Andreas Hinkel

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Andreas Hinkel
Hinkel - celtic.jpg
Hinkel in the Celtic jersey (2009)
Personnel
Surname Andreas Benjamin Hinkel
birthday March 26, 1982
place of birth BacknangGermany
size 183 cm
position Full-back (right)
Juniors
Years station
1987-1992 TSV Leutenbach
1992-2000 VfB Stuttgart
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1999-2001 VfB Stuttgart amateurs 31 (0)
2000-2006 VfB Stuttgart 156 (1)
2006-2008 Sevilla FC 15 (0)
2008-2011 Celtic Glasgow 79 (1)
2011–2012 Sc freiburg 7 (0)
2011 SC Freiburg II 1 (0)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
2002-2003 Germany U21 8 (0)
2002 Team 2006 1 (0)
2003-2009 Germany 21 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2013-2014 VfB Stuttgart U12
2013-2014 VfB Stuttgart U16 (assistant coach)
2014-2015 VfB Stuttgart U17 (assistant coach)
2016 VfB Stuttgart II (assistant coach)
2017-2018 VfB Stuttgart II
2018 VfB Stuttgart (interim)
2019 VfB Stuttgart (assistant coach)
2019 VfB Stuttgart II
2019– Spartak Moscow (assistant coach)
1 Only league games are given.

Andreas Benjamin Hinkel (born March 26, 1982 in Backnang ) is a former German soccer player and today's coach . He spent most of his career at VfB Stuttgart , where he also worked as a coach. For the German national team , he played a total of 21 games.

Since October 2019, Hinkel has been employed by Spartak Moscow in Russia as Domenico Tedesco's assistant trainer .

Career as a player

Beginnings

Andreas Hinkel began playing football at TSV Leutenbach , for whom he played club football for his first years from 1987 to 1992. As a ten-year-old (1992) he moved to VfB Stuttgart . He won two titles with the VfB youth teams: in 1996 he was the South German champion with the C-Youth, and in 1999 he was able to celebrate the German championship with the B-Juniors .

VfB Stuttgart (2000-2006)

In the 2000/01 Bundesliga season , Hinkel was awarded a professional contract by VfB Stuttgart. On February 15, 2001, Hinkel came in the UEFA Cup game against Celta Vigo (0-0) for his first competitive game. Three days later, Hinkel played his first Bundesliga game against Hertha BSC . The following week he was also in the starting line-up for the second leg at Celta Vigo, it was Ralf Rangnick's last game as VfB coach. The right-back came nine times under the new coach Felix Magath in the last twelve Bundesliga games of the season and thus played his part in staying up.

Hinkel was one of VfB Stuttgart's “ youngsters ” who became runner-up in 2003. At the end of his time at VfB, he rarely came close to what he had previously rated as outstanding.

Sevilla FC (2006-2008)

After 14 years at VfB Stuttgart, Andreas Hinkel decided in 2006 to take on a new challenge. He switched to FC Sevilla - at the most successful time in club history: Sevilla won the 2007 UEFA Cup with Hinkel . Hinkel played in eight games, but not in the final. He also won the Spanish Cup with Sevilla and finished the season of the Spanish Primera Division in third place.

In the 2007/08 season things were not so successful for Hinkel and after the contract extension of his then competitor Dani Alves in Seville, Hinkel's appearances became less frequent. Also due to several injuries, Hinkel played only 32 competitive games in the year and a half in Seville, 15 of them in the Spanish league.

Celtic Glasgow (2008-2011)

Hinkel reoriented himself and moved in January 2008 for a transfer fee of £ 1.9 million to the Scottish club Celtic Glasgow under coach Gordon Strachan . After Andreas Thom, he was the second German in the history of the Celtic club. Hinkel was able to prevail, became a regular player and became Scottish Champion in 2008 with Celtic . A year later, Celtic had to give way to local rivals Glasgow Rangers in the Scottish Championship , for which the club won the Scottish League Cup . Hinkel prepared seven goals in the 2008/09 season and was elected to the team of the season. By the end of the 2009/10 season , Hinkel had made 79 league appearances in which he was able to score a goal.

In late summer 2010 he suffered a cruciate ligament tear . Hinkel was only able to return to team training in spring 2011, but was not used in the 2010/11 season . Since his contract with Celtic was not renewed, he had been without a club since July 2011. In order to keep fit, Hinkel has been training at his former club VfB Stuttgart since August 2011.

SC Freiburg (2011-2012)

On October 6, 2011, SC Freiburg signed the clubless Hinkel and signed a contract with him until June 30, 2012. However, Hinkel could not prevail at SCF and was hardly used , especially after the coach change from Marcus Sorg to Christian Streich , which is why his contract in Freiburg was no longer extended. In September 2012 he ended his career as a professional footballer.

National team

The year 2003 was not only successful for Andreas Hinkel with VfB Stuttgart, it was also the year of his debut in the national team on April 30th against Serbia and Montenegro (1-0) under the then DFB team boss Rudi Völler .

In 2004 he was in the squad of the EM in Portugal , but was not used there. From autumn 2005 Hinkel was initially no longer considered for the national team. He missed the 2006 World Cup and the 2008 European Championship .

In September 2008, Hinkel was called back to the national team by national coach Joachim Löw after a three-year absence and came in Helsinki in the World Cup qualifier on September 10, 2008 against Finland (3: 3) for a brief assignment. Three more missions for the national team followed. He played his last game for the national team on June 2, 2009.

Career as a coach

In the 2013/14 season, Hinkel was the junior coach of the U12 and assistant coach of the U16 at VfB Stuttgart. In the 2014/15 season he was assistant coach of the U17s at VfB Stuttgart.

In January 2016, Hinkel returned to VfB as assistant coach of the second team. Before the second half of the 2016/17 regional league season , the club promoted him to head coach of VfB II, who was twelfth in the table at the time. He then led the second team to seventh place in his debut season. The season 2017/18 ended Hinkel with VfB II despite numerous sales made to U21 because of the upcoming conversion, in tenth place. He then resigned from the position of head coach for the second team in order to concentrate on the training to become a football teacher, which began in June 2018.

After the dismissal of the head coach of the professional team, Tayfun Korkut , Hinkel took over the interim management of the first team on October 7, 2018 with athletics coach Matthias Schiffers, goalkeeping coach Marco Langner and Andreas Schumacher. Just two days later, Markus Weinzierl was introduced as the new head coach. At the beginning of January 2019 he returned to the VfB Stuttgart coaching team as an assistant coach.

Shortly after successfully completing the DFB coaching course, at the beginning of April 2019 he took on the coaching position of the second team of VfB in the fourth-class Regionalliga Südwest and relegated the team to the top division at the end of the season. He then left VfB Stuttgart.

In mid-October 2019, Hinkel found a job with the Russian first division club Spartak Moscow as an assistant to the new head coach Domenico Tedesco .

successes

Web links

Commons : Andreas Hinkel  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. { http://www.transfermarkt.de/andreas-hinkel/leistungsdaten/player/599 Performance data from Hinkel on transfermarkt.de.
  2. Andreas Hinkel. thecelticwiki.com, accessed July 24, 2016 .
  3. ^ Matthias Arnhold: Andreas Hinkel - Matches and Goals in Bundesliga . RSSSF . May 19, 2016. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  4. Ex-national player Hinkel trains at VfB , spox.com from August 9, 2011, accessed on August 9, 2011.
  5. Andreas Hinkel switches to SC ( Memento from October 8, 2011 in the Internet Archive ).
  6. http://www.transfermarkt.de/hinkel-und-barth-verlassen-freiburg/view/news/89133
  7. "I'm looking forward to my new career" andreas-hinkel.de, accessed on September 10, 2012.
  8. ^ Matthias Arnhold: Andreas Hinkel - International Appearances . RSSSF . May 19, 2016. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  9. ^ "Andreas Hinkel will be a junior trainer" ( memento from November 29, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) vfb.de, accessed on April 12, 2013.
  10. Complete coaching team ( memento from November 10, 2016 in the Internet Archive ), VfB Stuttgart website, accessed on January 26, 2016.
  11. Andreas Hinkel becomes head coach of VfB II VfB Stuttgart December 19, 2016
  12. Realignment of the youth division VfB Stuttgart February 9, 2018
  13. kicker.de: VfB separates from coach Korkut - Hinkel takes over (October 7, 2018) , accessed on October 7, 2018
  14. vfb.de: Markus Weinzierl is the new head coach of VfB , October 9, 2018
  15. Good news from Stuttgart: Halil Altintop remains in the VfB coaching staff - Andreas Hinkel joins them. echo24.de, January 3, 2018, accessed on February 21, 2019 .
  16. kicker.de: Hinkel should lead VfB II to avoid relegation (April 1, 2019) , accessed on April 2, 2019
  17. Francisco "Paco" Vaz takes over U21 vfb.de from June 6, 2019, accessed on June 30, 2019
  18. Tedesco presented at Spartak Moscow. In: kicker.de. October 14, 2019, accessed October 14, 2019 .
  19. Domenico Tedesco and Andreas Hinkel are hiring in Russia. In: stuttgarter-zeitung.de. October 14, 2019, accessed October 14, 2019 .