Andreas Golombek
Andreas Golombek | ||
Personnel | ||
---|---|---|
birthday | August 9, 1968 | |
place of birth | Amshausen , Germany | |
size | 191 cm | |
position | Defense , midfield | |
Juniors | ||
Years | station | |
TSV Amshausen | ||
Arminia Bielefeld | ||
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
1986-1990 | Arminia Bielefeld | 99 (24) |
1990-1991 | Sc freiburg | 29 | (3)
1991-1993 | VfL Osnabrück | 62 | (8)
1993-1994 | SC Verl | |
1994-1996 | SG Wattenscheid 09 | 61 | (7)
1996 | Fortuna Dusseldorf | 3 | (0)
1997 | KFC Uerdingen 05 | 14 | (1)
1997-1998 | LR Ahlen | 8 | (2)
1999 | Graz AK | 13 | (1)
1999-2002 | 1. FC Magdeburg | 44 | (7)
2002-2003 | Borussia Neunkirchen | 35 | (4)
2003-2004 | VfV 06 Hildesheim | 20 | (5)
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
2005–2012 | VfV 06 Hildesheim | |
2013-2017 | SC Verl | |
2017-2018 | Sports fanatic Lotte | |
1 Only league games are given. |
Andreas Golombek (born August 9, 1968 in Amshausen ) is a German soccer coach and former soccer player .
Career
Golombek began playing football at TSV Amshausen from Steinhagen , from which he moved to Arminia Bielefeld in 1986 . For Arminia he played 52 second division games in two seasons and stayed there after relegation in 1988. In 1990 he went to SC Freiburg , for which he appeared 29 times in the second division. He spent the following two years at VfL Osnabrück (62 games). In 1993, Golombek took part in the military world championship in Morocco with the Bundeswehr national team and took third place. He then moved to SC Verl in the regional league for one season . From 1994 to 1996 he played at SG Wattenscheid 09 (61 missions). In the first half of the 1996/97 season he made his only three Bundesliga games with Fortuna Düsseldorf , in the second half of the season he played his last second division season (14 appearances) for KFC Uerdingen 05 . After a brief stint in Austria at Grazer AK , he played from 1999 for 1. FC Magdeburg , with whom he caused a sensation in the 2000/01 DFB Cup , as the amateur team against 1. FC Cologne , FC Bayern Munich and won the Karlsruher SC and was only eliminated 0-1 in the quarter-finals against the eventual winners FC Schalke 04 . In 2002 he moved to Borussia Neunkirchen in the regional league, before ending his career with the upper division VfV 06 Hildesheim in 2003/04 . In total, Golombek has three Bundesliga games, 218 second division games (23 goals), and 45 regional league games (5 goals).
Golombek has an A coaching license and was coach of VfV Borussia 06 Hildesheim (Oberliga Niedersachsen) from 2005 to 2012; from June 2013 to April 2017 he was the coach of SC Verl (Regionalliga West), for which he worked for a year in his playing career. He completed his soccer teacher training at the Hennes-Weisweiler-Akademie in Hennef and received the UEFA Pro license on March 20, 2017 in Gravenbruch . A month later he was released as a trainer in Verl. At the end of October 2017 he took over the coaching position at third division Sportfreunde Lotte and stayed there until the end of the season.
Web links
- Andreas Golombek in the database of weltfussball.de
- Andreas Golombek in the database of fussballdaten.de
- Andreas Golombek in the database of transfermarkt.de
Individual evidence
- ↑ kicker sports magazine No. 47/23. Wo., 10./11. June 1993, p. 21
- ↑ Andreas Golombek: Ex-professional dreams of the DFB Cup again ( memento from June 7, 2012 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ cfl / SID: DFB awards licenses to 25 new football teachers . In: kicker online. Olympia Verlag GmbH, March 20, 2017, accessed on March 20, 2017 .
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Golombek, Andreas |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German soccer player and coach |
DATE OF BIRTH | August 9, 1968 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Amshausen |