Fred Bartell

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Fred Bartell (* 13. December 1960 in the loop ; † 1. May 2003 ) was a German hockey player.

Fred Bartell came from the offspring of Dynamo Weißwasser , where he went through all the junior teams. In the seasons from 1979/80 to 1982/83 , the trained striker played for the team from Weißwasser in the GDR league . In the 1983/84 season he competed for arch rivals and then champions SC Dynamo Berlin in the European Cup and won the bronze medal. After his prime, he took part in the “best determination” in the management team of the BSG unit Weißwasser .

After the reunification in the GDR, he played from 1990 to 1992 at the then lower-class TSV Adendorf (Lower Saxony League, Regionalliga), then he went on the ice in the 1992/93 season for ETC Crimmitschau in the fourth-class regional league, switching after the season but to the ESC Dresden . From 2000 to 2003 the oldie played for ELV Niesky as a defender and in 2003 won the Saxony League, which meant promotion to the ice hockey league.

As a member of the GDR national team , which won the B world championship in 1982 without defeat , the left-handed shooter was promoted to the A group of the ice hockey world championship in 1983 and came 6th there. He played 47 games for the GDR.

Fred Bartell was a trained maintenance mechanic. He is the father of Daniel Bartell , who also became a professional ice hockey player.

Fred Bartell's grave

Fred Bartell died after collapsing at a soccer game - only 42 years old.

Individual evidence

  1. GDR best investigations, snapshots and teams. In: Lotok.de. Retrieved May 21, 2014 .
  2. S. Höhne: Another league was the goal. In: etconline.de. February 2, 1994, archived from the original on February 4, 2009 ; accessed on May 21, 2014 .
  3. a b c The father is always there. In: Saxon newspaper . ELV Niesky website , December 6, 2011, accessed on May 21, 2014 .
  4. Ice hockey: Carinthian “miracle”? In: New Germany . April 5, 1982, p. 6 , accessed on May 21, 2014 (free registration required).
  5. Interview with Daniel Bartell. ES Weißwasser, February 11, 2003, accessed May 21, 2014 .

Web links