Sandrine Ringler

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sandrine Ringler (born September 10, 1973 in Sélestat ) is a former French soccer player . Since ending her playing career, she has been working as a coach in women's football .

Club career

Sandrine Ringler began playing club soccer at the age of six; while she played for almost all of her youth at two amateur clubs from the Grand Ried between her hometown and Marckolsheim . First stop was at their residence Heidolsheim the Union Sportive , where her father played football and they themselves took in the mixed of boys and girls vintage teams. When she joined the C-youth team, she had to join an all- girls team and therefore switch to FC Hilsenheim . At this club, she was still used as a young woman in her first female team and won the Alsatian championship in 1989 and the regional cup competition in 1990. Immediately afterwards, the Alsatian women's football flagship at the time, ASPTT Strasbourg , secured its services. Even with the postal athletes, she quickly grew into the first womanhood and became a regular player in the defensive area there. At the end of their second season there took her team at the last time the discharged even in a combination of group and knockout games national championship second place in the preliminary round Group Southeast and thus qualified for the summer of 1992 newly introduced Championnat National 1A , a statewide highest League.

Ringler's first season ended with the Strasbourgers on a secure place in the midfield of the classification, and the following year they even finished third in the championship, tied with defending champion FC Lyon and well behind Juvisy FCF . This year, the defender made her debut in the national team (see the chapter below) . Only two years later, the ASPTT, which finished this season only in tenth place, was relegated. Like many of her teammates, she then joined the neighboring FC Vendenheim , where she played the next two seasons in the second division . In 1998 she moved to SC Schiltigheim , also based in Lower Saxony and also a second division. There she met other former ASPTT teammates. At the end of her second year in Schiltigheim, Sandrine Ringler and her teammates were promoted to the top division for the 2000/01 season . In this, however, it was only used for a few weeks; At the end of September 2000, one day after losing to FC Lyon, she sustained serious injuries in a traffic accident. Several attempts to get back to the old performance level failed. That's why she had to quit football at a high level when she was only 27. Her playing career was also not crowned by winning a national title, especially since a women's national cup competition in France was only introduced in 2001.

Stations

  • US Heidolsheim (1979–1985)
  • FC Hilsenheim (1985–1990)
  • ASPTT Strasbourg (1990-1996)
  • FC Vendenheim (1996-1998)
  • SC Schiltigheim (1998 - September 2000)

In the national team

In the French women's national team , Sandrine Ringler made her debut in September 1994 on the occasion of a qualifying match for the 1995 European Championship against Scotland . Subsequently, coach Aimé Mignot regularly considered them until the summer of 1996. Then it took until the spring of 1997 before she came back to appearances in the blue national dress and was appointed to France's European Championship squad . At the 1997 finals in Norway and Sweden , however, she played only a short stint: in the second group match between France and Russia , which France won 3-1 , Mignot replaced her with goal scorer Marinette Pichon in the 89th minute . After the preliminary round, France had to return home, if only because of the slightly worse goal difference compared to the Spanish women with equal points .

Then there was another interruption in Ringler's international career because Mignot's successor Élisabeth Loisel no longer considered her. It was only in March 1999 that Loisel brought the defender back to the national team and used her in two friendly matches against the women from Austria (for the full playing time) and Japan (for the last five minutes). The encounter against the Asians was their last appearance for France.

Sandrine Ringler has a total of 19 international A matches in which she did not score. Apart from the game against Austria, she did not play against other women from the German-speaking area, but against the Americans four times .

Coaching career

Sandrine Ringler had already acquired her first trainer license in 1996 and, in addition to her own playing career, trained girls' teams from her respective club. Another coaching license followed in 2004 and currently (beginning of 2019) she is taking part in a course at the end of which the acquisition of the Europe-wide coaching license for teams of all ages, with the exception of professional teams, stands. From 2004 to 2008 and again since 2012 she has worked as an assistant coach for the French U-19 / U-20 team; in this role she last worked under Gilles Eyquem at the 2018 U-20 World Cup in Brittany . In the years in between (2008–2012) she had coached France's student national team in futsal .

In addition, Sandrine Ringler was hired as a technical advisor for girls' football at the Alsatian FFF regional division LAFA in 2001, soon after her premature retirement as a player . She still holds this position in 2019 at LAFA's successor Ligue du Grand Est de Football , which is responsible for the Grand Est after the French regional reform.

literature

  • Ligue d'Alsace de Football Association (Ed.): 100 ans de football en Alsace. Édito, Strasbourg 2002, ISBN 2-911219-13-9 , 5 volumes

Web links

Evidence and Notes

  1. Ligue d'Alsace de Football Association (ed.), 100 ans de football en Alsace, 2002, Volume 4, pp. 168/169
  2. ^ Ligue d'Alsace de Football Association (Ed.), 100 ans de football en Alsace, 2002, Volume 2, p. 25
  3. ^ Ligue d'Alsace de Football Association (Ed.), 100 ans de football en Alsace, 2002, Volume 5, p. 155
  4. according to the data sheet of the EM game against the Russians at fff.fr
  5. Match data sheet from Ringler's last national team appearance at fff.fr
  6. see the U-19 coaching staff on the association's website
  7. Photos of the Bleuettes coaching staff (U-20 women) at this tournament on fff.fr