Carsten Jancker (born 28 August 1974) is a German football coach and former player. He played as a forward for various teams between 1993 and 2009, including 1. FC Köln, Rapid Wien, Bayern Munich, Udinese Calcio, FC Kaiserslautern, Shanghai Shenhua, and SV Mattersburg, as well as the Germany national team.

Club career

Jancker with 1. FC Kaiserslautern, 2005

Born in Grevesmühlen, Jancker started his career as a trainee at Hansa Rostock before making his Bundesliga debut in 1993 with 1. FC Köln. At the age of 21, he was transferred to Rapid Wien, scoring fourteen goals including seven in the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup to finish as the tournament's top scorer. Thanks to this impressive performance, Jancker spent only one season with the Austrian club before being brought back to Germany to play for Bayern Munich.

Jancker's time at Bayern between 1996 and 2002 was the best period of his career, a spell which included four Bundesliga titles and victory in the 2001 UEFA Champions League. At Bayern, Jancker was partnered with the Brazilian inside-forward Giovane Élber, often rated as one of the Bundesliga's best attacking players.

Jancker left Bayern for Italian side Udinese in 2002, but the move was not a success; over two seasons and 35 games, the forward registered only two goals. Jancker was said to be "too slow and predictable for Serie A" by one football website. In 2004, Jancker returned to Germany with 1. FC Kaiserslautern and showed a slight improvement in form, netting five times in 25 games. In 2004, he also scored six goals in Kaiserslautern's 15–0 first round DFB-Pokal win against FC Schönberg 95, still a record for any player in the competition. This was an improvement over his own previous joint record of five, which he had scored for Bayern Munich against DJK Waldberg in the latter's 16–1 first round cup defeat in 1997. Following the relegation of Kaiserslautern in May 2006, Jancker signed for Chinese team Shanghai Shenhua.

After poor performances, he was dropped in October, and agreed to join SV Mattersburg in the winter transfer window. In June 2009 it was announced that Mattersburg did not want to work with Jancker any further because of his physical condition. In February 2010, he announced his retirement at the end of the current season.

International career

Jancker with the Germany national team in 2000

His performances alongside Elber caught the eye of Germany national coach Erich Ribbeck, who included Jancker in his international squad for Euro 2000.

Instantly recognisable to European football fans, the invariably shaven-headed forward has generally failed to replicate his club form when playing for the national side. A possible explanation for his poorly-regarded international performances might be that the Germany national team lacked a skilful strike partner in the Élber mould. Whatever the reason, Jancker never impressed for Germany; although he was included in Rudi Völler's squad for the 2002 FIFA World Cup – scoring a goal in the team's opening 8–0 win over Saudi Arabia, he was dropped from the team shortly after the tournament and was never recalled. His German international scoring record stands at roughly a goal every three games. He is known for scoring in Germany's 5–1 defeat to England in 2001.

Style of play

A powerful and slow striker, Jancker was tall for a footballer, standing at 1.93 meters (6 ft 4.0 in). His height and strength proved to be an advantage when playing as a target man, as displayed during his most successful days at Bayern Munich. Jancker was known for being an unusual center forward, being weak in the air despite his huge frame, but showing a surprising control of the ball, especially featuring a polished back-to-the-goal game, good link-up play, and a touch for scoring with his hard right-footed shot. He also struggled with injuries throughout his career.

Coaching career

On 18 February 2010, the former international striker took over the U14 team of SC Neusiedl. Additionally he works for the first team in the Austrian Regional League East as an individual coach. On 27 April 2010, Jancker announced that he will work as the new coach of the Under 15 of his former club SK Rapid Wien, starting 1 July 2010. In April 2013, he became assistant coach of the club's Austrian Bundesliga team.

Jancker became the head coach of SV Horn in June 2017. He was fired on 28 November 2018. In April 2019, he was appointed manager of FC Marchfeld Donauauen, starting from 1 May 2019.

On 23 February 2021, Jancker signed with DSV Leoben. He was later dismissed in August 2023. In April 2024, he returned to DSV Leoben. He stepped down in January 2025, just half a season after the club's relegation to the Regionalliga.

In April 2025, he was appointed head coach of top-division side Austria Klagenfurt, with the club fighting to avoid relegation. However, after four matches, they finished bottom of the table and were relegated.

Career statistics

Club

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
ClubSeasonLeagueNational cupLeague cupContinentalOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
1. FC Köln1993–94Bundesliga111021
1994–95400040
1995–9600001010
Total511000100071
Rapid Wien1995–96Austrian Bundesliga27723763616
Bayern Munich1996–97Bundesliga2211010241
1997–9829136610844423
1998–99261364111234521
1999–200023932201234014
2000–01251221221524417
2001–0218042004021283
Total1434822156352122122579
Udinese2002–03Serie A20110211
2003–041612120202
Total36231002000413
1. FC Kaiserslautern2004–05Bundesliga254162610
2005–06502171
Total3043700003311
Shanghai Shenhua2006Chinese Super League7070
SV Mattersburg2006–07Austrian Bundesliga1223100153
2007–08331200413713
2008–09317333410
Total7621640041008626
Career total32483373063661921435136

International

Appearances and goals by national team and year
National teamYearAppsGoals
Germany199810
199940
200073
200193
2002124
Total3310

Scores and results list Germany's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Jancker goal.

List of international goals scored by Carsten Jancker
No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
13 June 2000Easycredit-Stadion, NurembergCzech Republic1–03–2Friendly
27 June 2000Dreisamstadion, FreiburgLiechtenstein6–28–2Friendly
38–2
42 June 2001Helsinki Olympic Stadium, HelsinkiFinland2–22–22002 FIFA World Cup qualification
515 August 2001Ferenc Puskás Stadium, BudapestHungary3–05–2Friendly
61 September 2001Olympiastadion, MunichEngland1–01–52002 FIFA World Cup qualification
79 May 2002Dreisamstadion, FreiburgKuwait7–07–0Friendly
81 June 2002Sapporo Dome, SapporoSaudi Arabia4–08–02002 FIFA World Cup
921 August 2002Vasil Levski National Stadium, SofiaBulgaria2–22–2Friendly
1011 October 2002Asim Ferhatović Hase Stadium, SarajevoBosnia and Herzegovina1–11–1Friendly

Honours

Rapid Wien

Bayern Munich

External links