Mathias Entenmann is a retired German rugby player, who played flank and No. 8 for the German national team from 1988 to 1998.[3] He also played for the Germany sevens team, which enjoyed some successes in the 1990s.

Mathias Entenmann
Place of birthHeidelberg, Germany
SchoolBunsen-Gymnasium Heidelberg
UniversityUniversity of Karlsruhe
Occupation(s)Director[1][2]
Rugby union career
Position(s) Flank; No.8
Amateur team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
until 1988 RG Heidelberg ()
1988 Windhoek Wanderers ()
1989 RG Heidelberg ()
1990-1991 FC Kronenb./Strassb. ()
1992-1994 Kowloon RFC ()
1995-1999 RG Heidelberg ()
International career
Years Team Apps (Points)
1987-1990 W-Germany 12
1990-1992 Germany 14
1993 Hong Kong
1994-1998 Germany
National sevens teams
Years Team Comps
1990-1992 Germany
1993 Hong Kong 7s
1994-1998 Germany

Entenmann was a member of German teams which competed in Rugby World Cup qualification matches and the erstwhile FIRA Tournaments. He was also part of the Germany sevens squads, which won the Bowl final of the 1990 Hong Kong Sevens, reached the Plate Final of the 1997 Punta Del Este Sevens,[4] and won the Bowl Final of the 1997 Paris Sevens.[5]

Mathias Entenmann played for Hong Kong during the year 1993, including the 1993 Hong Kong Sevens.

He hails from Heidelberg, and played club rugby for the Rudergesellschaft in Heidelberg, with whom he played in numerous German Championship finals, winning the Championship in 1996.[6]

He was the chairman of the organising committee of the Oktoberfest Sevens were inaugurated in 2017.[7] The event was covered nationwide on television on channel Sport1. Demonstrating its prowess as organisers and the acceptance of both, participating nations and spectators, is a declared mean to the end of hosting a tournament of the World Rugby Sevens Series.[8]

He featured again publicly in 2018 in a different capacity: He was appointed as the high-profile member of a negotiation team of three for the German Rugby Federation aiming to resurrect relations with its estranged donor Hans-Peter Wild.[9][10] A first meeting was coordinated by Mark Egan, senior executive at World Rugby in early April 2018.[11] These negotiations and the possible subsequent availability of professional German rugby players to the German national rugby union team have added meaning due to the renewed possibility of Germany qualifying for the 2019 Rugby World Cup.[12]

Mathias Entenmann studied industrial engineering at the University of Karlsruhe. After retiring from rugby, he founded the paybox.net AG in 1999, where he achieved great success with mobile payment services. He then became Vice President International of eBay's PayPal subsidiary in Europe and Asia, advanced to being Chief Products and Services Officer at Betfair Ltd in London before he finally joined Loyalty Partner, a vendor of Loyalty programs in June 2011 as Chief Operating Officer.[13]

References

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  1. ^ Loyalty Partner welcomes Mathias Entenmann on board Archived 2012-04-07 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "GESPRÄCHSAUFTAKT IN FRANKFURT". official website. German Rugby Federation.
  3. ^ ” 100 Jahre Deutscher Rugby-Verband”, Claus-Peter Bach, 2000
  4. ^ 10 anos de Seven en Punta del Este, Pedro Bordaberry, British Schools Old Boys Club, 1999
  5. ^ Champagne Rugby, John Blondin, The National Publishing Group Pty Limited, 1997, ISBN 0646340387
  6. ^ 100 Jahre Deutscher Rugby-Verband”, Claus-Peter Bach, 2000
  7. ^ "'Wonderful atmosphere' for Inaugural Oktoberfest 7s". Sport24. 30 September 2017.
  8. ^ wonderful-atmosphere
  9. ^ German rugby expansion stuck at a crossroads
  10. ^ Reportage: Streit DRV/ WRA
  11. ^ GESPRÄCHSAUFTAKT IN FRANKFURT
  12. ^ "independent disputes committee's decision". News. Worldrugby. Retrieved May 15, 2018.
  13. ^ "Stocks". www.bloomberg.com.