Monika Staab

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Monika Staab
Monika Staab.jpg
Monika Staab (2011)
Personnel
birthday January 9, 1959
place of birth DietzenbachGermany
position midfield
Women
Years station Games (goals) 1
1970-1974 SG Rosenhöhe Offenbach 0
1974-1977 Offenbacher Kickers 0
1977-1988 NSG Colonel Schiel 0
1978– Paris Saint-Germain 0
Queens Park Rangers 0
0000-1984 Southampton FC 0
1984-1992 SG Praunheim 0
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1993-1999 SG Praunheim
1999-2004 1. FFC Frankfurt
Incomplete:
2007 Bahrain
2013-2014 Qatar
1 Only league games are given.

Monika Staab (born January 9, 1959 in Dietzenbach ) is a German soccer coach and former soccer player . With four championship titles, five cup wins and the European Cup in 2002, the co-founder, former president and trainer of 1. FFC Frankfurt is one of the most successful trainers in the world.

Life

Soccer player

Monika Staab, the third daughter of a Dietzenbach master baker, was 11 years old when she played in the women's team at SG Rosenhöhe Offenbach when there were no girls' teams. In 1974 the department joined the Offenbacher Kickers , where they played until 1977, before moving to NSG Oberst Schiel , the strongest women's team in Hesse at the time. With the club she was in the final of the German championship in 1977 , but was just under the SSG 09 Bergisch Gladbach . She left Germany the following year and subsequently played for Paris Saint-Germain in France as well as Queens Park Rangers and FC Southampton in England. In 1984 she returned to her Hessian home with SG Praunheim from a Frankfurt district, which led her to qualify for the Bundesliga in 1990 as team captain . In 1992 she ended her playing career.

Trainer / functionary

National

In 1993 Staab took over the coaching position at Praunheim. When the members of the women's soccer department of SG Praunheim founded the 1. FFC Frankfurt in 1999 , she became the chairwoman of the new club. As a trainer she led the 1. FFC Frankfurt to four championship titles (1999, 2001, 2002, 2003) and five cup wins (1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003). In addition, she and the team won the newly created UEFA Cup for women's teams in 2002 , now the UEFA Women's Champions League.

After the club had lost both the DFB Cup and UEFA Cup finals within a few weeks in 2004 and only managed to finish second in the championship, Monika Staab resigned from her position as coach of 1. FFC Frankfurt. She gave up the office of President at the end of 2006.

International

In 2007 Staab moved to Bahrain to coach the local women's national team in football. After five months and only one game, she left Bahrain and worked for FIFA as a consultant on development projects.

From February 2013 she coached the women's national team of Qatar and lost this position in October 2014, the country's football association preferred a man as a coach.

Then "on behalf of FIFA in short-term projects for women's football in countries such as the Seychelles, North Korea and China."

In October and November 2017 she coached the Gambian national women's team for two months . Since October 2018 she has been working in Gambia to develop and expand women's football and train sports teachers.

Pioneering work

Staab has worked several times for FIFA or the DFB in order to build structures, promote women's and girls' football, or recruit teachers and coaches for football. For example, it was deployed in Uzbekistan in 2016 and in Gambia in 2020.

Staab was honored on May 5, 2014 by the German Football Ambassador Initiative for its commitment abroad and was awarded the main prize “German Football Ambassador 2014”.

Works

  • Monika Staab, Dieter Hochgesand: Fruits of the dream: How women conquered football . Röschen-Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 2011, ISBN 978-3-940908-08-7 .

literature

Web links

Commons : Monika Staab  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Marion Kehren: Out and about on behalf of FIFA - Development aid in women's football: Interview with Monika Staab. In: FanSoccer. July 26, 2009, accessed June 5, 2016 .
  2. Volker Stumpe: Frankfurt faces: Monika Staab. In: faz.net . June 6, 2003, accessed June 5, 2016 .
  3. ^ PT FFC Board of Directors. In: ffc-frankfurt.de. January 9, 2007, archived from the original on June 5, 2016 ; accessed on June 6, 2016 .
  4. Staab becomes national coach of Qatar. In: Focus Online . February 13, 2013, accessed July 14, 2020 .
  5. Stefan Nestler: Staab no longer national coach in Qatar. In: Deutsche Welle . November 4, 2014, accessed July 14, 2020 .
  6. Staab is no longer a Qatar trainer. In: weltfussball.de. November 4, 2014, accessed July 14, 2020 .
  7. Football Ambassador Monika Staab in Gambia. In: fussballbotschafter.de. October 20, 2017, accessed on July 14, 2020 .
  8. Omar Jarju: From Germany with Love: German Expert Brings Hope and Skills to Gambia's Women Football. In: The Chronicle Gambia. April 16, 2019, accessed April 17, 2019 .
  9. Monika Staab is doing pioneering work in women's football in Uzbekistan. In: dfb.de. February 2, 2016, accessed July 17, 2020 .
  10. Martina Keller: Emancipation through football - a German trainer on a mission in Gambia. In: Deutschlandfunk-Kultur broadcast “Nachspiel”. July 12, 2020, accessed on July 14, 2020 (also as mp3 audio , 21.8 MB, 23:51 minutes).
  11. Review 2013–2015: Prize winners 2014: Monika Staab and André Schürrle. In: fussballbotschafter.de. Archived from the original on June 5, 2016 ; Retrieved June 5, 2016 . Schürrle, Gutendorf and Staab honored. In: weltfussball.de. May 5, 2014, accessed July 14, 2020 .