Andreas Schicker

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Andreas Schicker
SC Wiener Neustadt vs Wolfsberger AC (04) .jpg
Andreas Schicker (2018)
Personnel
birthday July 6, 1986
place of birth Bruck an der MurAustria
size 178 cm
position Midfielder , full-back
Juniors
Years station
1994-1998 SV Oberaich
1998-1999 SC Bruck / Mur
1999-2001 Kapfenberger SV
2001-2003 FK Austria Vienna
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
2003-2007 FK Austria Vienna 11 (0)
2003-2007 FK Austria Vienna II 28 (0)
2004-2006 →  SV Ried  (loan) 67 (0)
2007-2008 ASK Schwadorf 20 (0)
2008-2010 FC Admira Wacker Mödling 55 (2)
2010–2012 SC Wiener Neustadt 66 (0)
2012-2014 SV Ried 53 (1)
2014-2015 SV Horn 0 (0)
2015-2017 SC Wiener Neustadt II
2016-2017 SC Wiener Neustadt 43 (0)
2017– SC Bruck / Mur 32 (4)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
Austria U-17
Austria U-19
2005-2008 Austria U-21 17 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2015-2017 SC Wiener Neustadt (assistant coach)
1 Only league games are given.

Andreas Schicker (born July 6, 1986 in Bruck an der Mur ) is an Austrian football player on the position of midfielder . During his active career, he worked as an assistant trainer and sports director at SC Wiener Neustadt before he was introduced as head scout of SK Sturm Graz in November 2018 . On May 1, 2020, he replaced Günter Kreissl as the sports director of the Austrian Bundesliga club.

life and career

Beginning and climax

He began his footballing career at SV Oberaich until he switched to the offspring of FK Austria Wien via Kapfenberg . In the 2003/04 season he played his first professional game in the Austrian Bundesliga against the Grazer AK , where he was used for 20 minutes.

In the summer of 2004 he switched to SV Ried on loan , where he played almost all the games for the Innviertel team before moving back to Austria Wien in June 2006. By the winter break he made seven games in the Bundesliga and two appearances for the amateurs of Austria Wien. In the 2007/08 season, Schicker played at ASK Schwadorf . After the merger with Admira, he was under contract with FC Admira Wacker Mödling . After two seasons in the second division, he moved to the Bundesliga for FC Magna Wiener Neustadt in summer 2010 .

After two years and 66 league appearances, he moved back to SV Ried , where he signed a contract until 2014. At the end of the 2013/2014 season, Schicker left Rieder for SV Horn . In the second division, however, he was not used in any official game and suffered from a cruciate ligament tear from the start.

Accident and return to professional football

On November 23, 2014, in his home town of Bruck an der Mur , he suffered serious injuries to both hands in a pyrotechnic accident with a firecracker, as a result of which the left hand had to be amputated . His companion suffered minor injuries to his legs and a shock. After the accident, he received a complaint because he was handling material that is normally only available for purchase with a corresponding pyrotechnic ID.

After his contract in Horn had expired, he returned to Wiener Neustadt, where he initially played in the amateur team and was to act as an assistant coach in the combat team. In February 2016 he was part of the professional squad for the first time as a player and on March 4, 2016, after he had not played in a professional game since May 2014, he made his comeback as a professional footballer in a 2-2 draw against SV Austria Salzburg , whereby According to FIFA, he was the first player in the world to play professional football with a prosthetic arm. Around four months before that, on October 30, 2015, he made his football comeback in a game of the amateurs of Wiener Neustädter in the fifth-class 2. Landesliga Ost.

For the 2017/18 season he became sports director of Wiener Neustädter; as a player, he moved to the fourth-class SC Bruck / Mur . He put his agendas as sports director of SC Wiener Neustadt back in November 2018 when he took on a new position as head scout of Bundesliga club SK Sturm Graz . He was also part of the club's video analysis team. On April 20, 2020, Schicker was introduced as the new sports director of the Austrian Bundesliga club. On May 1, 2020, he succeeded Günter Kreissl , who retired on April 30, 2020 , under whom he had already trained with the amateurs of Austria from 2003 and who had accompanied him over large parts of his career.

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. SC Magna: Lots of changes, same team. Oberösterreichische Nachrichten, July 17, 2010, accessed on June 7, 2018 .
  2. Andreas Schicker comes from Wiener Neustadt , derstandard.at
  3. Boller accident-in-Bruck_Opfer-thought-Boller-be-Bengali , November 25, 2014 BBC News
  4. Professional footballer tore his hands to pieces with firecrackers , November 23, 2014, Kurier
  5. After the Böller accident, Schicker expects an advertisement , derstandard.at of November 25, 2014. Accessed on November 25, 2014.
  6. ^ The emotional comeback of firecrackers victim Andreas Schicker , accessed on March 4, 2016
  7. Schicker: First football game with a prosthetic arm , accessed on March 4, 2016
  8. Andreas Schicker in the Landesliga fanreport.com, on June 20, 2017, accessed on June 20, 2017
  9. Schicker becomes Chief Scout at SK Sturm , accessed on November 26, 2018
  10. a b ANDREAS SCHICKER BECOMES CHEFSCOUT , accessed on May 20, 2020
  11. a b NEW SPORTING TOP , accessed on May 20, 2020