Andreas Diebitz
Andreas Diebitz | ||
Personnel | ||
---|---|---|
birthday | January 11, 1965 | |
place of birth | Dresden , GDR | |
size | 183 cm | |
position | Defender / midfielder | |
Juniors | ||
Years | station | |
-1972 | BSG Empor Dresden-Löbtau | |
1972-1983 | SG Dynamo Dresden | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
1983-1989 | SG Dynamo Dresden II | at least 87 (13) |
1985-1990 | SG / 1. FC Dynamo Dresden | 61 | (1)
1989 | TSG Meissen | 5 | (1)
1991-1992 | FC Sachsen Leipzig | 43 (10) |
1992-1998 | Bischofswerdaer FV 08 | 168 (30) |
1998-2003 | Dresdner SC | 87 | (5)
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
2006-2007 | Dresdner SC | |
1 Only league games are given. |
Andreas Diebitz (born January 11, 1965 in Dresden ) is a former German soccer player .
Athletic career
In 1972 Andreas Diebitz moved from BSG Empor Dresden-Löbtau , where he had started playing football under his first instructor Manfred Schmerbach, to SG Dynamo Dresden . In the course of the reintegration of the 2nd teams of the upper league clubs and communities from the disbanded junior upper league into the game operations of the district league in the summer of 1983 and the associated promotion opportunity to the second highest division, the league , the defensive man appeared with the reserve team in the 1984/85 season the Dresden Dynamos , who had become district champion in 1983/84 and prevailed in the promotion round , in the national football of the GDR . For Dynamo Dresden II Diebitz completed until the 1988/89 season , after which the second representation was dissolved, 87 games in which he scored 13 goals.
At the same time, the coach of the Dresden league team, Klaus Sammer (until summer 1986) and his successor Eduard Geyer , repeatedly gave him probation opportunities in the top division of the GDR. The then 21-year-old made his league debut on the 21st match day of the 1985/86 season in the 1: 2 away defeat at FC Rot-Weiß Erfurt . In the 1987/88 season , Diebitz was part of the permanent staff of the Black and Yellows with 25 missions, and they took third place. In the championship year 1988/89 he was in the preliminary round in eleven of 13 games, including 10 in the starting lineup, also as a regular on the ball and before the winter break he was also in five of the six Dresden European Cup games in that season , which later reached UEFA for the first time -Calculate Cup semi-finals , placed in the starting eleven . Diebitz missed the second half of the season in the major league and on the international stage, but in the spring of 1989 he was still in the SGD's second team.
The introduction of player contracts in East German football in the summer of 1989 was also linked to a regulation that made it possible for a contingent of six players from the league teams to collect game practice in league communities. In the autumn of 1989, Andreas Diebitz played alternately in the major league for Dynamo Dresden - plus an appearance in the national championship cup - and in the league for TSG Meißen , which had taken over from the previous second team of the SGD. In the second half of this season Diebitz was then used exclusively at Dynamo Dresden and won the second GDR championship title in a row with his teammates under the new coach Reinhard Häfner in the spring of 1990 . He was not used in the cup final against PSV Schwerin , but had a share in winning the double with two appearances in the previous rounds of the FDGB Cup . In the final season of the independent East German football , the defensive player was used again in the cup, but no longer in the point games for the club, which is now known as 1. FC Dynamo Dresden.
After a transfer to FC Sachsen Leipzig in the winter of 1990/91 , Diebitz fought with the chemical successor for entry into the now all-German 2nd Bundesliga , which however, with a 12th place, did not succeed either directly or via the subsequent promotion round . On matchday 22, he scored his second and last Oberliga goal in a total of 71 games against his ex-club from Dresden in a 1-0 home win for FC Sachsen. In the following season , the team from Leipzig-Leutzsch was fifth in the southern season in the third division of the NOFV amateur league newly introduced in the area of the former GDR .
From 1992 to 1998 Andreas Diebitz was active at the Bischofswerdaer FV 08 . In the summer of 1998 he returned to Dresden. In his fifth and final year at Dresdner SC , he played his last game in national football in the regional league in the 2002/03 season , when he lost 4-1 with the DSC on matchday 33 at home to FC Erzgebirge Aue . Then he was active in lower class clubs, including the SG Kesselsdorf in the district class. At the turn of the year 2006/07 he took over the coaching post at Dresdner SC, whose assistant he was already in his last two seasons as an active player in the Heinz-Steyer Stadium , for the second half of the regional league .
literature
- Hanns Leske : The GDR league players. A lexicon. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2014, ISBN 978-3-89784-392-9 , page 76.
Web links
- Andreas Diebitz in the database of weltfussball.de
- Andreas Diebitz in the database of fussballdaten.de
- Andreas Diebitz in the database of transfermarkt.de (player profile)
- Andreas Diebitz in the database of transfermarkt.de (trainer profile)
- Andreas Diebitz in the database of the German Football Association
Individual evidence
- ↑ fuwo - The new football week . Jan 19, 1988, p. 4.
- ↑ fuwo - The new football week . June 27, 1989, page 9.
- ↑ fuwo - The new football week . August 3, 1989, page 2.
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Diebitz, Andreas |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German soccer player |
DATE OF BIRTH | January 11, 1965 |