Germany women's national field hockey team

The Germany women's national field hockey team has represented the unified Germany since 1991.

Germany
NicknameDie Danas
AssociationDeutscher Hockey-Bund
(German Hockey Federation)
ConfederationEHF (Europe)
CoachXavier Reckinger
Assistant coach(es)Akim Bouchouchi
James Lewis
Dominik Ludwig
Florian Keller
ManagerFabian Schuler
CaptainJanne Müller-Wieland
FIH ranking
Current 4 (1 March 2020)[1]
Olympic Games
Appearances7 (first in 1992)
Best result1st (2004)
World Cup
Appearances14 (first in 1974)
Best result1st (1976, 1981)
EuroHockey Championship
Appearances14 (first in 1984)
Best result1st (2007, 2013)

The team won the gold medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece, by defeating the Netherlands in the final.

Tournament records

World Cup[2]
Year Host city Position
1974 Mandelieu, France 3rd
1976 West Berlin, West Germany 1st
1978 Madrid, Spain 2nd
1981 Buenos Aires, Argentina 1st
1983 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 4th
1986 Amsterdam, Netherlands 2nd
1990 Sydney, Australia 8th
1994 Dublin, Ireland 4th
1998 Utrecht, Netherlands 3rd
2002 Perth, Australia 7th
2006 Madrid, Spain 8th
2010 Rosario, Argentina 4th
2014 The Hague, Netherlands 8th
2018 London, England 5th
European Championships[3]
Year Host city Position
1984 Lille, France 3rd
1987 London, England 4th
1991 Brussels, Belgium 2nd
1995 Amsterdam, Netherlands 3rd
1999 Cologne, Germany 2nd
2003 Barcelona, Spain 3rd
2005 Dublin, Ireland 2nd
2007 Manchester, England 1st
2009 Amsterdam, Netherlands 2nd
2011 Mönchengladbach, Germany 2nd
2013 Boom, Belgium 1st
2015 London, England 3rd
2017 Amsterdam, Netherlands 4th
2019 Antwerp, Belgium 2nd
2021 Amsterdam, Netherlands Qualified
FIH World League[4]
Year Round Host city Position
2012–13 Semifinal Rotterdam, Netherlands 1st
Final San Miguel de Tucumán, Argentina 7th
2014–15 Semifinal Valencia, Spain 3rd
Final Rosario, Argentina 3rd
2016–17 Semifinal Johannesburg, South Africa 2nd
Final Auckland, New Zealand 6th
FIH Pro League[5]
Year Host city Position
2019 Amsterdam, Netherlands 3rd
2020 No Grand Final Qualified
Olympic Games[6]
Year Host city Position
1980 Moscow, Soviet Union N/A
1984 Los Angeles, United States 2nd
1988 Seoul, South Korea 5th
1992 Barcelona, Spain 2nd
1996 Atlanta, United States 6th
2000 Sydney, Australia 7th
2004 Athens, Greece 1st
2008 Beijing, China 4th
2012 London, United Kingdom 7th
2016 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 3rd
2020 Tokyo, Japan Qualified
Champions Trophy[7]
Year Host city Position
1987 Amstelveen, Netherlands DNP
1989 Germany, West Germany 3rd
1991 Berlin, Germany 2nd
1993 Amstelveen, Netherlands 3rd
1995 Mar del Plata, Argentina 4th
1997 Berlin, Germany 2nd
1999 Brisbane, Australia 3rd
2000 Amstelveen, Netherlands 2nd
2001 Amstelveen, Netherlands DNP
2002 Macau, China
2003 Sydney, Australia
2004 Rosario, Argentina 2nd
2005 Canberra, Australia 5th
2006 Amstelveen, Netherlands 1st
2007 Quilmes, Argentina 3rd
2008 Mönchengladbach, Germany 2nd
2009 Sydney, Australia 4th
2010 Nottingham, England 4th
2011 Amstelveen, Netherlands 8th
2012 Roasario, Argentina 4th
2014 Mendoza, Argentina 7th
2016 London, England DNP
2018 Changzhou, China
Champions Challenge I[8]
Year Host city Position
2002 Johannesburg, South Africa DNP
2003 Catania, Italy 1st
2005 – 2014 Did Not Participate

Team

Current squad

The following 18 players represented Germany in the 2020 test match against South Africa on 4 February in Stellenbosch.[9]

Caps and goals current as of 4 February 2020 after the match against South Africa.

No. Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
15 1GK Nathalie Kubalski (1993-09-03) 3 September 1993 21 0 Düsseldorfer HC
32 1GK Rosa Krüger (1995-03-19) 19 March 1995 5 0 Harvestehuder

2 2DF Kira Horn (1995-02-12) 12 February 1995 29 1 Club an der Alster
14 2DF Janne Müller-Wieland (C) (1986-10-28) 28 October 1986 309 14 UHC Hamburg
16 2DF Sonja Zimmermann (1999-06-15) 15 June 1999 28 3 Mannheimer HC
19 2DF Maike Schaunig (1996-03-13) 13 March 1996 39 0 Uhlenhorst Mülheim
25 2DF Viktoria Huse (1995-10-24) 24 October 1995 56 6 Club an der Alster
30 2DF Hanna Granitzki (1997-07-31) 31 July 1997 53 3 Club an der Alster

3 3MF Amelie Wortmann (1996-10-21) 21 October 1996 51 2 UHC Hamburg
9 3MF Elisa Gräve (1996-10-18) 18 October 1996 72 3 Düsseldorfer HC
21 3MF Franzisca Hauke (1989-09-10) 10 September 1989 178 16 Harvestehuder
27 3MF Naomi Heyn (1998-09-20) 20 September 1998 24 5 Rot-Weiss Köln
28 3MF Rebecca Grote (1992-08-06) 6 August 1992 26 14 Rot-Weiss Köln

6 4FW Hannah Gablać (1995-02-25) 25 February 1995 88 13 Club an der Alster
8 4FW Anne Schröder (1994-09-11) 11 September 1994 138 11 Club an der Alster
18 4FW Lisa Altenburg (1989-09-23) 23 September 1989 123 30 Club an der Alster
24 4FW Pia Maertens (1999-01-06) 6 January 1999 31 15 Rot-Weiss Köln
66 4FW Pauline Heinz (2001-05-01) 1 May 2001 7 1 Rüsselsheimer

The remainder of the 2020 national squad is as follows:

Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club Latest call-up
GK Julia Sonntag (1991-11-01) 1 November 1991 53 0 Rot-Weiss Köln v.  Ireland; January 29, 2020

DF Nike Lorenz (1997-03-12) 12 March 1997 110 28 Mannheimer HC v.  South Africa; January 30, 2020
DF Selin Oruz (1997-02-05) 5 February 1997 94 2 Düsseldorfer HC v.  South Africa; January 30, 2020

FW Lena Micheel (1998-04-29) 29 April 1998 45 10 UHC Hamburg v.  South Africa; February 2, 2020
FW Charlotte Stapenhorst (1995-06-15) 15 June 1995 99 30 UHC Hamburg v.  Australia; June 16, 2019
FW Cécile Pieper (1994-08-31) 31 August 1994 112 10 Mannheimer HC v.  Italy; November 3, 2019

Notable players

Results

2020 Fixtures & Results

2020 Statistics
Pld W WD LD L GF GA GD Pts
55000242+2215

Ireland Test Series

25 January 2020 Test MatchIreland 0–4 GermanyStellenbosch, South Africa
15:00 Report Maertens  9', 45'
Huse  29'
Grote  30'
Stadium: PSO Club House
29 January 2020 Test MatchGermany 4–1 IrelandStellenbosch, South Africa
19:00 Lorenz  14'
Micheel  27'
Schröder  32'
Horn  57'
Report Curran  53' Stadium: PSO Club House

South Africa Test Series

30 January 2020 Test MatchSouth Africa 0–4 GermanyStellenbosch, South Africa
19:00 Report Maertens  5', 54'
Grote  57'
Micheel  59'
Stadium: PSO Club House
2 February 2020 Test MatchSouth Africa 1–8 GermanyStellenbosch, South Africa
16:30 Paton  15' Report Maertens  1'
Heinz  9'
Heyn  21'
Grote  32', 51'
Zimmermann  41', 50'
Micheel  43'
Stadium: PSO Club House
4 February 2020 Test MatchSouth Africa 0–4 GermanyStellenbosch, South Africa
10:00 Report Heyn  21'
Zimmermann  45+'
Grote  46'
Maertens  49'
Stadium: PSO Club House

FIH Pro League

26 March 2020 Home 4Germany v BelgiumHamburg, Germany
14:00 Report Stadium: Uhlenhorster HC
28 March 2020 Home 5Germany v New ZealandHamburg, Germany
16:30 Report Stadium: Uhlenhorster HC
29 March 2020 Home 6Germany v New ZealandHamburg, Germany
15:30 Report Stadium: Uhlenhorster HC
25 April 2020 Home 7Germany v ChinaBerlin, Germany
14:30 Report Stadium: Ernst Reuter Sportfeld
26 April 2020 Home 8Germany v ChinaBerlin, Germany
12:30 Report Stadium: Ernst Reuter Sportfeld

XXXII Olympic Games

26 July 2020 Pool AGreat Britain v GermanyTokyo, Japan
09:30 Stadium: Oi Hockey Stadium
27 July 2020 Pool AGermany v IndiaTokyo, Japan
21:15 Stadium: Oi Hockey Stadium
29 July 2020 Pool AGermany v IrelandTokyo, Japan
12:15 Stadium: Oi Hockey Stadium
31 July 2020 Pool ASouth Africa v GermanyTokyo, Japan
09:30 Stadium: Oi Hockey Stadium
1 August 2020 Pool AGermany v NetherlandsTokyo, Japan
18:30 Stadium: Oi Hockey Stadium

Goalscorers

2020 Goalscoring Table
Pos. Player FG PC PS Total
1 Pia Maertens 5 1 0 6
2 Rebecca Grote 0 4 1 5
3 Lena Micheel 2 1 0 3
Sonja Zimmermann 0 3 0
5 Naomi Heyn 2 0 0 2
6 Pauline Heinz 1 0 0 1
Kira Horn 1 0 0
Viktoria Huse 0 1 0
Nike Lorenz 0 1 0
Anne Schröder 1 0 0
Total 12 11 1 24

References

  1. "FIH Men's and Women's World Ranking". FIH. 1 March 2020. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  2. "World Cup". fih.ch. International Hockey Federation. Retrieved 4 February 2020.
  3. "European Championships". fih.ch. International Hockey Federation. Retrieved 4 February 2020.
  4. "Hockey World League". fih.ch. International Hockey Federation. Retrieved 4 February 2020.
  5. "FIH Pro League". fihproleague.com. FIH Pro League. Retrieved 4 February 2020.
  6. "Olympic Games". fih.ch. International Hockey Federation. Retrieved 4 February 2020.
  7. "Champions Trophy". fih.ch. International Hockey Federation. Retrieved 4 February 2020.
  8. "Other". fih.ch. International Hockey Federation. Retrieved 4 February 2020.
  9. "Olympia-Vorbereitung: Kantersieg im vorletzten Spiel". web.hockey.de (in German). Deutscher Hockey-Bund. Retrieved 3 February 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.