Alois Schloder

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GermanyGermany  Alois Schloder Ice hockey player
IIHF Hall of Fame , 2005
Date of birth August 11, 1947
place of birth Landshut , Germany
size 182 cm
Weight 85 kilograms
position Right wing
number 15th
Shot hand Left
Career stations
1963-1986 EV Landshut
Alois Schloder (right) with Klaus Auhuber and Erich Kühnhackl in 2010

Alois Schloder (born August 11, 1947 in Landshut ) is a former German ice hockey player who played for EV Landshut in the national ice hockey league from 1963 to 1986 . He was the captain of the German national team for many years and won the bronze medal with it at the 1976 Olympic Games .

Career

In his youth Schloder played soccer, but at the age of 11 he emulated his older brother Kurt , who was a hockey player. Alois could not skate well and therefore became a goalkeeper in the youth team of the local EV Landshut . But he preferred to score goals himself and was eager to practice his running skills. As a 13-year-old he was finally allowed to play in the attack of his team and three years later he even made the jump to the first team, in which his brother also played. In Landshut, they bet on a young series in which both Schloder and Heinz Zerres played. The young players quickly managed to establish themselves in the team.

His career began in 1963 at EV Landshut and in his 23-year career he never played for any other club in the 1st Bundesliga. He completed 1085 games and scored 631 goals for the EVL. He was soon nominated for the German national team and took part in the 1966 World Cup in Zagreb. From then on, he was a permanent member of the national team in a total of 206 games (12 world championships, Olympic Winter Games 1968, 1972 and 1976) and scored 87 goals. From 1971 to 1978 he was the captain of the team. At the 1976 Olympic Games he won the bronze medal with the national team and received the silver laurel leaf for it . After differences of opinion with Hans Rampf , the coach at the time, he ended his international career after the 1978 World Cup in Prague.

Alois Schloder became a "doping victim" at the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo because the DEB team doctor at the time had prescribed the prohibited ephedrine-containing preparation RR-plus for him because of low blood pressure . These pills were on the Olympic doping list. When Schloder's innocence became apparent just a few weeks later, the ban imposed by the World Ice Hockey Federation ( IIHF ) for six months before the 1972 World Cup was lifted and the captain was then back in action for the national team in Prague in April. Alois Schloder has been fully rehabilitated on the homepage of the International Olympic Committee ( IOC ) since November 2016 . The IOC has also enforced on the Internet search engine Google that no automatic completions can be carried out there for search queries in connection with the IOC homepage. Although Schloder was fully rehabilitated just a few weeks later for proven innocence immediately after the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo, the IOC continued to publish the alleged doping case from 1972 on its website without making the actual facts discernible.

With EV Landshut, he was German ice hockey cup winner in 1969 and German champion in 1970 and 1983 . He ended his national career on March 21, 1986 with the farewell game Servus Alois in front of 7,000 spectators in Landshut.

His sporting successes were recognized in 2005 when he was inducted into the IIHF Hall of Fame in Toronto. Since 2001 he has also been a member of the Hall of Fame Germany in Augsburg. He was also selected as the right winger in the All-Star Team of the Century in 2000. From 1990 to 2001 Alois Schloder was the organizer of the DEB 's traditional German ice hockey team . The team brought in around 100,000 DM, which were then donated for charitable purposes.

He is a sought-after expert for ice hockey broadcasts in the media and was already working for ZDF at the World Cup in Dortmund and Munich in 1983. For the Bundesliga from 1988 to 1990 at SAT 1, from 1991 to 1997 at Premiere and at the Olympic Games 1988-1998-2002 and 2006 as an expert for ZDF. He was employed full-time at the city of Landshut from 1974 and was in charge of the sports department, which was founded at the suggestion of the then Mayor, Josef Deimer (CSU), until he retired in June 2007 .

In 2003, Alois Schloder and 43 other people took part in the “Ambassador Lower Bavaria” initiative of the regional marketing project in the Lower Bavaria district .

In 2012, Alois Schloder received the Bavarian Sports Prize in the “High-performance athlete plus” category.

Bundesliga statistics

Seasons Games Gates Assists Points Penalty minutes
Regular season 23 775 488 445 933 760
Playoffs 5 28 10 12 22nd 22nd

plant

On the occasion of the 70th anniversary of EV Landshut on April 25, 2018, Alois Schloder published together with Helmut Stix "The Ice Hockey Chronicle" of the two-time German champions. The almost 900-page chronicle covers the complete history of Landshut ice hockey. From the early years before and after the Second World War to the 2016/17 season, an all-encompassing overview of the players, coaches, results, tables and media reports about EV Landshut is offered with over 1600 images.

Web links

Commons : Alois Schloder  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Stadt Landshut, Sportchronik 1974-76: ... Reception of the German Olympic team in October with Federal Chancellor Helmut Schmidt in Bonn and award with the silver laurel leaf ...
  2. ^ Christian Schweppe: Alois Schloder: The wrong man . In: ZEIT Online from May 23, 2017. (Accessed May 26, 2017)
  3. http://www.landshut.de/fileadmin/files_stadt/webs/schloder/eishockeynews_20_02_07_schloder.jpg
  4. Tobias Grießer: Later Olympic victory for Alois Schloder . In: Wochenblatt (Landshut edition) of November 9, 2016 (accessed November 10, 2016)
  5. Johannes Viertlböck: IOC gives in: Ice hockey legend Schloder completely rehabilitated . In: Landshuter Zeitung, November 9th, 2016 (accessed November 8th, 2016)
  6. Michaela Arbinger: 44 ambassadors should bring Lower Bavaria up ( memento from October 9, 2017 in the Internet Archive ). In: Passauer Neue Presse of November 10, 2003 (accessed November 25, 2008)
  7. ^ Günter Klein: Alois Schloder writes history . In: Merkur.de of November 3, 2017. (Accessed March 26, 2018)