Christian Niebel

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Christian Niebel
Personnel
birthday 3rd November 1959
place of birth BerlinGermany
size 184 cm
position Defense
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
0000-1986 SC Charlottenburg
1986-1990 Hertha BSC 107 (7)
1990-1992 Blue-White 90 Berlin 54 (3)
1992-1993 BSV Stahl Brandenburg 7 (1)
1993-1995 Spandauer SV
1 Only league games are given.

Christian Niebel (born November 3, 1959 in Berlin ) is a former German soccer player .

Player career

Christian Niebel took his first steps as a footballer at SC Charlottenburg , where he played 15 games in the 1982/83 Oberliga season under coach Gerd Achterberg . As the Berlin champions, the team around goal scorers Jörg Gaedke and Frank Dietrich was entitled to participate in the promotion round to the 2nd Bundesliga . There the Charlottenburg took second place behind Rot-Weiß Oberhausen , which allowed them to qualify for the second-highest league. In the 1983/84 season , Niebel rose to become a regular at SC Charlottenburg and played 30 of 38 games. Relegation was missed by only two points. The direct resurgence was missed in the following season by second place behind Tennis Borussia Berlin . However, this authorized the SCC to participate in the 1985 German amateur soccer championship . There FC Augsburg was defeated twice in the first round . Against DSC Wanne-Eickel , however, was the last stop after a rough 4-0 defeat in the first leg in the semifinals. The league season 1985/86 concluded the SC Charlottenburg from the Traber FC Mariendorf first. In the promotion round, Niebel and his team failed in third place, just behind Rot-Weiss Essen .

Then Christian Niebel switched to the relegated and high-rise candidate Hertha BSC . Under Jürgen Sundermann , Niebel became a regular there and contributed with four goals in 25 games that Hertha was able to win the league . But in the promotion round, BVL 08 Remscheid and SV Meppen were too strong, so that Niebel again missed promotion. 1987/88 Niebel remained a regular player and was able to celebrate the relay victory again. In the promotion round, the Herthaners succeeded in that season, tied on points, as the first with Eintracht Braunschweig to be promoted to the 2nd Bundesliga. There Christian Niebel contributed as a regular player to relegation. In 1989/90 Hertha surprisingly managed to win the second division championship and promotion to the first division. First division games remained with Niebel, however.

Since coach Werner Fuchs no longer planned with Niebel as a regular for the Bundesliga - despite 27 completed games in the previous season - he switched to Blau-Weiß 90 Berlin for the 1990/91 season . In the Mariendorfern Niebel played in the regular eleven and reached 6th place at the end of the season. In the following season , blue-white had to go into the relegation round in the northern season and took third from last place, the relegation round with TSV 1860 Munich and TSV Havelse entitled. However, nothing came of the participation, since the German Football Association Blau-Weiß 90 withdrew the license for the 2nd Bundesliga. As a result, the club was forced to file for bankruptcy . The association was dissolved and deleted from the association register.

Then Christian Niebel moved to the league for BSV Stahl Brandenburg , where Niebel became a regular player straight away. On the 8th matchday he injured himself so badly in the 0: 4 in the top game against the later season champion and promoted tennis Borussia that he had to be replaced injured and was no longer used during the season.

For the new season Christian Niebel moved to league competitor Spandauer SV . With 27 disputed games, Niebel had a large share in the fact that the SSV could qualify for the newly founded regional league . Christian Niebel was unable to defend his regular position there and was only used sporadically. After the successful relegation, Christian Niebel ended his career in 1995 at the age of 35.

Web links

swell

  • Tragmann, Voss: The Hertha Compendium. Harald Voß Verlag, Berlin 2017, ISBN 3-935759-27-4 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hardy Green , Christian Karn: The big book of the German football clubs . AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2009, ISBN 978-3-89784-362-2 , p. 208.