Günter Selke

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Günter Selke
Personnel
Surname Günter Selke
birthday March 8, 1954
place of birth Germany
position Striker and midfielder
Juniors
Years station
0000-1970 FTSV Wilhelmsburg-Neuhof
1970-1972 Hamburger SV
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1972-1973 Hamburger SV 2 0(0)
1973-1975 VfL Osnabrück 49 (10)
1975-1982 Atlas Delmenhorst
1982-1987 Eintracht Osnabrück
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1971-1972 Germany U-18 10 0(0)
1 Only league games are given.

Günter Selke (born March 8, 1954 ) is a former German soccer player. The attacking player played two Bundesliga games for Hamburger SV in the 1971/72 season . At VfL Osnabrück , 39 league games with nine goals were added in 1973/74, the last year of the old second-rate Regionalliga Nord , and ten games with one goal in the first year of the 2nd Bundesliga , 1974/75.

Athletic career

The talent of the pupil Günter Selke developed in the youth department of FTSV Wilhelmsburg-Neuhof, located in the former Harburg district. In 1970 he moved to the youth department of the Bundesliga club Hamburger SV, where “talent scout” Gerhard Heid gathered a number of exceptionally talented youngsters in Ochsenzoll. In his second A-junior year, 1971/72, the 1.68 m tall technician was accepted into the German national youth team by DFB coach Herbert Widmayer . The Hamburg home-grown debut in the DFB youth team at the international match on February 25, 1972 against Yugoslavia (1: 1). On April 9, he was part of the selection in the 5-2 victory in the qualifier against Denmark. In May 1972 the UEFA youth tournament took place in Spain, Selke was part of the DFB squad and came in the games against the USSR (4: 0), Scotland (0: 1), Hungary (3: 2, 1 goal) and against Spain on May 20 in Barcelona, ​​which ended 2-2 after extra time and in which the Widmayer protégés prevailed 5-3 on penalties. The final was lost on May 22nd with 0: 2 against record winners England, the German attack came in the line-up with Selke, Ronnie Worm , Dieter Kaster , Kurt Eigl and Bernhard Dürnberger . In total, Selke played ten international youth matches in the first half of 1972.

Under coach Klaus-Dieter Ochs , the A-Junior was used twice in the Bundesliga at the end of the 1971/72 season in June 1972. He made his debut on June 3rd in a 2-0 home win against MSV Duisburg in the Bundesliga. He came on as a substitute for Peter Lübeke in the 46th minute . The round ended the HSV on June 28th with a home draw of 1: 1 against 1. FC Köln, Selke formed the attack with Lübeke and Klaus Winkler . When he officially moved up into the license squad in the following season 1972/73, there was no further BL assignment. Only in the league cup, on October 11, 1972, with a 2-1 success at Eintracht Braunschweig, did he put on the jersey with the diamond again in a competitive game. He couldn't get past players like Franz-Josef Hönig , Ole Björnmose , Caspar Memering and Klaus Zaczyk . When the previous HSV coach Ochs took over VfL Osnabrück in the Regionalliga Nord for the 1973/74 season, Selke also signed a new contract at the Bremer Brücke .

The midfield technician made his debut on August 12, 1973 in a 2-0 away win at Heider SV in the Regionalliga Nord. He scored his first goals on October 21, 1973 in a 7-0 home win against Itzehoer SV when he scored two goals. VfL won the last round game on May 5, 1974 3-0 at VfB Oldenburg; Selke was in midfield and had scored nine goals in 34 league appearances and Osnabrück was third. In the first year of the newly introduced 2nd Bundesliga, Selke only made ten appearances with one goal in Osnabrück and he joined SV Atlas Delmenhorst, the champion of the year 1974/75 in the Verbandsliga West in Lower Saxony , for the 1975/76 round . With Atlas succeeded in 1975/76 after a playoff against Hannover 96 Am. the championship and promotion to the amateur league north . Selke played at Atlas until 1982 and made a total of 168 league appearances with 22 goals.

In the summer of 1982 Selke joined Eintracht Osnabrück , where he ended his playing career in 1987.

literature

  • Christian Karn, Reinhard Rehberg: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 9: Player Lexicon 1963-1994. Bundesliga, regional league, 2nd league. Agon-Sportverlag, Kassel 2012, ISBN 978-3-89784-214-4 , p. 471.
  • Jürgen Bitter : Purple and white. The football history of VfL Osnabrück. Self-published, Osnabrück 1991, p. 183.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Karl-Heinz Heimann, Karl-Heinz Jens: Kicker Almanach 1989. Copress Verlag. Munich 1988. ISBN 3-7679-0245-1 . P. 411
  2. ^ German sports club for football statistics (ed.): Amateur-Oberliga Nord 1974 to 1994, Part 4: 1974 to 1979. KGT new media. Berlin 2010. p. 291