Ariane Hingst

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Ariane Hingst
ArianeHingst-crop.jpg
Ariane Hingst (2008)
Personnel
birthday July 25, 1979
place of birth West BerlinGermany
size 170 cm
position Defense , midfield
Juniors
Years station
1986-1992 Hertha Zehlendorf
1992-1994 VfB Lichterfelde
Women
Years station Games (goals) 1
1994-1997 Hertha Zehlendorf
1997-2007 1. FFC Turbine Potsdam 160 (53)
2007-2008 Djurgårdens IF 17 0(6)
2009-2011 1. FFC Frankfurt 34 0(6)
2011–2012 Newcastle United Jets 10 0(0)
2012-2013 Canberra United 12 0(1)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1996-2011 Germany 174 (10)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2016– VfL Wolfsburg (assistant trainer)
1 Only league games are given.

Ariane Hingst (born July 25, 1979 in West Berlin ) is a former German soccer player and current soccer coach . The defender and midfielder played in the women's national team from 1996 to 2011 .

Career

Club soccer

Ariane Hingst played football as a child. After the D-Jugend, Hingst was no longer allowed to play in a team with boys. So the then eleven-year-old jumped over an age group and continued to play in the female B-youth. After internal squabbles, the coach and many players moved to Berliner SV 92 . A short time later the girls' team was dissolved. The 13-year-old Hingst was now without a club and subsequently joined VfB Lichterfelde in 1992 . Meanwhile, Hingst was an integral part of the Berlin selection, but could no longer develop in Lichterfelde.

After two years she returned to Zehlendorf. In the meantime, the leisure team, which was little appreciated in the club, had developed into a highly regarded regional league team . Thanks to a special game permit, she was allowed to play in the first women's team at the age of 15. With Zehlendorf she became regional league champion in 1996, but failed in the subsequent promotion round. In the following season, Hingst was used in the DFB Cup game against Fortuna Sachsenroß Hanover despite not being eligible to play . Zehlendorf won the game 2-0, but was disqualified by the DFB .

The then national coach Tina Theune-Meyer made it more than clear to Hingst that she would have to switch to a Bundesliga team for the 1997/98 season in order to be invited to the national team. The matter turned into a dilemma for Hingst . Zehlendorf was again regional league champion in 1997 and Hingst hoped that the promotion would work this time. Otherwise, she wanted to go to the then Bundesliga club Tennis Borussia Berlin . TeBe, however, was relegated from the Bundesliga. Zehlendorf and Turbine Potsdam met in the relegation to the single-track Bundesliga. Potsdam won the game 5-1, and Zehlendorf's Bundesliga dreams were bursting. After the game, Zehlendorf's coach Michael Rossbach asked Potsdam's long-time coach Bernd Schröder to bring Hingst to the turbine. So she decided to move to Brandenburg.

Her first season at Turbine Potsdam was difficult. At the beginning of 1998 the situation improved: Bernd Schröder had meanwhile become the team's coach again. In 2001, Hingst was runner-up with Turbine Potsdam for the first time and reached the semi-finals of the DFB Cup. After two further runner-up championships with Turbine Potsdam, the most successful period of her career began in 2003. In 2004 she became German champion and cup winner for the first time with Turbine Potsdam. A year later she was again a cup winner and European champion for the third time; she also won the UEFA Women's Cup , which has only been held since 2001, the European Women's Cup . In 2006, she finally repeated the double from the championship and the cup.

On April 1, 2007, Hingst surprisingly moved to the Swedish first division club Djurgårdens IF . Hingst had been toying with a move abroad for a long time and was looking for a new challenge. In Stockholm she was used in her first season instead of in central defense in midfield and was runner-up.

On January 1, 2009, after a year and a half, Hingst moved back to Germany for 1. FFC Frankfurt , with whom she won the DFB Cup in 2011.

In October 2011, Hingst signed a contract with Newcastle United Jets Women in Australia. On September 29, 2012, she signed with W-League rivals Canberra United and ended her career after this season.

National team

Hung at the 2011 World Cup

On August 27, 1996, Hingst made his debut in the German national team in a game against the Netherlands . In her third international game against Iceland , she scored her first international goal and was successful one more time. It was her only double in the national dress. In 1997 she drove with the national team to the European Championship in Norway. In the final against Italy , she played her only tournament game from the start and was European champion for the first time.

In 1999, Hingst went to the 1999 World Cup as the youngest player in the squad , where, according to Kicker-Sportmagazin, she caused a sensation with “fearless runs across the flanks”. In September 2000 she drove with the national team to the Olympic Games in Sydney. In the last group game against Sweden , she scored the winning goal in the 88th minute, which helped the German team to win the group. After the semi-final defeat against Norway , the German selection won the small final against Brazil and thus the bronze medal.

For the national team, the European championship was on in their own country. In the first games, Hingst was at least partially used. The semi-final game against Norway was the last game in which Hingst was substituted on. The revenge for the defeat at the Olympic Games last year succeeded, and after the 1-0 victory over Sweden, Hingst, who was in the final in the starting eleven, became European champion for the second time. Her most successful tournament was the 2003 World Cup in the USA, which she won with the German team. A year later she took bronze again at the Olympic Games in Athens. In 2005 she won the European title again and in 2007 she was again world champion with the national team when the German team managed to successfully defend their title at the tournament in China .

At the 2009 European Championships , she suffered meniscus and cartilage damage in the quarter-finals against Italy and had to see from the bench how her teammates won the title. After that she was only used again in the 4-0 loss of the season final game against the USA on May 22, 2010 and in the following games almost exclusively as a substitute. Nevertheless, based on her experience, she was appointed to the squad for the World Cup .

At the 2011 World Cup , it was only used in the game against France . She came on in the second half for Simone Laudehr , who had already received a yellow card in one game and would have been suspended in the quarter-finals in another. After the lost quarter-finals against Japan , Hingst, like Birgit Prinz, announced their resignation from the national team, the DFB honored them with a daily series before the farewell game for Birgit Prinz.

Hingst is in third place among the national players with 174 A-internationals behind Birgit Prinz (214 games) and Kerstin Stegemann (191 games), and has played 24 more games than Lothar Matthäus , record national player in the German men's team. Worldwide, only 26 players and three players have played more international matches (as of January 21, 2014).

trainer

At the beginning of 2016, Hingst became an assistant trainer at VfL Wolfsburg .

successes

title

Awards

job

Ariane Hingst is a trained banker , but later retrained to become a physiotherapist . In Sweden, she worked part-time as a physiotherapist of the ice hockey team of Djurgårdens IF .

At the 2015 Women's World Cup , she worked as a football expert for the American TV station FOX.

Web links

Commons : Ariane Hingst  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Player statistics Ariane Hingst. Women's soccer FC Bayern Munich, archived from the original on February 2, 2014 ; accessed on July 31, 2019 .
  2. Birgit and Heike Klasen: Eleven girlfriends - The turbines from Potsdam. P. 77
  3. Hardy Greens: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume II, p. 264.
  4. cf. Klasen, p. 81.
  5. Jens Trommer: “Everything is open”: Turbine captain Ariane Hingst is moving to Sweden. In: MaerkischeAllgemeine.de . February 28, 2007, archived from the original on March 5, 2007 ; Retrieved October 18, 2013 .
  6. The 1. FFC Frankfurt signs double world champion Ariane Hingst on January 1st, 2009. In: ffc-frankfurt.de. November 20, 2008, archived from the original on September 16, 2009 ; Retrieved November 20, 2008 . It should be done at Frankfurt. In: kicker.de . November 20, 2008. Retrieved November 20, 2008 . Frankfurt brings US girl warriors - Hingst goes. In: Augsburger Allgemeine . August 5, 2011, accessed August 5, 2011 .

  7. Ex-national player Hingst moves to Australia. In: fifa.com. October 10, 2011, archived from the original on July 14, 2012 ; accessed on August 1, 2019 .
  8. Canberra United sign German ace Hingst. In: footballaustralia.com.au . August 29, 2012, archived from the original on February 4, 2014 ; accessed on August 1, 2019 .
  9. Euro ended for Ariane Hingst. In: dfb.de. September 5, 2009, accessed August 1, 2019 .
  10. Ariane Hingst. In: dfb.de. Retrieved August 1, 2019 .
  11. Hingst and Prince: Without cocoa, pennants and glasses. March 20, 2012, accessed August 1, 2019 . End of career: Prince can hope for a farewell game. In: fifa.com. July 10, 2011, archived from the original on October 5, 2013 ; accessed on August 1, 2019 .
  12. Hingst joins the "female wolves". In: kicker.de. January 6, 2016, accessed August 1, 2019 .