Marek Heinz

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Marek Heinz
Kapfenberger SV - Marek Heinz (arr.). JPG
Personnel
birthday 4th August 1977
place of birth OlomoucCzechoslovakia
size 187 cm
position attack
Juniors
Years station
1985-1986 Sigma Hodolany
1986-1987 Sokol Holice
1987-1991 Lokomotiva Olomouc
1991-1996 Sigma Olomouc
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1996 Sigma Olomouc 4 0(0)
1997 Atlantic Lázně Bohdaneč 8 0(0)
1997-2000 Sigma Olomouc 66 (17)
2000-2002 Hamburger SV 52 0(5)
2003 Arminia Bielefeld 14 0(0)
2003-2004 Baník Ostrava 32 (19)
2004-2005 Borussia Monchengladbach 20 0(1)
2005-2006 Galatasaray Istanbul 13 0(3)
2006-2007 AS Saint-Etienne 28 0(4)
2007-2008 FC Nantes 16 0(1)
2008-2009 FC Brno 21 0(2)
2009-2010 Kapfenberger SV 28 0(5)
2010-2011 Ferencváros Budapest 25 0(7)
2011-2013 Sigma Olomouc 21 0(4)
01 / 13-06 / 13 →  1. SC Znojmo  (loan) 12 0(8)
07 / 13-10 / 13 1. SC Znojmo 8 0(2)
2013-2014 1. HFK Olomouc
2014– SC Melk 0 0(0)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1997 Czech Republic U-20 4 0(0)
1998-2000 Czech Republic U-21 20 0(6)
2000-2006 Czech Republic 30 0(5)
2000 Czech Republic Olympics 2 0(1)
1 Only league games are given.
As of July 18, 2014

Marek Heinz (born August 4, 1977 in Olomouc ) is a Czech football player in the position of a striker , who has been under contract with SC Melk in Lower Austria since 2014 .

Career

Marek Heinz at
Ferencváros Budapest (2010)

In 2000 he moved from Sigma Olmütz to Hamburger SV in the Bundesliga . There he could not prevail and was given up in 2002 to Arminia Bielefeld , where he was also not used in the team.

In 2003 he moved to Baník Ostrava in the Czech Republic . There he was Czech top scorer and Czech champion in the 2003/04 season.

In the summer of 2004 he was signed by Bundesliga club Borussia Mönchengladbach after he had performed well in the Czech national team and scored two goals at the European Championships in Portugal . Marek Heinz could not meet the expectations.

In the summer of 2005, the Czech moved to Galatasaray Istanbul for € 2.2 million . At Galatasaray, too, Marek Heinz tended to disappoint and only scored three goals in 13 appearances.

Since September 2006, Heinz played with the traditional club AS Saint-Étienne in the French Ligue 1 , where he could not fully convince. At the end of August 2007, Heinz moved to the French second division club FC Nantes . On September 30th, 2008, he canceled his existing contract with FC Nantes and moved to his home country for FC Brno. At the beginning of the 2009/10 season , the Czech moved to the Austrian Bundesliga for Kapfenberger SV . In the summer of 2010, Heinz moved to Ferencváros Budapest . A year later he returned to Sigma Olomouc in his Czech homeland. There he was under contract until the summer of 2013, but was awarded to 1st SC Znojmo from January to June 2013 . With the team he was subsequently champion of the 2nd league and made it to the Gambrinus League . After his loan contract with Znojmo and his contract with Sigma Olomouc had expired, he joined South Moravia permanently. There it only lasted three months before he moved to the 1st HFK Olomouc in the Czech second division at the beginning of October 2013 . With the second division he was finally under contract until the end of the season and on the last day of the summer transfer period 2013/14 he moved to the lower class SC Melk in Austria , where he was brought into the team by former Bundesliga player Hannes Neumayer .

For the Czech national team, Heinz made 30 international appearances and scored five goals. At the 2004 European Championships in Portugal, he made a decisive contribution to the elimination of the German national soccer team in the preliminary round by scoring the goal to 1: 1 in the third group game (final score: 2: 1 for the Czech Republic). Previously, he was in the Czech U-20 and U-21 teams and played two games, in which he also scored a goal, at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Marek Heinz míří do Brna (archive version) ( Memento from December 2, 2008 in the Internet Archive ) 1fcbrno.cz from September 29, 2008, last accessed on September 21, 2014, in Czech
  2. Kapfenberg gets a Czech . Archived from the original on July 2, 2009 ; accessed on September 21, 2014 .
  3. Heinz a Fradié ftc.hu, July 16, 2010. Retrieved July 17, 2010, Hungarian.
  4. Former national team player at SC Melk , accessed on July 18, 2014