Peter Neustädter

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Peter Neustädter
Peter Neustädter, 2006.jpg
Peter Neustädter at 1. FSV Mainz 05 (2006)
Personnel
birthday February 16, 1966
place of birth Karabalta , Kyrgyz SSRUSSR
size 185 cm
position Central defender
Juniors
Years station
1984 Zenith Leningrad
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1985 FK Kairat Alma-Ata 17 (1)
1986 CSKA-2 Moscow
1986-1987 Iskra Smolensk 49 (5)
1988 Dnepr Dnepropetrovsk 4 (0)
1988 Tavriya Simferopol 18 (0)
1989-1990 FK Kairat Alma-Ata 74 (4)
1991-1992 Spartak Vladikavkaz 23 (0)
1992-1993 Karlsruher SC 16 (0)
1993-1994 Chemnitzer FC 17 (0)
1994-2003 1. FSV Mainz 05 239 (9)
2003-2006 1. FSV Mainz 05 II 49 (0)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1996 Kazakhstan 3 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2003-2005 1. FSV Mainz 05 II (assistant coach)
2005-2010 1. FSV Mainz 05 II
2012-2013 TuS Koblenz
2019– SV Wehen Wiesbaden U-17
1 Only league games are given.

Peter Neustädter ( Russian Пётр Нейштетер ; born February 16, 1966 in Karabalta , Kyrgyz SSR , Soviet Union ) is a German football coach and former football player . In the past, he had Kazakh citizenship and played for the Kazakh national team . At club level, after several years with Soviet clubs in Germany, he was primarily active for 1. FSV Mainz 05 in the 2. Bundesliga , where he became a long-time U23 coach in 2003 after almost ten years as a player. He trains the B-youth of SV Wehen Wiesbaden .

Career

Neustädter played since 1983 as a defender for Zenit Leningrad , CSKA Moscow , Iskra Smolensk , Dnepr Dnepropetrovsk , Tavrija Simferopol , Kairat Alma-Ata and Spartak Vladikavkas . With Dnepr Dnepropetrovsk he became Soviet champion in 1988 . He joined the Bundesliga for Karlsruher SC in 1992 and joined Chemnitzer FC in 1993 .

From 1994 Neustädter played for 1. FSV Mainz 05 as a regular player in central defense. With the 05ers he played regularly against relegation from the 2nd Bundesliga in the 1990s. Under coach Jürgen Klopp he was used less often from 2001 and finally missed promotion to the Bundesliga with the team in 2002 and 2003. In the 2003/04 promotion season he had only completed one game for the first team in the first half of the season. He then ended his professional career and was still active as a player-coach in the second team until 2006.

In Germany, Neustädter played 16 Bundesliga games for Karlsruher SC , 18 games in the second Bundesliga for Chemnitzer FC and 239 games for 1. FSV Mainz 05 ; he scored nine goals, all for the Mainz team. Neustädter get two hits in one game.

International

Neustädter was born as a Russian German (more precisely Kyrgyzstan German ) in Kyrgyzstan. Due to his time at the Kazakh association FK Kairat Alma-Ata , which is close to the border with Kyrgyzstan, where he and his family lived with his parents before moving to Germany, he was a Kazakh citizen until the mid-1990s before becoming a resettler and player of 1. FSV Mainz 05 took on German citizenship .

In 1996 he completed three international matches for the Kazakh national soccer team .

successes

Dnepr Dnepropetrovsk

Spartak Vladikavkaz

  • Russian runner-up: 1992

Trainer and functionary

Neustädter acquired his coaching license in 2002/03 . During the 2004/05 regional league season he took over the second team of 1. FSV Mainz 05 from Colin Bell , whose assistant coach he had been since 2003. He rose with the team at the end of the season in the Oberliga Südwest ; until 2006 he was player-coach. He finished the 2007/08 season with the team as champions and was promoted to the Regionalliga West. In 2003, 2004 and 2005 Mainz 05 II won the Südwestpokal as assistant coach and head coach under Neustädter and qualified for the DFB-Pokal competition; you never got past the first lap here. Neustädter was on leave in April 2010 when the team was in 16th place in the table. During his time as a coach, his son Roman played for the Mainz second team from 2006 to 2008 .

On September 17, 2012, he was the successor to Michael Daemgen coach of the regional division TuS Koblenz and ended the 2012/13 season in eighth place in the table. On August 21, 2013 he was given leave of absence from TuS.

For the 2014/15 season Neustädter became the new sports director of the youth division of Rəvan Baku FK in Azerbaijan ; in 2016 he took over the same post for three years at FK Qairat Almaty in Kazakhstan.

Since the 2019/20 season he has been the coach of the B-Youth (U-17) of SV Wehen Wiesbaden in the B-Junior Bundesliga .

Others

Neustädter's son Roman is part of the Dynamo Moscow squad and was appointed to the Russian national football team in 2016 after he acquired Russian citizenship . His second son Daniel (* 1994) is active after some engagements with regional league teams in the major league at 1. FC Bocholt .

Peter Neustädter lives in Mainz .

Individual evidence

  1. Alex Raack: »A childhood dream comes true«. (No longer available online.) In: 11 Freunde.de. 11 Freunde GmbH & Co. KG, March 31, 2016, archived from the original ; Retrieved June 5, 2016 .
  2. Kazakhstan's ex-national player Peter Neustädter "My pants stank of red wine" stuttgarter-zeitung.de, accessed on April 28, 2017
  3. See the entry Kindergarten in Kyrgyzstan on the timeline on Roman Neustädter's website.
  4. Peter Neustädter . Profile on the website of FSV Mainz 05, accessed on April 22, 2016.
  5. a b c Interview on the DFB website, accessed on February 20, 2020
  6. Peter Neustädter becomes the new head coach of TuS Koblenz . Message from TuS Koblenz, September 17, 2012, accessed on April 22, 2016.
  7. TuS Koblenz leaves coach Peter Neustädter on leave . Message from TuS Koblenz, August 21, 2013, accessed on April 22, 2016.
  8. Report in Wiesbadener Kurier , accessed on February 20, 2020
  9. U-17 of SV Wehen Wiesbaden, accessed on February 20, 2020
  10. Posted by Made in Bocholt: 1. FC Bocholt sign Daniel Neustädter |. In: Made in Bocholt. April 30, 2018, accessed on February 20, 2020 (German).
  11. ^ FC Gelsenkirchen-Schalke 1904 eV (Ed.): Roman Neustädter wants to score in his old home. (No longer available online.) In: FC Schalke 04 (schalke04.de). February 12, 2016, archived from the original ; accessed on February 12, 2016 .

Web links