Max Reichenberger

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Max Reichenberger
Personnel
birthday January 24, 1948
place of birth Germany
size 180 cm
position midfield player
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1967-1972 TSV 1860 Munich 88 (6)
1972-1976 Eintracht Bad Kreuznach
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1994-1995 SV labor
1996 SV Darmstadt 98
1997-2003 SpVgg Ingelheim
2004 Wormatia worms
1 Only league games are given.

Max Reichenberger (born January 24, 1948 ) is a former German football player and coach . As a player in TSV 1860 Munich , he played 39 league games in the Bundesliga from 1968 to 1970 . He is the father of Thomas Reichenberger , who was also active as a professional footballer.

Career

Max Reichenberger played for SpVgg Unterhaching until 1965 and then moved to TSV 1860 Munich . Coming from the amateur team of the "Löwen", he got a contract with the Bundesliga team for the 1967/68 season. In addition to Reichenberger, the team of coach Albert Sing also included the other young players Peter Kittel , Wolfgang Lex , Anton Gigl and Hans-Günther Kroth . In his first year as a Bundesliga player, Reichenberger was not yet used. He made his debut on January 31, 1969 in a 2-0 away defeat at Borussia Dortmund under Sing's successor Hans Pilz in the Bundesliga. He came on as a substitute for Zejlko Perusic in the second half . Then he formed the defender pair with Kroth until the end of the round. As the white-blue in the 1969/70 season, the descent overtook belonged Reichenberger with 25 league appearances alongside players like Petar Radenkovic , Horst Blankenburg , Kroth, Manfred Wagner , Lex, Rudolf Zeiser , Klaus Fischer and Ferdinand Keller of the regular cast of . Reichenberger played a total of 39 Bundesliga games at 1860 Munich. After Munich's relegation to the Regionalliga Süd in 1970 , Reichenberger did not make the desired return to the Bundesliga until 1972 under coach Hans Tilkowski . 1860 finished 4th in 1971 and 3rd in 1972 and the defensive and midfielder had completed 49 regional league games with six goals in the two rounds.

For the 1972/73 season he moved together with his previous teammates Manfred Purucker and Peter Zacher to Eintracht Bad Kreuznach in the 1st Amateur League Southwest . There CDU politician and wine wholesaler Elmar Pieroth tried to get promoted to licensed football with high financial outlay. Under coach Gerd Menne he won the championship in 1972/73 and in the promotion round against FC Ensdorf and SpVgg Andernach the desired promotion to the second -rate regional soccer league Southwest . With several teammates, Reichenberger also represented the selection of Südwest in the games against Südbaden in the national cup . In the last year of the old second-rate regional league, 1973/74 , Reichenberger and colleagues took a good 7th place, but due to the lack of nomination points from previous years, they could not be nominated for the 2nd Bundesliga , which started in 1974/75 . But it immediately succeeded in the championship in the amateur league southwest and in the promotion round against Eintracht Trier and the ASC Dudweiler promotion to the 2nd Bundesliga. In the 2nd Bundesliga 1975/76 it was enough for Kreuznach only to 19th place and thus descended again into the amateur camp. Reichenberger had scored two goals in 23 league games alongside Jürgen Wilhelm . After relegation, he played for Eintracht up to and including the 1978/79 season, but did not return to the 2nd Bundesliga.

In addition to the league games, Reichenberger had also played in the DFB Cup in games against TSV 1860 Munich, FSV Frankfurt, Viktoria Cologne, 1. FC Cologne and on August 5, 1978 in a 1: 3 defeat in the Wildparkstadion against Karlsruher SC.

As a trainer he was briefly under contract with SV Wehen from October 1994 to May 1995 , from May to October 1996 with SV Darmstadt 98 and from July to October 2004 with Wormatia Worms . However, he spent his longest time at SpVgg Ingelheim , where he was a trainer for seven years from July 1997 to July 2004.

literature

  • Christian Karn, Reinhard Rehberg: Player Lexicon 1963–1994. Agon Sportverlag. Kassel 2012. ISBN 978-3-89784-214-4 . P. 403.
  • Hardy Grüne, Claus Melchior: Lenenden in white and blue. 100 years of football history for a traditional Munich club. Publishing house Die Werkstatt. Göttingen 1999. ISBN 3-89533-256-9 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Jürgen Bitter: Germany's football. The encyclopedia. FA Herbig. Munich 2008. ISBN 978-3-7766-2558-5 . P. 586

Web links