Christian Peintinger

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Christian Peintinger
Personnel
birthday April 14, 1967
place of birth LeobenAustria
size 176 cm
position midfield player
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
0000-1987 SK Sturm Graz II
1987 SK Sturm Graz 12 (1)
1987-1988 FC Swarovski Tirol 19 (1)
1988-1989 LASK at least 12 (0)
1989-1992 DSV Alpine at least 57 (1)
1992-1993 LUV Graz 33 (3)
1993-1995 SV Oberwart 48 (7)
1995-1996 Wolfsberger AC
1996 LUV Graz
1996-2000 SC Kalsdorf
2000-2001 SV Gössendorf
2001-2005 SC Kalsdorf
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2000-2001 SV Gössendorf (player-coach)
2001-2004 SC Kalsdorf (player-coach)
2005-2006 SK Sturm Graz U-19
2006-2007 SK Sturm Graz II
2007-2008 SK Sturm Graz II (assistant coach)
2008-2011 SK Sturm Graz II
2011-2015 SC Kalsdorf
2015-2018 BSC Young Boys (assistant coach)
2018– Eintracht Frankfurt (assistant coach)
1 Only league games are given.

Christian Peintinger (born April 14, 1967 in Leoben ) is a former Austrian football player and now coach .

Career

As a player

Peintinger started his career at SK Sturm Graz . After he had initially played for the amateurs, he made his debut in March 1987 in the 1st division when he was substituted on on the 24th match day of the 1986/87 season against LASK in the 38th minute for Franz Feirer . On the following match day he was in the starting line-up for the first time against SK VOEST Linz and also scored his first goal in the top Austrian league in the 3-1 win for Graz. By the end of the season he came to twelve missions for Sturm in the 1st division.

For the 1987/88 season he moved to league rivals FC Swarovski Tirol . For the Tyroleans he came to a total of 19 missions in the 1st division that season, in which he scored a goal. After a year at Swarovski Tirol, Peintinger moved to LASK for the 1988/89 season. With the LASK he only reached the last place in the table until the winter break and so you had to play in the "middle playoff" after the winter break to stay up. As a fifth, this failed and Peintinger had to relegate to the 2nd division with the Upper Austrians .

He then moved to the 1989/90 season for the also second-class DSV Alpine . With the Leobners he first reached the middle playoff as fourth in the table and in this finally also with fourth place promotion to the 1st division. After two years in the 1st division, in which Peintinger completed 49 games for DSV, in which he scored a goal, he had to go to the middle playoff with the club as bottom of the table in 1992 and missed relegation there with the club in sixth.

After relegation, he moved to the second division team LUV Graz for the 1992/93 season . For Graz, he completed 33 second division games in that season, in which he scored three goals. At the end of the season, however, he had to relegate to the national league with the club as the last of the 2nd division . He then joined the second division SV Oberwart in the summer of 1993 . In his two years in Burgenland he played 48 games in the 2nd division and scored seven goals.

For the 1995/96 season he moved to the regional division Wolfsberger AC . After half a year in Carinthia, he returned to league competitor LUV Graz in January 1996. At the end of the season he had to relegate from the regional league with LUV Graz . After half a year in Graz, he moved to the fifth class SC Kalsdorf in the summer of 1996 . In January 2000 he moved to SV Gössendorf . After a year at Gössendorf, he returned to SC Kalsdorf in January 2001. In 2005 he ended his active career.

As a trainer

As a player coach, Peintinger was initially active at Gössendorf. From the 2001/02 season Peintinger acted in addition to his work as a player as head coach of SC Kalsdorf , which he led to the end of the season in the regional league. In 2004 he was able to move up to the third-class regional league with the club. During the current 2004/05 season, Peintinger was replaced by Roland Frumen as coach.

For the 2005/06 season he took over the training of the U-19 team of Bundesliga club SK Sturm Graz , where he was once active as a player. For the 2006/07 season he was the coach of the third-rate amateurs of Sturm. During the winter break of that season, after Sturm II was in 14th place and thus on a relegation place, he was replaced by Hannes Reinmayr . From the 2007/08 season Peintinger acted as Reinmayr's assistant coach for the amateurs of Sturm. After Reinmayr's move to SK Austria Kärnten , Peintinger took over the post of head coach again. After three years he resigned as a coach after the 2010/11 season, as Sturm II had made the coaching position a full-time occupation and Peintinger decided to work as his main job at the WKO . In addition, he could not come to an agreement financially with Sturm.

He then became a coach again for the 2011/12 season at SC Kalsdorf, which is now only fourth-class. In his first season at Kalsdorf, however, he was able to lead the club to the championship title in the Styrian regional league and thus, as in 2004, move up to the regional league with the club. In the following seasons under Peintinger they always placed themselves among the top ten clubs, the best season placement was achieved in 2012/13 with fourth place.

In September 2015 he left Kalsdorf and became Adi Hütter's assistant coach at the Swiss first division club BSC Young Boys . He gave up his job at the WKO to move to Switzerland. In the 2017/18 season he was able to become Swiss champions with the capital club. For the 2018/19 season he moved to Germany together with Hütter , where he became assistant coach at the Bundesliga club Eintracht Frankfurt . In March 2019, he represented the suspended Hütter as head coach in the second leg of the Europa League second leg against Inter Milan , which they won 1-0.

Personal

His father Walter (* 1945), like Christian Peintinger, was a Bundesliga player for SK Sturm Graz .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Chronicle of SC Kalsdorf on fussballoesterreich.at, accessed on March 24, 2019
  2. "The player has to develop himself" sturm12.at, on June 1, 2011, accessed on March 24, 2019
  3. Peintinger new, Gämperle extends bscyb.ch, on September 30, 2015, accessed on March 24, 2019
  4. This duo has been living in Eintracht neue.at for years , on January 3, 2019, accessed on March 24, 2019
  5. Adi Hütter will be the new trainer at Eintracht Frankfurt eintracht.de, on May 16, 2018, accessed on March 24, 2019
  6. Frankfurt with interim trainer Peintinger in the quarter finals kleinezeitung.at, on March 14, 2019, accessed on March 24, 2019
  7. Christian Peintinger: Hutter's closest confidante laola1.at, on March 15, 2019, accessed on March 24, 2019