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Lei Clijsters

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Place of birth
  
Opitter, Belgium

Role
  
Footballer

Height
  
1.78 m

Playing position
  
Centre back

Position
  
Defender

Name
  
Lei Clijsters


Lei Clijsters image1findagravecomphotos250photos200953269


Full name
  
Leo Albert Jozef Clijsters

Date of birth
  
(1956-11-06)6 November 1956

Date of death
  
4 January 2009(2009-01-04) (aged 52)

Died
  
January 4, 2009, Meeuwen-Gruitrode, Belgium

Children
  
Kim Clijsters, Elke Clijsters

Grandchildren
  
Jada Elly Lynch, Jack Leon Lynch, Cleo Van Damme, Cruz Leo Van Damme

Similar People
  
Kim Clijsters, Elke Clijsters, Brian Lynch, Jelle Van Damme, Hein Vanhaezebrouck

Place of death
  
Gruitrode, Belgium

Rip lei clijsters


Leo Albert Jozef "Lei" Clijsters (6 November 1956 – 4 January 2009) was a Belgian professional footballer, who played as a central defender.

Contents

Lei Clijsters Old School Panini Kim Clijsters39 father

Throughout his extensive senior career, the tough stopper was mainly associated with KV Mechelen, with whom he won the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup and the UEFA Super Cup. Also a prominent member of the Belgian national team, he was the father of tennis players Kim and Elke Clijsters.

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Club career

Lei Clijsters was born on 6 November 1956 in Opitter, started his football career with local Opitter FC. Later, he played for Club Brugge KV, but left the club after a disappointing two-year stint; he started his career as a midfielder.

Subsequently, Clijsters represented K.S.K. Tongeren, K. Patro Maasmechelen, K. Waterschei S.V. Thor Genk, KV Mechelen and R.F.C. de Liège. With Mechelen, he won the Belgian Cup in 1987, going on to conquer the subsequent UEFA Cup Winners' Cup and European Super Cup. He added the Belgian League in 1988–89, always as club captain.

In 1988, Clijsters also won the Golden Shoe award as league's MVP, and eventually retired with Liège at almost 37. Immediately, he starting working as a manager with former club Patro Eisden, then moving to K.A.A. Gent, K.F.C. Lommel S.K. (July–December 1998), K. Tesamen Hogerop Diest (two spells, in 1999–2000 and November 2000 – June 2001) and Mechelen (July–November 2000).

Clijsters was endorsed by Diadora.

Afterwards, Clijsters managed the professional tennis career of his daughter Kim. After her retirement, "Lei" became coach of third division club Tongeren, with which he had also played, in October 2007. He resigned in January 2008, after his family announced that he was suffering from a serious illness. Details were kept secret, but in February the Belgian press reported it to be metastatic melanoma and that treatment was not working.

International career

Clijsters played in 40 international matches for the Belgian national team, participating at UEFA Euro 1984 and the 1986 and 1990 FIFA World Cups.

In the 1986 edition, as Belgium reached the last four, he only appeared in two matches (being used as a substitute in the 2–1 win over Iraq and the famous round of 16 4–3 victory over the USSR.

In 1990, Clijsters saw action against South Korea (2–0 win), Uruguay (in which he scored a stunning header in a 3–1 triumph) and England (lost 0–1 after extra time).

Personal life

Clijsters was married to Els Vandecaetsbeek until 2005.

Death

On 4 January 2009, Leo Clijsters succumbed to the illness at age 52. Upon his death, Belgian newspapers like Het Laatste Nieuws revealed that he suffered from a recurrence of a melanoma which had spread to the lungs and other organs, having already experienced a bout of this condition twenty five years earlier.

References

Lei Clijsters Wikipedia