Andrzej Rudy

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Andrzej Rudy
Personnel
birthday October 15, 1965
place of birth ŚcinawaPoland
size 173 cm
position midfield player
Juniors
Years station
1980 KS Odra Ścinawa
1980-1983 Śląsk Wrocław
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1983-1988 Śląsk Wrocław 107 0(8)
1988-1989 GKS Katowice 13 0(1)
1989-1992 1. FC Cologne 43 0(4)
1992 Brøndby IF (loan) 8 0(1)
1992-1995 1. FC Cologne 91 (10)
1995-1996 VfL Bochum 14 0(1)
1996-1997 Lierse SK 21 0(4)
1997-1999 Ajax Amsterdam 41 0(3)
1999-2000 Lierse SK 13 0(1)
2000-2001 KVC Westerlo 1 0(0)
2001-2002 SCB Viktoria Cologne 23 0(2)
2002-2004 Borussia Fulda 15 0(3)
2004-2005 Bonner SC 9 0(0)
2007-2008 TSC Euskirchen
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1986-1998 Poland 16 0(3)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2003-2004 Borussia Fulda (player-coach)
2004-2005 Bonner SC (player-coach)
2008-2010 1. FC Köln (technical trainer, U-8 to U-15)
2010-2011 Sports fans victories
2014 TSC Euskirchen (youth coach, U-17)
1 Only league games are given.

Andrzej Rudy (born October 15, 1965 in Ścinawa ) is a former Polish football player . In his active career, he has been active with various clubs in Germany since 1989 . He also played for the Polish national team .

Career

Born and raised in Lower Silesia , Rudy joined the first team in Śląsk Wrocław in 1983 , for whom he had played in the youth squad since 1980. After five years he was signed to GKS Katowice , where he played alongside Jan Furtok before he moved to the German Bundesliga for Hamburger SV . Rudy himself was refused a change of club from the then People's Republic of Poland to the Federal Republic of Germany for political reasons .

In November 1988 Rudy left the Polish national team's quarters in Milan without the permission of the Polish national team - the national team was preparing for a friendly against a selection from the Italian Serie A - and met with an escape helper. Despite strict controls at the borders and although a wanted letter was already circulating against him, Rudy got to Germany via Austria . After Rudy had kept a low profile in Cologne for about a year, thanks to the support of Bernhard Worms (CDU), shortly after the political change in Poland, he was allowed to play for 1. FC Cologne in 1989 . Worms had obtained this together with a notary during a meeting with officials of the Polish Football Association in Warsaw as part of the renewed relations between the two countries.

In Cologne, however, Rudy was initially unable to assert himself through play, which, in retrospect, Worms attributed to the fact that Rudy was "in no way prepared for the civilization shock of the change from a deficit economy [...] to an affluent society [...]". Rudy got into debt, among other things, as a result of the divorce from his wife, which also affected his athletic performance. Even two years later he was unable to establish himself in the first team of 1. FC Köln and moved to Brøndby IF on loan to Denmark . The initiator of the change was the then coach of Brøndby IF, Morten Olsen , who had played for 1. FC Köln a few years before and knew Rudy from his active days on the Rhine. Only in the suburbs of Copenhagen did Rudy find his way back to his old strength.

In 1993 Olsen became the new trainer in Cologne, and Rudy also returned to the billy goats. This time he became a top performer and learned German very well. During this time he also became the first Polish player to become a team captain in the Bundesliga. He played 134 Bundesliga games and scored 14 goals. In 1996 he played for half a year for VfL Bochum and then for Lierse SK , Ajax Amsterdam , again for Lierse SK and finally for KVC Westerlo . At the age of 36, Rudy moved back to his adopted home in Cologne, where he played for the regional division SCB Viktoria Köln . After being employed as a player coach at Borussia Fulda , Rudy then worked for Bonner SC . At both clubs he played actively in their first team. The last time Rudy was active as a player was in 2008 at TSC Euskirchen , whom he had helped with promotion from the third season of the district league to the state league. He then worked as a technical trainer in the junior division (U-8 to U-15) of 1. FC Köln, before he was introduced as the new coach of Sportfreunde Siegen on April 13, 2010 . After the lack of sporting success, however, Rudy was given early leave on May 4, 2011.

In 2014, after a long break, Rudy took over the coaching position of the U-17s of TSC Euskirchen in the Junior Bundesliga . From summer 2014 he coached the club's C3 youth in the special league. Since November 1, 2017, he has been working as a tow truck driver for the Cologne-based transport company Colonia Spezialfahrzeuge and is no longer active in any association for the time being.

statistics

successes

  • 1984 3rd place at the U-18 European Championship with Poland
  • 1987 Polish Cup winner with WKS Śląsk Wrocław
  • 1990 German runner-up with 1. FC Köln
  • 1991 DFB Cup final participant with 1. FC Köln
  • 1997 Belgian champion with Lierse SK
  • 1998 Dutch champion with Ajax Amsterdam
  • 1998 Dutch cup winner with Ajax Amsterdam
  • 1999 Dutch cup winner with Ajax Amsterdam

Others

Andrzej Rudy lives in the Cologne suburb of Hürth .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g Thomas Urban: Black eagles, white eagles: German and Polish footballers in the machinery of politics . Die Werkstatt, Göttingen 2011, ISBN 978-3-89533-775-8 , p. 153-157 .
  2. ^ Andrzej Rudy the new Sportfreunde trainer. (No longer available online.) In: Expressi.de. February 26, 2017, formerly in the original ; accessed on April 16, 2018 .  ( Page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.expressi.de  
  3. ↑ Sports fans part with Andrzej Rudy. In: Expressi.de. May 4, 2011, archived from the original on August 2, 2012 ; accessed on April 16, 2018 .
  4. ^ Euskirchener TSC: C3 Juniors. In: juniorenfussball24.de. August 23, 2014, archived from the original on December 19, 2014 ; accessed on April 16, 2018 .
  5. Ulrich Bauer: Ex-Cologne professional now drives tow trucks. In: bild.de . March 26, 2018, archived from the original on April 2, 2018 ; accessed on April 16, 2018 .
  6. Wolfram Kämpf: C3 special team: The chance is called Rudy. In: fussball.de . September 21, 2014, accessed April 16, 2018 .