German men's national hockey team
Association: | German Hockey Association |
FIH world rankings : | 5 (December 21, 2017) |
Trainer: | Quays al Saadi |
Record national players: | Matthias Witthaus (350) |
Record scorer: | Bjorn Michel (229) |
The German national hockey team for men is a selection of top German players in the sport of hockey made by the national coach . It represents the German Hockey Association (DHB) on an international level, for example at the Hockey World Championship , the Champions Trophy or the Olympic Games . In addition to numerous successes such as winning the gold medal four times at the Olympics, the men's national hockey team was voted Team of the Year in Germany by sports journalists in 1963, 1972, 1992 and 2008. Currently (September 2019) Germany ranks 6th in the world - and 3rd in the European rankings in the field and in 2nd place in both the world and the European rankings in the hall.
Field hockey successes
Olympic games
- Bronze at the IX. 1928 Olympic Games in Amsterdam
- Silver at the XI. 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin
- Bronze at the XVI. 1956 Olympic Games in Melbourne
- Gold at the XX. 1972 Olympic Games in Munich
- Silver at the XXIII. 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles
- Silver at the XXIV Olympic Games in Seoul in 1988
- Gold at the XXV. 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona
- Bronze at the XXVIII. 2004 Athens Olympic Games
- Gold at the XXIX. Beijing 2008 Olympic Games
- Gold at the XXX. London 2012 Olympic Games
- Bronze at the XXXI. 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro
World championships
Placements at world hockey championships
- 5th place at the 1st World Cup in 1971 in Pakistan
- 3rd place at the 2nd World Cup in 1973 in the Netherlands
- 3rd place at the 3rd World Cup in Malaysia in 1975
- 4th place at the 4th World Cup 1978 in Argentina
- 2nd place at the 5th World Cup in India in 1982 (against Pakistan)
- 3rd place at the 6th World Cup in 1986 in England
- 4th place at the 7th World Cup in 1990 in Pakistan
- 4th place at the 8th World Cup in 1994 in Australia
- 3rd place at the 9th World Cup in 1998 in the Netherlands
- 1st place at the 10th World Cup 2002 in Malaysia (against Australia)
- 1st place at the 11th World Cup 2006 in Germany (against Australia)
- 2nd place at the 12th World Cup 2010 in India (against Australia)
- 6th place at the 13th World Cup 2014 in the Netherlands (against Belgium)
- 5th place at the 14th World Cup 2018 in India
European championships
Record winner (8 successes) at European Championships (1970, 1978, 1991, 1995, 1999, 2003, 2011, 2013)
- 1st place at the 1st European Championship in Belgium in 1970
- 2nd place at the 2nd European Championship 1974 in Spain / Madrid
- 1st place at the 3rd European Championship 1978 in Germany / Hanover
- 3rd place at the 4th European Championship 1983 in the Netherlands / Amsterdam
- 3rd place at the 5th European Championship in 1987 in the Soviet Union / Moscow
- 1st place at the 6th European Championship in 1991 in France / Paris
- 1st place at the 7th European Championship 1995 in Ireland / Dublin
- 1st place at the 8th European Championship 1999 in Italy / Padua
- 1st place at the 9th European Championship 2003 in Spain / Barcelona
- 3rd place at the 10th European Championship 2005 in Germany / Leipzig
- 2nd place at the 12th European Championship 2009 in the Netherlands / Amstelveen
- 1st place at the 13th European Championship 2011 in Germany / Mönchengladbach
- 1st place at the 14th European Championship 2013 in Belgium / Antwerp
- 2nd place at the 15th European Championship 2015 in Great Britain / London
- 4th place at the 16th European Championship 2017 in Amstelveen, Netherlands
- 4th place at the 17th European Championship 2019 in Antwerp, Belgium
Champions Trophy
10-time winner of the FIH Champions Trophy (1986, 1987, 1988, 1991, 1992, 1995, 1997, 2001, 2007, 2014)
- 2nd place at the FIH Champions Trophy 1980 in Pakistan
- 3rd place at the FIH Champions Trophy 1981 in Pakistan
- 3rd place at the FIH Champions Trophy 1983 in Pakistan
- 3rd place at the FIH Champions Trophy 1985 in Australia
- 1st place at the FIH Champions Trophy 1986 in Pakistan
- 1st place at the FIH Champions Trophy 1987 in the Netherlands
- 1st place at the FIH Champions Trophy 1988 in Pakistan
- 3rd place at the FIH Champions Trophy 1989 in Germany / Berlin
- 3rd place at the FIH Champions Trophy 1990 in Australia
- 1st place at the FIH Champions Trophy 1991 in Germany / Berlin
- 1st place at the FIH Champions Trophy 1992 in Pakistan
- 2nd place at the FIH Champions Trophy 1993 in Malaysia
- 2nd place at the FIH Champions Trophy 1994 in Pakistan
- 1st place at the FIH Champions Trophy 1995 in Germany / Berlin
- 3rd place at the FIH Champions Trophy 1996 in India
- 1st place at the FIH Champions Trophy 1997 in Australia
- 2nd place at the FIH Champions Trophy 2000 in the Netherlands
- 1st place at the 2001 FIH Champions Trophy in the Netherlands
- 2nd place at the FIH Champions Trophy 2002 in Germany / Cologne
- 2nd place at the FIH Champions Trophy 2006 in Spain
- 1st place at the FIH Champions Trophy 2007 in Malaysia
- 2nd place at the FIH Champions Trophy 2009 in Australia
- 1st place at the FIH Champions Trophy 2014 in India
- 3rd place at the FIH Champions Trophy 2016 in England
Successes indoor hockey
Indoor world championships
- 1st place at the Indoor Hockey World Championship 2003 in Germany (against Poland)
- 1st place at the Indoor Hockey World Championship 2007 in Austria (against Poland)
- 1st place at the Indoor Hockey World Championship 2011 in Poland (against Poland)
- 3rd place at the Indoor Hockey World Championship 2015 in Germany (against Iran)
- 2nd place at the Indoor Hockey World Championship 2018 in Germany / Berlin (against Austria)
European Indoor Championships
Record winner at European championships (16 titles at 19 European championships)
- 1st place at the European Championship 1974 in Germany / Berlin
- 1st place at the European Championship 1976 in the Netherlands
- 1st place at the 1980 European Championships in Switzerland
- 1st place at the European Championship 1984 in Scotland
- 1st place at the European Championships in Austria in 1988
- 1st place at the European Championships in England in 1991
- 1st place at the European Championship 1994 in Germany / Bonn
- 1st place at the 1997 European Championships in France
- 1st place at the 1999 European Championships in Denmark
- 1st place at the 2001 European Championships in Switzerland
- 1st place at the 2003 European Championships in Spain
- 1st place at the European Championship 2006 in the Netherlands
- 2nd place at the European Championship 2008 in Russia
- 1st place at the European Championship 2012 in Germany / Leipzig
- 1st place at the 2014 European Championships in Austria
- 1st place at the European Championship 2016 in the Czech Republic
- 3rd place at the European Championships 2018 in Belgium
- 1st place at the European Championship 2020 in Germany / Berlin
Other successes and awards
- " Team of the Year " 1963, 1972 , 1992 and 2008
National coach
A chronological overview of all trainers since 1969:
Term of office | Trainer |
---|---|
1969-1973 | Horst Wein |
1974-1990 | Klaus Kleiter |
1990-2000 | Paul Lissek |
2000-2006 | Bernhard Peters |
2006-2015 | Markus Weise |
2015-2016 | Valentin Altenburg (acting) |
2016-2019 | Stefan Kermas |
Since 2019 | Quays al Saadi |
Olympic squad
For the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio , coach Altenburg appointed the following squad (as of July 14, 2016)
No. | Playername | vintage | Country Sp. | TW / C | society |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Nicolas Jacobi | 1987 | 106 | TW | Uhlenhorster HC |
2 | Mathias Mueller | 1992 | 48 | Red and White Cologne | |
3 | Linus Butt | 1982 | 163 | Crefelder HTC | |
6th | Martin Häner | 1988 | 180 | Berlin HC | |
7th | Moritz Trompertz | 1995 | 15th | Red and White Cologne | |
8th | Mats Grambusch | 1992 | 74 | Red and White Cologne | |
9 | Oskar Deecke | 1986 | 213 | Crefelder HTC | |
10 | Christopher Wesley | 1987 | 153 | Nuremberg HTC | |
12 | Timm heartbreak | 1997 | 30th | Uhlenhorst Mülheim | |
13 | Tobias Hauke | 1987 | 291 | Harvestehuder THC | |
15th | Tom Grambusch | 1995 | 12 | Red and White Cologne | |
17th | Christopher Rühr | 1993 | 78 | Red and White Cologne | |
18th | Oliver Korn | 1984 | 197 | Uhlenhorster HC | |
20th | Martin Zwicker | 1987 | 172 | Berlin HC | |
21st | Moritz Fürste | 1984 | 280 | Uhlenhorster HC | |
23 | Florian Fuchs | 1991 | 157 | Uhlenhorster HC | |
27 | Timur Oruz | 1994 | 36 | Red and White Cologne | |
29 | Niklas waves | 1994 | 53 | Crefelder HTC |
For the 2012 Olympic Games in London , Trainer Weise appointed the following squad. (As of August 2012)
No. | Playername | vintage | Country Sp. | TW / C | society |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
4th | Maximilian Muller | 1987 | 157 | Nuremberg HTC | |
6th | Martin Häner | 1988 | 88 | Berlin HC | |
7th | Oskar Deecke | 1986 | 120 | Crefelder HTC | |
8th | Christopher Wesley | 1987 | 61 | Nuremberg HTC | |
9 | Moritz Fürste | 1984 | 188 | Uhlenhorster HC | |
13 | Tobias Hauke | 1987 | 181 | Harvestehuder THC | |
14th | Jan Philipp Rabente | 1987 | 171 | Uhlenhorst Mülheim | |
15th | Benjamin Wess | 1985 | 139 | Red and White Cologne | |
17th | Timo Wess | 1982 | 254 | Red and White Cologne | |
18th | Oliver Korn | 1984 | 120 | Uhlenhorster HC | |
19th | Christopher Zeller | 1984 | 168 | Red and White Cologne | |
21st | Max Weinhold | 1982 | 87 | TW | Red and White Cologne |
22nd | Matthias Witthaus | 1982 | 354 | Mannheimer HC | |
23 | Florian Fuchs | 1991 | 60 | Uhlenhorster HC | |
25th | Philipp Zeller | 1983 | 188 | Red and White Cologne | |
26th | Thilo Stralkowski | 1987 | 45 | Uhlenhorst Mülheim | |
X | Linus Butt | 1987 | X | Crefelder HTC | |
X | Nicolas Jacobi | 1987 | X | TW | Uhlenhorster HC |
See also
Web links
- Website of the German Hockey Association
- 2014 World Cup, 15 European champions included, Olympic champion Moritz Fürste not in the squad. In: national teams. hockey.de, May 18, 2014, accessed on August 3, 2016 .
- World Cup 2014 The national coach on the injured status, the World Cup preparation and his team. In: national teams. hockey.de, April 29, 2014, accessed on August 3, 2016 .
- EM 2007 11th European Men's Championship. hockey.de, August 2007, accessed on August 3, 2016 .
Remarks
- ^ FIH Men's and Women's Hero World Ranking. In: Outdoor. FIH, accessed December 28, 2019 .
- ^ FIH Men's and Women's Hero World Ranking. In: Indoor. FIH, accessed December 28, 2019 .
- ↑ WM HISTORY. Retrieved July 21, 2016 .
- ↑ Dieter Schuermann: Our world championship team. hockey.de, March 9, 2002, accessed August 3, 2016 .
- ↑ Team Germany. hockey.de, 2006, accessed on August 3, 2016 .
- ↑ No more surprises in the 18-man squad of national coach Markus Weise. In: 12th World Championship. hockey.de, January 2010, accessed on August 3, 2016 .
- ↑ 10th European Championship. hockey.de, August 2005, accessed on August 3, 2016 .
- ↑ 12th European Championship. hockey.de, August 2009, accessed on August 3, 2016 .
- ↑ 13th European Championship. hockey.de, August 2011, accessed on August 3, 2016 .
- ↑ 14th European Championship. hockey.de, August 2013, accessed on August 3, 2016 .
- ↑ 15th European Championship. hockey.de, August 2015, accessed on August 3, 2016 .
- ↑ hockey.de
- ^ The 1st Indoor Hockey World Championship Leipzig 2003. hockey.de, February 2003, accessed on September 6, 2016 . , Indoor Hockey World Cup Leipzig. FIH , February 2003, accessed September 6, 2016 .
- ↑ Indoor Hockey World Cup Vienna 2007. FIH , February 2007, accessed on September 6, 2016 .
- ↑ Indoor Hockey World Cup Poznan 2011. FIH , February 2011, accessed on September 6, 2016 .
- ↑ Indoor Hockey World Cup Leipzig 2015. FIH , February 2015, accessed on September 6, 2016 .
- ↑ Indoor Hockey World Cup Berlin 2018. FIH , February 11, 2018, accessed on February 11, 2018 .
- ↑ 29.01. Germany – Scotland 11: 4; 01/30 Germany – France 7: 7; 01/30 Germany – Spain 8: 6; 31/01 Germany – Poland 14: 3; 31/01 Germany – Austria 4-0. (Source: Hockey.de). Players: Dirk Brinkmann, Ulrich Mayer, Michael Hilgers , Stefan Saliger , Volker Fried , Thomas Gunst, Andreas Keller , goalkeeper Tobias Frank, goalkeeper Christian Schliemann, captain Ekkhard Schmidt-Opper , Andreas Mollandin. Trainer: Klaus Kleiter . France wins the silver medal, Austria bronze. (Source: rrk-online.de).
- ↑ February 22 - February 24, 1991 in Birmingham: February 22. Germany – Spain 13-0; 02/23 Germany – Switzerland 11: 7; 02/23 Germany – Scotland 8: 1; 02/23 Germany – Poland 5: 2; 24.02. Germany – England 7-3. Players: Stefan Blöcher (SC Frankfurt 1880), Thomas Brinkmann (Uhlenhorst Mülheim), Volker Fried (Rot-Weiss Köln), Christopher Gerber (Limburger HC), Holm Gregoire (Berliner HC), Michael Hilgers (Gladbacher HTC), Andreas Keller ( Berliner HC), Michael Knauth (Limburger HC), Oliver Kurtz (Rot-Weiss Köln), Michael Metz (Dürkheimer HC), Frederick Ness (Club an der Alster), Stefan Saliger (Harvestehuder THC). Coach: Paul Lissek . (Source: Hockey.de).
- ↑ The substitute goalkeeper is Tobias Walter . In the event of injury and / or illness, the goalkeeper may be replaced. The substitute goalkeeper does not receive a P accreditation if two field players have been nominated as P-accredited athletes (source: "Appendix 1" to "P Alternate Athletes" of the " L ate A thlete R eplacement"; FIH Competition Regulations Olympic Games, Rio 2016, P. 35).
- ↑ a b c d P-accredited field players