Hans-Georg Moldenhauer

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Hans-Georg Moldenhauer (2nd from left)
Moldenhauer 1967

Hans-Georg Moldenhauer (born November 25, 1941 in Senst ) is a former German football player and later a functionary in GDR football as well as in German sports.

Career as a soccer player

Moldenhauer's sporting career began in 1954 with the company sports association Motor Mitte Magdeburg, from whose football teams a section of SC Aufbau Magdeburg and later 1. FC Magdeburg emerged while Molderhauer was still active . At the age of twelve, Moldenhauer first played in the student team as a midfielder. When handball players tried to lure him into their own ranks, his coach persuaded him to try it as a soccer goalkeeper, and Moldenhauer proved his real talent there. Moved up to the junior team of SC Aufbau, Moldenhauer showed such reliable performance that those responsible for the junior national team of the GDR became aware of him. On March 27, 1960 Moldenhauer was used for the first time in an international match of the junior team and was also in the following four international matches in the goal of the GDR juniors. He played a total of six junior internationals.

In addition to his footballing activity, Moldenhauer passed his Abitur and studied mechanical engineering at the Magdeburg Technical University. Later he even received his doctorate as Dr.-Ing. in heavy machinery and plant engineering and also worked in this area in the Magdeburg heavy machinery construction combine.

Still in junior age Moldenhauer was on 2 July 1960 in the point game of the SC building against SC unit Dresden (0: 1) in the league team used. However, he remained for the time being reserve goalkeeper behind national goalkeeper Wolfgang Blochwitz . Only after his move to FC Carl Zeiss Jena due to relegation to the GDR league in 1966, Moldenhauer moved up to the Magdeburg team in the 1966/67 season. Before that, he was lucky enough to be used in the final of the GDR soccer cup on June 13, 1964. With the 3-2 victory over SC Leipzig Moldenhauer came to his first title win. Five years later, on June 1, 1969, he was again in the cup final with FCM and this time won 4-0 against FC Karl-Marx-Stadt. By winning the cup again, Moldenhauer also got the chance to play two games in the competition for the European Cup Winners' Cup . Due to injury, he was unable to play in the first European Cup games of the 1969/70 season, Moldenhauer was only used in the two round of 16 encounters against the Portuguese cup winner Academica Coimbra, but after 1-0 and 0-2 the Magdeburg team were eliminated. In the meantime, Moldenhauer had got competition from the young Ulrich Schulze and in the 1969/70 and 1970/71 seasons he lost his position as the goalkeeper. Since he was now almost 30 years old, he resigned from the first division team of 1. FC Magdeburg at the end of the 1970/71 season.

In his twelve years in the first team of Magdeburg he had played a total of 152 competitive games, in addition to the championship point games, 16 GDR Cup and two European Cup games.

  • All championship point games (except for 1966/67 in the major league)
    • 1960 - 6000
    • 1961/62 - 09
    • 1962/63 - 07
    • 1963/64 - 19th
    • 1964/65 - 02nd
    • 1965/66 - 04th
    • 1966/67 - 23 (GDR League)
    • 1967/68 - 13
    • 1968/69 - 25
    • 1969/70 - 14
    • 1970/71 - 11

Career as a sports official

As a gift for joining the DFB, Hans-Georg Moldenhauer (left), President of the NOFV, presented DFB President Hermann Neuberger (right) with a Trabant, November 1990

In addition to his age, professional reasons were also decisive for the end of his playing career. Moldenhauer had received an offer from the Magdeburg heavy mechanical engineering combine SKET to work there as a mechanical engineer in a responsible position. However, he remained a member of 1. FC Magdeburg and was a part-time goalkeeping coach there in 1975. He was later elected to the club's board of directors. When the question of the future of GDR football came up after the political change in 1989 , Moldenhauer put himself at the forefront of the advocates of a quick connection to the German football association . On March 31, 1990, he was elected President of the GDR Football Association in a battle vote and initiated the merger with the DFB, which took place on November 20, 1990. Moldenhauer was elected Vice President of the DFB and took on responsibility for coach training and talent development. In this context he also became chairman of the sponsoring association for the federal performance center in Kienbaum. At the same time he was elected President of the newly founded Northeast German Football Association. From 1994 to 2006 he was Vice President of the German Sports Confederation . In 1991 Moldenhauer founded SV Oldies Magdeburg in Magdeburg, where he kept himself fit and occasionally played soccer games.

Employee of the MfS

According to the files of the BStU , Moldenhauer was listed under the code name " Kurt Straube " as a social employee of the Ministry for State Security (MfS) of the former GDR. In April 1984, for example, he verbally declared his willingness to work with the MfS.

literature

Web links

Commons : Hans-Georg Moldenhauer  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b See DER SPIEGEL 19/2010: Form der Arbitrariness , p. 109.