Ferdinand Feldhofer (born 23 October 1979) is an Austrian football coach and a former player.

Ferdinand Feldhofer
Personal information
Date of birth (1979-10-23) 23 October 1979 (age 44)
Place of birth Vorau, Austria
Height 1.84 m (6 ft 0 in)
Position(s) Defender
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)
International career
2002–2007 Austria 13 (1)
Managerial career
2015–2019 SV Lafnitz
2019–2021 Wolfsberger AC
2021–2022 SK Rapid Wien
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Career edit

Club edit

Feldhofer started his career as a youth player with 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, Feldhofer ended up winning the case. 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, where he signed a 3-year contract.

National team edit

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

Managerial career edit

After acquiring his UEFA A Licence in June 2012, Feldhofer was a group manager at the "LAZ Weiz" in Weiz from 2013-2014. After that, from 2014 to 2015, he was working as an individual trainer for the ÖFB at the LAZ Styria. On the 10th of October, Feldhofer was revealed as manager of Austrian Regionalliga club SV Lafnitz and two days later started his work there. He was able to win the Austrian Regionalliga Central with the club, getting promoted to the Austrian 2. Liga by doing so. In October 2019, Feldhofer acquired his UEFA Pro Licence, the highest of Coach licences which is required in order to coach professional teams.

In December 2019, Feldhofer became coach of Austrian Bundesliga club Wolfsberger AC. Under him, the club was able to record what probably were the biggest achievements in the history of the club to date. At the end of the 2019/20 season, the Wolfsberger club stood at third place, which was the best season result in the history of the club, with this they were also able to immediately qualify for the Europa League for the second time. In 2020/21, the club was able to pass the group stage of said competition for the first time in club history but their run was put to a halt after two ties against Tottenham Hotspur. In the league however, the club was struggling to find continuous wins as they were, among other problems, missing a goalscorer of high caliber with Shon Weissman having departed to Real Valladolid. These smaller problems were however put in the background after it became public that Feldhofer had seemingly repeatedly been having fights with club skipper Michael Liendl putting him on the bench a few times before finally leaving him, together with two other leading players Michael Novak and Christopher Wernitznig, out of the match-day squad before their cup-clash against LASK, the game ended in a 0-1 loss after added time and Feldhofer decided to step down from his role as club-coach the following day, leaving the club at fifth in the table.

Since 28 November 2021, Feldhofer managed Austrian club SK Rapid Wien. Feldhofer was fired by Rapid on 16 October 2022.[1]

Managerial statistics edit

As of match played 15 October 2022
Managerial record by team and tenure
Team Nation From To Record Ref
G W D L Win %
SV Lafnitz   10 October 2015 23 December 2019 132 66 34 32 050.00 [2]
Wolfsberger AC   23 December 2019 4 March 2021 46 20 10 16 043.48 [3]
Rapid Wien   29 November 2021 16 October 2022 42 17 11 14 040.48 [4]
Total 220 103 55 62 046.82

Honours edit

As player edit

As coach edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Änderungen im Trainerteam der Profis" (in German). SK Rapid Vienna. 16 October 2022. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
  2. ^ "SV Lafnitz: Matches". Soccerway. DAZN Group. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  3. ^ "Wolfsberger AC: Matches". Soccerway. DAZN Group. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  4. ^ "SK Rapid Wien: Matches". Soccerway. DAZN Group. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  1. http://www.laola1.at/de/fussball/bundesliga/news/feldhofer-beendet-seine-karriere/page/58650-32-48---7.html Archived 29 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20161012100515/http://www.collegeweiz-stfv.at/trainer/ferdinand-feldhofer/
  3. http://sportnet.at/home/fussball/international/4840537/Fussball-Live_ExSturmKicker-Ferdinand-Feldhofer-hat-neuen-Job
  4. https://www.laola1.at/de/red/fussball/2--liga/news/2--liga--lafnitz-trainer-feldhofer-erhaelt-uefa-pro-lizenz/
  5. https://www.rzpelletswac.at/2019/12/23/feldhofer-neuer-cheftrainer/
  6. https://www.laola1.at/de/red/fussball/oefb-cup/news/wac-boss-riegler-zur-causa-feldhofer-liendl---eine-ungute-sache-/
  7. https://www.rzpelletswac.at/2021/03/04/feldhofer-tritt-zurueck/
  8. https://www.laola1.at/de/red/fussball/bundesliga/news/feldhofer-neuer-rapid-coach/

External links edit