Nico Patschinski

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nico Patschinski
Nico Patschinski - Day of Legends 2016 01.jpg
Nico Patschinski, 2016
Personnel
birthday November 8, 1976
place of birth East BerlinGDR
size 183 cm
position Storm
Juniors
Years station
1984-1988 BFC Dynamo
1988-1994 1. FC Union Berlin
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1994-1997 1. FC Union Berlin 57 (16)
1998 SV Babelsberg 03 14 0(3)
1998-1999 Dynamo Dresden 32 (12)
1999-2000 SpVgg Greuther Fürth 10 0(0)
2000-2003 FC St. Pauli 75 (21)
2003-2005 Eintracht Trier 65 (23)
2005-2006 LR Ahlen 31 0(8)
2006-2009 1. FC Union Berlin 82 (27)
2009-2010 BFC Dynamo 29 (14)
2010-2011 Eintracht Trier 15 0(2)
2011–2012 Borussia Neunkirchen 36 (18)
2012 SC Victoria Hamburg 15 (13)
2012-2013 BFC Dynamo 18 0(6)
2013-2015 Niendorfer TSV 14 0(2)
2015-2016 FC Schnelsen (player-coach)
2016– SC Empelde
1 Only league games are given.

Nico "Patsche" Patschinski (born November 8, 1976 in East Berlin ) is a former German football player .

Career

1980 to 1994: Youth and promotion at Union Berlin

Patschinski was initially interested in ice hockey and therefore joined the ice hockey department of SC Dynamo Berlin at the age of four . He was inspired by his father Rainer Patschinski , who was a successful ice hockey player at TSC Berlin and later at Dynamo. It wasn't until two years later that “Patsche” began playing football in the youth team of the BFC Dynamo . In 1988 he switched to the youth team of 1. FC Union Berlin and made his debut in the men's team there in 1994.

1994 to 2000: various stations and professional debut

In the next season he became a regular at Union. Towards the end of 1997 he accepted an offer from the financially better off SV Babelsberg 03 in view of the tense financial situation at the Köpenick club . But he was not happy at the Potsdam club, because the Babelsberg fans had a bad opinion of Berlin players, and in the summer of 1998 he switched to Dynamo Dresden . The dispute with the Babelsberg appendage tempted Patschinski in the following season in his Dresden game against Babelsberg to show the audience the finger after a goal .

Patschinski played in the Saxon capital for a year and scored eleven goals in 31 league games. Then he accepted an offer from SpVgg Greuther Fürth to play in professional football. With SpVgg he gained his first experience in the second Bundesliga , but remained both without scoring and without a long period of play and therefore decided after a year to change clubs again. In addition, Patschinski, who was born in Berlin, did not feel comfortable in rural Fürth .

2000 to 2006: Success at FC St. Pauli and relegations

Nico Patschinski (2002)

In 2000 Patschinski finally came to FC St. Pauli , with whom he achieved his greatest successes in the following three years. With the hamburgers he made the leap into the first Bundesliga . On February 6, 2002 he scored the 2-0 in a 2-1 win against FC Bayern Munich . This made St. Pauli the “world cup winner”.

At the end of the 2001/02 season St. Pauli rose from the first division. In the following season, Hamburg could not keep the class in the second division. Patschinski was sorted out by the new trainer Franz Gerber .

Patschinski then went to Eintracht Trier . After two years with the Trier team , he was relegated from the second Bundesliga and moved on to LR Ahlen , where he also relegated with this club. So he was relegated four times in five seasons with three clubs. Patschinski later described his move to Ahlen as a mistake.

During his time in Ahlen, in the run-up to the 2006 World Cup, the magazine RUND discovered that Patschinski had Polish grandparents and might therefore be eligible to play for the Polish national team . The magazine got in touch with those responsible for the Polish Football Association; In the end, however, nothing came of the hoped-for international match.

2006 to 2009: return to Union Berlin

At the beginning of the 2006/07 season Patschinski returned to Berlin and hired his old club Union Berlin. With the Unionern, he experienced a mixed season, in which the team wavered between promotion and relegation battle. Ultimately, the Berliners secured the class in the Regionalliga Nord and Patschinski scored a goal against his former club FC St. Pauli, which was voted “Goal of the Week” and thus a candidate for ARD's “ Goal of the Month ”. Patschinski admitted that the supposed shot on goal was originally intended as a cross. In the following season he qualified with 1. FC Union for the new third professional league .

On March 4, 2009, 1. FC Union Berlin terminated the employment relationship with Patschinski without notice. The reason given by the club was the broken relationship of trust between the player and the club. Patschinski sued against this and was ruled on June 3, 2009 by the Berlin regional labor court . As a result, the player remained formally an employee of 1. FC Union, who qualified as a player for the Second Bundesliga without him. First Patschinski trained in the club's reserve team until the contract was terminated on July 14, 2009.

Since 2009

In July 2009 Patschinski returned to the league club BFC Dynamo. The main reasons he gave for the change were the location in Berlin and the ties to the former Union player Guido Spork , who also played for the BFC. After a year he ended his engagement with BFC and rejoined Eintracht Trier for the 2010/11 season, for which he played until his contract was terminated in January 2011. On January 31, 2011, he signed a contract valid until June 30, 2013 with the upper division Borussia Neunkirchen . In Neunkirchen he met his former coach Paul Linz and scored two goals in his debut against SV Auersmacher in a 3-2 win on February 12, 2011.

After differences between the club's management and Patschinski, Borussia Neunkirchen separated from him at the beginning of October 2011, but brought him back to the squad at the end of October after coach Linz publicly took sides for his team captain . In February 2012 Patschinski left Neunkirchen for good and went to the Oberliga club SC Victoria Hamburg . For Hamburg he scored twelve goals in 14 league games, was first division champion and was promoted to the Regionalliga Nord. He also won the Hamburg Cup with Victoria and qualified for the DFB Cup . Patschinski was involved in the cup success with three goals in three games. Despite the successes, he returned to BFC Dynamo before the start of the 2012/13 season. On April 3, 2013 Patschinski signed a two-year contract with Hamburg's upper division Niendorfer TSV .

At the beginning of 2015 he started working as a player-coach at FC Schnelsen . He dissolved this contract in January 2016 and joined SC Empelde as a player.

Private

By 2007, Patschinski was considered a gambling addict and had lost money playing cards and betting. He did not feel himself addicted to gambling. He worked in various jobs and professions: initially he worked as a temporary worker in a catering company and as a dispatcher, from 2012 as a parcel delivery agent for DPD . From 2015 to 2017 he earned his living as an employed undertaker . In 2018 he trained as a bus driver at the Hamburg-Holstein transport company , where he has been employed in regular operations since February 2018.

Patschinski is divorced, has three children and lives in Hamburg.

successes

  • 28 first division appearances (all for FC St. Pauli)
  • 153 second division appearances (10 for SpVgg Greuther Fürth, 47 for FC St. Pauli, 65 for Eintracht Trier, 31 for LR Ahlen)
  • Promotion to the first Bundesliga with FC St. Pauli

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Joker with a difficult start - Nico Patschinski is the new darling of St. Pauli fans, but his career was anything but smooth - Interview - January 5, 2001. Accessed February 11, 2018 .
  2. a b c "Mistakes are there to be made and Ahlen was one" . January 14, 2008, accessed on March 29, 2013 (interview with Patschinski at www.die-fans.de ).
  3. Portrait - Nico Patschinski ( Memento from May 26, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
  4. Patschinski's favorite with the public and spoiled for choice. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007 ; accessed on March 29, 2013 (article in the “Hamburger Abendblatt” from June 12, 2003).
  5. Oliver Lück u. Rainer Schäfer: Bad luck for Poland . In: ROUND . No. 9 , April 2006, p. 78–79 ( rund-magazin.de (PDF; 6.5 MB)).
  6. Matthias Wolf: The fun seeker. In: Berliner Zeitung . August 12, 2006, accessed March 29, 2013 .
  7. "25. Matchday, man of the day ”. In: kicker.de. March 12, 2007, accessed March 29, 2013 .
  8. Michael Färber: Union finally dissolves contract with Nico Patschinski. In: Berliner Morgenpost . July 14, 2009, accessed March 29, 2013 .
  9. Matze Koch: I am at peace with myself and the world. In: Football Week. August 3, 2009, archived from the original on July 30, 2012 ; Retrieved August 3, 2009 .
  10. Editor: Borussia and Patschinski go their separate ways. In: Borussia Neunkirchen, official website. October 4, 2011, accessed December 2, 2011 .
  11. Sebastian Zenner: Borussia Neunkirchen: Linz hopes for Patschinski's return. In: Saarbrücker Zeitung . October 7, 2011, accessed March 13, 2017 .
  12. ^ SC Victoria Hamburg - The season. SC Victoria Hamburg, accessed on May 29, 2012 .
  13. Ex-professional Patschinski will run for Niendorf in the future. Hamburger Abendblatt , accessed on April 3, 2013 .
  14. a b c d Nico Patschinski: Finally undertaker. In: zeit.de , March 16, 2016, accessed on March 17, 2016
  15. ↑ Additional time - Reportage & Documentation - ARD - Das Erste ( Memento of the original from November 2, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , accessed January 17, 2016 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.daserste.de
  16. Nico Patschinski - Former St. Pauli professional now works as a bus driver . In: Spiegel Online , February 7, 2018, accessed on February 11, 2018
  17. NDR 90,3 meeting point Hamburg / Das Stadtgespräch , accessed on February 4, 2018