Jørgen Juve

Journalist

Birthday November 22, 1906

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Porsgrunn, Norway

DEATH DATE 1983-4-12, Oslo, Norway (76 years old)

Nationality Norway

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1906

Jørgen Juve (22 November 1906 – 12 April 1983) was a Norwegian football player, jurist, journalist, and non-fiction writer.

For most of his career, he played as a striker for Lyn.

He also played for a season at FC Basel in Switzerland before retiring and earned a total of 45 caps for the Norway national team.

He is the highest-scoring player ever for Norway, with 33 goals in just 45 games.

1926

In 1926 he moved to Oslo, where he started playing for the club Lyn.

1928

Juve played in the Norwegian Cup final for Lyn in 1928, but the team lost 2–1 against Ørn-Horten.

He made 45 appearances and scored 33 international goals for the Norway national team between 1928 and 1937.

His first match for the national team was against Finland in June 1928, and his 45th match was against Denmark in June 1937.

He was sports editor for the newspaper Dagbladet from 1928 to 1934, and for Tidens Tegn from 1934 to 1940.

During World War II Juve started the weekly magazine Bragd.

1929

Juve scored his first goals for Norway in June 1929, when he scored a hat-trick against Netherlands, and during the next seven matches he scored 16 goals.

His 33 goals makes Juve the Norway national team all time top scorer.

He only played as a striker in 22 of those games; the rest he alternated between right-back and centre-half.

1930

During the season 1930–1931 he played 12 games for FC Basel in which he scored 10 goals.

1931

In 1931, Juve obtained a law degree in Basel, and would later work as a journalist and writer.

1932

He was married twice, first to Erna Riberg in 1932, and they had two children.

One of their grandchildren is folk singer Tone Juve.

He was later married to the psychologist Eva Røine, and they had one daughter.

1936

He was captain of the Norway team which won Olympic bronze medals in the 1936 Summer Olympics.

He also had a career as a journalist for Dagbladet and Tidens Tegn, and wrote several books.

Juve was born in Porsgrunn; the son of tanner Ole Martin Juve and Marie Pøhner.

The family name originates from the farm Juve/Djuve in Lårdal, where his grandfather was born.

He was the eldest of six children.

His two brothers both emigrated to the United States, while his three sisters married and settled in Norway.

Among his childhood friends was later composer Klaus Egge.

He was captain of the team that won bronze medals at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin.

In the first round of the Olympics, 3 August, the Norwegian team met Turkey, and won the match 4–0.

In the second round they met Germany, and won this match 2–0.

Both goals were scored by Magnar Isaksen (after 8 and 84 minutes).

Among the spectators were Hitler and Goebbels.

It was the first and last time Hitler watched a football match.

In the semifinal, on 10 August, the Norwegian team lost 1–2 to Italy, after extra time.

Finally the team won 3–2 over Poland in the bronze final.

1938

Juve retired from football in 1938, then coached Bodø/Glimt in 1939.

1941

In 1941 he moved to Stockholm, where he edited the magazine Norges-Nytt.

1942

In 1942 he travelled to London, and later to New York.

1948

He coached Molde FK for a few weeks in 1948.

1983

He died in Oslo in 1983.

Juve started playing football for the Porsgrunn sports club Urædd, only 16 years old.

2006

In 2006, on the occasion of the 100-year anniversary of Juve's birth Per Ravn Omdal stated that Juve was one of the greatest Norwegian footballers while Sondre Kåfjord, Per Jorsett, Ola Dybwad Olsen and Arne Scheie named Juve as the most important contributor to Norway's only medal in an international football championship for men.