Frenkie Schinkel

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Frenk Schinkel
WahlNÖ2013 Frenk Schinkels 5154.JPG
Frenkie Schinkels in March 2013
Personnel
birthday January 9, 1963
place of birth RotterdamNetherlands
size 168 cm
position midfield player
Juniors
Years station
until 1980 Feyenoord Rotterdam
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1981-1982 Halmstads BK 34 0(2)
1982-1983 AZ Alkmaar 15 0(0)
1983-1985 Excelsior Rotterdam 11 0(3)
1985-1986 Salzburg AK 1914 19 0(3)
1986-1987 Viennese sports club 27 0(4)
1987-1988 FK Austria Vienna 34 0(2)
1988 SV Spittal / Drau 2 0(0)
1989-1990 SK VOEST Linz 43 0(6)
1991-1993 VSE St. Pölten 80 (11)
1993 SV Austria Salzburg 7 0(0)
1994 VSE St. Pölten 16 0(0)
1994 FK Austria Vienna 0 0(0)
1995 SV Gerasdorf 8 0(0)
1995-1998 FC Sturm 19 St. Pölten
2000-2003 SV Karlstetten / Neidling
2003-2004 SV Hollenburg
2004-2006 SV Ratzersdorf
2006-2007 SC Harland
2007 FCU Winklarn
2007-2010 ATUS Velden 17 0(1)
2010– SV Karlstetten / Neidling 0 0(0)
2010– SV Karlstetten / Neidling (Res.) 3 0(2)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1987 Austria OT 2 0(0)
1992-1993 Austria 6 0(1)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1995 SC Stattersdorf
1995 SC Harland
1995-1998 FC Sturm 19 St. Pölten
2001 Kremser SC
2002 ASK Kottingbrunn
2002-2004 SKN St. Pölten
2004-2006 Vienna Austria
2007-2008 1. FC Vöcklabruck
2008-2009 SK Austria Carinthia
2010 First Vienna FC
2012– Kremser SC (team manager)
2013 Kremser SC (interim)
1 Only league games are given.
Frenk Schinkels with a fan scarf from SK VÖEST Linz , for which he played in the 2nd division in the spring of 1989 and in the 89/90 season

Frenk "Frenkie" Schinkels (born January 9, 1963 in Rotterdam ) is a Dutch - Austrian soccer coach and former soccer player .

Career as a football player

societies

Frenk Schinkels completed his football training in the Netherlands, where he started at Feyenoord Rotterdam at the age of eight and signed his first contract as a professional player at the age of 16. With his then coach Jan Mak , the midfielder went to the Swedish club Halmstads BK in early 1981 and returned to the Netherlands two years later. Schinkels played in the Dutch Eredivisie with AZ Alkmaar and Excelsior Rotterdam until he insulted a referee at a game in 1985 and kicked him in the leg. Because of the assault, he was banned for eight months and fired from his club.

Hugo Hovenkamp , a former player at Wacker Innsbruck , offered him to the Tyroleans in the summer of 1985. However, they decided on Hansi Müller as playmaker; In the fall of 1985, Hovenkamp finally brought Schinkels to the then first division club Salzburger AK 1914 . In terms of sport, things picked up again for Schinkel in the years that followed. From SAK in 1914 he moved to the Wiener Sport-Club and a year later to Wiener Austria . With Austria he was runner-up behind Rapid in 1987/88 and made 31 league appearances. In July 1987, Schinkels took on Austrian citizenship ; on July 28, 1987 he made his debut in the Austrian Olympic team in a test match against a Bavarian selection. In the following season, under the new coach August Starek, he only made three Bundesliga appearances and hopes of a competitive debut in the national team were dashed with the appointment of Josef Hickersberger as the new national coach. In the autumn of 1988 Schinkels moved to SV Spittal / Drau for two games, and in the spring of 1989 he signed a contract with SK VOEST Linz .

In 1991 Schinkels went to VSE St. Pölten , where he developed into a leading player in the Austrian Bundesliga . In 1993 he became Austrian runner- up with Austria Salzburg , and in 1994 he briefly returned to VSE St. Pölten. In the summer of 1994 he received another performance-related contract with Vienna Austria, but did not make a single championship appearance under coach Egon Coordes . This ended his second career with the Viennese. In 1995 he finally moved to SV Gerasdorf in the 2nd division, where he ended his career as a professional footballer.

Schinkel admitted in 2016 that he took doping substances during his time at Alkmaar .

National team

On March 25, 1992 he made his debut under coach Ernst Happel in the international match against Hungary in Budapest for the ÖFB . Schinkels played a total of six international matches for the Austrian national team from 1992 to 1993 . Its sporting highlight of the team, he marked on 27 May 1992 of scarce 2: 3 defeat of the Austrians in Sittard against the Netherlands when he scored the first goal in the 89th minute with a header against his former countrymen. Schinkels played his last game for Austria on March 27, 1993 when he lost to France in Vienna.

Career as a coach

Successful years of apprenticeship in the lower grades

After the end of his active career, Schinkels acquired the highest coaching license in the football business with the UEFA professional license. For a while he still acted as a player-coach at the lower class SC Stattersdorf, before he accepted his first pure coaching position at Kremser SC in 1995. Although he led the club to the championship title of the Lower Austrian Regional League, he was dismissed at the end of the season after a dispute with President Herbert Steininger. He then trained again as a player-coach for the club FC Sturm 19 St. Pölten, with whom he won the championship title of the 2nd regional league west in the 1996/97 season and thus rose to the 1st regional league and established himself there until he was eliminated in 1998 . Later followed in the Regionalliga Ost by ASK Kottingbrunn (2000/01) and from 2002 SKN St. Pölten (fourth place in 2004 and Cup quarter-finals after victories over Wörgl, SW Bregenz and Austria Salzburg).

Schinkels made a name for himself as a football expert at the TV station Premiere Austria and acted as the organizer of the St. Pölten football camp for players and goalkeepers.

From chief scout to master trainer

In December 2004, Frank Stronach brought Schinkels to Vienna Austria as chief scout . On May 6, 2005, he succeeded the dismissed supervisor duo Günter Kronsteiner and Lars Søndergaard as a trainer . For the time being, he shared his duties with the newly appointed team manager Peter Stöger . Four weeks after its premiere, he achieved his first success on the supervisor's bench by winning the trophy in 2005.

The 2005/06 season began for Schinkels with a short negative run for Austria. After a successful final third of the championship, Austria won their 23rd championship title on May 6, 2006 with a 2-1 victory over FC Wacker Innsbruck . For Schinkels this was the first championship and his greatest success in his coaching career up to that point.

After the total sale of the championship team and the worst start of a champion in the history of the Bundesliga so far, Schinkels was given a leave of absence on October 23, 2006 together with sports director Peter Stöger. As before his engagement with Wiener Austria, he was now again an expert for the TV broadcaster Premiere. On November 7th, 2006 he was co-opted into the supervisory board of the SKN St. Pölten and was an advisor to the board. On May 22, 2007 Schinkels took over the coaching job at the then regional league club 1. FC Vöcklabruck , with whom he was autumn champion of the 2007/08 season . During the winter break, he separated from the club and became sports director of the Bundesliga club SK Austria Kärnten . On February 24, 2008 he took over from Klaus Schmidt as coach for the remainder of the 2007/08 season. The team lost their first game under Schinkels in their own stadium with 0-2 goals against SK Rapid Vienna . In the end, however, in the penultimate round he managed to stay in the almost impossible class with a goalless draw against SV Ried .

In the 2008/09 season he wanted to lead the sporting fortunes of the club as a manager; a young coach should join the team. Schinkels, who signed a contract until June 30, 2013, had to remain a coach; he formed the link to the board. After the team had achieved only one win and three draws in 16 rounds in the 2009/10 season , Schinkels offered the board of SK Austria Kärnten to resign on November 21, 2009 after a 3-0 home defeat against SV Mattersburg was adopted without a dissenting vote.

On April 26, 2010 First Vienna FC signed Schinkels as coach for the remaining six championship games and a possible relegation. At the end of August 2010 he was given a leave of absence with immediate effect.

At the beginning of December 2012 Schinkels was hired as team manager of the fifth-class Kremser SC with games in the 2nd LLW Lower Austria . At the end of March he was the interim coach of the fifth division team for around two months until a new coach was found in Christian Karl. After the new head coach took office, Frenkie Schinkels stayed with the club as team manager.

Achievements and Awards

Success as a player

Success as a trainer

Awards

  • 2006: Sports honor mark of the city of St. Pölten

Private life

Frenk Schinkels has a son with his second wife Romana. He has four daughters from his first marriage to Esther, whom he had known since his youth in the Netherlands. Esther, his childhood sweetheart, moved to Austria with him in 1985. The couple married in 1987 after the birth of their first daughter. In 1995 Esther Schinkels was killed in a traffic accident.

Frenk Schinkels lives in St. Pölten.

Television appearances

Frenk Schinkels took part in the 7th season of the ORF entertainment program Dancing Stars , in which he made it to the finals with professional dancer Roswitha Wieland as a partner, where he had to admit defeat to Petra Frey (with professional dancer Vadim Garbuzov ). As part of the European Football Championship 2012, he analyzed, alternating with other former football professionals (such as Herbert Prohaska ), European Championship games for ORF. In 2012/13/14 he was co-host for Puls 4 for Champions League games.

Schinkels also tried in between to start a musical career with Marlena Martinelli. However, there was no success.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Application dates from the 2008/09 season
  2. Frenkie Schinkels on this offense at Willkommen Österreich on June 14, 2012 (from 8:13 am), accessed on June 11, 2013
  3. ^ Doping confession by Frenkie Schinkels sportnet.at July 28, 2016
  4. Courier : Frenk Schinkels has resigned ( Memento of November 24, 2009 in the Internet Archive ) (accessed on November 22, 2009)
  5. SK Austria Kärnten: Frenkie Schinkels is no longer the trainer of SK Austria Kelag Kärnten  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (accessed on November 22, 2009)@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.sk-austriakaernten.at  
  6. Frenkie Schinkels should save Vienna (accessed April 26, 2010)
  7. Christian Karl takes over as a trainer in Krems , accessed on June 11, 2013
  8. http://www.frenkieschinkels.at/privat/familie.html