Andreas Wagenhaus

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Andreas Wagenhaus
Andreas Wagenhaus 1988.png
Wagenhaus at HFC Chemie (1988)
Personnel
birthday October 29, 1964
place of birth Naumburg / SaaleGDR
size 187 cm
position Defender
Juniors
Years station
1972–0000 TSG Naumburg
0000-1977 BSG RSK Freyburg / Unstrut
1977-1983 HFC chemistry
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1983-1989 HFC chemistry 123 (16)
1989-1993 Dynamo Dresden 89 0(4)
1993-1994 Fenerbahçe Istanbul 18 0(1)
1994-1996 Waldhof Mannheim 51 0(2)
1997 FC Gossau
1997-1998 VfL Halle 1896 27 0(5)
FC Dornbirn
FC Schwarzach
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1990 GDR 3 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
FC Krumbach
FC Doren
FC Schwarzach
1 Only league games are given.

Andreas Wagenhaus (born October 29, 1964 in Naumburg / Saale ) is a former German football player. He played first division football for Halleschen FC , Dynamo Dresden and Fenerbahçe Istanbul . With Dynamo Dresden Wagenhaus was GDR champion and cup winner, he is a three-time GDR national team player .

Athletic career

offspring

Andreas Wagenhaus came through TSG Naumburg , where he started to play organized football in 1972, and the company sports association of the Freyburger Rotkäppchen Sektkellerei , the BSG RSK Freyburg, joined Halleschen FC Chemie (HFC) in 1977 at the age of twelve. Between 1982 and 1983 Wagenhaus was a member of the GDR junior national team , for which he played 13 international matches. It was used as a pre-stopper in most games .

Oberliga and relegation in Halle

The 1.87-meter-tall wagon house also made its debut in the GDR league on August 27, 1983 as a stopper . It was the match on the 3rd match day of the 1983/84 season between FC Karl-Marx-Stadt and Halleschen FC Chemie (2: 2), in which he substituted for Roland Wawrzyniak , who was not ready for use . In the second half of the season Wagenhaus was used as a defender in eight other league games. On April 3, 1984 he was called up for the first time in an international match of the GDR youth national team. In the game GDR - Poland (0: 2) he was substituted on as a defender in the second half. By 1989 he had a total of 14 U-21 internationals. After the relegation of the HFC in 1984 Wagenhaus had to play three seasons in the GDR league . It was only in the 1985/86 season that he was able to play his way into the starting eleven when he played 31 of the 34 point games. While coach Olaf Keller used him continuously as a stopper in the first half of 1985, Wagenhaus was mobilized in various defensive positions in the spring of 1986. In the promotion season 1986/87 he played alternately Libero and left-back and came to 31 point games, in which he scored four goals. In his second league season, coach Karl Trautmann let him play exclusively as a libero in 22 point games. After another 17 league appearances as a Libero in the 1988/89 season Wagenhaus left the HFC. In six seasons he had played 123 point games for the first team of the HFC, 48 of them with nine goals in the league.

Championship and cup with Dynamo Dresden

For the 1989/90 season Wagenhaus joined the reigning GDR champions Dynamo Dresden. There he was only used on the 4th game day in the league after defender Andreas Trautmann was injured. By the end of the season, Wagenhaus only had 17 point games and was therefore not part of the regular formation. After he had contributed to the defense of the championship title in this way, Wagenhaus stood as a stopper on June 2, 1990 with Dynamo Dresden in the final of the GDR soccer cup, which the Dresdeners won 2-1 over the second division PSV Schwerin. At this point, Wagenhaus had already played two international matches. Both in the match between France and GDR (3-0) on January 24, 1990 and in the match between Kuwait and GDR (1: 2) on January 26, 1990, he was used as a Libero. His third international match took place on September 12, 1990 in Belgium. In their last international match, the GDR team with Wagenhaus as right defender won 2-0. In the meantime, the last season of the GDR Oberliga had begun, which, in addition to determining the last GDR champions, also served to qualify for the three top DFB leagues .

Career in the united Germany

As runner-up in the last GDR top division season 1990/91, Dynamo Dresden qualified for the 1st Bundesliga . Wagenhaus was usually involved as a Libero with 22 stakes and two goals. Under coach Helmut Schulte Wagenhaus began his first Bundesliga season in 1991/92 again as a Libero, but was then used in constantly changing defensive positions. Of the 38 league games played, he played 27 games. In 1992/93, the new coach Klaus Sammer experimented in the first two point games with Wagenhaus as a left winger, but then took him back into the defense. After only irregular appearances, he did not get a regular place again until matchday 27 under coach Ralf Minge as a pre-stopper and so came to a total of 34 league games on 21 appearances. For the 1993/94 season Dynamo Dresden waited with Sigfried Held again with a new coach. He only used Wagenhaus as a pre-stopper in the first two league games, after which his career at Dynamo Dresden was over. From 1989 to 1993 Wagenhaus had played 39 GDR league games with three goals and 50 Bundesliga games with one goal for the Dynamos. Wagenhaus played seven of the eight European Cup matches played by Dresden during this period.

For a year, Wagenhaus played for the Turkish first division club Fenerbahçe Istanbul in 1993/94 and played 20 competitive games and scored one goal, then returned to Germany, where he received a contract with the second division SV Waldhof Mannheim . In Mannheim he was active for three seasons and played 51 point games in the 2nd Bundesliga , in which he was always used as a Libero. When his contract ended on December 31, 1996, Wagenhaus joined the Swiss second division club FC Gossau for half a year , but could not prevent its relegation to the third division. In the summer of 1997, he ended his career in professional football.

End of career and transition to coaching life

From 1997 to the end of his career the following summer, Wagenhaus played at VfL Halle 1896 in the southern season of the NOFV-Oberliga , in which VfL achieved 3rd place in 1997/98 . In this season, the former national player was active in the DFB Cup for the last time, in which Halle lost 4-0 to Eintracht Frankfurt in round 1 . In Austria, Wagenhaus still played for FC Dornbirn and FC Schwarzach in the fourth-class Vorarlberg League after the turn of the millennium .

From 2008 to 2010 he worked as a coach at the Austrian FC Krumbach, first as a goalkeeping coach for the 2nd team and then as head coach. At the beginning of 2011 Wagenhaus took over the coaching position at the Austrian FC Doren in the 5th state class Unterland. In the summer of 2013 Wagenhaus trained the 2nd team from FC Schwarzach in the 4th Vorarlberg regional class, with which he came in 7th.

literature

Web links

Commons : Andreas Wagenhaus  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Andreas Wagenhaus in the Türkiye Futbol Federasyonu database (English). Retrieved October 2, 2019.
  2. ^ Andreas Wagenhaus I. Trainer at FC Krumbach. VOL.AT (Vorarlberg Online), June 17, 2009, accessed on August 31, 2017 .
  3. Alex Hammerer: FC Doren has a new coach. VOL.AT (Vorarlberg Online), February 3, 2011, accessed on August 31, 2017 .