Dominik Thalhammer Explained

Dominik Thalhammer
Height:1.86 m
Birth Date:1970 10, df=yes
Birth Place:Vienna, Austria
Manageryears1:1997–2000
Managerclubs1:SC Brunn/Gebirge
Manageryears2:2000–2003
Managerclubs2:AKA Admira Wacker Mödling U18
Manageryears3:2003–2004
Managerclubs3:FC Admira Wacker Mödling II
Manageryears4:2004–2005
Managerclubs4:FC Admira Wacker Mödling
Manageryears5:2006
Managerclubs5:Wiener Sportklub
Manageryears6:2008
Managerclubs6:Floridsdorfer AC
Manageryears7:2010
Managerclubs7:TSV Ottensheim
Manageryears8:2010–2011
Managerclubs8:Union Pregarten
Manageryears9:2011–2020
Managerclubs9:Austria women
Manageryears10:2020–2021
Managerclubs10:LASK Linz
Manageryears11:2021–2022
Managerclubs11:Cercle Brugge
Manageryears12:2022–2023
Managerclubs12:KV Oostende

Dominik Thalhammer (born 2 October 1970) is an Austrian football manager, best known for bringing Austria's women to the brink of the Euros final at their first ever major championship, and later spells at Cercle Brugge and KV Oostende in Belgian men's football.

Coaching career

Early career

Thalhammer first made his name at FC Admira Wacker Mödling, being appointed as U18 coach at the age of 29. Impressing as both U18 and reserve team coach, Thalhammer was put in charge of the first team in 2004, making the then 33-year-old the youngest coach in the history of the Austrian Bundesliga.[1]

Leaving the role after eleven months with Admira losing their first six games of the 2005-06 season,[2] and having moved through a series of Austrian men's clubs through the 2000s, Thalhammer made a switch to women's football in 2011.

Austria women's team coach

Thalhammer was appointed coach of both the Austria women's national team and the Austrian U17 women in 2011. In his first campaign in charge, Austria reached the Euro play-offs for the first time in their history, losing to Russia in their bid to reach Euro 2013 in Sweden.

With the U17s, Thalhammer achieved the first qualification of an Austrian women's national team for the finals of any European Championship, which took place in England in 2014. There they narrowly missed out on a place in the semi-finals after a 0-0 draw against Portugal, a 2-1 defeat against England and a 1-0 win over Italy.

After finishing second in their qualifying group for the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup behind France, with only the group winners going through to the finals, Austria qualified for a major tournament for the first time, Euro 2017 held in the Netherlands.

Beating Switzerland and Iceland in the group stage, added to a draw against France, Austria qualified for the knockout stages on their debut, with a shock victory achieved in the quarter-finals over Spain on penalties after a goalless draw.

Another shoot-out in the semis against Denmark saw them edged out in another shoot-out, where Austria failed to score. The sensational run saw Thalhammer nominated as FIFA Women's World Coach of the Year, where he finished eighth.[3] [4] Austria would go on to miss out on qualification for the 2019 FIFA World Cup, despite losing only two of their eight qualifying games, both of those to eventual group-winners Spain, with the only automatic spot available from the group taken by the future 2023 World Cup winners, who won all eight qualifying group games.

LASK Linz

After nine years as Austria women's coach, Thalhammer stepped down to return to the men's game for the 2020-2021 season with LASK Linz,[5] guiding the Upper Austrians to fourth-place, qualifying for the UEFA Europa League, and reaching the 2021 Cup Final, where they lost to Red Bull Salzburg.

LASK got off to a bad start in the 2021-22 season, falling to second-last by the seventh matchday, dropping out of the Europa League into the Conference League. Thalhammer was dismissed from LASK in September 2021.

Cercle Brugge and KV Oostende

Within two months, Thalhammer was approached by lowly Belgian Pro League team Cercle Brugge, who were second-from-bottom and fighting relegation.[6] [7] The Austrian won seven of his first eight games in charge at Cercle,[8] finishing the 2021-22 Pro League season 10th of the 18 clubs, missing out on the European play-offs by two places. A poor start to the following campaign saw him replaced in September 2022 by his assistant Miron Muslic.[9]

Thalhammer quickly moved to nearby KV Oostende, but with the club suffering from a severe lack of funding, they were relegated at the end of the 2022–23 Belgian Pro League season, and Thalhammer stood down as coach.

Notes and References

  1. News: Krauss nicht mehr Admira-Trainer (Krauss no longer Admira coach). Der Standard. 1 October 2004. 8 February 2024. de.
  2. News: Thalhammer nicht mehr Admira-Trainer (Thalhammer no longer Admira coach). Der Standard. 17 August 2005. 8 February 2024. de.
  3. News: Ten names in the running to be The Best FIFA Women’s Coach 2017. FIFA.com. 17 August 2017. 8 February 2024. en.
  4. News: Thalhammer: I was not expecting to be nominated. Ghana Soccernet. 22 September 2017. 8 February 2024. en.
  5. News: Dominik Thalhammer neuer Trainer des LASK (Dominik Thalhammer is the new LASK coach). Sky Sport Austria. 11 July 2020. 8 February 2024. de.
  6. News: L’Autrichien Dominik Thalhammer est le nouvel entraîneur du Cercle de Bruges (Austrian Dominik Thalhammer is the new coach of Cercle Brugge). SudInfo. 28 November 2021. 8 February 2024. fr.
  7. News: OFFICIEEL: Cercle Brugge stelt Thalhammer voor als nieuwe trainer (OFFICIAL: Cercle Brugge presents Thalhammer as new coach). Voetbal Primeur. 28 November 2021. 8 February 2024. nl.
  8. News: Cercle Brugge-coach verklapt geheim: "Het gaat niet om mij, maar om het team" (Cercle Brugge coach reveals secret: "It's not about me, it's about the team"). Sporza. 27 January 2022. 8 February 2024. nl.
  9. News: Cercle Brugge grijpt in en zet trainer Dominik Thalhammer op straat (Cercle Brugge intervenes and fires coach Dominik Thalhammer). Gazet van Antwerpen. 19 September 2022. 8 February 2024. nl.