Bernd Hoss

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Bernd Hoss (born June 19, 1939 in Neckarhausen ; † April 6, 2016 in Freiburg im Breisgau ) was a German football coach .

Coaching career

As a player, Hoss was active at TB Neckarhausen and FV 09 Nürtingen . Injury consequences led to the termination of his playing career and the start of coaching at an early stage.

Hoss completed his training as a soccer teacher at the Cologne Sports University under Hennes Weisweiler , which he completed in 1966. He gained his first coaching experience in the amateur field, where he worked for FV Ebingen until 1971. For the 1971/72 season he got the first chance to prove himself in higher class football from FSV Mainz 05 from the second-class regional football league Southwest . In his first year with the Rheinhessen he reached fourth place with his new team. In the second year, 1972/73 , he won the championship in the southwest with the parade tower around Herbert Renner , Gerd Klier and Manfred Kipp . In the promotion round to the Bundesliga , however, he failed at SC Fortuna Cologne . In the last year of the old second-rate regional league, 1973/74, he finished fifth with Mainz and the zero fives were thus qualified for the 1974/75 round for the newly starting 2nd Bundesliga.

He took over as coach of FK Pirmasens and led the team to second place in the debut round of the 2nd Bundesliga South 1974/75 . Despite offensive forces like Georg Beichle , Günther Michl , Harry Erhart , Alfred Seiler , Dieter Weinkauff and Raimund Krauth , he failed in the relegation games to the 1st Bundesliga at KFC Uerdingen 05 . After his time in Pirmasens, Hoss took over Wormatia Worms in the 1st Southwest Amateur League on November 15, 1976. He led Wormatia to the top of the table and the young attacker Emanuel Günther to the top of the scorers list with 32 hits. For the 1977/78 season he signed a new contract with the Bundesliga relegated Karlsruher SC and thus returned to the professional field. He immediately raised hopes that KSC would return to the Bundesliga immediately. After the tenth game day, the Karlsruhe team won their away game 1-0 at VfR Bürstadt at the beginning of October 1977, they moved up to the top of the table with 16: 4 points, tied with Bayreuth and Nuremberg. After the 12th matchday, a 2-2 draw at Freiburg FC, but still in 1st place with 18: 6 points, Hoss was surprisingly dismissed at Karlsruher SC. At the end of the lap, the KSC was in 7th place, with a clear gap to the top positions.

In March 1978 he continued his coaching activity at Wuppertaler SV in the 2nd Bundesliga Group North. After stints at Freiburg FC and VfL Osnabrück, he moved to Berlin in 1982, where he took over Tennis Borussia in the Berlin Football League in 1982/83 . After the runner-up in 1983/84 behind champions and promoted players in the 2nd Bundesliga, Blau-Weiß 90 Berlin , he took over the promoted team in September 1984 in the 2nd Bundesliga and led the blue-whites to seventh place at the end of the round.

In his second year, 1985/86 , he was runner-up and thus directly promoted to the Bundesliga . This also began the career of the later international striker Karlheinz Riedle , who was used in all 34 games under coach Hoss and scored ten goals this season. Nevertheless, after a year, in 1986/87 , the team was relegated to the 2nd Bundesliga. On the 34th matchday, June 17, 1987, Blau-Weiß 90 said goodbye to the Bundesliga with a 2-2 home draw against FC Homburg.

After another brief engagement at SC Freiburg , Hoss withdrew from the coaching business. His last second division game on the coaching bench was on May 17, 1990, when SC Freiburg played 6-1 against SV Meppen . Overall, Hoss sat in 34 first division and 394 second division games on the dugout.

Hoss died in Freiburg at the beginning of April 2016 after a long illness.

Coaching stations

literature

  • Reinhard Rehberg, Christian Karn: Carnival on Bruchweg. The great years of Mainz 05 . Verlag Die Werkstatt, Göttingen 2008, ISBN 978-3-89533-624-9 , S. #.
  • Jürgen Bitter : Germany's football. The lexicon . Sportverlag Berlin, Berlin 2000. ISBN 3-328-00857-8 , p. 287.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Mainz 05 mourns the loss of Bernd Hoss mainz05.de, accessed on April 7, 2016