Hannes Baldauf

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Hannes Baldauf
Personnel
birthday March 9, 1938
place of birth Break / Vogtl. Germany
date of death February 25, 2015
Place of death HanoverGermany
position Defense
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1959-1963 Hannover 96 amateurs
1963-1966 Hannover 96 5 (0)
1966-1968 Bonner SC
1968-1970 TuS Celle 60 (1)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1973-1974 Hannover 96
1976 Hannover 96
1977-1980 SpVgg Fürth
1980-1981 SC Herford
1981-1984 FC Augsburg
1984 SSV Ulm 1846
1985-1987 SSV Jahn Regensburg
1987-1989 1. FC Nürnberg amateurs / youth
1989 VfL Frohnlach
1991-1992 Hannover 96 (youth)
1992-1994 Hannover 96 (assistant trainer)
1994-1995 Hannover 96 amateurs
1 Only league games are given.

Hannes Baldauf (born March 9, 1938 in Pausa / Vogtl. , † February 25, 2015 in Hanover ) was a German football player and coach .

life and career

Hannes Baldauf grew up in Pausa in the Vogtland region, where he did wrestling until he was 13 . In 1951 he came to the Federal Republic.

As a defender, Baldauf played from 1963 to 1966 for the professional team of Hannover 96 in the Regionalliga Nord and the Bundesliga , playing five Bundesliga games in the 1965/66 season . He also made two appearances in the DFB club cup in 1964 and 1966. In addition, he played for the Hannover 96 amateurs, with whom he was three times German amateur champion in 1960, 1964 and 1965 . Baldauf also played in an amateur international match for Germany against France in 1966 . From 1966 to 1968 he played for the Bonner SC .

At the end of his career as a player, he strengthened the defense of TuS Celle in the Regionalliga Nord in the 1968/69 and 1969/70 seasons , where he made 60 appearances. Here was his first station as head coach in the 1970/71 and 1971/72 seasons, which he completed with midfield positions. In 1972 he then accepted the offer from Hannover 96 and initially became an assistant coach.

In March 1973, Hannes Baldauf took over the post of head coach at Hannover 96. He replaced Hans Hipp , who suffered from a bad second half of the season and the team's chronic weakness away from home. Under Baldauf Hannover managed to stay in the league on the last day of the 1972/73 season . In the course of the mixed season 1973/74 he was replaced by Helmut Kronsbein as head coach, but remained in the club. After the unavoidable relegation in 1974 and the direct resurgence in 1975, Hannes Baldauf was head coach again in 1976, as Kronsbein was dismissed due to a lack of sporting success in the Bundesliga.

However, this change of coach did not change Hannover's Bundesliga relegation in 1976 . The club was in a sporting and economic crisis and dismissed Hannes Baldauf in the second division first half of 1976/77 . Strangely enough, Helmut Kronsbein was again signed as his successor.

From 1977 to 1980 Baldauf was a coach at SpVgg Fürth in the 2nd Bundesliga South and each achieved a place in the table in the top third. In 1980/81 he was unable to qualify for the single-track 2. Bundesliga with SC Herford in the 2nd Bundesliga North. From 1981 to 1984 he looked after FC Augsburg , but in the 2nd Bundesliga he could not prevent the newcomer's immediate relegation in the 1982/83 season . Baldauf remained a trainer in Augsburg until 1984. But he could not achieve the ascent. In 1984/85 Baldauf was a coach at SSV Ulm 1846 in the 2nd Bundesliga for a few months . Later he worked for Jahn Regensburg (1985 to 1987), from 1987 to 1989 he looked after the amateurs and youths of 1. FC Nürnberg and VfL Frohnlach (1989). After his return to Hanover, he looked after the youth (1991 to 1992), worked as an assistant trainer (1992 to 1994) and trained the amateurs of Hanover 96 in 1994/95.

Hannes Baldauf died on February 25, 2015 at the age of 76 from complications from cancer.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Ex-trainer from 96: Hannes Baldauf died at the age of 76. In: Spiegel Online from February 25, 2015 (accessed February 25, 2015).
  2. FC Augsburg: Hannes Baldauf is dead: Tough coach - good person - Sport Augsburg - Augsburger Allgemeine from February 26, 2015, accessed on July 23, 2017.