Kurniawan Dwi Yulianto

Kurniawan Dwi Yulianto (born 13 July 1976) is a former professional football from Indonesia. Normally playing as a striker, Kurniawan has the fourth most caps and goals for the Indonesia national football team with 33 goals in 59 appearances. His nickname is "Kurus" (literally meaning "skinny") because he has a slender figure.[1] He is currently the assistant coach of Serie B side Como 1907, owned by Indonesian tobacco giant Djarum.

Kurniawan Dwi Yulianto
Personal information
Full nameKurniawan Dwi Yulianto
Date of birth (1976-07-13) 13 July 1976 (age 47)
Place of birthMagelang Regency, Indonesia
Height1.74 m (5 ft 9 in)
Position(s)Striker
Youth career
1993PSSI Primavera
1994Sampdoria Primavera
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1994–1995FC Luzern12(3)
1995–1999Pelita Bakrie36(18)
1999–2001PSM Makassar58(37)
2001–2003PSPS Pekanbaru50(28)
2003–2004Persebaya Surabaya28(14)
2004–2005Persija Jakarta18(10)
2005–2006Serawak31(29)
2006–2007PSS Sleman16(11)
2007–2008Persitara Jakarta Utara32(14)
2008–2009Persisam Putra Samarinda22(10)
2009–2010Persela Lamongan24(7)
2010–2011Tangerang Wolves16(6)
2011–2012Pro Duta27(9)
2012–2013Persipon Pontianak18(9)
Total406(200)
International career
1995–2005Indonesia59(33)
Managerial career
2018Indonesia (Assistant coach)
2019Indonesia U-23 (Assistant coach)
2019–2021Sabah
2022–Como 1907 (Assistant coach)
2023Indonesia U-23 (Assistant coach)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Playing career

Primavera years

Kurniawan became a household name in Indonesia when he went on a scoring spree for the Indonesian youth team that went to Italy in 1993 to train at Serie A club U.C. Sampdoria and play in the Campionato Nazionale Primavera, the league for youth teams of Serie A and Serie B clubs. The Indonesian football association PSSI sent the team abroad for two years to prepare for the 1994 AFC Youth Championship in Jakarta and the qualifying round for the 1996 Summer Olympics. Kurniawan was so prolific that Sampdoria's coach at that time, Sven-Göran Eriksson, included the 18-year old in the team that toured Asia in 1994, along with superstars Roberto Mancini and Attilio Lombardo who just won the 1993-94 Copa Italia title.[2][3]

FC Luzern

Kurniawan's performance in the Primavera league and with Sampdoria in exhibition matches caught the attention of other European clubs, including Swiss top-tier club FC Luzern that signed him on loan for the 1994–95 season. Kurniawan scored three goals in his 12 appearances for the Lucerne-based club, a respectable result for any teenager with no previous professional career. Kurniawan is the first and only Indonesian national who has scored in a top-flight European league. He was also the only Indonesian who competed and scored in the UEFA Intertoto Cup, which was abolished in 2008. Despite such achievements, young Kurniawan suffered homesickness, culture shock, and injuries in Switzerland.[4][5]

Sampdoria in 1995 called him back from the loan spell to prepare him for the 1995–96 season of Serie A but Kurniawan chose to return to Indonesia.[6]

Indonesian clubs

Kurniawan played for 12 teams in Indonesia after his 1995 return, winning the national title with PSM Makassar in 2000 and Persebaya Surabaya in 2004. He scored more than 170 goals for those teams combined. That said, his re-entry to Indonesia was not smooth as defenders brutally targeted the popular striker and the media hounded him as a celebrity. The rough transition during his early 20s led him to intentions of quitting football and a drug scandal that made PSSI suspended him from the national team. Criticism was rife against Kurniawan for his inability to match the quality he showed in Europe. He overcame the challenges and became more stable when he joined PSM in 1999 and won his first team trophy in 2000. He came second on the top scorer list that year below his perennial rival Bambang Pamungkas.[7][8][9]

Sarawak

Despite his popularity coming from his achievements in Europe and Indonesia, he was most prolific when he played in Malaysia for Sarawak FA in 2005–06 with 29 goals in 31 appearances. When he joined, Sarawak was playing in the Malaysian Premier League, the second-tier of Malaysian football. His goals helped the club to win promotion and compete in the 2006 Malaysian Super League.[10]

National team

Outside his dark years in the late 1990s, Kurniawan has always been the top choice for the youth and senior Indonesian national football teams from 1993 to 2005. With 33 goals in 59 appearances for the senior team, he has collected more caps and goals than any other Indonesian, except Bambang Pamungkas who also played in Malaysia when Kurniawan was there. His first three goals were scored against Cambodia in a 10–0 rout in the 1995 Southeast Asian Games in Thailand.[11]

Career statistics

International

Indonesia national team
YearAppsGoals
199543
199664
1997119
199832
199920
2000135
200164
200341
200464
200541
Total5933

International goals

Kurniawan Dwi Yulianto: International goals
No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
16 December 1995Chiang Mai, Thailand  Cambodia10–01995 Southeast Asian Games
26 December 1995Chiang Mai, Thailand  Cambodia10–01995 Southeast Asian Games
36 December 1995Chiang Mai, Thailand  Cambodia10–01995 Southeast Asian Games
42 September 1996National Stadium, Singapore,  Laos3–05–11996 Tiger Cup
57 September 1996National Stadium, Singapore,  Cambodia1–03–01996 Tiger Cup
611 September 1996National Stadium, Singapore,  Vietnam1–11–11996 Tiger Cup
715 September 1996National Stadium, Singapore,  Vietnam1–22–31996 Tiger Cup
814 September 1997Siliwangi Stadium, Bandung, Indonesia  Tanzania2–13–1Friendly
914 September 1997Siliwangi Stadium, Bandung, Indonesia  Tanzania3–13–1Friendly
1028 September 1997Gelora 10 November Stadium, Surabaya, Indonesia  New Zealand3–05–0Friendly
1128 September 1997Gelora 10 November Stadium, Surabaya, Indonesia  New Zealand4–05–0Friendly
125 October 1997Senayan Stadium, Jakarta, Indonesia  Laos3–05–21997 Southeast Asian Games
137 October 1997Senayan Stadium, Jakarta, Indonesia  Vietnam2–12–21997 Southeast Asian Games
149 October 1997Senayan Stadium, Jakarta, Indonesia  Malaysia4–04–01997 Southeast Asian Games
1512 October 1997Senayan Stadium, Jakarta, Indonesia  Philippines2–02–01997 Southeast Asian Games
1618 October 1997Senayan Stadium, Jakarta, Indonesia  Thailand1–11–11997 Southeast Asian Games
175 September 1998Thong Nhat Stadium, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam  Thailand1–03–31998 Tiger Cup
1815 August 2000Senayan Stadium, Jakarta, Indonesia  Thailand2–04–12000 Indonesian Independence Cup
1928 August 2000Senayan Stadium, Jakarta, Indonesia  Myanmar4–12000 Indonesian Independence Cup
2028 August 2000Senayan Stadium, Jakarta, Indonesia  Myanmar4–12000 Indonesian Independence Cup
216 November 2000700th Anniversary Stadium, Chiang Mai, Thailand  Philippines2–03–02000 Tiger Cup
2212 November 2000700th Anniversary Stadium, Chiang Mai, Thailand  Myanmar4–05–02000 Tiger Cup
2312 November 2000700th Anniversary Stadium, Chiang Mai, Thailand  Myanmar5–05–02000 Tiger Cup
248 April 2001Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, Jakarta, Indonesia  Maldives2–05–02002 FIFA World Cup qualification
2522 April 2001Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, Jakarta, Indonesia  Cambodia6–06–02002 FIFA World Cup qualification
266 May 2001Rasmee Dhandu Stadium, Malé, Maldives  Maldives1–02–02002 FIFA World Cup qualification
2713 May 2001Kunming Tuodong Sports Center, Kunming, China PR  China1–01–52002 FIFA World Cup qualification
286 October 2003Jeddah, Saudi Arabia  Bhutan1–02–02004 AFC Asian Cup qualification
297 December 2004Thong Nhat Stadium, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam  Laos6–06–02004 Tiger Cup
3013 December 2004Mỹ Đình National Stadium, Hanoi, Vietnam  Cambodia6–08–02004 Tiger Cup
3113 December 2004Mỹ Đình National Stadium, Hanoi, Vietnam  Cambodia7–08–02004 Tiger Cup
3228 December 2004Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, Jakarta, Indonesia  Malaysia1–01–22004 Tiger Cup
333 January 2005National Stadium, Bukit Jalil, Malaysia  Malaysia1–14–12004 Tiger Cup

Coaching career

After Kurniawan retired as a player in late 2013, he chose to become a coach at the new Chelsea Soccer School Indonesia, which is supported by English Premier League club Chelsea F.C. despite approaches from Indonesian clubs. One reason was the position did not require him to stay in Indonesia for long stretches as he wanted to spend more time in Malaysia, where his Malaysian wife opens a restaurant business. The pressure of training an Indonesian professional team throughout most of the year would take him away for too long.[12]

After approaches by PSSI and national team coaches, Kurniawan agreed to be a part-time assistant coach for Indonesian youth teams, including the U-23 team that won silver at the 2019 Southeast Asian Games in the Philippines.

Sabah FC

Newly promoted Malaysia Super League club Sabah FC became the first club that hired Kurniawan as a head coach in December 2019. The decision followed the inability of the previous coach Jelius Ating to lead a top-tier team due to his lack of AFC Pro coaching license, which Kurniawan holds.[13][14]

Kurniawan's first season at Sabah reaped mixed reviews from club decision-makers with some applauding the first-time head coach for keeping the team out of relegation while some criticizing him for only winning two out of 11 matches played in the shortened 2020 Malaysia Super League season amid the COVID-19 pandemic. The latter group managed to push Kurniawan out in November 2020. However, a change of management leadership at the club led to a January 2021 rehiring of Kurniawan who was about to join Malaysia Premier League club Kuching City F.C. as an assistant coach.[15] On 28 August 2021, Sabah lost 4–0 against UiTM FC. Next days, Sabah announced that they had sacked Kurniawan.[16]

Managerial statistics

As of 28 August 2021
Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamFromToRecord
GWDLGFGAGDWin %
Sabah FC19 December 201929 August 2021[17]31610153254−22019.35
Career total31610153254−22019.35

Personal life

Kurniawan mostly resides in Kuching, Sarawak, Malaysia where his second wife opens a restaurant business that has several outlets. Kurniawan met her when he was playing for Sarawak FA in 2005, two years after his divorce from his first wife.[18]

Honours

PSM Makassar

Persebaya Surabaya

  • Liga Indonesia Premier Division: 2004

Persija Jakarta

Persisam Putra Samarida

Persela Lamongan

Indonesia

Individual

References

External links