Ferdinand Feldhofer

Ferdinand Feldhofer (born 23 October 1979) is an Austrian former footballer.

Ferdinand Feldhofer
Personal information
Full name Ferdinand Feldhofer
Date of birth (1979-10-23) 23 October 1979
Place of birth Vorau, Austria
Height 1.84 m (6 ft 0 in)
Playing position(s) Defender
Youth career
USV Riegersberg
TuS Vorau
TSV Pöllau
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1998–2002 Sturm Graz 32 (1)
2002–2005 Rapid Wien 80 (5)
2005–2008 Wacker Innsbruck 77 (4)
2008–2013 Sturm Graz 88 (2)
National team
2002–2007 Austria 13 (1)
Teams managed
2015–2019 SV Lafnitz
2019– Wolfsberger AC
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Club career

Feldhofer started his career as a youth player with USV Riegersberg, TuS Vorau and TSV Pöllau in Styria before joining Sturm Graz with whom he won the double in 1999. He moved on a free to Rapid Wien in 2002, after refusing to extend his deal with Sturm and making the way to court because he was subsequently put back in Sturm's amateur side. He clinched another league title with Rapid in 2005 and then left to become skipper of Wacker Innsbruck. In summer 2008 he decided to return to Sturm.

International career

He made his debut for Austria in a March 2002 friendly match against Slovakia and went on to earn 13 caps, scoring one goal. His last international was a March 2007 friendly match against Ghana. He was not considered for Austria's Euro 2008 squad.

International statistics

Austria national team
YearAppsGoals
200230
200300
200410
200500
200681
200710
Total131

Honours

gollark: It's 1, or the nice neat recursive factorial calculation algorithms would stop working.
gollark: It's not an example, this seems to be true in all cases.
gollark: Oh, they said they don't need to be different, so square numbers are fine I guess.
gollark: I mean, you know it has 2 as a factor, and you know it divided by 2 isn't prime, implying it must have multiple prime factors (actually, *is* that the case given square numbers' existence? hmmm.)
gollark: Well, if 0 = 1 then obviously 2 = 3.

References

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