Falk Zschiedrich

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Falk Zschiedrich
Personnel
birthday 5th September 1961
place of birth RadebergGDR
size 178 cm
position midfield player
Juniors
Years station
SG Dynamo Dresden
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
0000-1981 SG Dynamo Dresden ( NWOL )
1981 BSG Stahl Riesa II
1981-1983 ASG forward Kamenz 29 0(3)
1983-1987 BSG Stahl Riesa 93 0(9)
1987-1993 BSG / BSV (steel) Brandenburg 100 (12)
0000-1995 SG Bornim
1995–0000 1. FC Passau
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1979 GDR U-18 4 (0)
1 Only league games are given.

Falk Zschiedrich (born September 5, 1961 in Radeberg ) is a former German soccer player. In the top division of GDR football , the Oberliga , he played for BSG Stahl Riesa and BSG Stahl Brandenburg .

Athletic career

Zschiedrich began playing soccer at the Dresden children's and youth sports school . From 1977 he played in the junior team of the Dynamo Dresden police sports club . 1979 Zschiedrich was included in the squad of the GDR junior national team and was used in September and October 1979 in four international matches. However, he was only twice in the starting line-up as a midfielder. At the beginning of the 1979/80 season, Zschiedrich played for Dynamo Dresden in the junior league . There he was a regular for two seasons as a central defender and also among the goalscorers every season.

For the 1981/82 season he was again nominated for the youth team. Before the start of the season, he got involved in the proceedings for the Dresden league players Peter Kotte , Matthias Müller and Gerd Weber, who were suspected of escaping from the republic . It was revealed that Zschiedrich had family ties to the Federal Republic. This was taken as an opportunity to exclude him from Dynamo Dresden. He was deported to the company sports club Stahl Riesa , where he was only allowed to play in the third-class district league team BSG Stahl II. As early as November 1981, Zschiedrich was drafted into the National People's Army for 18 months . During this time he was able to play football in the second-rate GDR league with the Vorwärts Kamenz army sports community . By the end of the 1982/83 season, Zschiedrich was used in 29 league games, in which he was used as a striker and appeared three times as a goal scorer.

After his discharge from the army, Zschiedrich returned to Stahl Riesa. Coach Peter Kohl already used him in the league promotion games in 1983, where Zschiedrich played all seven matches from the second day of the game. At first he was only a substitute, only in the last game he came 90 minutes as a center forward. Riesa qualified for the major league, and Zschiedrich had finally made it to the top division. For Stahl Riesa he completed four seasons there, in which he was always part of the player base. He started in 1983/84 as a midfielder, was in the first half of 1984/85 continuously Libero and was then used variably both in defense and again in midfield. In total, Zschiedrich made 93 league games and nine goals in Riesa. In the summer of 1987 Zschiedrich was suspended again, Stahl Riesa suspended him for the Oberliga and transferred him to the district league team Stahl II.

In November 1987, Zschiedrich received the approval to move to the top division Stahl Brandenburg. Although he met his former coach Peter Kohl there, he did not succeed for a long time in gaining a foothold in the regular eleven, so that in 1987/88 he only made seven, 1988/89 only 15 league appearances. It was only when Gerd Struppert took over the team for the 1989/90 season that Zschiedrich made 20 appearances in the 26 league rounds. As before, he had no fixed position and was deployed variably in midfield and in defense. Due to the turning point , the Brandenburger company sports association was converted into the BSV Stahl Brandenburg at the beginning of the 1990/91 season and played the last independent season of East German first division football under this name . Zschiedrich was still part of the squad, but now played under the new coach Eckhard Düwiger . In again changing positions, Zschiedrich came to 22 missions. This season, after being taken over by the DFB , the league teams had to qualify for the Bundesliga , the 2nd Bundesliga or the Oberliga Nordost . The BSV Stahl managed to qualify for the 2nd Bundesliga via the promotion round after the normal season, with Zschiedrich being used in all six games.

In the 2nd Bundesliga, Zschiedrich played 17 games in 1991/92 in the North season until matchday 18, in which he scored two goals. Then he ended his playing career in high-class football. Zschiedrich remained loyal to BSV Brandenburg for one more season in the then third-class amateur league in the NOFV area . In 1993 he joined SG Bornim after six years in a steel dress . At the end of the 1990s, Zschiedrich was active in the fourth-class league in Bavaria at 1. FC Passau .

He later worked as a coach for lower-class soccer teams. From 2007 Zschiedrich coached the U23 team of the Bayern division SV Schalding-Heining , and in January 2011 he became assistant coach of the first team.

Trivia

His goal in the 90th minute for the 3-2 win in the game against 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig on May 7, 1988, the 23rd matchday of the 1987/88 season , would prove to be fatal for Stahl a short time later. If the game had ended in a 2-2 draw and the games on days 24 to 26 of all teams involved had ended up analogous to their actual course, 1. FC Lok would have become East German champions for the first time. The second-placed BFC Dynamo in this fictitious calculation example, who won the FDGB Cup this season a few days after the end of the league, would have qualified for the European Cup Winners' Cup. Thus, the two UEFA Cup starting places in the Oberliga would have been moved down one place in the table, which would have given Brandenburg, as the team in fourth place, the historically second participation in the European Cup . The beneficiary of this goal was ultimately the league sixth FC Carl Zeiss Jena , who moved into the European Cup winners' cup as the defeated cup finalist.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Lennart Laberenz: The gate that was not allowed to fall. In: 11 friends . May 25, 2011, accessed June 23, 2020 .