Dieter Hoeneß

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Dieter Hoeneß
Dieter Hoeneß in front of Hertha BSC office 001.jpg
Dieter Hoeneß (2006)
Personnel
birthday January 7, 1953
place of birth UlmGermany
size 188 cm
position attack
Juniors
Years station
1959-1967 VfB Ulm
1967-1973 TSG Ulm 1846
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1973-1975 VfR Aalen 103 0(46)
1975-1979 VfB Stuttgart 105 0(44)
1979-1987 FC Bayern Munich 224 (102)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1979 Germany B 2 00(2)
1979-1986 Germany 6 00(4)
1 Only league games are given.

Dieter Hoeneß (born January 7, 1953 in Ulm ) is a former German soccer player and soccer manager . He is the younger brother of Uli Hoeneß and the father of Sebastian Hoeneß .

Career as a player

societies

From the age of six to fourteen, Hoeneß played as a goalkeeper in the club VfB Ulm , which his father, the master butcher Erwin Hoeneß , co-founded on November 13, 1949, and won the first district championship in the D-Youth together with his brother Uli in the 1960/61 season . From 1967 to 1973 Hoeneß played for TSG Ulm 1846 .

At the age of 20, Hoeneß moved to VfR Aalen in 1973 in the first amateur league (third highest division). In his first season he won the championship with the Aalen team and with 23 goals was the second best goalscorer of his team behind Helmut Dietterle . Because of the league reform, in which the five-track regional league was replaced by the two-track 2. Bundesliga as the second highest division, the VfR was unable to rise and entered the third division the following season. There Hoeneß was able to reach the championship again with the team, but failed in the promotion games.

In 1975 he was signed by the second division VfB Stuttgart , with whom he was promoted to the Bundesliga after two seasons . He made his debut on September 13, 1975 (7th matchday) in the 2-0 defeat in the home game against 1. FSV Mainz 05 , he scored his first goal on October 15 (11th matchday) at 2-0 Home win over Röchling Völklingen . In the Bundesliga, he made his debut on August 6, 1977 (1st matchday) in a tense 3-3 draw against his future club, FC Bayern Munich . With the intermittent 1: 1 in the 1: 2 defeat in the home game against Hamburger SV on August 31 (5th matchday), he also scored his first goal in the top division.

Dieter Hoeneß (left) with Karl-Heinz Rummenigge in the final of the European Cup against Aston Villa , 1982

From 1979 to 1987 Hoeneß played with great success for FC Bayern Munich . In 224 Bundesliga games he scored 102 goals and statistically scored in every second European game (26 goals in 52 appearances) for Bayern. In 1980 he reached the semi-finals with the team in the UEFA Cup , and was the top scorer of the competition with seven goals. In 1982 he was defeated by Aston Villa in the final of the European Cup and was again top scorer with seven goals. During his time in Munich, the center forward was feared because of his scoring risk, his specialty were header goals, and he was also considered a fighter by nature. He strengthened this reputation when in 1982 in the final of the DFB Cup after a clash with Alois Reinhardt from Nuremberg, despite a laceration on his head, he continued to play for almost an hour with a turban-like bandage and headed the 4-2 final score in the Scored 89th minute. On February 25, 1984 he scored five goals in a row in a half-time of 21 minutes in Bayern's 6-0 home win over Eintracht Braunschweig .

After five German championships with Bayern and three DFB Cup victories, Hoeneß ended his career as an active footballer in 1987.

National team

On March 28, 1979 Hoeneß played his first international match in the jersey of the B national team , which defeated the A national team of Norway 3-0 in Aachen , where he contributed one goal. Also in his second game in this national team, on December 19, 1979 in Genoa, he contributed with a goal in the 2-1 victory over Italy's B-selection.

In the senior national team Hoeneß made his debut - briefly nominated for the trip to Ireland and Iceland - on May 22, 1979 in the 3-1 victory over Ireland , in which he also scored a goal, and two in the game on May 26 in Reykjavík , in the 3-1 win over Iceland .

It was not until seven years later that Hoeneß played again in the national team when team boss Franz Beckenbauer called him for the game on April 9, 1986 in Basel against Switzerland and he scored the "golden" goal. In the subsequent 1-1 draw against Yugoslavia , he stayed in Bochum for the first time in an international match on May 11 without a goal. Nominated for the squad for the 1986 World Cup in Mexico , Hoeneß was substituted on in the quarterfinals against the hosts and in the final against eventual world champions Argentina . Hoeneß did not score a goal, but like his one year older brother Uli (at the 1974 World Cup ) was also in a World Cup final.

Career as a manager

After the end of his career, Hoeneß joined the computer manufacturer Commodore , which has been the main sponsor of FC Bayern Munich since 1984. He took up his new position in October 1987 as head of sports marketing for the company, which at the time dominated the German home computer market. In 1989, he was responsible for the expiry of the sponsorship agreement with the record champions and, due to the strategic realignment of the company, the focus on other sports such as riding , golf , tennis and alpine skiing and in the direction of event marketing.

In the spring of 1990, his ex-club VfB Stuttgart hired Hoeneß as “Director for Marketing and Sports Technology” as part of a professionalization strategy, in the course of which Daimler board spokesman Matthias Kleinert also moved into the VfB executive committee . In the season 1991/92 , the Swabian club won the league title, but missed the following season due to a " faulty substitution " - unjustifiably put coach Christoph Daum after Substitutes of Jovo Simanić in the second leg at Leeds United four foreign players a - a 1: 2 defeat in the play-off at Camp Nou in the first round of the 1992/93 UEFA Champions League, the group stage of the European Cup, which was played in a new form for the first time. In the following years the club could not build on the success. In the spring of 1995, the sporting management in the form of Hoeneß and trainer Jürgen Röber was dismissed, while Hoeneß was also charged with the fact that his Anglo-Saxon vocabulary such as "event", "marketing" and "merchandising" did not fit the Swabian down-to-earth attitude and he did showed up for work late in the morning. Significantly, Hoeneß's successor became his predecessor, Ulrich Schäfer , who was in office between 1976 and 1990 , again took over the operational fate of the association.

In November 1995, Michael A. Roth , the president of 1. FC Nürnberg , campaigned heavily for Hoeneß's commitment, but was unable to assert himself in the club, so that the club accepted the offer to take over the post of general manager of a TV company. At the same time, he became Vice President of Hertha BSC , where the company was a sponsor. In April 1997 he ended his involvement with the TV company and moved permanently as a manager to Hertha BSC, after having acted as temporary substitute for the dismissed Carl-Heinz Rühl since March . After the club's promotion to the Bundesliga in the summer of that year, the team subsequently established itself in the top division and qualified seven times in twelve seasons under the leadership of Hoeneß for participation in an international cup. The team was eight times in the top 6 of the league during this phase. In June 2009 he left the club after disagreements about his leadership style at his own request one year before the end of his contract. Hoeneß took over the management of the Bundesliga club VfL Wolfsburg on January 15, 2010 . On March 18, 2011, he was replaced at VfL by Felix Magath , who also became a coach. His contract was terminated by mutual agreement. Hoeneß later settled in Munich.

Sporting successes

As a player

As a manager

Awards

Others

Hoeneß attended the Schubart-Gymnasium in Ulm and successfully passed the Abitur examination there in 1972. In Tübingen he began studying to be a teacher in English , geography and sports .

He is married and has two sons. His son Sebastian was also active as a soccer player and played for the U-19s of VfB Stuttgart, TSG Hoffenheim and the second team from Hertha BSC. Sebastian Hoeneß was the captain of the U-23 team in Berlin. From June 2019 he was head coach of third division promoted FC Bayern Munich II, with whom he immediately became third division champion, since July 2020 he has been head coach of TSG 1899 Hoffenheim.

As the city sponsor of his hometown Ulm, Hoeneß supported the social project We are helping Africa for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa . He is an ambassador for the Respekt! No place for racism .

After his career as a Bundesliga manager, Hoeneß moved back to Munich, where he founded a consulting company in 2012 . Today Hoeneß is active as a player agent for his company Ballwerk Sports .

literature

Web links

Commons : Dieter Hoeneß  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Greetings from the Hoeneß brothers on the 60th anniversary of the association ( Memento from September 16, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
  2. ^ Matthias Arnhold: Dieter Hoeneß - Matches and Goals in Bundesliga . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. February 19, 2015. Retrieved February 27, 2015.
  3. Marcel Haisma: Dieter Hoeness - Matches in European Cups . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. January 7, 2009. Retrieved February 27, 2015.
  4. Hoeneß '"fivefold success"
  5. ^ Matthias Arnhold: Dieter Hoeneß - International Appearances . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. February 19, 2015. Retrieved February 27, 2015.
  6. Handelsblatt: "Personalalien" (June 16, 1987), p. 17
  7. Marketing: "Sports Marketing - Hoeness kuendigt Hoeness" (May 1, 1989)
  8. taz: "Headless run and defended" (March 26, 1990), p. 12
  9. ^ Neue Zürcher Zeitung: "The end for Röber and Hoeness - Jürgen Sundermann back to the roots in VfB Stuttgart" (April 26, 1995), p. 60
  10. Nürnberger Nachrichten: "Michael A. Roth continues to fight for Dieter Hoeneß as manager at 1. FC Nürnberg - President threatens to resign" (November 13, 1995)
  11. Hertha BSC separates from manager Dieter Hoeneß
  12. Dieter Hoeneß is leaving Hertha BSC on June 30, 2009 at his own request ( Memento from June 11, 2009 in the Internet Archive )
  13. Hoeneß new managing director
  14. VfL presents Felix Magath: "Only football writes such stories". VfL Wolfsburg, March 18, 2011, archived from the original on March 21, 2011 ; accessed on February 14, 2015 .
  15. Goalscorer of the month March 1982
  16. Goalscorer of the month September 1982
  17. Morning post of May 30, 2008: "The little one was the quieter one"
  18. Last Hoeneß gone with Hertha! on www.bz-berlin.de from May 29, 2010 ( Memento from May 30, 2010 in the Internet Archive )
  19. Sebastian Hoeneß 'profile on www.weltfussball.de
  20. Ambassador - Sport. Charitable respect! No space for Rassismus GmbH, archived from the original on March 4, 2016 ; accessed on February 14, 2015 .
  21. “The VfB is bobbing around” Stuttgarter-Zeitung.de, January 27, 2014, accessed on March 1, 2014.
  22. Note in: SportBild 14/2019, p. 53