Christian Ilzer Explained

Christian Ilzer
Fullname:Christian Ilzer
Birth Date:21 October 1977
Birth Place:Puch bei Weiz, Austria
Height:1.84m[1]
Position:Midfielder
Currentclub:Sturm Graz (Manager)
Youthyears1:1986–1998
Youthclubs1:USK Raiffeisen Puch
Youthyears2:1998–1999
Youthclubs2:SV Ada Anger
Youthyears3:2001–2004
Youthclubs3:USK Raiffeisen Puch
Youthyears4:2004–2006
Youthclubs4:SC Weiz
Years1:2006–2007
Clubs1:USK Raiffeisen Puch
Manageryears1:2006–2007
Managerclubs1:USK Raiffeisen Puch (player-manager)
Manageryears2:2007–2011
Managerclubs2:TSV Hartberg (assistant)
Manageryears3:2012–2013
Managerclubs3:SC Weiz
Manageryears4:2013–2014
Managerclubs4:TSV Hartberg (assistant)
Manageryears5:2014–2015
Managerclubs5:Wiener Neustadt (assistant)
Manageryears6:2014
Managerclubs6:Wiener Neustadt (caretaker)
Manageryears7:2015
Managerclubs7:TSV Hartberg
Manageryears8:2015–2017
Managerclubs8:Wolfsberger AC (assistant)
Manageryears9:2017–2018
Managerclubs9:TSV Hartberg
Manageryears10:2018–2019
Managerclubs10:Wolfsberger AC
Manageryears11:2019–2020
Managerclubs11:Austria Wien
Manageryears12:2020–
Managerclubs12:Sturm Graz

Christian Ilzer (born 21 October 1977) is an Austrian football manager who manages Sturm Graz.

Coaching career

Early career

As a teenager, three cruciate ligament injuries stopped his career and at the age of only 17, where became coach of USK Raiffeisen Puch's U17 squad. In addition to his job as an electronics technician, he started a second education as a trainer. From 2006 to 2007, he was in charge of the first team of USK Raiffeisen Puch as a playing manager.[2] From July 2007 to July 2011, he was assistant manager under manager Bruno Friesenbichler at TSV Hartberg.[2]

In September 2011, he worked with the Austrian U19 national team as a fitness coach, while he in the 2012–13 season also was the manager of SC Weiz.[2] From the summer 2013, once again he became assistant manager under manager Bruno Friesenbichler at TSV Hartberg.[2] After one season at TSV Hartberg, he joined SC Wiener Neustadt as assistant manager. On 12 November 2014, Heimo Pfeifenberger was fired at Neustadt and Ilzer took over as caretaker manager. Ilzer was in charge for one game which he won 2–0 against Wolfsberger AC, before Helgi Kolviðsson was appointed as manager on 23 November 2014. Ilzer continued his role as assistant manager at the club, before he left at the end of the season and then became manager of TSV Hartberg.[2] He left his position already on 25 November 2015, to become assistant manager at Wolfsberger AC under Heimo Pfeifenberger.[2]

TSV Hartberg

In May 2017, Ilzer returned to TSV Hartberg as head coach.[3] In the 2017–18 season, he guided the club to finish second in the second division, securing promotion to the Austrian Bundesliga for the first time in their history.[4]

Wolfsberger

In May 2018, it was announced that Ilzer would rejoin Wolfsberger AC as head coach for the 2018–19 season.[5] He led the club to qualify to the Europa League group stage for first time in their history, after finishing third in the Austrian Bundesliga.[6]

Austria Wien

On 29 May 2019, Ilzer was appointed manager of FK Austria Wien for the 2019–20 season.[7] After a 7th-place finish in the league, his team lost the Europa League play-offs 3–2 on aggregate against his former club TSV Hartberg.[8]

Sturm Graz

On 17 July 2020, he was hired as manager of Sturm Graz.[9] He guided the club to a runner-up finish in both 2021–22 and 2022–23, where he achieved the VdF-Fußballerwahl Coach of the Season award for the latter.[10] He won his first title at the club by clinching the 2022–23 Austrian Cup after a 2–0 win against SK Rapid Wien in the final.[11]

In the 2023–24 season, he led the club to their fourth league title in history after a 2–0 win over Austria Klagenfurt on the final matchday, ending Red Bull Salzburg's decade-long dominance, in addition to securing a UEFA Champions League group stage berth for the first time since 2000–01.[12] Furthermore, he succeeded in steering the club to their first domestic double since the 1998–99 season, having achieved the 2023–24 Austrian Cup following a 2–1 victory over Rapid Wien in the final.[13]

Managerial statistics

Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamNatFromToRecord
1 July 20128 June 2013
Wiener Neustadt (caretaker)12 November 201423 November 2014
TSV Hartberg5 June 201525 November 2015
TSV Hartberg1 July 20171 June 2018
Wolfsberger AC1 June 201829 May 2019
Austria Wien29 May 201917 July 2020
Sturm Graz17 July 2020Present
Total

Honours

Sturm Graz

Individual

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Christian Ilzer . weltfussball.de . de .
  2. http://www.fk-austria.at/de/n/news/2019/05/christian-ilzer-im-portraet/ Christian Ilzer im Porträt
  3. Web site: Gutmann . Ulrich . Christian Ilzer kehrt als Cheftrainer zum TSV Hartberg zurück . MeinBezirk.at . de . 29 May 2017 .
  4. Web site: WIR SIND BUNDESLIGA !!! . tsv-hartberg-fussball.at . de . 29 May 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180702204850/http://www.tsv-hartberg-fussball.at/home/newsarchiv/1183-tsv-hartbergt-2018-lizenzentscheidung-schiedsgericht . 2 July 2018 .
  5. Web site: Christian Ilzer wird neuer Cheftrainer der Wölfe . Wolfsberger AC . de . 6 May 2018 .
  6. Web site: Nach historischem Erfolg: WAC sucht Coach und Stadion. SPOX. German. 27 May 2019.
  7. http://www.fk-austria.at/en/redaktionsbaum/news/2019/christian-ilzer-becomes-the-new-head-coach-of-austria-wien/ Christian Ilzer becomes the new head coach of Austria Wien
  8. Web site: Marten . Jan . Das Hartberger Fußballmärchen . Sport1 . de . 1 August 2020 .
  9. Web site: Sturm Graz. Christian Ilzer neuer Cheftrainer. 17 July 2020. German. 27 October 2020. 10 May 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210510103536/https://www.sksturm.at/de/news/kampfmannschaft/2020/christian-ilzer-neuer-cheftrainer/. dead.
  10. Web site: Sturm beendet Salzburgs Bruno-Dominanz . sport.orf.at . de . 9 October 2023 .
  11. Web site: So wollte Sarkaria nicht in Erinnerung bleiben . laola1.at . de . 1 May 2023 .
  12. Web site: Salzburg entthront: Sturm zum vierten Mal Meister! . Kicker . de . 19 May 2024 .
  13. Web site: SK Puntigamer Sturm Graz 2–1 SK Rapid . Austrian Football Association . de . 1 May 2024 .