Karl-Heinz Artmann

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Karl-Heinz Artmann (born January 9, 1945 ) is a former German football player . The offensive player has played 21 league games (3 goals) at Borussia Dortmund (1969/70) and Rot-Weiß Oberhausen (1972/73) in the Bundesliga and 45 league games with nine goals at Linz ASK in the Austrian Bundesliga .

Career

Until 1969, the striker Artmann played in the Kaufbeurer district club BSK Neugablonz in Bavarian amateur football in the Landesliga Süd. After the only narrowly averted relegation from the Bundesliga in the 1968/69 season , Borussia Dortmund ran a great deal of effort in the composition of the new league squad before the 1969/70 season. With Jürgen Rynio (goalkeeper), Branko Rašović , Jürgen Schütz , Ferdinand Heidkamp and Alfred Kohlhäufl, the black and yellow signed five proven league players and the amateurs Karl-Heinz Artmann, Theo Bücker , Theodor Rieländer and Jürgen Boduszek . Coach Hermann Lindemann primarily had to replace the departure of striker Lothar Emmerich and after the first half of the season he and his team were in 6th place with 19:15 points. The well-known newcomers actually met expectations, as the rapid performance development of the previous amateurs was not important. In attack ensured Werner Weist (20 goals), Jürgen Schütz (8 goals) and Willi Neuberger (7 goals) on the side of tireless preparer Sigfried Held for the necessary goals and Rynio, Rasovic, Heidkamp and Kohlhäufl stabilized the defense. Artmann made his debut on March 28, 1970 in a 3-1 home win against MSV Duisburg on right winger in the Bundesliga. He formed the BVB attack with Weist and Held. In the Bundesliga chronicle it is stated: “Karl-Heinz Artmann showed impressive qualities in his first outing for Borussia. Actually, it was all alone who shook Duisburg's solid cover in the first half, when he nibbled the good Heidemann, at least a national defender, twice and even hit the post in the process. "There were two more substitutions against Aachen ( 3: 1) and against VfB Stuttgart (0: 0) and then Artmann's time in Dortmund was up.

For the 1970/71 season he went to LASK Linz in Austria. With LASK he reached 5th place in his first year and had scored four goals in 21 league games alongside other players such as Johann Kondert , Kurt Leitner and Gerhard Sturmberger . In his second year in Linz it went down in the table, LASK was only 12th and Artmann had scored five goals in 24 league appearances alongside his compatriot Jürgen Martin . For the 1972/73 season he was signed by the Bundesliga club Rot-Weiß Oberhausen and thus returned to top German football. On October 28, 1972, he made his debut at RWO in an away game at Borussia Mönchengladbach (1: 4) in the Bundesliga. The eleven from the Niederrheinstadion constantly fought for relegation and wore out three coaches in this round: Günter Brocker was in office until November 1, 1972 and was replaced by Friedhelm Kobluhn , until Heinz Murach , a head coach, closed the round from January 1 End led. With a 2-1 home win, RWO said goodbye to Kickers Offenbach on June 9, 1973, finishing 18th in the Bundesliga. Artmann had played in 18 league games and scored three goals alongside Ditmar Jakobs , Willi Mumme , Hans Schumacher and Dieter Heinrichs .

After relegation to the Bundesliga, he played ten games for RWO in the Regionalliga West in the 1973/74 season and was thus a runner-up in the “Kleeblatt-Elf” team. In the Bundesliga promotion round, he played six games against FC St. Pauli, Tennis Borussia Berlin, Borussia Neunkirchen and FC Augsburg and scored one goal.

literature

  • Christian Karn, Reinhard Rehberg: Player Lexicon 1963–1994 . Agon Sportverlag, Kassel 2012, ISBN 978-3-89784-214-4 , p. 30.
  • Ulrich Merk, Andre Schulin, Maik Großmann: Bundesliga Chronicle 1969/70 . Agon Sportverlag, Kassel 2007, ISBN 978-3-89784-089-8 .
  • Rudolf Matheis (Ed.): LASK beckons forever . Trauner Verlag, Linz 2007, ISBN 978-3-85487-822-3 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Jürgen Bitter: Germany's football. The encyclopedia. FA Herbig, Munich 2008, ISBN 978-3-7766-2558-5 , p. 29
  2. ^ Karn, Rehberg: Spiellexikon 1963-1994. P. 30
  3. Merk, Schulin, Großmann: Bundesliga Chronicle 1969/70. P. 165

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