Michael Tarnat

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Michael Tarnat
Personnel
birthday October 27, 1969
place of birth HildenGermany
size 186 cm
position Midfield / defense
Juniors
Years station
1979-1990 SV Hilden-Nord
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1990-1994 MSV Duisburg 134 (12)
1994-1997 Karlsruher SC 81 0(7)
1997-2003 FC Bayern Munich 122 0(8)
2003-2004 Manchester City 32 0(3)
2004-2009 Hannover 96 100 0(8)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1996-1998 Germany 19 0(0)
1 Only league games are given.

Michael "Tanne" Tarnat (born October 27, 1969 in Hilden ) is a former German football player .

Career

As a club player

Tarnat started playing soccer in 1979 in his hometown Hilden, in the soccer department of the local SV Hilden-Nord . For the 1990/91 season he was 19 years old from the second division MSV Duisburg , for which he played 33 of 38 league games and scored four goals in his first professional season. His debut on August 7, 1990 (2nd matchday), in the 2-0 win in the away game against VfL Osnabrück , he crowned immediately with his first goal, the goal to the final score in the 84th minute - seven minutes after the substitution for Dirk Bremser . In four seasons he was promoted to the Bundesliga twice and relegated twice with the club . He made his Bundesliga debut on August 2, 1991 (1st matchday) in a 1-0 win at home against VfB Stuttgart ; He scored his first Bundesliga goal on August 27, 1993 in a 1-1 draw in the away game against VfB Leipzig with the goal to make it 1-0 in the 26th minute. For the 1994/95 season he moved to Karlsruher SC , for which he played 81 Bundesliga games in three seasons and scored seven goals. For the 1997/98 season he was signed by league rivals FC Bayern Munich . In six seasons he won 13 titles with FC Bayern. During this time, he also played two extremely memorable games for FC Bayern Munich in 1999.

On May 26th he was part of the team that lost the Champions League final against Manchester United 2-1 in stoppage time and on September 18 he was part of the team for which he won the 2-1 away win against Eintracht Frankfurt held on with a remarkable parade in the closing stages. From the 62nd minute he guarded the goal for the injured goalkeeper Bernd Dreher , who had previously replaced the goalkeeper Oliver Kahn, who had been injured by his own defender Samuel Kuffour .

Michael Tarnat celebrated his greatest success in May 2001 when he won the Champions League title with FC Bayern . In the final, however, he was not used.

For the 2003/04 season he moved to the English first division club Manchester City , which he left after 32 of 38 league games to move to the Bundesliga club Hannover 96 . Although Tarnat originally wanted to end his career after the 2006/07 season, he extended his expiring contract during the winter break of the season by one year and in December 2007 again until the end of the 2008/09 season . After he was informed just a few hours before the last home game of the season on May 16, 2009 against VfL Wolfsburg that the club was not planning to renew its expiring contract, Tarnat refused to shake hands with his coach in the 58th minute after his early substitution Dieter Hecking , whose behavior Tarnat described as unworthy and disrespectful. As a result of these events in a conversation with the club's president Martin Kind , Tarnat refused any further collaboration with Hannover 96 . Instead, he ended his active playing career at the end of the season and went back to Munich.

As a national player

For the senior national team , he made 19 international matches between 1996 and 1998. On October 9, 1996 he made his debut in Yerevan in a World Cup qualifier in a 5-1 win over the selection of Armenia , when he came on in the 75th minute for Thomas Häßler .

In 1998 he took part with the senior national team at the 1998 World Cup in France and played four tournament games. In the second group game on June 21, 1998 in Lens , in a 2-2 draw against the national team of Yugoslavia , his long-range shot, deflected by Mihajlović to his own goal, led to the 2-2 goal. His last international match he completed on October 14, 1998 in Chișinău in a 3-1 victory in the European Championship qualifier against the selection of Moldova .

As a functionary

When he returned to FC Bayern Munich, Tarnat became a youth scout in August 2009 . From July 2010 he was the sporting director of the club's youth department. For the 2015/16 season, Heiko Vogel became the sporting director of the youth department; Tarnat was initially still responsible for the teams from the U16 onwards, but retired in January 2016. In the summer of 2017, Tarnat returned to Hannover 96 and took over the management of the “96 Academy”, the Lower Saxony youth center.

Personal

His son Niklas (* 1998) is also a soccer player. The defensive midfielder was trained at Hannover 96 and FC Bayern Munich and led Hannover 96 II as captain in the 2018/19 season of the Regionalliga Nord .

successes

Awards

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Matthias Arnhold: Michael Tarnat - Matches and Goals in Bundesliga . RSSSF . May 12, 2016. Retrieved May 12, 2016.
  2. Tarnat as a goalkeeper on fussballdaten.de
  3. Article ( Memento of March 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) on ndr .de
  4. ^ Matthias Arnhold: Michael Tarnat - International Appearances . RSSSF . May 12, 2016. Retrieved May 12, 2016.
  5. Match pairing on dfb .de
  6. tz.de : Tarnat returns to FC Bayern - as a talent scout , accessed on April 22, 2014
  7. FCB sets 'important course for the future'. In: fcbayern.de. June 9, 2015, accessed June 10, 2015 .
  8. Michael Tarnat and Jürgen Jung are leaving FC Bayern. In: fcbayern.de. January 19, 2016. Retrieved January 19, 2016 .
  9. Hannover 96 grabs Bayerns Tarnat , sport.de, accessed on September 24, 2018
  10. ^ Profil Niklas Tarnat , transfermarkt.de
  11. Goal of the month on sportschau .de