André Breitenreiter

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André Breitenreiter (born 2 October 1973) is a German professional manager and former player. Breitenreiter’s entire playing career was in his native Germany, appearing in both the Bundesliga and 2. Bundesliga for nine different sides.

André Breitenreiter
Breitenreiter as Schalke 04 manager in 2015
Personal information
Date of birth (1973-10-02) 2 October 1973 (age 50)
Place of birthLangenhagen, West Germany
Height1.82 m (6 ft 0 in)
Position(s)Attacking midfielder, striker
Youth career
1977–1984Borussia Hannover
1984–1986Hannoverscher SC
1986–1991Hannover 96
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1991–1994Hannover 9672(10)
1994–1997Hamburger SV71(12)
1998–1999VfL Wolfsburg24(1)
1999–2002SpVgg Unterhaching78(18)
2002SC Langenhagen14(3)
2002–2003Hessen Kassel13(8)
2003–2007Holstein Kiel116(15)
2007–2009BV Cloppenburg60(9)
2009–2010TSV Havelse21(6)
Total469(82)
International career
Germany U1612(8)
Germany U1814(4)
Germany U205(3)
1995–1996Germany U216(2)
Managerial career
2011–2013TSV Havelse
2013–2015SC Paderborn
2015–2016Schalke 04
2017–2019Hannover 96
2021–2022Zürich
2022–2023TSG Hoffenheim
2024Huddersfield Town
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

As a manager, Breiitenreiter led SC Paderborn to promotion to the Bundesliga for the first time in history, as well as leading Schalke 04, Hannover 96 and TSG Hoffenheim in the top flight. He won the Swiss Super League for FC Zürich in 2021–22 and briefly led EFL Championship club Huddersfield Town in 2024.

Playing career

Breitenreiter with TSV Havelse in 2009

Breitenreiter played for Hannoverscher SC, Borussia Hannover, Hannover 96, Hamburger SV, VfL Wolfsburg, SpVgg Unterhaching, SC Langenhagen, Hessen Kassel, Holstein Kiel, BV Cloppenburg and TSV Havelse.[1] He played 144 Bundesliga matches scoring 28 goals and 101 2. Bundesliga matches with 14 goals.[2]

Managerial career

Early years and SC Paderborn

Breitenreiter started his coaching career in 2009 and worked as scout for Kaiserslautern. On 3 January 2011, he was appointed as head coach of TSV Havelse, club playing in Regionalliga Nord.[3] In 2012, he won Lower Saxony Cup with TSV Havelse. On 15 May 2013, it was announced that Breitenreiter would take over SC Paderborn starting in the 2013–14 season.[4] On 11 May 2014, his club gained promotion to Bundesliga for the first time ever in club's history. On 20 September 2014, after four undefeated games (two wins, two draws) in the German top tier, Paderborn was top of the league, ahead of European powerhouses Bayern Munich, Borussia Dortmund and Bayer Leverkusen.[5]

Schalke 04

Breitenreiter became the 14th head coach for Schalke 04 in the last decade on 12 June 2015, signing a two-year deal with €500,000 being paid to Paderborn for his services.[6] His debut on 8 August was a 5–0 win away to MSV Duisburg in the first round of the DFB-Pokal,[7] followed a week later by a 3–0 win at SV Werder Bremen in his first league game.[8] His first campaign as a manager in European football ended in the last 32 of the UEFA Europa League with a 3–0 loss to Shakhtar Donetsk.[9] He left the club after a single season, having come fifth and qualified for the Europa League again, but falling short of club aims of reaching the UEFA Champions League.[10]

Hannover 96

Breitenreiter was appointed as the new head coach for Hannover 96 on 20 March 2017, replacing Daniel Stendel during a time of internal changes at the fourth-placed club.[11] On 1 April, he debuted in a 2–0 home win over 1. FC Union Berlin, ending a nine-game unbeaten run for the league leaders.[12] He finished his nine-game run to the end of the season unbeaten, winning promotion as runners-up to VfB Stuttgart.[13] He was sacked on 27 January 2019 after eight consecutive losses put the team second from bottom; his last result was a 5–1 loss at Dortmund, and he was replaced by Thomas Doll.[14]

FC Zürich

Breitenreiter took the first foreign job of his lifetime in the summer of 2021, taking over an FC Zürich side that had avoided relegation from the Swiss Super League on the penultimate matchday of the previous season. His team won the 2021–22 season by 14 points over FC Basel, playing a quick counter-attacking game; only two teams averaged less possession in the entire league.[15]

TSG Hoffenheim

In May 2022, Breitenreiter signed for TSG Hoffenheim, succeeding Sebastian Hoeneß on a two-year deal.[16] He was sacked the following 6 February 2023, with the club three points above the relegation zone.[17]

Huddersfield Town

On 15 February 2024, Breitenreiter was appointed head coach of English Championship club Huddersfield Town on a two-and-a-half year contract. The team were in 20th, five points above the relegation zone.[18] Nine days later, his team came from behind to win 2–1 at Watford on his debut.[19]

On 10 May 2024, Breitenreiter left Huddersfield Town by mutual consent following the club's relegation to EFL League One; he had won two of his 13 games. Before his final game, he told BBC Radio Leeds that he would not have joined the club if he had been aware of "things and problems", alleging that they had spent pre-season playing golf and going to the pub.[20]

Coaching record

As of 4 May 2024
TeamFromToRecord
MWDLWin %Ref.
Havelse3 January 2011[3]30 June 2013[4]86412025047.67[21][22]
SC Paderborn1 July 2013[4]12 June 2015[6]71261827036.62[23]
Schalke 0412 June 2015[6]14 May 2016[10]44201014045.45[24]
Hannover20 March 2017[11]27 January 2019[14]66201729030.30[25]
FC Zürich9 June 202130 June 2022392586064.10[26]
TSG Hoffenheim1 July 20226 February 2023227411031.82[27]
Huddersfield Town15 February 202410 May 202413256015.38
Total34114182118041.35

Honours

Player

Hannover 96

Manager

TSV Havelse

SC Paderborn

Zürich

References