Dariusz Wosz

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Dariusz Wosz
Dariusz Wosz 2019.jpg
Dariusz Wosz (2019)
Personnel
birthday June 8, 1969
place of birth Piekary ŚląskiePoland
size 169 cm
position midfield
Juniors
Years station
1980-1981 BSG Motor Hall
1981-1984 BSG upstairs hall
1984-1988 Hallescher FC
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1986-1991 Hallescher FC 116 (19)
1992-1998 VfL Bochum 211 (25)
1998-2001 Hertha BSC 85 (11)
2001-2007 VfL Bochum 135 (16)
2007-2009 SC Union Bergen
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1987 DDR U-20 6 (1)
1988-1989 DDR U-21 5 (0)
1989-1990 GDR 7 (0)
1997-2000 Germany 17 (1)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2007-2013 VfL Bochum U-19
2009-2010 VfL Bochum (assistant coach)
2010 → VfL Bochum (interim)
2013-2015 VfL Bochum II
2013– VfL Bochum (assistant coach)
1 Only league games are given.

Dariusz "Darek" Wosz ˈdaːri̯ʊs ˈvɔʃ (born June 8, 1969 in Piekary Śląskie , Poland ) is a German football coach and former football player .

Childhood and youth

Since their ancestors were citizens of the German Empire , the family took the opportunity in 1980 to move to Halle in the GDR as part of the agreement on family reunification from Poland, where the brother of Wosz's mother had operated a gardening business . With the move, the family lost their Polish citizenship; originally the parents had hoped to be able to travel to West Berlin with their Polish passports , where other relatives lived. As a resettler from Upper Silesia, Wosz initially spoke hardly any German and compensated for his initial school problems with performance in sports.

Player career

society

Wosz was appointed seven times in the GDR youth team in speed skating . However, his greater interest was in football. In 1980 Wosz, who had played soccer on the street before the resettlement, joined BSG Motor Halle as a soccer player. After a further position at the BSG Empor Halle (1981 to 1984) he was delegated to the youth department of the Halle FC Chemie . The scouts of the GDR sport found him to be 1.69 cm too big for speed skating and the youth trainers in Halle found him too small and skinny. At the age of 16 he took a trip to South America with a youth team; According to a report from his mother, he is said to have turned back a West German passenger who promised him a career in the West if he got off the plane on a stopover.

For the 1987/88 season , the HFC Chemie managed to return to the top division of the GDR, the Oberliga , where the then 17-year-old Wosz was used once in the second division game year 1986/87. In the following four seasons until the dissolution of the league after the 1990/91 season , the midfielder played 93 first division matches, in which he scored 15 goals for the HFC. In the 1991/92 season Wosz played 22 games (5 goals) in the now all-German 2nd Bundesliga for the club, which has now been renamed Hallescher FC . The HFC played this season, after finishing fourth in the last league season 1990/91, also in the UEFA Cup , in which Wosz played in two games.

During the winter break of the 1991/92 season , Wosz moved to Bundesliga club VfL Bochum in the Ruhr area . He stayed with VfL until the end of the 1997/98 season and led the club as team captain and midfield director in the 1996/97 Bundesliga season to fifth place and into the UEFA Cup. The team supervised by Klaus Toppmöller - Wosz was there in all six games and scored one goal - was eliminated in the third round of the 1997/98 European Cup with 4-6 goals after a return match against Ajax Amsterdam .

In the summer of 1998, Wosz decided to move to Hertha BSC . With the capital club Wosz played in the UEFA Champions League , but was hardly used in the 2000/01 season after two successful years . The free kick specialist played a total of 85 Bundesliga games (11 goals) for Berliners. He scored two goals in 15 European Cup games.

Wosz returned to the then second division VfL Bochum in summer 2001 at his own request . After promotion to the Bundesliga in 2002, the team won a place in the UEFA Cup with him as captain in summer 2004. In the 2004/05 season , VfL was relegated from the Bundesliga together with Hansa Rostock and SC Freiburg , but returned to the first division in the following season. Wosz, who was 37 at the time, only made one more appearance in the Bundesliga after being promoted. On May 12, 2007, at VfL's last home game against VfB Stuttgart , Wosz was bid farewell. In the last Bundesliga game this season in Mönchengladbach , he was substituted in for Zvjezdan Misimović in the 70th minute and scored the 2-0 for VfL in the 82nd minute.

Wosz currently plays in the district league A for SC Union Bergen from the Bochum district of Bergen .

National team

For the national team of the GDR , Wosz played seven full international matches between 1989 and 1990 (no goal). He made his debut at the age of 19 in a friendly against Finland (1-1) on March 22, 1989 in Dresden . His seventh international match marked the departure of the GDR team from the international football stage when the team led by captain Matthias Sammer beat Belgium 2-0 on September 12, 1990 in Brussels .

On February 26, 1997, Wosz, who had already been invited in September 1992 by national coach Berti Vogts to a screening course for the all-German national team at the Wedau sports school, made his debut in the German A selection . In the friendly match in Tel Aviv , Israel was defeated 1-0 by a goal from Wosz just before the end of the game. In 2000 he made the jump into the squad of Vogts' successor Erich Ribbeck for the EM 2000 in Belgium and the Netherlands . Ribbeck did not use him at this EM, which was disappointing for the German team. The international match on November 15, 2000 in Copenhagen against Denmark (1: 2 defeat) was for Wosz after 17 games and one goal his last in the German national football team.

Coaching career

As a trainer in the youth department and in the area of ​​public relations, he was also employed in Bochum beyond the 2006/07 season. He looked after the U-19s of VfL Bochum in the Bundesliga West as the successor to Sascha Lewandowski .

Until 2013, Wosz was the coach of the U-19 youth team at VfL Bochum. Since September 20, 2009, he has also been the assistant coach of interim coach Frank Heinemann for the first team of the Revierklub. On April 29, 2010, two days before the penultimate Bundesliga match day, he took over the first team of VfL Bochum as interim coach until the end of the season for the sacked Heiko Herrlich and was relegated with the team from the Bundesliga. From 2013 until the team withdrew after the 2014/15 season, he was in charge of VfL's second team. Since then he has been active in the club as a technical trainer and in the coaching team of the first team.

statistics

Missions (as of May 19, 2007)

  • Oberliga (1st division of the GDR)
Calls Gates season society
93 14th 1987-1991 Hallescher FC
  • League (2nd league of the GDR)
Calls Gates season society
1 - 1986/1987 Hallescher FC
  • 1st National League
Calls Gates season society
49 3 1991-1993 VfL Bochum
32 2 1994/1995 VfL Bochum
65 14th 1996-1998 VfL Bochum
85 11 1998-2001 Hertha BSC
92 8th 2002-2005 VfL Bochum
1 1 2006/2007 VfL Bochum
324 39 total
  • 2nd Bundesliga
Calls Gates season society
22nd 5 1991/1992 Hallescher FC
34 3 1993/1994 VfL Bochum
31 3 1995/1996 VfL Bochum
27 6th 2001/2002 VfL Bochum
15th 1 2005/2006 VfL Bochum
129 18th total
  • 17 missions for the German national team
  • 7 missions for the GDR national team

successes

Hallescher FC
  • Promotion to the GDR league in 1987
VfL Bochum
  • Promotion to the 1st Bundesliga in 1994, 2002 and 2006 with VfL Bochum

useful information

Dariusz Wosz with his wife Nika Krosny-Wosz (2015)
  • During his time as an active Bundesliga player, journalists often referred to Wosz as the “magic mouse” because of his agile style of play.
  • He is the first VfL player to have an official farewell game. On September 8, 2007, a UEFA Cup Allstar Team from VfL Bochum was set up against a selection of old colleagues from Wosz in the Rewirpower Stadium . The game ended with 12: 8, with Wosz playing for both teams and scoring two goals.
  • Since May 2005 he has been running a soccer school in Bochum.
  • Wosz operates a Wosz fan shop in Halle, Leipzig and Suhl and takes over the merchandising of Halleschen FC with the HFC fan article shop . The Wosz fan shop is also the supplier of the soccer school in Bochum.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Hertha BSC GmbH & Co. KGaA (Hrsg.): WHAT IS ACTUALLY DOING DARIUSZ WOSZ? In: Hertha BSC (club website). Retrieved on August 13, 2015 : " " I started out as a real street footballer. In my Polish hometown of Pekane Slonske [sic!] We played every free minute. I breathed football! ”In 1980 the then 11-year-old Wosz moved to Halle with his family. "
  2. a b c Thomas Urban: Black eagle, white eagle. German and Polish footballers at the heart of politics. Göttingen 2011, p. 162.
  3. Schuemann: The upright walk . In: Der Spiegel . No. 22 , 1997, pp. 126–128 ( spiegel.de ).
  4. ^ Matthias Arnhold: Dariusz Wosz - Matches and Goals in Oberliga . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. June 4, 2015. Retrieved June 5, 2015.
  5. ^ Matthias Arnhold: Dariusz Wosz - International Appearances . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. June 4, 2015. Retrieved June 5, 2015.
  6. ^ "Woe if Berti asks for the national team", Sport-Bild from February 3, 1993, p. 20
  7. Match data on Fussballdaten.de, accessed on February 11, 2016
  8. U19 starts preparing ( memento from August 14, 2015 in the web archive archive.today ) vfl-bochum.de, accessed on August 14, 2015
  9. http://www.vfl-bochum.de/site/_profis/_profis/kaderp.htm#trainer
  10. The "Magic Mouse" says goodbye ; wdr.de, September 9, 2007 ( Memento from September 12, 2007 in the Internet Archive )