Torsten Ziegner Explained

Torsten Ziegner
Birth Date:9 November 1977
Birth Place:Neuhaus am Rennweg, East Germany
Height:1.75 m
Position:Midfielder
Youthyears1:1988–1991
Youthclubs1:BSG Mikroelektronik Neuhaus
Youthyears2:1991–1995
Youthclubs2:Carl Zeiss Jena
Years1:1995–1998
Clubs1:Carl Zeiss Jena
Caps1:21
Goals1:0
Years2:1998–2000
Clubs2:FSV Zwickau
Caps2:48
Goals2:4
Years3:2000–2001
Clubs3:Stuttgarter Kickers
Caps3:37
Goals3:0
Years4:2001–2003
Clubs4:Rot-Weiß Erfurt
Caps4:69
Goals4:9
Years5:2003–2004
Clubs5:Mainz 05 II
Caps5:30
Goals5:3
Years6:2004–2011
Clubs6:Carl Zeiss Jena
Caps6:161
Goals6:24
Years7:2011–2012
Clubs7:FSV Zwickau
Caps7:24
Goals7:5
Totalcaps:390
Totalgoals:45
Manageryears1:2012–2018
Managerclubs1:FSV Zwickau
Manageryears2:2018–2020
Managerclubs2:Hallescher FC
Manageryears3:2021
Managerclubs3:Würzburger Kickers
Manageryears4:2022–2023
Managerclubs4:MSV Duisburg

Torsten Ziegner (born 9 November 1977) is a German former footballer who played as a midfielder.

Career

Ziegner began his career with Carl Zeiss Jena, joining the club from amateur club BSG Mikroelektronik Neuhaus at aged 13. He was part of a successful Jena youth team alongside Robert Enke and Mario Kanopa and was capped by the Germany youth team. He made his first-team debut in September 1995 in a 2. Bundesliga match, and made a further twenty appearances over the following three seasons, leaving the club in 1998 after they'd been relegated to the Regionalliga Nordost.

Ziegner, along with Jena team-mates Heiko Cramer and Frank Nierlich, joined FSV Zwickau, who had been relegated to the same level. Zwickau finished in fourth place in Ziegner's first season, but started the following season badly: the Regionalliga was being restructured, and only the top seven teams would avoid relegation. Zwickau's poor start to the season made this almost impossible, and so there was a mass exodus of players during the season – Ziegner was one of the players to leave, returning to the 2. Bundesliga to sign for Stuttgarter Kickers. Zwickau finished the season bottom of the table.

Ziegner spent eighteen months at Kickers, the highlight being a DFB-Pokal tie in which they took Bundesliga side Werder Bremen to extra time, before losing 2–1. The following season ended in relegation, though, so in July 2001 Ziegner returned to his native Thuringia, signing for Rot-Weiß Erfurt of the Regionalliga Süd. After two successful seasons with Erfurt, he signed for second division side FSV Mainz 05, but didn't make a first-team appearance in his year with the club, mainly playing for the reserve team. At the end of the 2003–04 season, he left Mainz to return to Carl Zeiss Jena, who were by now in the fourth-tier NOFV-Oberliga Süd.

Ziegner missed just one game in the 2004–05 season, scoring nine goals as Jena won the division, and beat MSV Neuruppin in the playoff to earn promotion to the Regionalliga Nord. Another promotion followed immediately: Ziegner scored eight goals in 31 appearances as Jena finished second, behind Rot-Weiss Essen, returning to the 2. Bundesliga after an eight-year absence. An injury in an August match against 1. FC Köln caused Ziegner to miss much of the 2006–07 season, and the following year his 24 appearances couldn't prevent the club being relegated back to the third tier, now in the form of a national 3. Liga. He played a further three years for the club at this level, but was dropped from the team near the end of the 2010–11 season, and left the club in June 2011. He joined FSV Zwickau for a second spell, helping them win the NOFV-Oberliga Süd title, and promotion to the revived Regionalliga Nordost. Ziegner retired his player career at the end of the 2011–12 season.

Coaching career

After retiring his player career, Ziegner was appointed as Zwickau's manager. He was sacked after coaching a total 213 games in six seasons on 25 April 2018.[1]

He signed for the 2018–19 with Hallescher FC.[2] On 24 February 2020, he was sacked.[3]

On 24 May 2021, he was named head coach of Würzburger Kickers, starting with the 2021–22 season.[4] He was sacked after just four months, on 4 October 2021.[5] In May 2022, with two matches to go, he took over the reign of MSV Duisburg.[6] He was sakced in September 2023.[7]

Ban

Ziegner was given a five-match ban in October 2008 for racially abusing Nigerian player Kingsley Onuegbu during a match against Eintracht Braunschweig.[8]

Managerial statistics

Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamFromToRecord
FSV Zwickau1 July 201225 April 2018 [9]
1 July 201824 February 2020 [10]
Würzburger Kickers1 July 20214 October 2021[11]
MSV Duisburg4 May 202216 September 2023
Career total

Notes and References

  1. News: FSV Zwickau: Torsten Ziegner wird mit sofortiger Wirkung von seiner Tätigkeit als Cheftrainer beim FSV Zwickau e.V. entbunden. 25 April 2018. fsv-zwickau.de. 25 April 2018.
  2. Web site: Ziegner wird neuer Trainer in Halle. kicker.de. 27 March 2018. 27 March 2018.
  3. Web site: HFC stellt Trainer Torsten Ziegner frei. dfb.de. 24 February 2020. 24 February 2020. German.
  4. News: Torsten Ziegner wird neuer Cheftrainer des FC Würzburger Kickers. wuerzburger-kickers.de . de . 24 May 2021. 24 May 2021.
  5. News: Würzburg stellt Trainer Ziegner frei. dfb.de . de . 4 October 2021. 4 October 2021.
  6. News: Duisburg: Ziegner übernimmt für Schmidt. msv-duisburg.de . de . 4 May 2022. 4 May 2022.
  7. Web site: MSV stellt Torsten Ziegner & Michael Hiemisch frei. dfb.de . 16 September 2023. 16 September 2023. de.
  8. Web site: German player banned for racism. 28 October 2008. 28 October 2008. BBC.
  9. Web site: FSV Zwickau: Matches . Soccerway . Perform Group . 31 October 2021.
  10. Web site: Hallescher FC: Matches . Soccerway . Perform Group . 31 October 2021.
  11. Web site: Würzburger Kickers: Matches . Soccerway . Perform Group . 31 October 2021.