- Markus Schupp
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Markus Schupp Personal information Date of birth 7 January 1966 Place of birth Idar-Oberstein, West Germany Height 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in) Playing position Midfielder Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 1984–1991 1. FC Kaiserslautern 177 (16) 1991–1992 SG Wattenscheid 09 37 (8) 1992–1995 Bayern Munich 91 (12) 1995–1996 Eintracht Frankfurt 30 (4) 1996–1997 Hamburger SV 16 (0) 1997 → FC Basel (loan) 6 (0) 1997–2001 Sturm Graz 128 (5) – Total 485 (45 ) National team 1985–1987 West Germany U-21 7 (0) Teams managed 2002–2004 Sturm Graz (reserves) 2004-2006 Wacker Burghausen 2007–2008 Hamburger SV (assistant) 2009 FC Red Bull Salzburg (assistant) 2009–2010 Karlsruher SC * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).Markus Schupp (born January 7, 1966 in Idar-Oberstein, Rhineland-Palatinate) is a German football manager and former player.
Contents
Career
Schupp started playing professionally in 1984 at 1. FC Kaiserslautern, where won the German Cup in 1990 and the League Title in 1991. He went on to play over 150 matches for the club over seven years before joining SG Wattenscheid 09 in July 1991. He played at Wattenscheid for just one season, but he was so impressive during that time that it led to him being signed by FC Bayern Munich in the Summer of 1992. At Bayern, he was a first-team regular and helped the club win the 1994 Bundesliga title and two Fuji-Cups, in 1994 and 1995. He then moved to Eintracht Frankfurt in 1995 where he had moderate personal success but won no major honours as he left the club after just one season to play for Hamburger SV.[1] He was by no means a first-team regular at Hamburg and had a short loan spell at FC Basel in 1997. Later that year, he signed for SK Sturm Graz of Austria and retired in 2001, having played 128 league games for the club.[2]
Coaching career
After his retirement from playing, he managed SV Wacker Burghausen from 2004 until 2006 and was assistant manager to Huub Stevens at Hamburger SV during the 2007/08 season.[3] On 22 April 2009 signed a contract with FC Red Bull Salzburg as assistant coach and signed then on 3 September 2009 a contract as head coach from Karlsruher SC,[4] the contract runs between 30 June 2011.[5]
Honours
- Bundesliga champion: 1991, 1994.
- DFB-Pokal winner: 1990.
- Bundesliga runner-up: 1993.
References
Karlsruher SC – managers Hipp (1952–53) · Moser (1953) · Patek (1953–56) · Janda (1956–59) · Frühwirth (1959–62) · Sommerlatt (1962–65) · Schneider (1965) · Roth (1965–66) · Frantz (1966–67) · Gawliczek (1967–68) · Widmayer (1968) · Termath (1968) · Baluses (1968–71) · Baas (1971–73) · Rühl (1973–77) · Hoss (1977) · Schafstall (1977–78) · Baureis (1978) · Krafft (1978–81) · Merkel (1981–82) · Franz (1982–83) · Strehlau (1983) · Olk (1983–85) · Buchmann (1985–86) · Schäfer (1986–98) · Berger (1998) · Ulrich (1998–99) · Löw (1999–2000) · Kuntz (2000–02) · Pezzaiuoli (2002) · Köstner (2002–04) · Fanz (2004–05) · Becker (2005–09) · Schupp (2009–10) · Kauczinski (2010) · Rapolder (2010–11) · Scharinger (2011–)
Categories:- 1966 births
- Living people
- German footballers
- Germany under-21 international footballers
- 1. FC Kaiserslautern players
- SG Wattenscheid 09 players
- FC Bayern Munich players
- Eintracht Frankfurt players
- Hamburger SV players
- FC Basel players
- Sturm Graz players
- Fußball-Bundesliga players
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