Peter Stoeger
Peter Stoeger | ||
Peter Stöger (2017)
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Personnel | ||
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birthday | April 11, 1966 | |
place of birth | Vienna , Austria | |
size | 176 cm | |
position | midfield | |
Juniors | ||
Years | station | |
1975-1985 | Favoritner AC | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
1985-1986 | Favoritner AC | 9 | (0)
1986-1987 | SK Forward Steyr | |
1987-1988 | First Vienna FC | 36 | (6)
1988-1994 | FK Austria Vienna | 181 (52) |
1994-1995 | FC Tirol Innsbruck | 35 | (6)
1995-1997 | SK Rapid Vienna | 84 (17) |
1997-1998 | LASK | 32 | (5)
1998-2000 | FK Austria Vienna | 54 | (7)
2000-2002 | VfB Admira Wacker Mödling | 47 | (6)
2002-2004 | SC Untersiebenbrunn | 62 (29) |
National team | ||
Years | selection | Games (goals) |
1987 | Austria Olympia | 1 | (0)
1988-1999 | Austria | 65 (15) |
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
2007-2010 | First Vienna FC | |
2010-2011 | Graz AK | |
2011–2012 | SC Wiener Neustadt | |
2012-2013 | FK Austria Vienna | |
2013-2017 | 1. FC Cologne | |
2017-2018 | Borussia Dortmund | |
2020– | FK Austria Vienna | |
1 Only league games are given. |
Peter Stöger (born April 11, 1966 in Vienna ) is a former Austrian soccer player and now a trainer and functionary. Since August 1, 2019, he has been working in various functions at Austria Wien .
Career
player
Via the Favoritner AC , the SK Vorwärts Steyr and First Vienna FC , the trained retail salesman Stöger came to Austria Vienna in 1988 at the age of 22 . He was signed as a replacement for midfield director Herbert Prohaska , who announced his resignation in 1989. With the "Wiener Veilchen", as the club is popularly known in Vienna, Stöger experienced his most successful years as a player. With three championship titles and three cup wins, he had a proud record after six seasons. He played his first game for the Austrian national team on February 5, 1988 against Switzerland (result 1: 2). In total, Stöger wore the Austrian jersey 65 times, scoring 15 goals. He was also part of the squad at the 1998 World Cup in France (2 appearances).
After a Bundesliga season at FC Tirol (1994/95), Stöger moved to Austria's arch rivals, SK Rapid Wien . In his first season he also won the championship title with the Hütteldorfer. In 1996 he also reached the European Cup final of the cup winners with Rapid .
Discarded by Rapid, he came back to Austria, with which he is most often identified, via LASK . After engagements with VfB Admira Wacker Mödling and the second division club SC Untersiebenbrunn , Stöger declared his active football career over in 2004.
2004–2013: Trainer, sports director, columnist in Austria
After the end of his playing career, Stöger got the offer to work as a manager for SC Untersiebenbrunn . Due to the precarious financial situation of the association, he refused and returned to “his” Austria; there he became manager of the amateurs. In May 2005, Stöger and the previous scout of the Austria Amateurs, Frenk Schinkels , surprisingly replaced the coaching duo Günter Kronsteiner and Lars Søndergaard . After four weeks Austria won the cup final against Rapid 3-1 under Stöger / Schinkels - Stöger's first title as coach. In December 2005 he retired from daily training work and became sports director; Austria became champions for the 23rd time this season.
In autumn 2006, he and Schinkels were given leave of absence due to the poor performance of the team (including last place in the table). In June 2007 he returned to First Vienna FC , where he was sports director until June 2010, and from autumn 2007 to April 2010 he was also a coach; the club rose to the second highest division in June 2009. Schinkels followed him as Vienna coach for the last games of the season.
After that, Stöger changed clubs every year. From November 2010 he was coach of the Grazer AK . In June 2011, his current contract with the GAK was canceled amicably so that he could take up an offer from the Austrian Bundesliga club SC Wiener Neustadt as a coach and sports director. After only one season, he himself negotiated the termination of the contract in order to succeed Ivica Vastić with a two-year contract at Wiener Austria . In the 2012/13 season he led Austria to the championship with a record point. Stöger himself found this title to be the “most beautiful” of his career and in the summer of 2013 made his next career step. For a rumored transfer fee of 700,000 euros and the income from a friendly match between the two teams, he received the approval to move to 1. FC Köln . Regarding the question of morality in such changes, Stöger said: “We only talk about morals when good people want to improve despite an existing contract. We don't talk about morals when coaches are fired despite a contract. "
In addition, Stöger worked at Sky as an analyst for Bundesliga games and as a columnist for the daily newspaper Kurier .
2013–2017: Coach at 1. FC Köln
In his first season with 1. FC Köln, Stöger was champion of the second division and was promoted to the Bundesliga. In the 2014/15 season , apart from against Bayern and Freiburg, FC scored points against 15 competitors, in the spring no home game was lost, nine games were 0-0. In the first half of the season that gave 19 points, in the second 22. With a 2-0 home win over Schalke 04 , Cologne secured relegation three rounds before the end. In the first half of the 2015/16 season , 24 points were scored. In January 2016, Stöger and his assistant trainer Manfred Schmid extended their contracts until 2020, including an exit clause. The second half of the season was less good with 19 points, but 1. FC Köln reached a single-digit place in the table for the first time in 24 years. In the 2016/17 season , Cologne scored 26 and 23 points and qualified for a European competition, the Europa League, with fifth place in the table after 25 years.
At the beginning of the 2017/18 season, Stöger started his fifth year with 1. FC Köln, a novelty since the club was founded in 1948. On December 3, 2017, Stöger and 1. FC Köln parted ways, as the team scored three points after 14 match days was in the last place in the table.
2017-2018: Coach at Borussia Dortmund
On December 10, 2017, one week after his release from 1. FC Köln , Stöger took over the Borussia Dortmund team, which was in seventh place in the table after the 15th matchday, from Peter Bosz . Stöger is the first BVB coach to remain undefeated in his first ten Bundesliga games with BVB - with five wins and five draws. At the end of the 2017/18 season , he finished fourth in the Bundesliga with BVB. His contract expired at the end of the season.
Since 2019: Austria Vienna
On July 23, 2019 it was announced that Stöger was returning to his old place of work, Wiener Austria. He took over the post of sports director on August 1, 2019. For the 2020/21 season he was also the head coach of the Viennese for a second time and also took over as the third post of sports director.
Personal
The presenter, actress and cabaret artist Ulrike Kriegler has been his partner since 1998.
Success as a player
- 4 × Austrian champions : 3 × with Austria ( 1990/91 , 1991/92 , 1992/93 ), 1 × with Rapid ( 1995/96 )
- 3 × Austrian cup winners : 1989/90 , 1991/92 , 1993/94
- Best midfielder of the 1995/96 season
- Participation in the 1998 World Cup
Success as a trainer / sports director
- 2 × Austrian Cup winners : 2004/05 , 2005/06 ( FK Austria Wien )
- 2 × Austrian champions : 2005/06 , 2012/13 ( FK Austria Wien )
- Champion of Regionalliga Ost: 2009 ( First Vienna FC )
- Champion 2nd Bundesliga and promotion to the Bundesliga : 2013/14 ( 1. FC Köln )
- Qualification for the Europa League 2017/18 with 1. FC Köln
Trivia
Stöger's statement "I offered the linesman my glasses. He didn't see that either." won the German Football Culture Prize 2016 as football saying of the year .
Web links
- Peter Stöger in the database of weltfussball.de
- Peter Stoeger (players) in the database of transfermarkt.de
- Peter Stoeger (trainer) in the database of transfermarkt.de
- Peter Stöger in the Rapid Archive
- Austria Archives: Peter Stöger as a player
- Austria archives: Peter Stöger as trainer
Individual evidence
- ↑ Stöger celebrates a comeback in violet ( Memento from September 16, 2014 in the Internet Archive ), kleinezeitung.at, from May 30, 2012
- ↑ Austria Wien 2012/2013 under Peter Stöger , 2013-06-01.
- ^ Euphoric Stöger rushes to Cologne. In: sport.orf.at. June 12, 2013, accessed December 1, 2017 .
- ^ "I won't take Hosiner with me" , Österreich.at, June 9, 2013
- ↑ Peter Stöger: The Cologne new love child. In: kurier.at. December 27, 2013, accessed December 22, 2017 .
- ↑ http://www.express.de/fc-koeln/fc-sieg-macht-klassenerhalt-perfekt-peter-stoeger---ich-bin-einfach-nur-stolz-auf-die-mannschaft,3192,30667892 .html
- ↑ Stöger: "I sincerely hoped that it would work" , Kurier, from July 23, 2015
- ↑ 1. FC Köln Will Stöger go one better? , Express, 2016-01-23.
- ↑ FC coach record contract until 2020! Stöger celebrates with “Extended” , Express, 2015-01-21.
- ↑ [1]
- ↑ FC Bayern Munich: Simply Insatiable , 2016-05-16.
- ↑ FC sports director Schmadtke expects a furious final around Europe , express.de, 2017-05-08.
- ↑ Outward and backward round 2016/17 , kicker.de, outward and backward round 2016/17, accessed: 2017-05-22.
- ↑ FC and Stöger split up , fc.de, December 3, 2017, accessed on December 3, 2017.
- ↑ Peter Stöger follows Peter Bosz , bvb.de, December 10, 2017, accessed on December 10, 2017.
- ↑ Article from reviersport.de . February 18, 2018, accessed on February 25, 2018 : "BVB: Stöger with start record in second place"
- ↑ Andreas Königl: Report from goal.com . February 18, 2018, accessed on February 25, 2018 : "Bundesliga: Peter Stöger sets Bundesliga start record with Dortmund"
- ↑ Article from sport1.de . February 28, 2018, accessed on March 1, 2018 : "Stöger: A fragile structure"
- ↑ Borussia Dortmund GmbH & Co KGaA: Stöger: "New stimulus is good for the club!" Accessed on May 22, 2018 (German).
- ↑ Peter Stöger becomes the new sports director at Wiener Austria. vienna.at, July 23, 2019, accessed on July 23, 2019 .
- ↑ Peter Stöger will be the new Austria trainer fk-austria.at, on July 31, 2020, accessed on July 31, 2020
- ↑ It works without a ring , BZ - Wiener Bezirkszeitung (Alsergrund), No. 12, 20/21. March 2013, pp. 1, 38-39
- ↑ according to the daily newspaper Kurier
- ↑ Stöger keeps his glasses - and gets a title FAZ.net , accessed on August 15, 2018
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Stoeger, Peter |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Austrian soccer player and coach |
DATE OF BIRTH | April 11, 1966 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Vienna , Austria |