National coach (DFB)
As national coach (before 1945 Empire coach ) called the German Football Association (DFB), the responsible coach of the men's or women's national soccer team .
The first Empire coach Otto Mink , in 1926 first as a " part-time " appointed coach. Until 1928, the game committee of the DFB determined the squad and line-up, but the team captain determined the tactics.
According to the DFB statutes, the national coach must have a coaching license as a football teacher . Since Franz Beckenbauer, who was responsible for the men's national team, did not have a trainer's license, the designation of team manager was introduced for him . This was later also transferred to Rudi Völler . Your actual assistants ( Horst Köppel and Holger Osieck or Michael Skibbe ) then officially acted as national coaches.
In contrast to the players, the national coach does not have to have German citizenship . To date, however, there has not yet been a foreign national coach.
With the exception of Steffi Jones , no national coach has yet been dismissed from the DFB. Jupp Derwall , Erich Ribbeck and Rudi Völler resigned prematurely after the team's poor performance at European championships (each eliminated after the preliminary round), while Berti Vogts resigned, after having only reached and joined the quarter-finals at the 1998 World Cup as European champion and second in the world rankings two friendlies in September against Malta (124th in the FIFA world rankings ) , among others, did not show a convincing performance. Joachim Löw asked the DFB in March 2021 to be able to end his contract , which was valid until the 2022 World Cup, after the 2021 European Championship , which the DFB allowed.
Men
No. |
Name (italic = assistant coach 1 ) |
from 2 | until 2 | Term of office (days) |
Sp | S. | U | N | Gates | Diff. | Pt. | Quota 3 | Victories | Newbies | successes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
no trainer | Apr 5, 1908 | June 20, 1926 | 58 | 16 | 12th | 30th | 119: 146 | - 27 | 60 | 1.03 | 27.59% | 194 | |||
1. |
Otto Nerz (Reichstrainer) Sepp Herberger (1932–1936) Ferdinand Fabra (1935–1936) |
4 | October 31, 1926October 17, 1936 5 | 3,640 | 75 | 44 | 11 | 20th | 204: 124 | + 80 | 143 | 1.91 | 61.11% | 138 | 3rd place WM 1934 |
2. |
Sepp Herberger (Reich trainer) Emil Melcher (1936–1942) |
5 | Nov 15, 1936Nov 22, 1942 | 2,199 | 65 | 40 | 12th | 13 | 204: 93 | + | 111132 | 2.03 | 61.54% | 82 | |
Sepp Herberger (national coach) Hennes Weisweiler (1954–1955) Helmut Schön (1955–1964) |
Nov 22, 1950 | June 7, 1964 | 4,947 | 97 | 52 | 14th | 31 | 219: 146 | + 73 | 170 | 1.75 | 53.61% | 134 | World Champion 1954 , 4th place in the 1958 World Cup | |
Sepp Herberger (overall) | Nov 15, 1936 | June 7, 1964 | 7.146 | 162 | 92 | 26 | 44 | 423: 239 | + | 184302 | 1.86 | 56.79% | 216 | ||
3. |
Helmut Schön Dettmar Cramer (1964–1966) Udo Lattek (1966–1970) Jupp Derwall (1970–1978) |
Nov 4, 1964 | June 21, 1978 | 4,977 | 139 | 87 | 31 | 21 | 292: 107 | + | 185292 | 2.10 | 62.59% | 98 | Vice World Champion 1966 , 3rd place World Cup 1970 , European Champion 1972 , World Champion 1974 , Vice European Champion 1976 |
4th |
Jupp Derwall Erich Ribbeck |
Oct 11, 1978 | June 20, 1984 | 2,079 | 67 | 44 | 12th | 11 | 144: 60 | + 84 | 144 | 2.15 | 65.67% | 46 | European champion 1980 , vice world champion 1982 |
5. |
Franz Beckenbauer (Team Principal) Horst Köppel (1984–1987) Holger Osieck (1987–1990) |
Sep 12 1984 | July 8, 1990 | 2.125 | 66 | 34 | 20th | 12th | 107: 61 | + 46 | 122 | 1.85 | 51.52% | 40 | Vice World Champion 1986 , European Championship semi-finals 1988 , World Champion 1990 |
6th |
Berti Vogts Rainer Bonhof |
Aug 29, 1990 | Sep 5 1998 | 2,929 | 102 | 66 | 24 | 12th | 206: 86 | + | 120222 | 2.18 | 64.71% | 56 | Vice European Champion 1992 , US Cup Winner 1993 , European Champion 1996 |
7th |
Erich Ribbeck Uli Stielike (1998–2000) Horst Hrubesch (only EM 2000) |
Oct 10, 1998 | June 20, 2000 | 619 | 24 | 10 | 6th | 8th | 42:31 | + 11 | 36 | 1.50 | 41.67% | 15th | |
8th. |
Rudi Völler (Team Principal) Michael Skibbe |
Aug 16, 2000 | June 24, 2004 | 1,408 | 53 | 29 | 11 | 13 | 109: 57 | + 52 | 98 | 1.85 | 54.72% | 26 | Vice World Champion 2002 |
9. |
Jürgen Klinsmann Joachim Loew |
July 26, 2004 | July 8, 2006 | 712 | 34 | 20th | 8th | 6th | 81:43 | + 38 | 68 | 2.00 | 58.82% | 12th | 3rd place Confederations Cup 2005 , 3rd place World Cup 2006 |
10. |
Joachim Löw Hansi Flick (2006–2014) Thomas Schneider (2014–2018) Marcus Sorg (2016–2021) |
Aug 16, 2006 | June 29, 2021 | 5 431 | 198 7 | 124 | 40 | 34 | 467: 200 | + | 267412 | 2.08 | 62.94% | 113 | Vice European Champion 2008 , 3rd place World Cup 2010 , EM semi-finals 2012 , World Champion 2014 , EM semi-finals 2016 , winner of the Confederations Cup 2017 |
11. | Hansi Flick | Sep 2 2021 | |||||||||||||
Total 6 (as of June 15, 2021) | 977 | 566 | 201 | 210 | 2194: 1152 | +1042 | 1899 | 1.94 | 57.93% | 954 | |||||
including penalty shootouts | 8th | 6th | 2 | 34:29 | 75% |
Remarks:
Women
No. |
Name (italic = assistant trainer 1 ) |
from 1 | until 1 | Term of office (days) |
Sp | S. | U | N | Gates | Tord. | Quota 2 | Pt. | successes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. |
Gero Bisanz Tina Theune-Meyer |
Nov 10, 1982 | July 25, 1996 | 5,006 | 127 | 83 | 17th | 27 | 343: 122 | +221 | 2.09 | 266 | European champion in 1989 , 1991 and 1995 ; Vice world champion 1995 |
2. |
Tina Theune-Meyer Silvia Neid |
Aug 27, 1996 | June 19, 2005 | 3,218 | 135 | 93 | 18th | 24 | 380: 113 | +267 | 2.20 | 297 | World champion 2003 ; European Champion 1997 , 2001 and 2005 ; Bronze medal Olympic Games 2000 and 2004 |
3. |
Silvia Neid Ulrike Ballweg |
Sep 1 2005 | Aug 20, 2016 | 4,006 | 169 | 125 | 22nd | 22nd | 526: 106 | +420 | 2.35 | 397 | World champion 2007 ; European Champion 2009 and 2013 ; Gold medal Olympic Games 2016 , bronze medal Olympic Games 2008 |
4th |
Steffi Jones Markus Högner |
16 Sep 2016 | March 7, 2018 | 543 | 22nd | 13 | 4th | 5 | 51:20 | +31 | 1.95 | 43 | |
5. |
Horst Hrubesch Ulrike Ballweg |
Apr 7, 2018 | Nov 13, 2018 | 220 | 8th | 7th | 1 | 0 | 29: 5 | +24 | 2.75 | 22nd | Interim trainer |
6th |
Martina Voss-Tecklenburg Britta Carlson , Thomas Nörenberg |
28 Feb 2019 | still active | 854
(active) |
26 | 21 | 2 | 3 | 81:13 | +68 | 2.5 | 65 | |
Total 3 (as of June 10, 2021) | 487 | 342 | 64 | 81 | 1410: 379 | +1031 | 2.24 | 1090 | |||||
including penalty shootouts | 4th | 3 | - | 1 | 16:14 | 75% |
Remarks:
Trivia
- Most of the previous national and Reich coaches were national players themselves before. Among the men's coaches, this does not apply to Otto Nerz , Erich Ribbeck and Joachim Löw , who, however, played four times for the German U-21s . Of the female national coaches of the women's national team, only Tina Theune was not active in the national team herself.
- The highest number of international matches as a player and coach was achieved by Berti Vogts (96 as a player, 102 as a coach) and Joachim Löw (all as a coach) with 198 games each and Silvia Neid (111 as a player, 169 as a coach) with 280 Play with the women.
- Under the direction of Silvia Neid and Joachim Löw, over 100 games were won each.
- Silvia Neid was the only national coach to win the title at her first world championship. She is the only coach in the world whose team has become a continental champion, world champion and Olympic champion.
- Berti Vogt's men and women interim coach Horst Hrubesch had the best points quota ahead of current national coach Martina Voss-Tecklenburg (as of June 23, 2021).
- For women and men, Germany has the fewest national team coaches among the nations that have been world and / or European champions at least once.
See also
- National soccer team of the GDR / coach
- National football coach (Switzerland)
- ÖFB team boss (Austria)
- List of national soccer coaches with at least 100 international matches
Individual evidence
- ^ DFB: Rejection to Louis van Gaal. In: tz.de. tz , June 23, 2010, accessed on March 23, 2013 .
- ↑ dfb.de: Joachim Löw ends his job as national coach after the EURO
- ↑ Herberger's international match statistics corrected. In: dfb.de. German Football Association , April 17, 2019, accessed on April 18, 2019 .