Dieter Eckstein

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Dieter Eckstein
Personnel
birthday March 12, 1964
place of birth KehlGermany
size 178 cm
position striker
Juniors
Years station
1970-1983 Kehler FV
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1983-1984 1. FC Nürnberg amateurs 34 (27)
1984-1988 1. FC Nuremberg 135 (51)
1989-1991 Eintracht Frankfurt 70 (14)
1991-1993 1. FC Nuremberg 91 (28)
1993-1995 FC Schalke 04 30 0(4)
1995 West Ham United 0 0(0)
1995-1996 SV Waldhof Mannheim 21 0(1)
1996 FC Winterthur 11 0(8)
1997-1998 FC Augsburg 48 (26)
1998-1999 SG Post / South Regensburg 32 0(7)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1981-1982 Germany U-18 4 (1)
1985-1986 Germany U-21 6 (4)
1986-1988 Germany 7 (0)
1987-1988 Olympic team 3 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1999 SV Heidingsfeld
2000-2001 TSV Neusäß
2001-2004 FC Erzberg-Wörnitz
2004 FSV Weißenbrunn
2004 TSV Burkersdorf
2005 FC Dombühl
2005 TSV Hainsfarth
2006-2010 TSV Dürrwangen
2010–2012 DJK / SV Mitteleschenbach
2013-2017 SpVgg Steinachgrund
2017 Union Hallein
2018-2019 SV running
1 Only league games are given.

Dieter Eckstein (born March 12, 1964 in Kehl ) is a former German soccer player .

Athletic career

Club career

Eckstein's first football club was Kehler FV in his hometown . From there he moved to 1. FC Nürnberg in 1983 . First he was used with the amateurs, with whom he made the promotion to the Bayern League in 1984, to which he contributed 31 goals. Eckstein then played as a striker in the Bundesliga for 1. FC Nürnberg, Eintracht Frankfurt and FC Schalke 04 . He was also active from 1995 to 1998 for West Ham United in England , in the 2nd Bundesliga for SV Waldhof Mannheim , FC Winterthur in Switzerland and FC Augsburg in the Regionalliga Süd, where he was the top scorer. He ended his career at SG Post / Süd Regensburg .

He played a total of 289 times in the Bundesliga and scored 84 goals.

1. FC Nuremberg

Eckstein completed 37 second division games in the 1984/85 season, in which he scored 13 goals, and rose with the club as champions of the second division in the Bundesliga. From 1985 to 1988 and from 1990 to 1994 he played 189 times in the first division team and scored 66 goals. This makes him the Bundesliga scorer with the second highest number of hits at the club, behind Heinz Strehl .

  • Successes: Promotion to the Bundesliga in 1985, 5th place in 1988

Eintracht Frankfurt

Between 1988 and 1991 he scored 14 goals in 70 games for Eintracht Frankfurt.

  • Successes: Third in 1990

FC Schalke 04

During a brief stint at Schalke 04 from 1993 to 1995, he scored four goals in 30 games.

Further stations

A station at West Ham United, where he was not used, was followed by an engagement at SV Waldhof Mannheim in the second division. There he met the opposing goal only once in 21 season appearances in the 1995/96 season. His path then led via the Swiss club FC Winterthur , for whom he scored eight goals in eleven games in the qualifying round, to FC Augsburg , who were then playing in the Regionalliga Süd . There are 26 hits for Eckstein in 48 games of the 1996/97 and 1997/98 seasons. At the end of his career he was in the Oberliga Bayern for SG Post / Süd Regensburg , for which he scored another seven goals in 32 missions.

Selection bets

Eckstein made six appearances for the German U-21 national team between 1985 and 1986 and scored four goals. For the Olympic selection he came to a total of three missions in 1987 and 1988. In the senior national team he played seven times from 1986 to 1988. At the four-country tournament held in Berlin in 1988 , he scored for Germany on penalties against Sweden. In 1988 he was part of the German national soccer team at the European soccer championship in Germany .

Coaching career

After the end of his career, he began his coaching career in Swabia and Franconia . This was followed by positions as head coach at TSV Neusäß, SV Heidingsfeld, FC Erzberg-Wörnitz, SV Weißenbrunn, FC Dombühl, SV Hainsfarth, TSV 08 Dürrwangen and most recently DJK / SV Mitteleschenbach in the A-class Frankenhöhe. As coach of TSV Dürrwangen, he led the club in the 2009/10 season for promotion to the Frankenhöhe district league. Since November 2013 he has been training the men's teams of SpVgg Steinachgrund in the district class 3 district of Nuremberg / Frankenhöhe. He also assists the former professional Helmut Rahner as youth coordinator at SpVgg Steinachgrund.

In April 2017 he became assistant coach of his neighbor in Waging am See , Werner "Beinhart" Lorant at the relegation-threatened Union Hallein in the fourth-class Salzburg league . After relegation was achieved and Lorant said goodbye, Eckstein became head coach for the new season, but only lasted until October. The former Austrian national player Thomas Eder became his successor.

In the 2018/19 season he was the head coach of the district classics SV Laufen in Berchtesgadener Land .

Private

When Eckstein was 11 years old, his father and mother died when he was 14 years old. From then on he grew up with foster parents. In 1988 his seven week old son died of sudden infant death syndrome . Eckstein fell ill with testicular cancer in 2001 , which he defeated. In February 2001 he suffered a heart attack during an indoor game in Neusäß and was in a coma for five days . Eckstein suffered cardiac arrest on July 1, 2011 during a charity soccer game by celebrities as part of the charity campaign Sternstunden of the Bavarian Radio in Regensburg and had to be reanimated as a result.

Today he lives in Dürrwangen in Central Franconia and runs a football school for children and young people. As a coach and player in several regional clubs, u. a. in Dombühl , Erzberg and Dürrwangen, he is still active in his football home in Middle Franconia.

Together with a number of other former professional soccer players of 1. FC Nürnberg, Eckstein is a member of the traditional team of 1. FC Nürnberg. Together with former colleagues such as Jörg Dittwar , Bernd Hobsch , Armin Eck , Fred Klaus and Martin Schneider, he runs the all-star football school for children and young people in Wörnitz .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Matthias Arnhold: Dieter Eckstein - Matches and Goals in Bundesliga . RSSSF . March 21, 2019. Accessed March 22, 2019.
  2. Profile on www.playerhistory.com ( Memento from February 13, 2013 in the web archive archive.today ), accessed on October 21, 2012
  3. ^ Matthias Arnhold: Dieter Eckstein - International Appearances . RSSSF . March 21, 2019. Accessed March 22, 2019.
  4. Dieter Eckstein at www.glubberer.de
  5. ^ Dieter Eckstein - Eintracht Frankfurt - Archive
  6. Dieter Eckstein takes over SpVgg Steinachgrund. In: fussballn.de. Archived from the original on November 13, 2013 ; accessed on August 22, 2017 .
  7. bgland24.de: Dieter Eckstein joins SV Laufen (March 24, 2018) , accessed on April 3, 2020
  8. rosenheim24.de: "Player reservation ": Dieter Eckstein ends engagement with SV Laufen (June 11, 2019) , accessed on April 3, 2020
  9. Dieter Eckstein is back - Augsburger Allgemeine
  10. ^ "Ex-national player Eckstein collapsed during a benefit game"
  11. Dieter Eckstein has recovered well from his collapse. Hamburger Abendblatt of July 2, 2011. Retrieved on August 22, 2017.
  12. ^ Cardiac arrest in ex-national player Dieter Eckstein
  13. An ex-national player as a draft horse