Ferdinand Heidkamp

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Ferdinand Heidkamp
Personnel
Surname Paul-Ferdinand Heidkamp
birthday September 14, 1944
place of birth DusseldorfGermany
date of death June 28, 2019
Place of death Bastia
size 181 cm
position Defense
Juniors
Years station
0000-1963 SV Schlebusch
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1963-1965 SC Viktoria Cologne 44 (0)
1965-1967 Hamborn 07 44 (0)
1967-1969 Kickers Offenbach 63 (0)
1969-1971 Borussia Dortmund 50 (2)
1971-1972 Fortuna Cologne 2 (0)
1972-1973 KFC Diest ? (0)
1973-1976 SC Bastia 92 (0)
1976-1977 Lille OSC 26 (0)
1977-1988 GFCO Ajaccio 26 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2006-2010 Eintracht Bad Kreuznach U17
2013-2014 RC Bastia North
1 Only league games are given.

Paul-Ferdinand Heidkamp (born September 14, 1944 in Düsseldorf , † June 28, 2019 in Bastia ) was a German professional footballer . The defensive player played a total of 81 games in the Bundesliga from 1968 to 1971 for the two clubs Kickers Offenbach and Borussia Dortmund and scored two goals as a defender.

Career

The defensive player already attracted attention as a youth footballer with his home club SV Schlebusch . In February and March 1963, the DFB called the junior from Schlebusch, who was strong in combat, to the German national youth soccer team for the two qualifying games against Austria. Heidkamp played center stage in the World Cup system at the time and was thus the head of defense. After asserting himself in the qualification, he was also a member of the DFB line-up for the UEFA youth tournament in April. He played in the three group matches against Greece (2: 7), Scotland (2: 1) and Switzerland (2: 1), as in the qualification as a middle runner. In the attack, Helmut Sandmann , Klaus Zaczyk , Willi Dürrschnabel and Günter Netzer were among his teammates.

At the beginning of his senior career, he trained in the 1963/64 season at SC Viktoria Köln in the Football Regionalliga West under coach Hennes Weisweiler , and then from 1965 to play at Hamborn 07 before moving to the ambitious Kickers Offenbach. In the then second-rate Regionalliga West, he made 88 league games from 1963 to 1967. The Elf vom Bieberer Berg had already reached the promotion round to the Bundesliga in 1966 and 1967 , but not successfully completed each. In the 1967/68 season , Heidkamp rose after the runner-up in the south - he had played 32 league games for the OFC - then with the Offenbacher Kickers as group winner in the promotion round - in which Heidkamp had played all eight games for Offenbach and scored one goal - in the first football league. On the first day of the 1968/69 season, Heidkamp made his Bundesliga debut with Offenbach. The game was lost on August 17, 1968 at 1. FC Köln with 1: 2 goals. In total, he played 31 Bundesliga games with Rudolf Wimmer , Egon Schmitt , Hermann Nuber , Roland Weida and Gerd Becker in this round . The Kickers went down with 28:40 points in the regional league and Heidkamp therefore signed a contract with Borussia Dortmund , 16th in the BL table, for the 1969/70 round and thus returned to the football west.

At BVB, he played in a team with famous football players such as Jürgen Rynio , Rudi Assauer , Sigfried Held and Hoppy Kurrat . In his first season with the Black and Yellows, Dortmund came fifth and Heidkamp had played in 30 games. In the second Dortmund season he played again in 20 other Bundesliga games and BVB took 13th place under coach Horst Witzler . After a season in Belgium with KFC Diest , he was hired in France. Here played a total of 144 games in the French Ligue 1 (then Division 1 ) and in the cup for the clubs SC Bastia , OSC Lille and GFCO Ajaccio until 1978 .

literature

  • 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 .
  • Ulrich Merk, André Schulin, Maik Großmann: Bundesliga chronicle 1968/69. Volume 6: FC Bayern out of competition. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2006, ISBN 3-89784-088-X .
  • Thierry Berthou, Collectif: Dictionnaire historique des clubs de football français. Pages de Foot. Créteil 1999. Volume 1 (A – Mo) ISBN 2-913146-01-5 , Volume 2 (Mu – W) ISBN 2-913146-02-3 .
  • Jean Cornu: Les grandes equipes françaises de football. Famot, Geneva 1978.
  • Charles and Christophe Bartissol: Les racines du football français. PAC, Paris 1983, ISBN 2-85336-194-2 .
  • Paul Hurseau, Jacques Verhaeghe: Olympique Lillois - Sporting Club Fivois - Lille OSC Alan Sutton, Joué-lès-Tours 1997, ISBN 2-84253-080-2 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. short obituary at corsematin.com (French)
  2. Historical review on derwesten.de.