Hans-Peter Briegel

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Hans-Peter Briegel
6633 Hans Peter Briegel.JPG
Hans-Peter Briegel in the studio with Markus Lanz in 2012
Personnel
birthday October 11, 1955
place of birth KaiserslauternGermany
size 188 cm
position Defense
Juniors
Years station
1972-1974 SV Rodenbach
1974-1975 1. FC Kaiserslautern
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1975-1984 1. FC Kaiserslautern 240 (47)
1984-1986 Hellas Verona 55 (12)
1986-1988 Sampdoria Genoa 51 0(9)
1989-1992 FC Glarus
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1976-1988 Germany amateurs 6 0(0)
1978-1979 Germany B 2 0(1)
1979-1986 Germany 72 0(4)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1989-1992 FC Glarus
1992-1994 SV Edenkoben
1994-1995 SG Wattenscheid 09
1999-2000 Beşiktaş Istanbul
2001-2002 Trabzonspor
2002-2006 Albania
2006-2007 Bahrain
2007 MKE Ankaragücü
1 Only league games are given.

Hans-Peter Briegel (born October 11, 1955 in Kaiserslautern ) is a German soccer coach , official and former soccer player . His greatest international success was the European title in 1980 .

player

Track and field athlete

Briegel came from athletics and was a German youth champion in the long jump and triple jump . He also completed two decathlons, which later led the press to refer to him as a "former decathlete". Briegel achieved his best long and triple jump performances as an A-youth of the TV Rodenbach in 1972 and 1973.

society

Briegel began his footballing career at the age of 17 and first played for the current national league club Sportverein Rodenbach 1919 e. V. After moving to 1. FC Kaiserslautern , he played in the Bundesliga from 1975 to 1984 . He later worked for Hellas Verona and Sampdoria Genoa . With Hellas Verona Briegel was Italian champion in 1984/85 under Osvaldo Bagnoli . In the same year he was voted Germany's Footballer of the Year as the first footballer playing abroad . Briegel, the " Walz from the Palatinate ", as he was often called because of his athletic stature and his unbridled forward thrust, ended his active career as a player in 1988 with the cup victory with Sampdoria Genoa shortly before the introduction of the shin guards . He was known to always play without shin guards.

National team

From October 1979 to June 1986 he made 72 games in the German national soccer team . He got four goals. The highlights of his career were the European championship title in 1980 and the runner-up world title in Spain in 1982 and in Mexico in 1986 . Before joining the senior national team, he had already played six international matches with the DFB amateur national team from 1976 to 1978.

For winning the European Championship he was awarded the Silver Laurel Leaf by Federal President Karl Carstens .

Trainer

From October 1989 to June 30, 1992 Briegel was player-coach at FC Glarus . His first pure coaching station was SV Edenkoben from July 1992 to June 1994. He then trained, among other things, SG Wattenscheid 09 until March 1995, Beşiktaş Istanbul first from May 1999 to September 1999 as an assistant coach under Karl-Heinz Feldkamp and from mid-September 1999 to June 2000 as head coach and Trabzonspor from November 2001 to June 2002.

From December 21, 2002 until his resignation on May 9, 2006 Briegel was coach of the Albanian national team , from July 2006 to January 20, 2007 coach of the Bahraini national team . For the 2007/08 season he was the head coach of the Turkish first division club MKE Ankaragücü and was released after five months.

official

From summer 1996 until his resignation on October 21, 1997, Briegel was the sporting director of 1. FC Kaiserslautern. On November 5, 2002 he was elected to the board of directors of the FCK . Until his resignation on December 10, 2003, Briegel sat on this body .

successes

Anecdotes

  • Briegel was known as a player for playing without shin guards.
  • His greatest triumphs as a coach were the victories with Albania against the European champions Greece trained by Otto Rehhagel and against Russia . These victories brought Briegel a cult status in Albania . Numerous children were baptized with the first name Briegel . His quarters in Tirana , opposite the presidential palace in a magnificent building by Enver Hoxha , were also legendary .

Private

  • Briegel's parents owned a potato farm in Rodenbach near Kaiserslautern, where he still helped with the harvest when he was already a professional at FCK.
  • Briegel and his wife Petra have been working with the DFB Foundation Egidius Braun and the children's mission organization “Die Sternsinger ” since 2008 for people in need in Mexico who live on garbage dumps and have to fight for their survival every day.

Web links

Commons : Hans-Peter Briegel  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Hans-Peter Briegel: Portrait. Retrieved July 18, 2010 .
  2. Statistics, Athletics Archive, Eternal Leaderboards Rhineland-Palatinate
  3. ^ Matthias Arnhold: Hans-Peter Briegel - Matches and Goals in Bundesliga. Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation, November 29, 2012, accessed January 2, 2013 .
  4. Legendary games and holes in the shin , Trierischer Volksfreund, October 30, 2012
  5. ^ "Walz aus der Pfalz": Always without shin guards: Hans-Peter Briegel is 60 , rp-online, October 112, 2015
  6. ^ Matthias Arnhold: Hans-Peter Briegel - International Appearances. Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation, March 13, 2004, accessed January 2, 2013 .
  7. Bundesarchiv: L Sportpreise (silver laurel): Awarding of the silver laurel leaf to the German national football team (European championship 1980), signature B.Arch B122 / 29165.
  8. SWR.de: "Ready for the Grumbeer'n, go!"; Footballer legend and potato professional Hans-Peter Briegel got the harvest rolling.
  9. Instead of Spain's sun, the Briegels experience misery in Mexico in Mannheimer Morgen on January 12, 2010, accessed on July 26, 2019 (archived version)