Ernst-Günter Habig
Ernst-Günter Habig | ||
Personnel | ||
---|---|---|
birthday | September 14, 1935 | |
place of birth | Cologne , German Empire | |
date of death | March 14, 2012 | |
Place of death | Cologne, Germany | |
position | Winger | |
Juniors | ||
Years | station | |
RSV Union 05 Cologne | ||
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
-1956 | RSV Union 05 Cologne | |
1956-1957 | SC Rapid Cologne | |
1957-1960 | SC Viktoria Cologne | 83 (39) |
1960-1963 | 1. FC Cologne | 82 (16) |
1963-1965 | SC Viktoria Cologne | 22 | (1)
1965-1967 | SC Fortuna Cologne | |
National team | ||
Years | selection | Games (goals) |
1953-1954 | Germany U-18 | 10 | (4)
1957 | Germany U-23 | 1 | (0)
1956-1957 | Germany amateurs | 4 | (3)
1955 | Germany B | 1 | (0)
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
1970-1972 | SC Fortuna Cologne | |
1973-1975 | SC Viktoria Cologne | |
1976-1988 | SC Fortuna Cologne | |
1978-1981 | SC Viktoria Cologne | |
1981 | Alemannia Aachen | |
BV Burscheid | ||
1 Only league games are given. |
Ernst-Günter "De Bumms" Habig (born September 14, 1935 in Cologne ; † March 14, 2012 ibid) was a German football player and coach who took part in the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne as an active member of the German amateur football team .
Career
Ernst-Günter Habig was active both as a football player and later as a coach exclusively in West Germany, and there preferably in Cologne. His achievements as a player brought him 16 appointments in various selection teams of the DFB , including four appointments in the amateur national team and one appointment in the B national team , but the senior national team was not among them. In his three years at 1. FC Köln he played under coaches Oswald Pfau and Zlatko Čajkovski . In 1962 the right winger with the billy goats won the German championship . In the 4-0 final victory on May 12, 1962 in front of 80,000 spectators in the Berlin Olympic Stadium against 1. FC Nuremberg , Habig scored two goals. Also in 1963 he reached the final of the German championship with 1. FC Köln , but was not used in the final defeat against Borussia Dortmund.
Habig was a member of the first German U-18 national team to beat Argentina 3-2 in the FIFA youth tournament in Liège on March 31, 1953 . His teammates included Uwe Seeler and Klaus Stürmer . In total, he came to April 19 on 10 A-youth internationals in which he scored four goals. He also took part in the junior tournament in 1954, in which the DFB selection reached second place on April 19, 1954 with a 2-2 after extra time against the Spanish selection when they participated in the tournament for the second time. Habig was used in all games. The final was his last international youth game.
On November 24, 1956, the German national football team of amateurs competed in Melbourne at the 1956 Olympic Games against the later Olympic champion, the Soviet Union . Habig scored the only goal for the German team, which after the 1: 2 final result was eliminated from the tournament after the first game.
His son Günter was also active as a soccer player in the 2nd Bundesliga. His son-in-law Jens Keller also played for 1. FC Köln for several years . Ernst Günter Habig died on March 14, 2012 after a stroke in the Cologne University Hospital .
statistics
-
Oberliga West
- 83 games; 39 goals SC Viktoria Cologne
- 71 games; 12 goals 1. FC Cologne
- Final round of the German championship
- 11 games; 4 goals 1. FC Cologne
-
Regionalliga West
- 3 games SC Viktoria Cologne
-
DFB Cup
- 4 games; 1 goal 1. FC Cologne
- West Cup
- 13 games; 3 goals 1. FC Cologne
-
European Champion Clubs' Cup ; Uefa cup
- 5 games; 1 goal 1. FC Cologne
successes
- German champion : 1962
- Champion of the Oberliga West : 1961 , 1962 , 1963
Web links
- Ernst-Günter Habig in the database of fussballdaten.de
- Ernst-Günter Habig in the Sports-Reference database (English; archived from the original )
- 1. FC Köln mourns Ernst-Günter Habig. Obituary.
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Habig, Ernst-Günter |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | De boom |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German soccer player and coach |
DATE OF BIRTH | September 14, 1935 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Cologne |
DATE OF DEATH | March 14, 2012 |
Place of death | Cologne |