Danny Winkler

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Danny Winkler
Personnel
birthday 16th August 1973
place of birth MannheimGermany
size 187 cm
position Storm
Juniors
Years station
MFC 08 Lindenhof
until 1988 VfL Neckarau
1988-1991 SV Waldhof Mannheim
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1992-1993 SV Waldhof Mannheim 17 0(0)
1993-1996 TSG Pfeddersheim
1996-1998 VfL Bochum 7 0(0)
1998-2000 Stuttgart Kickers 16 0(3)
2000-2004 Eintracht Trier 140 (46)
2004-2006 TSG 1899 Hoffenheim 18 0(7)
2006 SV 98 Schwetzingen
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2006-2008 SV 98 Schwetzingen
2016 SpVgg Neckarelz
1 Only league games are given.

Danny Winkler (born August 16, 1973 in Mannheim ) is a German soccer coach and former soccer player . In the course of his playing career, the 1.87 m tall striker played seven times in the German Bundesliga and 89 times in the second division .

Career

Danny Winkler was born in Mannheim and grew up there. In his youth he played for the district clubs MFC 08 Lindenhof and VfL Neckarau , before he joined the youth department of the then Bundesliga club SV Waldhof Mannheim in 1988 . In the second half of the 1991/92 season, the striker was also used in the professional team under coach Klaus Toppmöller , which had meanwhile been relegated to the second division; Winkler made his debut on March 25, 1992 in the 0-0 draw of Mannheim against SC Freiburg , where he was on the starting line-up. By the end of the season he played four more games and was in the first eleven each time. In the following season 1992/93 he was used a total of twelve times.

After five years at the club, he left Mannheim and moved to the 1993/94 season on the left side of the Rhine for the upper division TSG Pfeddersheim from Worms . With the Pfeddersheimers, Winkler won the Südwestpokal twice, which entitles them to participate in the first round of the DFB Cup . In 1995 he played in the game against Borussia Dortmund (3: 4 n. E.), in which he managed to equalize to 1: 1 in extra time. In the league, he narrowly missed promotion to the regional league with the club this season.

After another season in Worms-Pfeddersheim, he accepted an offer from Bundesliga club VfL Bochum in 1996 and moved to the Ruhr area. In the next two years he came there but only on a total of seven missions, each time he was only substituted in the final stages of the games. Therefore, he moved to the Stuttgart Kickers in the second division for the 1998/99 season , where he completed only 16 games in the next two seasons, in which he scored three goals.

In the summer of 2000, Winkler therefore moved to Eintracht Trier in the then third-class regional league. Under coach Paul Linz he became a regular player there and scored eleven goals in 34 games in his first year. In the following season 2001/02 he was able to increase the number of his goals this season with the same number of completed games to 15 and thus made his contribution to the promotion of Trier to the second division. In this he played with the Trier team for two years before moving to TSG 1899 Hoffenheim in the regional league in summer 2004 . After 18 games with seven goals, he injured himself and fell out of the entire second half of the season. He also did not play a game in the following 2005/06 season.

At the end of his career, Winkler moved back to the Electoral Palatinate in 2006 to join the SV 98 Schwetzingen club . During the 2006/07 season he ended his active career because of a serious knee injury. Since then he has worked as an assistant coach at Schwetzingen.

For the 2016/17 season he was coach of the upper division SpVgg Neckarelz , after only three points from the first eight games, he and his assistant coach Helmut Hofmann have already been dismissed.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ SpVgg Neckarelz - 1st team, men. In: FuPa.net. Retrieved August 25, 2016 .
  2. rnz.de: SpVgg Neckarelz separates from coach Danny Winkler after eight match days (September 15, 2016) , accessed on October 1, 2016