Hartmut Schade

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Hartmut Schade (born November 13, 1954 in Radeberg ) was a soccer player with Dynamo Dresden in the GDR Oberliga , the highest soccer class of the East German soccer association. He is a four-time GDR soccer champion and won the FDGB soccer cup three times . He played 31 times for the GDR national team and is an Olympic gold medalist from 1976. After his playing days, Schade worked as a football coach.

Hartmut Schade 1976

Soccer player

At the age of ten Schade began to play organized football under his father as a coach in the home BSG Robotron Radeberg . At the age of 14 he was delegated to the regional soccer focus Dynamo Dresden in 1969. With Dynamo's junior team he was GDR champion in 1972. Schade had already played his first games with the junior national team. His first international junior match was the encounter between the GDR and Poland (2-0) on April 1, 1972. He was used in central midfield and scored the 1-0. By 1973 Schade completed a total of 26 junior internationals, in which he scored six goals as a midfielder. At times he was team captain. In 1973 he finished second in the youth selection in the UEFA youth tournament. He was then seamlessly taken over into the youth national team, with which he played six international matches (1 goal).

On March 31, 1973 Schade was used for the first time in the league. In the game of the 15th championship round 1972/73 Dynamo Dresden - 1. FC Union Berlin, he came on in the 80th minute for striker Gert Heidler . It was his only game in this league season, but he belonged to the championship team of 1973. More often he was used in 1972/73 in the second representation of the Dresden Dynamos in the league (9 games / 2 goals). Already in the 1973/74 season, Schade had won a regular place in the league team with 23 point games. After a setback in 1974/75 with only eight league games, the 1.80 m large Schade belonged to the permanent staff of Dresden for five years from the 1975/76 season and regularly played in a midfield position. During this time he won another three GDR championship titles with Dynamo Dresden in 1976, 1977 and 1978 and the GDR soccer cup in 1977, which he was able to conquer two more times in 1982 and 1984.

With his good performance at Dynamo, Schade also recommended himself for the senior national team. For his first international match he came on October 12, 1975 in the qualifier for the European Championship GDR - France (2-1). He was used in central midfield, a position on which had recently been experimented with several players. Schade was not initially set here either, but only became part of the national team from mid-1976. After all, by early 1980 he had 31 full internationals. Without the games in the context of the Olympic football tournament , 28 international games are listed for Schade. Between 1975 and 1976 Schade was also part of the GDR's soccer team . With her he played two qualifying games and four games during the Olympic tournament in Canada. He was also in the team that won the gold medal on July 31, 1976 with a 3-1 victory over Poland. Schade laid the foundation for this victory with the 1-0 win. For this success he was awarded the Patriotic Order of Merit in silver.

On the 15th day of the league season 1979/80 Schade suffered a serious injury, after which he could no longer play in the league until the summer of 1981. During this time he finished his studies as a qualified sports teacher. The 1981/82 season was the last season in which Schade was fully used again. In the two following seasons he played only 15 and 16 league games, and after the end of the 1983/84 season he ended his career as an active football player. Within eleven years, Schade had played 198 league games with 34 goals for Dynamo Dresden, plus 35 European cup games with five goals and various national cup games.

Hartmut Schade (right) next to Reinhard Häfner 1990 coach of Dynamo Dresden

coach

After the end of his active career, Schade first became a rehab trainer at Dynamo Dresden, then in 1990 he was assistant trainer under Reinhard Häfner . Despite having successfully qualified for the Bundesliga, both were given leave of absence on June 3, 1991. Schade then worked in the real estate industry for a few years before returning to Dynamo Dresden in the Regionalliga Nordost as head coach from 1996 to 1998 . From 1999 to March 2001 Schade trained the amateurs of TSV 1860 Munich .

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ↑ About the honor for the Olympic team of the GDR. Awarded high government awards. Patriotic Order of Merit in silver. In: New Germany . September 10, 1976, p. 4 , accessed on April 10, 2018 (online at ZEFYS - newspaper portal of the Berlin State Library , free registration required).