Andreas Bornschein

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Andreas Bornschein
Andreas Bornschein 1983.jpg
Andreas Bornschein in the jersey
of 1. FC Lok Leipzig (1983)
Personnel
birthday November 29, 1956
place of birth LeipzigGDR
size 172 cm
position Midfielder / striker
Juniors
Years station
1967-1975 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1974-1975 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig II 5 0(0)
1975-1985 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig 80 (19)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1974-1975 GDR U-18 13 (0)
1975 DDR U-23 1 (1)
1976-1977 DDR U-21 5 (1)
1982 GDR 1 (0)
1 Only league games are given.

Andreas Bornschein (born November 29, 1956 in Leipzig ) is a former German soccer player. For 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig he played in the GDR Oberliga , the top division in GDR football . With 1. FC Lok he won the FDGB Cup in 1976 . Bornschein played once for the GDR national team and was previously a junior and young national player for the DFV of the GDR .

Athletic career

1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig

Bornschein came to 1. FC Lok Leipzig in 1967 as a ten-year-old, where he began to play football organized under the supervision of trainer Wolfgang Wagner. With the Leipzig football club , where he ran through all the youth teams until 1975, he was GDR champion in 1973/74 in the junior league under coach Heinz Joerk . Bornschein gained his first experience in men's football in the second-class league as a junior . For the 2nd team in Leipzig he played in five games in the 1974/75 season .

For the 1975/76 season, the 1.72 meter tall Bornschein, who had meanwhile completed his apprenticeship as a motor mechanic, was nominated for the first division team of 1. FC Lok. Already on the 2nd game day of the season, August 27, 1975, he came to his first league assignment. In the match between 1. FC Lok and 1. FC Magdeburg (2: 1) he came on for Andreas Roth in the 68th minute . By the end of the season he was called up in a total of 13 first division games, but only played four games over the full time. Bornschein scored his first league goal on matchday 19 at 1-1 in Jena, when he shot his team in the lead in the 32nd minute. He concluded the season with his first major success in the men's field. On May 1, 1976 he was in the last twelve minutes in the final of the GDR soccer cup , which his team won 3-0 over FC Vorwärts Frankfurt.

In the following two seasons between 1976 and 1978 Bornschein was only a substitute and played only 23 of the 46 played point games. In the cup final of 1977, lost by 1. FC Lok , he was also only substituted for 16 minutes. Because of this record he was demoted to the junior league eleven for the 1978/79 season . However, he only played there until October 1978. After that, he was drafted into military service. During his time in the National People's Army , Bornschein did not have any appearances with the ASG Vorwärts Dessau belonging to the Army Sports Association Vorwärts .

After the end of his military service, Bornschein was again included in the first division team of 1. FC Lok for the 1980/81 season. But again he did not get beyond the substitute player status, he played only ten point games with only two full-time appearances and was not used in the cup final won for Leipzig. The best performance of his league career he showed in the 1981/82 season, in which he played 17 point games mainly as a left winger and with eight goals next to Dieter Kühn was the top scorer of 1. FC Lok.

On the 1st day of the 1982/83 season Bornschein suffered a serious injury in which an artery in the knee was damaged. After that he was no longer fully resilient and was no longer used for the full playing time in his last 16 league games until 1984. He played his last league game at the age of 27 on April 14, 1984. In the encounter on the 22nd game day of the 1983/84 season 1. FC Lok - Hallescher FC (4: 1) he was substituted on again for 35 minutes. So he had come within ten years to 80 league games, in which he played mainly on the left attacking side and scored 19 goals. During his time as a member of the league team, 1. FC Lok Leipzig played 23 national cup games, of which Bornschein played 17 (8 goals). Of the 24 European Cup games in this period, he completed 10 games (1 goal).

Although Bornschein was nominated again for the league squad for the 1984/85 season, he was no longer used. He ended his career in the summer of 1985.

Selection bets

As a junior player, he was included in the squad of the GDR U-18 team in 1974. He played his first international junior game as a substitute on November 8, 1974 in the encounter between the GDR and Bulgaria (3-0). By May 1975, when he took part in the UEFA youth tournament in Switzerland with the East German team , he was a midfielder in a total of 13 national meetings in this age group. He then moved up to the junior national team , for which he played six international matches (two goals) between September 1975 and March 1977.

The good performance in the league in spring 1982 meant that Bornschein was appointed to the squad of the GDR senior national team. On May 5, 1982, he played for 76 minutes in the friendly game Soviet Union - GDR (1-0) as a left winger. According to the trade journal fuwo - Die neue Fußballwoche (The New Football Week) , when he made his debut, there was "a certain cheek that is characteristic of Bornschein." In the following international match he was still part of the squad, after which he was eliminated from the national team due to a serious injury.

Coaching career

From the mid-1980s he was goalkeeping coach at 1. FC Lok. After 1990 he worked in the youth field and was also employed at times as an assistant coach for the first team. During the Bundesliga season 1993/94 he was kit manager. In 1996 Bornschein left the club and took a job at a waste disposal company in Delitzsch . In addition, he coached the district class team SG Rotation Leipzig from 1997 to 2002 , with whom he rose to the district league in 1999. He then coached the SG Tauchau 99 district division until 2004.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Klaus Schlegel : USSR-Elf gives us a football lesson. In: fuwo - The new football week . May 11, 1982, p. 8.