Daniel Neuner

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Daniel Neuner
Born (1987-10-25) October 25, 1987 (age 34)
Team
Curling clubSC Riessersee, Garmisch-Partenkirchen
Career
World Championship
appearances
1 (2019)
European Championship
appearances
2 (2012, 2018)
Other appearancesWorld Junior Curling Championships: 2 (2007, 2008),
European Junior Curling Challenge: 1 (2007),
European Youth Olympic Winter Festival: 1 (2005)
Medal record
Curling
Representing  Germany

Daniel Neuner (born October 25, 1987 in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, West Germany) is a German male curler.[1] He has represented Germany at several international championships, including at two World Junior Championships and a World Men's Championship.

Curling career[]

As a junior Neuner skipped Team Germany in back-to-back years at the World Junior Championships, in 2007 and 2008. His teams finished 8th[2] and 6th,[3] respectively.

Neuner competed in his first European Men's Curling Championship in 2012 as lead for skip Andreas Lang. The team also included third Daniel Herberg (a two-time Olympian), second Markus Messenzehl, and Andreas Kempf as alternate. The tournament went poorly for Team Germany, their only win coming over Hungary's György Nagy.[4] Their 1-8 record put them at 9th out of the 10 teams in the Group A competition and meant Germany was relegated to Group B of the 2013 European Curling Championships.

Later in the season the same team competed in the 2013 German Men's Curling Championship, though without Lang at skip. With Lang out the rest of the team were promoted a position, with Herberg skipping, Messenzehl as third, Neuner as second, and former alternate Kempf as lead. The team finished with a 4-2 record, good enough for the silver medal behind John Jahr.[5] The next year Neuner returned to the German Championship with a different team, throwing third for skip Konstantin Kampf. Despite the different team the result was the same for Neuner, another silver medal to John Jahr's gold.[6]

For the 2018 European Championships Neuner played as second for skip Marc Muskatewitz. The team just missed getting a medal, losing the bronze medal match to Italy's Joël Retornaz 6-8.[7] Later in the same season Neuner played with Muskatewitz again, this time as third at the 2019 World Men's Championship.[8][9] It was Neuner's first World Men's Championship and they finished in 8th place, Germany's best finish since 2014.[10]

Personal life[]

Neuner started curling around the age of 15. He attended the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich.[11]

Teams[]

Season Skip Third Second Lead Alternate Coach Events
2004–05 Nico Erlewein Daniel Neuner Florian Zahler Sven Rauscher Konstantin Harsch Holger Schäfer EYOWF 2005 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)
2006–07 Daniel Neuner Florian Zahler Johannes Glaser Dominik Greindl Gabor Dénes (WJCC) Rainer Schöpp EJCC 2007 1st place, gold medalist(s)
WJCC 2007 (8th)[12]
2007–08 Daniel Neuner Florian Zahler Johannes Glaser Dominik Greindl George Geiger Rainer Schöpp WJCC 2008 (6th)[12]
2008–09 Daniel Neuner Florian Zahler Dominik Greindl Laynes Lauterbach George Geiger
2009–10 Daniel Neuner Florian Zahler Dominik Greindl Laynes Lauterbach George Geiger
2010–11 Daniel Neuner Florian Zahler Dominik Greindl Laynes Lauterbach
2011–12 Andreas Lang Daniel Herberg Markus Messenzehl Daniel Neuner Andreas Kempf
2012–13 Andreas Lang Daniel Herberg Markus Messenzehl Daniel Neuner Andreas Kempf Andy Kapp, Martin Beiser ECC 2012 (9th)
Daniel Herberg Markus Messenzehl Daniel Neuner Andreas Kempf 2013 2nd place, silver medalist(s)
2013–14 Konstantin Kampf Daniel Neuner Alexander Kampf Dominik Greindl Sebastian Jacoby GMCC 2014 2nd place, silver medalist(s)
2014–15 Daniel Neuner (fourth) Konstantin Kampf (skip) Alexander Kampf Dominik Greindl Sebastian Jacoby
2018–19 Marc Muskatewitz Sixten Totzek Daniel Neuner Ryan Sherrard Sebastian Schweizer Martin Beiser ECC 2018 (4th)[13]
Marc Muskatewitz Daniel Neuner Ryan Sherrard Dominik Greindl Benjamin Kapp Andy Kapp WCC 2019 (8th)[14]

References[]

  1. ^ "Daniel Neuner". CurlingZone. Retrieved 17 Dec 2019.
  2. ^ "World Junior Curling Championships 2007". World Curling Federation. Retrieved 18 Dec 2019.
  3. ^ "World Junior Curling Championships 2008". World Curling Federation. Retrieved 18 Dec 2019.
  4. ^ "Le Gruyère European Curling Championships 2012". World Curling Federation. Retrieved 17 Dec 2019.
  5. ^ "Herberg 4-2 at German Championship". Curling Zone. Retrieved 17 Dec 2019.
  6. ^ "Kampf Runner-up at 2014 German Championships". CurlingZone. Retrieved 17 Dec 2019.
  7. ^ "Germany women and Italy men win Le Gruyère AOP European bronze medals". World Curling Federation. 23 Nov 2018. Retrieved 17 Dec 2019.
  8. ^ Strong, Gregory (1 Apr 2019). "Canadian Ryan Sherrard comes home as member of German team at men's world curling championships". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 17 Dec 2019.
  9. ^ Wyman, Ted (28 Mar 2019). "WORLD CURLING BREAKDOWN: A team-by-team look at the world men's curling championship". Winnipeg Sun. Retrieved 17 Dec 2019.
  10. ^ "Top-Ten-Platzierung für das Curling-Team: Erfolgreiche WM in Kanada". Team Deutschland (in German). 9 Apr 2019. Retrieved 17 Dec 2019.
  11. ^ "Sport ist ihr Hobby: Curlingspieler Daniel Neuner" (PDF). Münchner Uni Magazin (in German). 2013. pp. 24–25. Retrieved 17 Dec 2019.
  12. ^ a b "Erfolge des SC Riessersee". SC Riessersee Curlingverein (in German). Retrieved 16 Dec 2019.
  13. ^ "Le Gruyère AOP European Curling Championships 2018". World Curling Federation. Retrieved 17 Dec 2019.
  14. ^ "Pioneer Hi-Bred World Men's Curling Championship 2019". World Curling Federation. Retrieved 17 Dec 2019.

External links[]

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