Jan Šimák

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jan Šimák
Jan Šimák.JPG
Jan Šimák, 2012
Personnel
birthday October 13, 1978
place of birth TáborCzechoslovakia
size 182 cm
position Attacking midfield
Juniors
Years station
1983-1984 Sokol Mezno
1984-1995 VS Tábor
1996 SK České Budějovice
1996 FK Tábor
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1996-2000 Chmel Blšany 99 (16)
2000-2002 Hannover 96 58 (27)
2002-2004 Bayer 04 Leverkusen 22 0(3)
2003-2004 → Hannover 96 (loan) 6 0(2)
2004-2007 Sparta Prague 51 0(3)
2004-2006 Sparta Prague B 7 0(2)
2007-2008 FC Carl Zeiss Jena 27 0(7)
2008-2009 VfB Stuttgart 22 0(2)
2010-2011 1. FSV Mainz 05 9 0(1)
2011–2012 FC Carl Zeiss Jena 28 0(8)
2012-2014 FK MAS Táborsko 49 0(9)
2014-2015 FK Bohemians Prague 4 0(0)
2015-2016 Dynamo Budweis 24 0(6)
2016-2017 UPS Atzenbrugg-Heiligeneich 10 0(5)
2017 TJ Sokol Horní Jiřetín
2017 TJ Sokol Chotoviny
2018– TJ Sokol Lom
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1997 Czech Republic U-20 1 0(0)
1998-2000 Czech Republic U-21 14 0(0)
2002 Czech Republic 1 0(0)
1 Only league games are given.
As of January 1, 2018

Jan Šimák (born October 13, 1978 in Tábor ) is a Czech football player .

Career

1996 to 2007: from the Czech Republic to Germany and back

Šimák played in the youth field for Sokol Mezno , VS Tábor , SK České Budějovice and FK Tábor ; In the senior sector he was active for four years from 1996 for FK Chmel Blšany .

In 2000 he moved to Germany to the then second division Hannover 96 . After a solid debut season (nine goals, two assists in the league), he doubled his points in the following season (18 goals, four assists in the league) and contributed to promotion to the Bundesliga . In 2002 he went to Bayer 04 Leverkusen to the succession of the Bayern Munich migrated Michael Ballack to compete. He could not assert himself in Leverkusen and returned to Hannover 96 on loan in 2003. After six games he dropped out due to illness due to a fatigue syndrome combined with depression and alcohol problems. In July 2004 he finally dissolved his contract in Leverkusen. A short time later he signed a contract with Sparta Prague . However, he no longer played at the same level as before at Hannover 96 and went into therapeutic treatment. After successful therapy, Šimák began playing football again in October 2005 at Sparta Prague and was substituted on on October 23, 2005 in the game against city rivals Slavia in the 66th minute. His three years in Prague were overshadowed by arguments with coaches and alcoholism. In the 2006/07 season he had scored a goal in only 18 games and only played over 90 minutes twice. Because of his expressed intention to change he was not allowed to participate in the training last time.

2007 to 2012: Five years in Jena, Stuttgart and Mainz

In July 2007 he went back to Germany for the then second division club FC Carl Zeiss Jena . He made his debut on August 5, 2007 in the first round match of the DFB Cup against 1. FC Gera 03 , when he was substituted on in the 57th minute. On August 10, 2007, he was 2-2 on the first match day in the 2007/08 second division against Alemannia Aachen in the starting eleven and was substituted for Michael Stegmayer after 58 minutes . He was used in 27 games and scored seven goals. At the end of the season, FC Carl Zeiss Jena was relegated to the newly founded 3rd division .

In April 2008, Šimák's move to VfB Stuttgart for the 2008/09 season had been contractually agreed . On July 19, 2008 he made his debut for VfB in the 0-1 defeat in the first leg of the third round of the UI Cup against Saturn Ramenskoye . Eight days later he scored his first goal for VfB in the second leg with the 1-0. On August 17, 2008, he played in the Bundesliga for the first time since 2004, when he was in the starting line-up and provided two assists in the 3-1 win on the first day of the 2008/09 Bundesliga season against Borussia Mönchengladbach . In his first season for Stuttgart, he came to 20 missions, he played once over 90 minutes and scored two goals. In the first half of the 2009/10 season he only made two appearances for the Swabians.

On January 19, 2010, Šimák moved to 1. FSV Mainz 05 . He made his debut for Mainz on January 23, 2010 in a 1-0 win on matchday 19 against Hannover 96 in the starting line-up; after 62 minutes he was replaced by Chadli Amri . For the Rheinhessen he came to eight missions in the second half of the 2009/10 season. After he only had a one-minute short assignment for the Mainz team in the 2010/11 season , his contract was not extended.

He returned in the summer 2011 to now in its third league playing FC Carl Zeiss Jena back where he signed a one year contract. On July 23, 2011 he made his comeback for the FCCZ at 0: 3 on the first day of the third division season 2011/12 in the starting lineup. On August 2, 2011, he scored his first goal for the Jena team after his return on matchday two against SV Wehen Wiesbaden with the winning goal to make it 1-0. He made 28 appearances and seven goals for FC Carl Zeiss Jena this season. At the end of the season, the club was relegated to the regional league . After relegation, he did not get a new contract for financial reasons and he left the club in June 2012.

Since 2012: career end

During the summer break of 2012 he signed a contract with the Czech second division club Spartak MAS Sezimovo Ústí . In autumn 2014 he moved to the third division club FK Bohemians Prague . In the summer of 2015 he moved to the 2nd division for Dynamo Budweis .

Šimák moved to the fifth-class 2. Landesliga Niederösterreich West for the 2016/17 season and played for USV Atzenbrugg-Heiligeneich. During the winter break he went back to the Czech Republic for TJ Sokol Horního Jiřetína and since September 2017 has been playing in the Czech regional league B in his home town for TJ Sokol Chotoviny.

successes

Web links

Commons : Jan Šimák  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Radovan Jelínek, Miloslav Jenšík et al .: Atlas českého fotbalu od roku 1890. Prague 2005. p. 161. ISBN 80-901703-3-9
  2. Olympia Verlag GmbH (ed.): Simak change to Bayer perfect. In: kicker online. May 27, 2002, accessed August 22, 2014 .
  3. Olympia Verlag GmbH (ed.): Bayer dissolves Simak contract. In: kicker online. July 7, 2004, accessed September 9, 2014 .
  4. J. Kolar and M. Ulbricht: Simak - Chance or Risk? In: kicker online. Olympia Verlag GmbH, July 30, 2007, accessed on November 15, 2014 .
  5. Olympia Verlag GmbH (ed.): Simak to FC Carl Zeiss. In: kicker online. July 26, 2007, accessed September 9, 2014 .
  6. Olympia Verlag GmbH (ed.): Fröhlich clears up the last doubts. In: kicker online. August 5, 2007, accessed November 15, 2014 .
  7. Olympia Verlag GmbH (ed.): Petersen crowns catch-up. In: kicker online. August 10, 2007, accessed November 15, 2014 .
  8. Jan Simak leaves Jena for Stuttgart at the end of the season
  9. Olympia Verlag GmbH (ed.): All clear with Simak. In: kicker online. April 28, 2008, accessed September 12, 2014 .
  10. Olympia Verlag GmbH (ed.): Mainz fishing for Simak. In: kicker online. January 19, 2010, accessed September 12, 2014 .
  11. ^ FC Carl Zeiss Jena Fußball Spielbetriebs GmbH (ed.): Jan Simak back in paradise. In: FC Carl Zeiss Jena. Retrieved June 18, 2011, 2011 .
  12. Without Simak: FC Carl Zeiss Jena with a radical new beginning , June 13, 2012
  13. Na soustředění FC MAS Táborsko every 22 hráčů, a pozor: mezi nimi Jan Šimák!
  14. Druhá Fotbalová league přišla o hvězdu. Šimák skončil v Táborsku fotbal.idnes.cz from August 26, 2014. Retrieved October 8, 2014, in Czech.
  15. Šimák bude po odchodu z Táborska hrát ČFL na Střížkově sportovninoviny.cz from September 11, 2014. Accessed October 8, 2014, in Czech.
  16. Simak in Austria's 5th league transfermarkt.de from July 20, 2016.