Frank-Michael Marczewski

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Frank-Michael Marczewski
Personnel
birthday April 30, 1954
place of birth BerlinGermany
position Defense
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1972-1977 Spandauer SV 162 (20)
1977 FC Augsburg 12 (0)
1977-1988 OSC Bremerhaven 21 (0)
1978-1982 Tennis Borussia Berlin 124 (12)
1982-1983 Lichterfelder SU 29 (7)
1983-1985 SC Charlottenburg 69 (14)
1986-1988 Spandauer SV 66 (11)
1988-1992 SC Gatow 109 (6)
1995 Hertha Zehlendorf 1 (0)
2009-2010 Spandauer SV 8 (0)
1 Only league games are given.

Frank-Michael Marczewski (born April 30, 1954 in Berlin ) is a former German soccer player .

Career

Frank-Michael Marczewski played a total of 200 games in the 2nd Bundesliga for Spandauer SV , FC Augsburg , OSC Bremerhaven , Tennis Borussia Berlin and SC Charlottenburg , plus 65 games in the 1972 Regionalliga Berlin before the 2nd Bundesliga was introduced until 1974 as well as around 300 appearances in the third-rate amateur league in Berlin or Northeast and 25 appearances in the Berlin Association League (4th league). He made his debut on April 23, 1972 at the age of 17 in the regional league match against Rapide Wedding . From the 1972/73 season he was a regular in the first team of the SSV in the Regionalliga Berlin. After slipping into the third division through the introduction of the 2nd Bundesliga, he managed to return to the second division in 1975 with the Spandauer, but this only lasted for a year. In his long career Marczewski was only sent off the field once, on May 15, 1977 he had to leave the pitch in the last minute of his last game for SSV before moving to FC Augsburg.

After two short guest games at FC Augsburg and OSC Bremerhaven in the 1977/78 season, Marczewski landed back in Berlin in 1978 and signed on to Tennis Borussia. He immediately became a regular player in the violets. Local rivals Hertha BSC took the defender for the squad for the 1981/82 season in the selection. A possible obligation was broken before the start of the season, as Hertha was well filled with Horst Ehrmantraut , Edmund Stöhr and Jörg Diefenbach in this position. An obligation with the SG Union Solingen also failed because Union did not want to pay the required transfer of 90,000 DM. Marczewski was the preferred candidate of Solingen trainer Gerhard Prokop .

The joint move with Edmund Malura to SC Charlottenburg was initially on the brink in 1983, since Tennis Borussia Berlin demanded 100,000 DM each, which Charlottenburg could not manage, but then came about. Marczewski had previously run for the Lichterfelder SU for a year. With the Charlottenburgers he played for a year in the 2nd Bundesliga, but rose again in 1984 in the Oberliga Berlin.

At the beginning of 1986 Marczewski moved from SCC back to Spandauer SV. In 1988 he switched to league rivals SC Gatow, with whom he was relegated to the state league in 1989 and rose again in 1990 and was incorporated into the new Oberliga Nordost in 1991. After a year in this league, Marczewski ended his active career in 1992 after more than twenty years. In April 1995 he jumped in for a game at Hertha Zehlendorf in the then third-class Regionalliga Nordost.

From spring 2010 Marczewski joined the Berlin-Liga again at the age of 56 for Spandauer SV after the club only had six players in the squad and was in danger of being downgraded to the lowest division. Marczewski was previously only active in the old men's team. He played eight more games for the SSV this season.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. https://www.weltfussball.de/ Spieler_profil/ frank-michael- marczewski / 2- bundesliga / 2 / Accessed on October 17, 2018.
  2. Berlin / North / Northeast database in 'Das Fussballstudio' (only available offline)
  3. Hertha is testing three South German players. 2 Cologne residents cost 750,000 DM , in Kicker No. 43 of May 27, 1981, p. 19
  4. Solingen has different opinions. Strengthening the midfield , in Kicker No. 55 of July 9, 1981, p. 14
  5. Malura is too expensive for SSC in Kicker No. 53 of June 30, 1983, p. 14
  6. Spandauer SV: When love plays along , in Der Tagesspiegel of July 13, 2012; accessed on October 19, 2018