Heiner Brand

Heiner Brand (born 26 July 1952) is a former West German handball player. He was the Germany men's national handball team coach from 1997 to 2011. He is the only person who has won the world handball championship both as a player (in 1978) and as a coach (in 2007).

Heiner Brand
Personal information
Born (1952-07-26) 26 July 1952
Gummersbach, West Germany
Height 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
Playing position Pivot
Youth career
Years Team
1959–87
VfL Gummersbach
Senior clubs
Years Team
1987–91
VfL Gummersbach
1992–94
SG Wallau-Massenheim
1994–96
VfL Gummersbach
National team
Years Team
1997–2011
German national team

Career as player

Heiner Brand joined at the age of seven the handball club VfL Gummersbach. He was with that club six times German champion (1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1982 and 1983) and won four times the DHB-Pokal (1978, 1979, 1982 and 1983). He also became with that club internationally successful (European Cup winner in 1978 and 1979, European National Championship winner in 1974 in 1983, Super cup winner in 1979 and 1983, IHF cup winner in 1982).

Heiner Brand was also successful in the Germany men's national handball team, where he played a total of 131 games and scored 231 goals, including one penalty throw. In 1976, he was a member of the West German team that finished fourth in the Olympic tournament in Montreal. He played all six matches and scored twelve goals. In 1978, he was the World champion at the World Men's Handball Championship. His first two international goals he scored in his first game for Germany was on July 1, 1974 in Holon against Israel.

Career as coach

Heiner Brand

Heiner Brand has been a long-time coach for VfL Gummersbach (1987–91 and 1994–96). In between, he was the coach for SG Wallau-Massenheim (1992–94). Even before becoming a club coach, he was an assistant coach of the German national team (1984–87), in which he became the full-time coach on 1 January 1997. At the beginning of the new millennium, he raised the national team to the top. After the vice European Championship in 2002 and the vice World Cup in 2003, the DHB selection won in 2004 the European Championship and the same year the silver medal at the Summer Olympics in Athens.

It was announced on 24 October 2007 that Brand's contract of the National team with the DHB would be extended until 30 June 2013. However, it was announced on 16 May 2011 that his post of national coach would expire on 30 June 2011. The results were the tenth place at the 2010 European Championship and the eleventh place at the 2011 World Championship. It was the worst result in the history of the German National Championship.[1] Since 1. Juli 2011 Martin Heuberger is the successor to Heiner Brand. Since 1 November 2004 Heuberger has been Assistant to Heiner Brand and Co-coach of the German National Handball team.

Personal life

Brand is married and has two children. He has two older brothers named Klaus (born 1942) and Jochen (born 1944). Both also played for the German national handball team.

His trademark since the 1970s is his bushy walrus moustache.

Success as coach

  • 1984 : Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, silver medal (as assistant coach)
  • 1988 : German Champion with VfL Gummersbach
  • 1991 : German Champion with VfL Gummersbach
  • 1993 : German Champion with SG Wallau-Massenheim
  • 1993 : DHB cup winner with SG Wallau-Massenheim
  • 1993 : European Champion finalist with SG Wallau-Massenheim
  • 1994 : DHB cup winner with SG Wallau-Massenheim
  • 1998 : Super cup winner with the national team
  • 1998 : European Championship, third place
  • 1999 : World Cup, fifth place
  • 2000 : Summer Olympics in Sydney, fifth place
  • 2001 : Super cup winner with the national team
  • 2002 : Vice-European Champion, lost against Sweden
  • 2003 : Vice-World Champion, lost against Croatia
  • 2004 : European Champion against Slovenia (biggest success since the 1978 World Cup in Denmark)
  • 2004 : Summer Olympics in Athens, silver medal, lost again against Croatia
  • 2006 : European Championship, fifth place
  • 2007 : World Champion with the German national team against Poland
  • 2008 : European Championship, fourth place
  • 2008 : Summer Olympics in Beijing, ninth place
  • 2009 : World Cup, fifth place
  • 2009 : Super cup winner with the national team
  • 2010 : European Championship, tenth place
  • 2011 : World Championship, eleventh place

References

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