Dzsenifer Marozsán

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Dzsenifer Marozsán
2019-05-17 football, women, UEFA Women's Champions League, Olympique Lyonnais - FC Barcelona StP 0641 LR10 by Stepro.jpg
Dzsenifer Marozsán (2019)
Personnel
birthday April 18, 1992
place of birth BudapestHungary
size 171 cm
position midfield
Juniors
Years station
1996-2003 DJK Burbach
2003-2007 1. FC Saarbrücken
Women
Years station Games (goals) 1
2007-2009 1. FC Saarbrücken 38 (13)
2009-2016 1. FFC Frankfurt 133 (41)
2016– Olympique Lyon 60 (28)
National team
Years selection Games (goals) 2
2004-2007 Germany U-15 12 (13)
2007-2008 Germany U-17 21 (21)
2009–2012 Germany U-19 12 (13)
2009–2012 Germany U-20 17 0(6)
2010– Germany 98 (32)
1 Only league games are given.
As of November 16, 2019

2 As of March 4, 2020

Marozsán in the 2015 DFB Cup round of 16

Dzsenifer Marozsán [ ˈdʒɛnifɛr ˈmɒroʒaːn ] (born April 18, 1992 in Budapest , Hungary ) is a German soccer player . She has been playing for the senior national team since 2010 . From 2009 to 2016 she was active with Bundesliga club 1. FFC Frankfurt , and since 2016 she has been under contract in France with Olympique Lyon . From 2017 to 2019 she was voted Germany's Player of the Year .

Career

societies

Marozsán was born in Budapest . Her parents moved with her to Saarbrücken-Burbach in Saarland in 1996 after her father János , a four-time Hungarian national soccer player , signed a contract with 1. FC Saarbrücken . She started her career at DJK Burbach , where she played in a boys' team up to the D-youth . Then she also moved to the youth department of 1. FC Saarbrücken. In 2007 Marozsán, although still eligible to play for the B youth team, made the leap into the first team, in which she became a regular player. She played her first Bundesliga game at the age of 15 - making her the youngest Bundesliga player to date - on August 19, 2007 (first matchday) in a 1-1 away game against SC Freiburg with a substitute for Josephine Henning in the 77th minute . She scored her first Bundesliga goal on August 26, 2007 (2nd match day) in a 2-2 home game against TSV Crailsheim with the goal to make it 2-1 in the 76th minute, two minutes after being substituted for Sarah Karnbach . With her team she reached the cup final in 2008 , which was lost to 1. FFC Frankfurt with 1: 5. For the 2009/10 season , Marozsán moved to league competitor 1. FFC Frankfurt , with whom she won the DFB Cup twice (2011, 2014) and the Champions League once (2015).

For the season 2016/17 changed Marozsán to Olympique Lyon . Only ten months later she had won the triple (championship, national and European cup) with OL and was also awarded the trophy of the players' union UNFP as the season's best player in Division 1 Féminine . She had initially extended her contract with Olympique, which she described as "the world's best club with the best players in the world", until June 2020, and now until June 2023.

National team

For the U-15 national team , she scored four goals in five games. Two weeks after her debut in the U-15 national team, she made her first appearance in the U-17 national team . In the 8-0 win against Denmark , she scored three goals. She took part in the Nordic Cup and took third place with the DFB selection. In 2008 she became European champion with the team and was the top scorer in the tournament with two goals. At the U-17 World Cup that was held in New Zealand for the first time in the same year, she played all tournament games and was also the top scorer there with a total of six goals. As the second best player in the tournament, she was awarded the "Silver Ball" behind the Japanese Mana Iwabuchi. Remarkable: In 21 international matches for the U-17 national team, she scored 21 goals.

On March 9, 2009 she played her first international match for the U-19 national team as part of the ten-nation tournament in La Manga, southern Spain, against the selection of Italy, and scored her first goal in this age group in this game. On October 28, 2009, she completed her first international match for the U-20 national team against Sweden's U-23 national team in Barsinghausen . On August 1, 2010, Marozsán was able to celebrate the title win with her team at the U-20 World Cup in Germany by beating Nigeria 2-0 in the final.

Almost three months later, on October 28, 2010, she made her senior national team debut in the game against Australia . Marozsán was initially nominated for the extended World Cup squad, suffered a ruptured ligament in his right knee during training on May 1, 2011, which meant that she was canceled for the 2011 World Cup . On February 15, 2012, she scored her first international goal in a 5-0 win in the European Championship qualifier with a 1-0 win over Turkey . With the DFB selection, she won the Algarve Cup on March 7, 2012 in Faro with a 4: 3 in the final against the selection of Japan .

In summer 2012 she took part in the U-20 World Cup for the second time . She reached the final with the team again and was the first player to do so. After five wins without conceding a goal, including a 3-0 win in the preliminary round against the United States ' national team, the final was lost to the same opponent 0-1. Marozsán was awarded the "Golden Ball" as the best player of the tournament and is now the record player for the U-20 team with 17 international matches together with Marina Hegering , Bianca Schmidt and Kim Kulig .

At the European Championships in Sweden from July 10 to 28, 2013 , she played all three group matches , the quarter-finals against the Italian team , the semi-finals on July 24 against the host Swedes , in which she scored 1-0 in the 33rd minute contributed to the move into the final, and the very thing that led 1-0 against the selection of Norway to win the title.

On November 27, 2013 she scored four goals in an international match for the first time in the 8-0 World Cup qualifier against Croatia in Osijek, scoring the first, third, fifth and seventh goals. In March 2014 she won the Algarve Cup again with the German team . She was named the best player of the tournament and was the top scorer with four goals at the same time.

On May 24, 2015 she was appointed to the final squad for the 2015 World Cup in Canada by national coach Silvia Neid . Despite an ankle injury sustained in training, she was used in five games at this tournament, in which Germany finished fourth. Her goal to make it 4-1 in the round of 16 against Sweden was later voted “Goal of the Month” by the viewers of the ARD sports show.

In 2016, Marozsán was accepted into the national team for the women's Olympic football tournament in Brazil and won the gold medal there. In the 2-1 win in the final against Sweden , she scored once and prepared a goal. For winning the gold medal, she received the silver bay leaf on November 1, 2016 .

On October 21, 2016, she was appointed captain of the national team. At the 2017 European Championships in the Netherlands, Germany was eliminated in the quarter-finals against Denmark. Marozsán resigned from her role as captain at the beginning of 2019, and was succeeded by Alexandra Popp . Regardless of this, she was appointed to the German team for the 2019 World Cup by national coach Martina Voss-Tecklenburg .

In 2019 she was named Germany's Footballer of the Year for the third time in a row with 159 out of 477 votes , ahead of Alexandra Popp and Sara Däbritz .

successes

National team

societies

Awards

Exhibition in the Museum of European Cultures

Web links

Commons : Dzsenifer Marozsán  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Michael Burkhardt: Dzsenifer Marozsan: 6 facts you need to know about the German soccer star. In: 90min. Minute Media, April 10, 2019, accessed on April 10, 2019 (German).
  2. ^ 1. FFC Frankfurt: Dzsenifer Marozsan moves to Olympique Lyon: Marozsan moves to France . Sport1.de , May 3, 2016.
  3. Article UNFP trophies: Dzsenifer Marozsán best player… from May 15, 2017 at footofeminin.fr
  4. according to the report of December 7, 2017 at footofeminin.fr
  5. ^ Extensions for Sarah Bouhaddi and Dzsenifer Marozsan. Olympique Lyonnais, June 22, 2020, accessed August 25, 2020.
  6. U-17 female player profile ( memento from May 17, 2015 in the web archive archive.today ) on dfb.de.
  7. ^ U-19 player profile ( memento from May 20, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) on dfb.de.
  8. U-20 player profile ( memento from August 5, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) on dfb.de.
  9. News report on dfb.de
  10. Envy appoints final squad for the World Cup in Canada on dfb.de, May 24, 2015
  11. Women's Olympic Football Tournament; Germany, players on FIFA.com, accessed August 17, 2016.
  12. Marozsan makes German gold dream come true on FIFA.com, August 19, 2016, accessed on August 20, 2016.
  13. Press release from the Office of the Federal President of November 1, 2016: Awarding of the Silver Laurel Leaf. Retrieved March 31, 2017 .
  14. dfb.de: "Marozsán new captain of the DFB women"
  15. New captain Popp leads DFB women into the France game. Retrieved February 19, 2019 .
  16. Dzsenifer Marozsan again Footballer of the Year. In: kicker.de. July 28, 2019, accessed on July 28, 2019 (German).
  17. News from July 30, 2013 on uefa.com
  18. Report on dfb .de
  19. Sportschau: Goal of the Month June 2015