Dieter Brenninger

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Dieter Brenninger
Personnel
birthday February 16, 1944
place of birth AltenerdingGerman Empire
size 174 cm
position Storm
Juniors
Years station
1954-1952 SpVgg Altenerding
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1962-1971 FC Bayern Munich 276 (110)
1971-1972 Young Boys Bern 25 00(6)
1972-1976 VfB Stuttgart 99 0(16)
1976-1977 TSV 1860 Rosenheim ? 00(?)
1977-1988 SpVgg Altenerding ? 00(?)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1969 Germany 1 00(0)
1 Only league games are given.

Dieter "Mucki" Brenninger (born February 16, 1944 in Altenerding ) is a former German soccer player who played in the Bundesliga for FC Bayern Munich and VfB Stuttgart .

Career

youth

Brenninger began playing football at the age of ten in the football department of SpVgg Altenerding, a multi-discipline club based in his birthplace - 36 km northeast of Munich.

1962–1965: FC Bayern Munich

For the 1962/63 season , Bayern Munich, who played in the Oberliga Süd , signed him . Brenninger, talented, dangerous for goals, mastered the combination game, who knew how to occupy the defensive ranks and serve the inner strikers with templates, signed his first licensed player contract in the senior sector at the age of 18 - with the additional signature of his father.

He made his debut on August 19, 1962 (1st matchday) in the 5-0 defeat in the home game against Eintracht Frankfurt . He scored his first two goals on matchday 2, a week later, in a 4: 4 draw in the away game against SSV Reutlingen 05 with the 2: 0 goals in the 11th and 3: 0 in the 18th minute. With 14 goals in 25 league games, he was the second top scorer behind Rainer Ohlhauser , who scored 25 goals. At the end of the season he took third place in the table with Bayern , which was not enough for inclusion in the newly introduced top division, the Bundesliga .

The coach Zlatko Čajkovski signed by 1. FC Köln brought Dieter Brenninger to use in 34 league games in which he scored 26 goals. In the regional league , which has taken the place of the major league - but is second class - the favored FC Bayern Munich finished the 1963/64 season in second place behind KSV Hessen Kassel . In the subsequent promotion round for the Bundesliga, for which FC Bayern Munich qualified due to the placement, Brenninger played all six games and scored six goals, three of them in the first group game in a 4-0 win at St. Pauli . In second place, three points behind Borussia Neunkirchen , he stayed with Bayern for another season in the Regionalliga Süd. With the newcomers Gerd Müller and Rudolf Nafziger , the championship succeeded here in 1964/65 , to which Brenninger contributed with 11 goals in 27 games. During the subsequent promotion round , Brenninger scored one goal in six games, and Bayern Munich qualified as promoted for the Bundesliga. Thus, from 1962 to 1965, Brenninger played 86 top and regional league games for FC Bayern Munich and scored 51 goals. During this time he was also used internationally for the first time and was also the first goalscorer for Munich in a European club competition. On October 16, 1962, he scored two goals alongside Jakob Drescher in the 3-0 victory in Basel against the city ​​selection in the first leg of the first round of the trade fair cup .

Brenninger's Bundesliga debut and that of his team ended on August 14, 1965 (1st matchday) with the 0-1 defeat in the city ​​derby against TSV 1860 Munich , against the club that had been accepted into the Bundesliga two years earlier instead of Bayern. In the first Bundesliga game, which was decided in the first minute by a goal from Timo Konietzka , Brenninger was mostly involved in duels with right defender Manfred Wagner .

Brenninger, a member of the promoted eleven, had a number of successes with them until he left in 1971. In 1969 he won the national double ( championship and national club cup ) as well as three other titles in the DFB Cup ( 1966 , 1967 and 1971 ). In the final on June 4, 1966 in Frankfurt, when the team around Libero Franz Beckenbauer won the DFB Cup for the first time 4-2 against Meidericher SV , Brenninger scored two goals, although Hartmut Heidemann was one of the opponents Best right-back in the Bundesliga at the time. When he won the title in 1969 , Brenninger played all 34 league games under coach Branko Zebec . The storm duo "Müller-Brenninger" scored 49 goals in the 1969/70 season , setting a new record for a pair of strikers. Internationally, the win of the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1967 against Glasgow Rangers and the semi-finals in 1967/68 against AC Milan stand out internationally . Dieter Brenninger contributed to all the successes on the left wing of the Bayern attack.

For winning the European Cup, he received the silver laurel leaf on December 3, 1967 together with the team from FC Bayern Munich.

When the newcomers Paul Breitner , Johnny Hansen , Uli Hoeneß , Erich Maas , Edgar Schneider and Rainer Zobel were signed for the 1970/71 season under coach Udo Lattek , the days of the man from Altenerding in the team of the "Reds" seemed numbered. In particular, the three-time senior national player Erich Maas from Eintracht Braunschweig came to Munich as a proven class man on the left wing. "Mucki" showed it to all critics and played 31 Bundesliga games in which he distinguished himself as a goalscorer twelve times. Bayern finished second behind defending champion Borussia Mönchengladbach and for the fourth time - with a 2-1 win after extra time over 1. FC Köln on June 19, 1971 - DFB Cup winners. "Charly" Mrosko , Gerd Müller and Brenninger formed the storm trio in the 4-3-3 system .

In the trade fair cup , Brenninger - playing his sixth Bundesliga season - played in all eight games of the competition against Glasgow Rangers , Coventry City , Sparta Rotterdam and FC Liverpool in the Bayern attack. After the 3-0 defeat on March 10, 1971 at Anfield Road, Bayern were eliminated after the 1-1 draw in the second leg in the stadium on Grünwalder Strasse on March 24, 1971 against the English first division club . In both meetings, Brenninger fought bitter duels with Chris Lawler .

Between 1965 and 1971 he played 190 Bundesliga games and scored 59 goals. He played in 30 European Cup and 29 DFB Cup games for FC Bayern Munich. The 28-year-old escaped the constant pressure to perform with the constant goal of winning the title and to survive in Europe when he moved to Switzerland . His successors on the left wing of Bavaria - Willi Hoffmann , Wolfgang Sühnholz , Bernd Gersdorff , Klaus Wunder  - did not achieve the man from Altenerding's longstanding consistency.

1971–1972: Young Boys Bern

After nine seasons, Brenninger left Bayern Munich and moved to Young Boys Bern in Switzerland for the 1971/72 season . After only one season in the National League A , in which he was used 25 times, scored six goals and finished fifth in the table with the club, he returned to Germany because he could not resist an offer from VfB Stuttgart .

1972–1976: VfB Stuttgart

Under coach Hermann Eppenhoff and the offensive forces Wolfgang Frank and Horst Köppel , he finished sixth in the 1972/73 season as a newcomer with VfB Stuttgart and qualified with him for participation in the 1973/74 UEFA Cup competition . The former Bayern striker had played 27 games for the Swabians and scored nine goals. In the European Cup, VfB prevailed in the first two rounds against Olympiakos Nicosia and 1. FC Tatran Prešov . In the last sixteen they prevailed against Dynamo Kiev with Oleg Blochin and met in the semifinals on Feyenoord Rotterdam . In De Kuip , Brenninger gave Stuttgart a 1-0 lead in the 24th minute. In the second leg on April 24, 1974, in the Neckar Stadium , which was filled with 70,000 spectators , VfB tried to make up for the 1: 2 first leg defeat with the top Heinz Stickel , Hermann Ohlicher and Brenninger. Feyenoord countered Stuttgart, and Dieter Brenninger's two goals in the 55th and 59th minute of the game were only enough for a 2-2 draw. In the Bundesliga, the Swabians finished ninth in the middle of the field. Brenninger's personal performance curve dropped noticeably over the next few laps. In his third season, 1974/75 , Brenninger played 20 Bundesliga games in which he only managed one goal; Stuttgart was relegated to the 2nd Bundesliga . With coach István Sztani (replaced in March 1976 by Karl Bögelein ), the championship favorite sank to eleventh place in the South group , and Brenninger only played 18 games in the second division and scored once. He played his last league game on March 20, 1976 (27th matchday) in a 1-1 draw in the home game against SpVgg Bayreuth . From 1972 to 1976 Brenninger played 81 Bundesliga (15 goals) and 18 second division games (1 goal) for Stuttgart.

1976–1978: discharge

Brenninger played one more season in 1976/77 for TSV 1860 Rosenheim , which was promoted to the Bayern League as champions of the Landesliga Süd .

The offspring of a football-loving Altenerdingen family, in which four other brothers also kicked the leather ball in addition to the father - the "Sepp-Brenninger Stadium" reminds of the former mayor - ended his football career where it began in 1954: in the Football department of SpVgg Altenerding.

National team

On May 10, 1969, Brenninger made his international debut when he came on for Georg Volkert in the 67th minute in the 1-0 victory of the senior national team in Nuremberg against the selection of Austria in the qualifying game for the 1970 World Cup in Mexico . Of all people, his teammate Peter Pumm , who knew Brenninger's peculiarities from many training games, was his opponent. In view of the quality of the then competitors Lothar Emmerich , Sigfried Held , Johannes Löhr and Georg Volkert, Brenninger did not make any further international matches under national coach Helmut Schön .

successes

Others

After completing his footballing career, Dieter Brenninger, who trained as a retail salesman in a Munich bookstore, was a representative and sales manager at Erdinger Weißbräu from 1979 to 2007 , which is only a good two kilometers away from his company. When he started there, the brewery had an output of 200,000 hectoliters. When he left it was over 1.5 million hectoliters. His father was once mayor of Altenerding , where the soccer field is still called Sepp-Brenninger-Stadion .

From his time at FC Bayern, he still maintains a close friendship with Peter Kupferschmidt , with whom he regularly visits a regulars' table of former Sechzger such as Hans Rebele , Hans Reich and Fredi Heiss .

He and his wife Inge will celebrate their golden wedding in 2016 . His son Andreas, who has three children, is now sales manager at Erdinger.

Web links

literature

  • Jürgen Bitter : Germany's national soccer player: the lexicon . SVB Sportverlag, Berlin 1997, ISBN 3-328-00749-0 .
  • Werner Skrentny (Ed.): When Morlock still met the moonlight. The history of the Oberliga Süd 1945–1963. Klartext, Essen 1993, ISBN 3-88474-055-5 .
  • Ulrich Homann (Hrsg.): Hellfire on Ascension. The history of the promotion rounds to the Bundesliga 1963–1974. Klartext, Essen 1990, ISBN 3-88474-346-5 .
  • Matthias Weinrich: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 3: 35 years of the Bundesliga. Part 1. The founding years 1963–1975. Stories, pictures, constellations, tables. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1998, ISBN 3-89784-132-0 .
  • Matthias Weinrich, Hardy Greens : Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 6: German Cup history since 1935. Pictures, statistics, stories, constellations. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2000, ISBN 3-89784-146-0 .
  • Matthias Kropp: Triumphs in the European Cup. All games of the German clubs since 1955 (= "AGON Sportverlag statistics." Volume 20). AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-75-4 .
  • Lorenz Knieriem, Hardy Grüne : Player Lexicon 1890 - 1963 . In: Encyclopedia of German League Football . tape 8 . AGON, Kassel 2006, ISBN 3-89784-148-7 .

Individual evidence

  1. Sports report of the Federal Government of March 29, 1973 to the Bundestag - printed matter 7/1040 - page 58
  2. Drüben und Droben , Süddeutsche Zeitung , October 16, 2015, accessed on December 25, 2018