Jürgen Mohr

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Jürgen Mohr , also Hans Jürgen Mohr (born August 18, 1958 in Aachen ) is a former German soccer player .

Life

The midfielder Jürgen Mohr signed his first professional contract in 1978 with the German champions 1. FC Köln under coach Hennes Weisweiler . After only five appearances in two years, Mohr moved to the 2nd Bundesliga in 1980 at Hertha BSC in Berlin , with whom he was promoted to the 1st Bundesliga. In the 1982/83 season, the technically savvy midfielder, who had been thrown back several times due to injuries, was appointed to the newly installed German Olympic team under Erich Ribbeck , for which he played four appearances, including two Olympic qualifying games.

In 1983, Mohr went to Eintracht Frankfurt as one of the first million transfers , where he suffered a serious adductor injury after the third game against Bayer 04 Leverkusen , which meant that he was out for almost the entire season and also missed participation in the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. In 1985 he moved to the newly promoted 1. FC Saarbrücken and in 1986 to Switzerland for FC Luzern , which became Swiss champions with him in 1989.

In the same year Mohr moved to FC Sion , in the following to Servette Geneva under coach Gilbert Gress . Here Mohr was operated on on the two Achilles tendons , which meant that he was out for almost the entire season. In 1991 he went again to the 2nd Bundesliga for Blau-Weiß 90 Berlin and in 1992 for Eintracht Trier , where they just missed promotion to the 2nd Bundesliga twice in the promotion games. In 1995 he ended his career at the age of 37. In 2007 he coached the first division club SV Grevenmacher in Luxembourg and in 2010 again the district division SV Hetzerath.

Mohr has been an independent sales representative for wines since 1996. He still plays games with the traditional Eintracht Frankfurt team and plays in the Lotto Rhineland-Palatinate team.

Stations

statistics

  • 1st National League
    5 games, 1. FC Cologne
    33 games, 5 goals, Hertha BSC
    41 games, 5 goals, Eintracht Frankfurt
    22 games, 2 goals, 1. FC Saarbrücken
  • 2nd Bundesliga
    71 games, 26 goals, Hertha BSC
    15 games, blue-white 90 Berlin
    3 Europa League games
    13 DFB Pokal games
    2 Bundesliga relegation games
    9 relegation games to the 2nd Bundesliga
  • National League A, Switzerland
    125 games, 30 goals
    4 games in the German Olympic team 1982/83
    69 games, 23 goals for Eintracht Trier, 3rd division

successes

  • 1980 DFB Cup final (bank)
  • 1982 promotion to the 1st Bundesliga
  • 1989 Swiss champion with FC Luzern
  • 2 × Southwest Champion Eintracht Trier (3rd division)

Web links