Irene Fuhrmann

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Irene Fuhrmann
20180912 UEFA Women's Champions League 2019 SKN - PSG Irene Fuhrmann DSC 5001.jpg
Irene Fuhrmann (2018)
Personnel
birthday September 23, 1980
place of birth ViennaAustria
size 165 cm
Women
Years station Games (goals) 1
2000-2002 USC Landhaus Vienna
2002-2003 Innsbruck AC
2003-2008 USC Landhaus Vienna
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
2002-2008 Austria women 22 (3)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2008-2011 Austria Women (Co-Trainer)
2011-2017 Austria women U-19
2017-2020 Austria Women (Co-Trainer)
2020– Austria women
1 Only league games are given.

Irene Fuhrmann (born September 23, 1980 in Vienna ) is an Austrian soccer coach and former soccer player . In July 2020 she was appointed team leader of the Austrian national soccer team .

Career

As a player

Irene Fuhrmann grew up in Vienna's 14th district of Penzing , where she came to soccer through her brothers and played in the cage of the Ferdinand Wolf Park. In the course of her sports studies at the sports center of the University of Vienna (USZ) on the Schmelz , she attended the elective women's football, the professor recommended that she go to a club.

She started her club career at USC Landhaus Wien , with whom she celebrated a championship title in 2000 and 2001 and three cup victories from 2000 to 2002. She took part in the UEFA Women's Cup with the USC Landhaus (2001/02) and the Innsbruck AC (2002/03) . She made her national team debut in autumn 2002 against Switzerland. In the ÖFB team dress, Irene Fuhrmann completed 22 international matches and scored three goals. In the Bundesliga, she played 129 games and scored 45 goals.

As a trainer

After the end of her active career, she moved to the coaching bench in 2008, and was appointed assistant coach by women's team boss Ernst Weber . In 2011 the National Center for Women's Football was opened in St. Pölten , where Fuhrmann was given a full-time job as an individual trainer. She also became the team leader of the U-19 women’s national team, with which she reached the finals of the 2016 U-19 European Women's Football Championship in Slovakia. In 2017 she brought Dominik Thalhammer to the women's national team as an assistant coach, and in the same year she became the first woman in Austria to complete the course for the UEFA Pro license. At the 2017 European Women's Football Championship , the Austrians finished third in their first participation in a major tournament.

On July 27, 2020, she was appointed by the Austrian Football Association (ÖFB) to succeed Dominik Thalhammer as head of the Austrian women's national football team . Her assistant became U17 women team boss Markus Hackl.

Web links

Commons : Irene Fuhrmann  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Irene Fuhrmann in the Soccerdonna.de database. Retrieved July 27, 2020.
  2. a b c Irene Fuhrmann: The "cage" kicker is now team boss. In: Small newspaper . July 27, 2020, accessed July 27, 2020 .
  3. ^ Sigi Lützow: Historically: Irene Fuhrmann is the first team leader of the ÖFB women. In: DerStandard.at . July 27, 2020, accessed July 27, 2020 .
  4. ^ A b c d Günther Pavlovics: Historically: The ÖFB makes a woman a team leader for the first time. In: Kurier.at . July 27, 2020, accessed July 27, 2020 .
  5. Isabella Lechner: "Don't want to attract attention with short panties". In: DerStandard.at . July 19, 2011, accessed July 28, 2020 .
  6. ^ A b Philipp Eitzinger: Irene Fuhrmann, Austria's first team manager. In: ballverliebt.eu. July 27, 2020, accessed on July 28, 2020 .
  7. Irene Fuhrmann: With consistency from the cage to the command. In: DerStandard.at . July 27, 2020, accessed on July 28, 2020 .