Sv Mattersburg Players - Adnan Mravac, Akos Kovrig, Alexander Pollhuber, Alois Holler, Anton Pauschenwein, Carsten Jancker, Cem Atan, Christian (Paperback)


Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 36. Chapters: Adnan Mravac, Akos Kovrig, Alexander Pollhuber, Alois Holler, Anton Pauschenwein, Carsten Jancker, Cem Atan, Christian Aflenzer, Christian Fuchs, Christian Gartner (footballer), Csaba Csizmadia, Dalibor Dragi, David Schartner, Dietmar Kuhbauer, Dominik Doleschal, Eldar Topi, Florin Lovin, Franti ek Hanc, Goce Sedloski, Hannes Reinmayr, Herfried Sabitzer, Il o Naumoski, Ivan Parlov, Jabu Mahlangu, Jan Ko iak, Josef Hamouz, Jurgen Mansberger, Jurgen Patocka, Krzysztof Ratajczyk, Lukas Mossner, Lukas Rath, Manuel Seidl, Mario Losch, Markus Bocskor, Markus Schmidt (footballer), Martin Rodler, Marvin Potzmann, Matthias Lindner (footballer born 1988), Mattias Lindstrom (footballer), Michael Morz, Milan Faggyas, Milivoje Novakovi, Miroslav Hole ak, Nedeljko Mali, Ostoja Stjepanovi, Patrick Burger, Patrick Farkas, Peter Chrappan, Philipp Steiner, Raimund Hedl, Rene Wagner, Robert Almer, Robert Uj ik, Robert Waltner, Ronald Spuller, Sergei Mandreko, Stanislav Velicky, Stefan Bliem, Stefan Ilsanker (footballer), Thomas Borenitsch, Thomas Salamon, Thomas Wagner, Thorsten Rocher, Tibor Zatek, Toma Sedlak, Wilfried Domoraud, Zoltan Fulop. Excerpt: Carsten Jancker (born 28 August 1974 in Grevesmuhlen) is a former German professional footballer and current manager. A striker, Jancker is physically very large for a footballer, standing at 1.93 meters (6 ft 4.0 in). His height and strength have proved to be an advantage when playing as a target man, as displayed during his most successful days at FC Bayern Munich. Jancker was known for being an unusual center striker, being weak in the air despite his huge frame, but showing a surprising control of the ball, especially featuring a polished back-to-the-goal game, and a touch for scoring with his hard right-footed shot - always doing the most intelligent and simple things on the field. Jancker started his career as a trainee at Hansa Rostock before making his Bundesliga debut in 1993 with 1. FC Koln. At the age of 21, he was transferred to Rapid Vienna, scoring fourteen goals including seven in the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup to finish as the tournament's top scorer. Thanks to this impressive performance, Jancker spent only one season with the Austrian club before being brought back to Germany to play for FC Bayern Munich. Jancker's time at Bayern between 1996 and 2002 was the best period of his career, a spell which included four Bundesliga titles and victory in the 2001 UEFA Champions League. At Bayern, Jancker was partnered with the Brazilian inside-forward Giovane Elber, often rated as one of the Bundesliga's best attacking players. Jancker left Bayern for Italian side Udinese in 2002, but the move was not a success; over two seasons and 35 games, the forward registered only two goals. Jancker was said to be "too slow and predictable for Serie A" by one football website. In 2004, Jancker returned to Germany with Kaiserslautern and showed a slight improvement in form, netting five times in 25 games. In 2004, he also scored six goals in Kaiserslautern's 15-0 first round DFB-Pokal win against FC Schonberg 95, still a record for any player in the competition. This was an

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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 36. Chapters: Adnan Mravac, Akos Kovrig, Alexander Pollhuber, Alois Holler, Anton Pauschenwein, Carsten Jancker, Cem Atan, Christian Aflenzer, Christian Fuchs, Christian Gartner (footballer), Csaba Csizmadia, Dalibor Dragi, David Schartner, Dietmar Kuhbauer, Dominik Doleschal, Eldar Topi, Florin Lovin, Franti ek Hanc, Goce Sedloski, Hannes Reinmayr, Herfried Sabitzer, Il o Naumoski, Ivan Parlov, Jabu Mahlangu, Jan Ko iak, Josef Hamouz, Jurgen Mansberger, Jurgen Patocka, Krzysztof Ratajczyk, Lukas Mossner, Lukas Rath, Manuel Seidl, Mario Losch, Markus Bocskor, Markus Schmidt (footballer), Martin Rodler, Marvin Potzmann, Matthias Lindner (footballer born 1988), Mattias Lindstrom (footballer), Michael Morz, Milan Faggyas, Milivoje Novakovi, Miroslav Hole ak, Nedeljko Mali, Ostoja Stjepanovi, Patrick Burger, Patrick Farkas, Peter Chrappan, Philipp Steiner, Raimund Hedl, Rene Wagner, Robert Almer, Robert Uj ik, Robert Waltner, Ronald Spuller, Sergei Mandreko, Stanislav Velicky, Stefan Bliem, Stefan Ilsanker (footballer), Thomas Borenitsch, Thomas Salamon, Thomas Wagner, Thorsten Rocher, Tibor Zatek, Toma Sedlak, Wilfried Domoraud, Zoltan Fulop. Excerpt: Carsten Jancker (born 28 August 1974 in Grevesmuhlen) is a former German professional footballer and current manager. A striker, Jancker is physically very large for a footballer, standing at 1.93 meters (6 ft 4.0 in). His height and strength have proved to be an advantage when playing as a target man, as displayed during his most successful days at FC Bayern Munich. Jancker was known for being an unusual center striker, being weak in the air despite his huge frame, but showing a surprising control of the ball, especially featuring a polished back-to-the-goal game, and a touch for scoring with his hard right-footed shot - always doing the most intelligent and simple things on the field. Jancker started his career as a trainee at Hansa Rostock before making his Bundesliga debut in 1993 with 1. FC Koln. At the age of 21, he was transferred to Rapid Vienna, scoring fourteen goals including seven in the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup to finish as the tournament's top scorer. Thanks to this impressive performance, Jancker spent only one season with the Austrian club before being brought back to Germany to play for FC Bayern Munich. Jancker's time at Bayern between 1996 and 2002 was the best period of his career, a spell which included four Bundesliga titles and victory in the 2001 UEFA Champions League. At Bayern, Jancker was partnered with the Brazilian inside-forward Giovane Elber, often rated as one of the Bundesliga's best attacking players. Jancker left Bayern for Italian side Udinese in 2002, but the move was not a success; over two seasons and 35 games, the forward registered only two goals. Jancker was said to be "too slow and predictable for Serie A" by one football website. In 2004, Jancker returned to Germany with Kaiserslautern and showed a slight improvement in form, netting five times in 25 games. In 2004, he also scored six goals in Kaiserslautern's 15-0 first round DFB-Pokal win against FC Schonberg 95, still a record for any player in the competition. This was an

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Books LLC, Wiki Series

Country of origin

United States

Release date

November 2012

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

November 2012

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Editors

Creators

Dimensions

246 x 189 x 2mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

102

ISBN-13

978-1-155-86090-9

Barcode

9781155860909

Categories

LSN

1-155-86090-X



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