Armin Reutershahn

Armin Reutershahn (born 1 March 1960) is a German football coach and manager.

Armin Reutershahn
Personal information
Full name Armin Reutershahn
Date of birth (1960-03-01) March 1, 1960
Place of birth Duisburg, West Germany
Playing position(s) Goalkeeper
Club information
Current team
Eintracht Frankfurt (Assistant Manager)
Youth career
Team
Preussen Krefeld
TuS Xanten
VfB Homberg
Teams managed
Years Team
1991–1997 Bayer Uerdingen (Assistant Manager)
1996 Bayer Uerdingen (Caretaker Coach)
1997–2003 Hamburger SV (Assistant Manager)
2004–2009 Eintracht Frankfurt (Assistant Manager)
2009–2012 1. FC Nürnberg (Assistant Manager)
2012–2013 1. FC Nürnberg (Manager)
2014–2015 VfB Stuttgart (Assistant Manager)
2016 TSG Hoffenheim (Assistant Manager)
2016– Eintracht Frankfurt (Assistant Manager)

Career

Reutershahn played in his active career for Preussen Krefeld, TuS Xanten and VfB Homberg as goalkeeper.

Coaching career

He began his coaching career as assistant coach by Bayer Uerdingen and was a short time in the 1995–96 season Caretaker Head Coach of the club.[1] After the relegation was moving back as assistant coach of Bayer Uerdingen and signed in summer 1997 a contract as assistant coach of Hamburger SV. Reutershan was than for six years assistant coach of the HSV and was named after one year without a job as assistant of Friedhelm Funkel at Eintracht Frankfurt. After the resigning of Funkel, Reutershahn left the club and signed a contract as assistant manager with 1. FC Nürnberg.

Following the departure of Nürnberg's manager Dieter Hecking in December 2012, Reutershahn took charge of the Bundesliga team along with Michael Wiesinger. On 7 October 2013, the duo was dismissed after a 0–5 defeat against Hamburger SV.[2]

On 10 March 2014 Reutershahn became assistant manager of VfB Stuttgart.

Personal

His son Yannick plays for TuRa Harksheide, his daughter Larissa is an Equestrianism and his wife is former swimmer Beate was member of the 1976 Summer Olympics team in Montreal[3]

gollark: You have a reasonable point that you can be nice to people inside a conversation but (possibly inadvertently) non-nice to those outside it. I think niceness within conversations is more important, as people outside them can more easily choose not to participate in them, but this doesn't work excellently. Banning discussion of anything some people do not like reading is *a* fix for some of this, but I don't like the tradeoffs, given the wide range of things in this category. Isolating that elsewhere is also not good for various reasons I indicated before. A generalized rule-4-y approach could end up doing basically the same thing as preemptively banning it, and people seem dissatisfied with "ignore the channel for a bit". Thus, I'm unsure of how the issue can be solved nicely and it's worth actually investigating the options.
gollark: What a strange name.
gollark: You are to wait while I:- type- think- move a mouse cursor around somewhat- get distracted by unrelated topics repeatedly
gollark: Too bad, you are to wait.
gollark: Somewhat, maybe. Please hold on while I engage in typing™.

References

  1. "Armin Reutershahn". Fussballdaten - Die Fußball-Datenbank.
  2. "Wiesinger sacked by Nurnberg". teamtalk.com. 8 October 2013. Archived from the original on 11 October 2013. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  3. "Der unermüdliche Helfer" (in German). welt.de.
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