Patrick Wolf (soccer player, 1989)

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Patrick Wolf
Personnel
birthday February 12, 1989
place of birth KaiserslauternGermany
size 189 cm
position Defense , midfield
Juniors
Years station
0000-2001 Stuttgart Kickers
2001-2002 Braunschweiger SC
2002-2003 VfL Wolfsburg
2003-2005 1. FC Nuremberg
2006-2008 1. FC Kaiserslautern
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
2008-2009 1. FC Nuremberg II 10 (0)
2009-2011 Wacker Burghausen 66 (2)
2011–2012 KSV Hessen Kassel 28 (4)
2012 FC Hansa Rostock 6 (0)
2013 FC Hansa Rostock II 1 (0)
2013-2014 Wormatia worms 12 (2)
2014-2015 Energy Cottbus 1 (0)
2014-2015 Energy Cottbus II 3 (1)
2015-2017 FSV Zwickau 24 (1)
2017-2018 1. FC Schweinfurt 05 24 (0)
2018-2020 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig 34 (2)
1 Only league games are given.
As of August 8, 2020

Patrick Wolf (born February 12, 1989 in Kaiserslautern ) is a German football player who is used as a right-footed defensive player, particularly in central defense , but also as a full-back or six -man.

Career

Youth stations

Born in 1989 as the son of the then professional footballer and later football coach Wolfgang Wolf in Kaiserslautern, Patrick Wolf learned to play football, particularly in the youth teams of those clubs where his father worked as a coach. The Swabian Kickers from Stuttgart became Wolf's first club station after his father became coach of the Kickers regional league team in 1994 .

When his father moved to Lower Saxony's Bundesliga club VfL Wolfsburg in 1998 , Wolf initially stayed in Stuttgart, but also moved to Lower Saxony in 2001. There he played for a year in the youth of Braunschweiger SC before he succeeded his father to VfL Wolfsburg in 2002, where he was now a member of the C youth for a year . When his father switched to 1. FC Nürnberg in 2003, Patrick Wolf also went to the Franconian club, for which he first played for one year in the C-youth, then another 18 months in the B-youth .

At the beginning of 2006, Wolf again followed his father, who had now taken over the coaching position of 1. FC Kaiserslautern , which meant that Wolf returned to his place of birth. Although he initially belonged to the B-youth team in Kaiserslautern, he was also used in the A-youth team of the club in the 2005/06 season of the U-19 Bundesliga when coach Michael Dusek played him three times in the last games of the second half of the season substituted. In the following season 2006/07 Wolf belonged to the Kaiserslautern A-youth, so that he was used in 24 of the 26 season games under the now acting coach Steven Dooley and scored a total of four goals. Thus, Wolf played a decisive role in the second place in the South / Southwest relay, which ultimately enabled him to take part in the final round of the German A-Juniors soccer championship . There the team was eliminated in the semi-finals by two defeats against the eventual title holder Bayer 04 Leverkusen .

In the 2007/08 season of the U-19 Bundesliga, Wolf stayed with 1. FC Kaiserslautern, although his father had to leave the club during the preseason. Wolf played another 22 appearances for Kaiserslautern's A-youth, but the team with the seventh place of their relay could no longer qualify for the championship finals.

Beginnings in Nuremberg and Burghausen

At the end of his youth in summer 2008, Wolf left Kaiserslautern to return to 1. FC Nürnberg , where he received a two-year contract as a professional . At the Nürnberger Club he was then planned for the reserve team of the second division , trained by René Müller , which took part in the regional league in 2008/09 after being promoted from the Oberliga Bayern . At the same time he also took part in the season preparation of the professional team under Thomas von Heesen , so that he was used in the friendly game of the professional team against Al Jazira and tore a cruciate ligament . As a result, Wolf was only able to play his first competitive game for Nuremberg's reserve in March 2009, so that he only made a total of ten appearances in the regional league.

In the summer of 2009, Wolf left Nuremberg to join SV Wacker Burghausen instead, who competed in the third division under coach Jürgen Press in the 2009/10 season . Initially only considered as a substitute, Wolf then developed into a regular player at the Upper Bavarian club, who, after a promising start to the season, ultimately played against the threatened relegation to the regional league. With two goals in a total of 33 appearances, Wolf contributed to the relegation as 17th in the final table.

In the following 2010/11 season , Wacker started with little success, so that Trainer Press was replaced by Mario Basler after just four match days . Even under this, Wolf remained a regular player on the defensive of SV Wacker with 32 appearances, but the club only finished 18th in the final table and would have been relegated to the regional league. As the league competitor Rot Weiss Ahlen, who was actually placed before Burghausen, had to relegate due to bankruptcy, Burghausen moved up to 17th place and thus still managed to stay in the league.

Via Kassel to Rostock

In the summer of 2011, Wolf moved to the regional division KSV Hessen Kassel , where he signed a one-year contract with an extension option. Wolf then became a regular player in Kassel in the 2011/12 season and completed a total of 28 missions in which he also scored four goals. However, initially under coach Christian Hock , then under Holger Brück and finally under Uwe Wolf, the team fell short of the expectations placed on them, so that only eleventh place in the final table was achieved at the end of the season.

Wolf then switched to FC Hansa Rostock , now being trained by his father, where he had already participated in training at short notice in January 2012 when Rostock was still in the second division. After the Rostock relegation to the third division in summer 2012, Wolf received a two-year contract there from the 2012/13 season ; but his father's engagement in Rostock ended after eight match days, on which Patrick Wolf had played a total of six missions. Under the new coach Marc Fascher , Wolf no longer played a role in the Hansa team, which was initially due to a serious injury, so that he should train with the reserve team from the winter break. For this he also played in a major league game in March 2013, but soon received an extraordinary termination of his contract due to "serious off-duty misconduct".

New beginning in Worms

After Wolf couldn't find a new club at first, he kept fit individually at the beginning of the 2013/14 season. After an unsuccessful trial training for MSV Duisburg , he finally received an offer from the regional league team Wormatia Worms in November 2013 . There he signed a contract until the end of the season.

In summer 2014, he then joined the third division Energie Cottbus and received a one-year contract. On the 3rd matchday, Wolf was substituted on for Tim Kleindienst and thus made his only league appearance for Cottbus. In addition, he played twice in the Brandenburg State Cup . Since his contract was not renewed, Wolf moved to FSV Zwickau in the summer of 2015 and played in the Regionalliga Nordost . With the Zwickau team, he was promoted to the 3rd division as a champion. At the beginning of the 2017/18 season, Wolf moved to the regional division FC Schweinfurt . For the 2018/19 season he moved to the regional list 1. FC Lok Leipzig .

successes

FSV Zwickau

  • Promotion to the 3rd division: 2016

1. FC Schweinfurt 05

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. KSV-Hessen.de, July 20, 2011: Newcomers introduce themselves: Patrick Wolf , accessed on June 1, 2012.
  2. FCN.de, May 8, 2008: Club obliges Patrick Wolf , accessed on June 1, 2012.
  3. FCN.de, August 30, 2008: Sensational: Small club wins at SV Wehen Wiesbaden II , accessed on June 1, 2012.
  4. KSV-Hessen.de, June 7, 2011: First new entry for KSV Hessen Kassel , accessed on June 1, 2012.
  5. FC-Hansa.de, June 1, 2012: Patrick Wolf strengthens the defense of FC Hansa , accessed on June 1, 2012.
  6. NDR.de , March 16, 2013: Hansa: Fascher the Wolf in Sheep's Clothing ( Memento from March 17, 2013 in the Internet Archive ), accessed on June 13, 2013.
  7. SVZ.de , May 15, 2013: Hansa Rostock upgraded to , accessed June 13, 2013.
  8. liga3-online.de, March 28, 2013: Hansa Rostock announces Patrick Wolf without notice , accessed on June 13, 2013.
  9. kicker.de, November 8, 2013: Wormatia Worms signs Patrick Wolf
  10. Wolf and Schröter sign in Zwickau. kicker.de, June 5, 2015.
  11. www.Mdr.de: Wolf leaves Zwickau ( Memento of the original from July 11, 2017 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. from May 02, 2017 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.mdr.de
  12. www.lok-leipzig.com: Patrick Wolf Reinforces the locomotive defense