Hans-Otto Hiestermann

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Hans-Otto "HO" Hiestermann (born January 7, 1949 in Hermannsburg ) is a former German soccer player . In the 1975/76 season, the striker played nine games (1 goal) for 1. FC Köln in the Bundesliga . Before that, he played 37 league games at 1. FC Nürnberg in the 2. Bundesliga South 1974/75 and scored four goals for the club. After Cologne, another station at Würzburger FV followed in the 2nd Bundesliga South, in which Hiestermann scored five goals in 77 second division games from 1976 to 1979.

career

Amateur national team, 1974–1975

The 1.68 m tall footballer Hans-Otto Hiestermann grew up in Hermannsburg , Celle district , in the Lüneburg Heath and learned to play football at TuS Hermannsburg in the football department that had been in existence there since 1924 and practiced it until he was drafted into the army in 1969. The Lower Saxon did his basic military service in Fürstenfeldbruck and therefore also joined the local Bayern division SC Fürstenfeldbruck . His ability to dribble with short, quick changes of direction quickly brought the winger into the Bavarian amateur team. When he reached fifth place with Fürstenfeldbruck in the 1973/74 season , the DFB became aware of the winger. On April 26, 1974, the attacker made his debut in the amateur national team of the DFB. DFB coach Jupp Derwall brought him to Rijeka in the semi-finals against the Netherlands as part of the UEFA Amateur Cup as a substitute for Ewald Hammes . The game ended 1: 1 a. V. and in the penalty shootout, the DFB team prevailed with 4: 2 goals. Due to weather-related circumstances, the final could not be played and UEFA declared both final opponents Yugoslavia and Germany to be joint winners. Hiestermann signed a contract with 1. FC Nürnberg for the 1974/75 season and moved to the 2. Bundesliga . He remained an amateur that season and completed eight more international matches from September 25, 1974 to July 8, 1975 in the amateur national team. In April 1975, for example, the club attacker was used in the two Olympic qualifying games against Spain (0: 0, 2: 3) and in early July 1975 he played his last two amateur international games on a trip to Asia with games against China (1: 1) and Singapore (4: 1).

Nuremberg, Cologne, Würzburg, 1975 to 1979

1. FC Nürnberg won for the debut round of the 2. Bundesliga 1974/75 with Hans Walitza from VfL Bochum, a courted Bundesliga hunter, and goalkeeper Franz Schwarzwälder (SV Alsenborn), Ulrich Pechtold (FC Bayern Hof) and Günter came from the former second-rate regional leagues von de Fenn (Jahn Regensburg), Wolfgang Holoch (Stuttgarter Kickers), Karlheinz Meininger (1860 Munich) and the Bayern league player Hiestermann from SC Fürstenfeldbruck. Under coach Hans Tilkowski , the amateur national player made his debut in the second division on August 4, 1974, after losing 2-0 at FC Augsburg. In addition to regular players such as Manfred Rüsing , Kurt Geinzer , Dieter Nüssing , Rudi Sturz and Dietmar Schabacker , Hiestermann played 37 league games and scored four goals. The club took sixth place. With a weak 10:28 away points, Nuremberg missed the top ranks. But Hiestermann was noticed by the Bundesliga and accepted the offer of 1. FC Cologne after Cologne had reached an agreement with Nuremberg for the 1975/76 season .

Zlatko Čajkovski worked as a trainer in the cathedral city on the Rhine . The billy goat team was peppered with self-confident stars such as Toni Schumacher , Bernhard Cullmann , Herbert Hein , Harald Konopka , Wolfgang Weber , Gerd Strack , Heinz Flohe , Herbert Neumann , Wolfgang Overath , Heinz Simmet , Jürgen Glowacz and Dieter Müller . Striker Johannes Löhr wanted to end his career. Which newcomer, in addition to Hiestermann, FC also signed Matthias Brücken , Roland Gerber , Miodrag Petrović , Dieter Prestin and Günter Weber , was actually expected to move up into the regular cast, that does not immediately become apparent when looking at the competition in the players' squad Look. None of the newcomers came in 1975/76 on a double-digit number. Bridges (9-2) and Hiestermann (9-1) topped the list of missions among the newcomers. All nine missions by Hiestermann were under Cajkovski. When he was released on December 13, 1975 and replaced by ex-national player Georg Stollenwerk on January 1, 1976 , Hiestermann also struggled with Achilles tendon problems and Löhr had long been active again, no further missions were added. When, after Hennes Weisweiler took over training for the 1976/77 season, the chances of playing worsened, Hiestermann went back one league and joined the Würzburger FV in the 2nd Bundesliga South.

His debut for Würzburg took place under extremely unfavorable circumstances: His new club lost the away game at the Stuttgarter Kickers with 1: 8 goals when they first played on September 12, 1976 . Under the coaches Herbert Wenz and Werner Bickelhaupt - Wenz was replaced by Bickelhaupt in March 1977 - Würzburg finished 13th at the end of the round; The newcomer from Cologne had 32 league games with two goals alongside teammates such as Siegfried Scherzer (goalkeeper), Walter Szaule , Friedhelm Groppe , Heinz-Dieter Lömm , Bernd Göbel , Lothar Emmerich , Heribert Müller , Klaus Sterz , Hans Schmidradner and Max Müller completed. In the second season in Würzburg, 1977/78 , the zero fours under coach Rudolf Kröner reached 11th place. The two local derbies against Kickers Würzburg ended 2: 2 and 4: 0. Hiestermann played 31 games with three goals. In his third season, 1978/79 , only 14 league games were possible for him due to Achilles tendon problems. He played his last second division game on November 19, 1978 in a 1: 3 home defeat against SC Freiburg.

As a football player, Hans-Otto Hiestermann was quite a talented man, who could not assert himself in the Bundesliga at 1. FC Köln under coach Georg Stollenwerk , but in the 2. Bundesliga he was a reliable and solid player for 1. FC Nürnberg and after his time in Cologne also with the Würzburger FV .

Since 1991 Hans-Otto Hiestermann has lived and worked in Tübingen as a tennis trainer at the TC Tübingen and head of a tennis school. He hardly cares about football any more, he says.

Club stations, missions and goals

societies

Appearances and goals

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 .
  • Thomas Hardt, Thomas Hohndorf, Bruno Morbitzer, Hubert Dahlkamp, ​​Hardy Grüne: Hennes u. Co. Verlag Die Werkstatt. Göttingen 2005. ISBN 3-89533-470-7 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hiestermann, Hans-Otto Hiestermann - Futbolista. Retrieved February 22, 2019 .
  2. Trainer of the TC Tübingen Hans-Otto Hiestermann celebrates his 70th birthday , gea.de , January 5, 2019