Birgit Prinz

German football player
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Quick Facts
Born:
October 25, 1977, Frankfurt am Main, West Germany [now Germany] (age 47)

Birgit Prinz (born October 25, 1977, Frankfurt am Main, West Germany [now Germany]) is a former football (soccer) player from Germany, considered by many to be Europe’s finest female footballer of the 1990s and 2000s. Prinz won three FIFA Player of the Year awards (2003–05), and she helped her country win two Women’s World Cups (2003 and 2007) and three Olympic bronze medals (2000, 2004, and 2008).

Prinz was an all-around sports enthusiast as a young girl, with swimming, trampoline, and athletics among her varied outdoor pursuits. Her football-playing father encouraged her to take up that sport too, coaching her while she played as a youth for SV Dörnigheim and FC Hochstadt. In 1992 she changed clubs to FSV Frankfurt, and two years later she moved on to the top-level league (Bundesliga) FFC Frankfurt.

At age 16 she made her international debut for the German national women’s team as a 72nd-minute substitute in a game against Canada; she scored in the 89th minute to secure a 2–1 victory for Germany. At more than 5 feet 10 inches (1.79 meters), Prinz was taller than most of her contemporaries, with a physical fitness level above most of the other players on the team. With drive, speed, and an accurate finish in front of goal, she was widely regarded as the number one player in Europe. Prinz’s team claimed four European championships, two Union of European Football Associations Cups, eight German league championships, and eight domestic cup trophies.

Serena Williams poses with the Daphne Akhurst Trophy after winning the Women's Singles final against Venus Williams of the United States on day 13 of the 2017 Australian Open at Melbourne Park on January 28, 2017 in Melbourne, Australia. (tennis, sports)
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Olympic Medals
2000 Sydney
  • Bronze: 1 (football)
2004 Athens
  • Bronze: 1 (football)
2008 Beijing
  • Bronze: 1 (football)

Because German women’s football was played at a semiprofessional level at the time, however, she broadened her experience in 2002 by playing a season in the United States for the professional Women’s United Soccer Association (WUSA) team Carolina Courage, helping it win the WUSA championship before she returned to FFC Frankfurt.

In addition to three consecutive FIFA Player of the Year awards (2003–05) and three Olympic bronze medals (2000, 2004, and 2008), Prinz secured two Women’s World Cup trophies. She also won the Golden Ball and was named Player of the Tournament at the 2003 World Cup. In the 2007 Cup final against Brazil in Shanghai—her third World Cup final—Prinz opened the scoring in the 52nd minute on the way toward a 2–0 win for Germany’s second straight Women’s World Cup title. It was a record 14th goal in Cup matches for Prinz. (Her mark, also held by American Abby Wambach, was surpassed in 2015 by Brazil’s Marta.) Her play leveled off, and she was removed from the German national team’s starting lineup during the 2011 Women’s World Cup. She retired in May 2012 with a record 214 international caps and 128 goals scored.

Originally trained as a masseuse and medical lifeguard, Prinz later qualified as a physiotherapist and studied for a master’s degree in psychology at Goethe University Frankfurt am Main. She graduated in 2010 and was employed by the German women’s football club TSG Hoffenheim. In addition, she has served as a sports psychologist for the German Football Association. In November 2007 Prinz was awarded the Hessian Order of Merit for her outstanding success as a personality in the community. She was inducted into the German Football Hall of Fame in 2019.

Jack Rollin