Germany football coach joachim loew biography
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I am not responsible for an individual player, but for an entire team. Joachim Löw
Like Berti Vogts in , Joachim Löw was appointed as Nationaltrainer on the crest of a wave.
Having basked in the Klinsmann-inspired success of the World Cup there would be none of the intense public and media pressure that had plagued his three immediate predecessors, and the master tactician and strategist long seen as the real driving force behind the new approach in German football would continue to press on in making the changes.
A solid striker
Jogi Löws professional career as a player would never reach the heights of the likes of a Völler or a Klinsmann, but had been solid enough. Having started off at SC Freiburg in , Löw would experience disappointing spells with both VfB Stuttgart and Eintracht Frankfurt before returning to his first club for two years which saw him score 25 times in 65 outings.
After a season at Karlsruhe SC Löw moved back for his third stint at the
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Current club
Without Club
Manager
Germany
Age
65
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Personal Details
| Date of birth/Age: | Feb 3, (65) |
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| Place of Birth: | Schönau im Schwarzwald |
| Citizenship: | Germany |
| Avg. term as coach: | Years |
| Coaching Licence: | UEFA Pro Licence |
| Agent: | ARP Sportmarketing |
Stats
History
This is an overview of the career of a manager.
| wappen | Club & role | Appointed | In charge until | Matches | PPM | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Germany Manager | 06/07 (Jul 12, ) | 21/22 (Jul 31, ) | ||||
| Germany Assistant Manager | 04/05 (Aug 1, ) | 06/07 (Jul 11, ) | - | |||
| Austria Vienna Manager | 03/04 (Jul 1, ) | 03/04 (Mar 24, ) | 31 | |||
| FC Tirol Manager | 01/02 (Oct 10, ) | 01/02 (Jun 30, ) | 25 | |||
| Adanaspor Manager | 00/01 (Dec 20, ) | 00/01 (Mar 1, ) | 5 | |||
| Karlsruher SC Manager | 99/00 (Oct 25, ) | 99/00 (Apr 19, ) | 18 | |||
| Fenerbahce Ma • Löw: Germany’s greatest coach, but a man who stayed too longIt was somehow fitting that Joachim Löw's era ended at Wembley, a stadium in which Germany have longed reigned supreme, and against England, a nation whose national football team has so often seemed stuck in the past while the Germans won the lot. In the last 16 of the World Cup in Bloemfontein, South Africa, a youthful Germany side featuring Philipp Lahm, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Jerome Boateng, Sami Khedira, Thomas Müller and Lukas Podolski dismantled the Three Lion's so-called "Golden Generation" of John Terry, Ashley Cole, Frank Lampard, Steven Gerrard and Wayne Rooney, en route to a third-place finish. For "Jogis Jungs" ("Jogi's lads"), it was a key milestone in a footballing revolution that would culminate with World Cup glory in Brazil in For England, the despairing wait for international glory went on. Fast forward 11 years and the two nations met again in the gods 16 of a major tournament. But this time, t | ||||||