Heiko Bonan

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Heiko Bonan
Heiko Bonan 1989.jpg
Heiko Bonan 1989
Personnel
Surname Heiko Bonan
birthday February 10, 1966
place of birth HaldenslebenGDR
size 170 cm
position midfield
Juniors
Years station
1972-1988 BSG Medicine Haldensleben
1978-1984 1. FC Magdeburg
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1984-1989 1. FC Magdeburg 119 (14)
1989-1991 BFC Dynamo 51 0(9)
1991-1993 VfL Bochum 69 0(6)
1993-1995 Karlsruher SC 53 0(6)
1995-1997 FC Gütersloh 59 (12)
1997-2000 LR Ahlen 87 0(8)
2000-2001 SV Wilhelmshaven 35 0(3)
2001-2004 Red and white food 92 0(4)
2004-2005 FC Gutersloh 2000 32 0(2)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1983-1984 GDR U-18 14 (2)
1984-1989 DDR U-21 27 (3)
1989-1990 GDR national team 2 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2005-2006 FC Gutersloh 2000
2006 Rot Weiss Ahlen II
2006 Rot Weiss Ahlen (Assistant Trainer)
2006-2007 Red and white awls
2007-2008 Red and white food
2009 FC Gutersloh 2000
2009-2010 FSV Gütersloh 2009
2010-2011 BFC Dynamo
2011-2013 Al-Hilal (assistant coach)
2013-2014 TuS Bad Driburg
2014-2016 FC Gutersloh 2000
2016-2019 FC Blau-Weiß Weser
2019– FC 99 Aa Nethetal
1 Only league games are given.

Heiko Bonan (born February 10, 1966 in Haldensleben ) is a former German soccer player and today's soccer coach who worked for 1. FC Magdeburg , BFC Dynamo , VfL Bochum and Karlsruher SC , among others . For the DFV of the GDR , he played two games in the national soccer team of the GDR in 1989 and 1990 . Heiko Bonan has been a trainer since 2005.

Athletic career

1972–1991: From youth to the top league

At the age of six, Heiko Bonan started playing football in the youth of the BSG Medicine Haldensleben. As a 12-year-old, the talent scouts of 1. FC Magdeburg noticed him and moved to the club. From 1978 he attended the local children's and youth sports school. "Bonan was the largest Magdeburg talent in the eighties." In spring 1984 Magdeburg's head coach Claus Creul took the then 18-year-old high school graduates in the league team, where Bonan off the season 1985/86 under coach Joachim Streich in Senior sector developed further. From 1984 to 1989 he was used in 119 league games for 1. FC Magdeburg and scored 14 goals. At the end of the 1980s, since Magdeburg was no longer among the absolute top class of GDR football and he really wanted to play with the club internationally, Heiko Bonan moved to Berlin for BFC Dynamo in the summer of 1989 .

In his first season he came fourth with the Berliners and was able to gain experience in four games against Reykjavík and AS Monaco in the European Cup . On September 12, 1990, he was in the DFV national team's last game. It took place in Brussels and ended with a 2-0 victory for the GDR after two goals from Matthias Sammer . Since Thomas Doll and Andreas Thom moved from BFC to the Bundesliga in the summer of 1990, Bonan was only able to take 11th place in the NOFV-Oberliga of the 1990/91 season with the club renamed FC Berlin. Since the Bundesliga qualification had been missed, he moved to Bochum.

Parallel to his time in the top division, Bonan completed a five-year distance learning course at the DHfK branch in Magdeburg and became a qualified sports teacher.

1991–1995: Bundesliga

From the 1991/92 season he played in the Bundesliga at VfL Bochum. He played all 38 championship games in his first VfL season. After relegation in 1993, Bonan, who scored six goals in 69 games, moved from Bochum to Karlsruher SC. The highlight of the 1993/94 season was the UEFA Cup games. Via PSV Eindhoven , FC Valencia , Girondins Bordeaux and Boavista Porto , Bonan and his club reached the semi-finals against Austria Salzburg , but after a 0-0 draw in Salzburg and a 1: 1 in Karlsruhe became the final destination. Bonan was used in nine UEFA Cup games, but not in the sensational 7-0 home win over Valencia.

In his second year in Baden, Bonan had to face competition from Thomas Häßler , Thorsten Fink and Michael Tarnat . After initial difficulties, Bonan in the left half position and Tarnat in the outer position finally formed the pair on the left side of the KSC in the 1994/95 season. When he played on the last day of the season on June 17, 1995 in the 2-2 home game against VfL Bochum, Bonan brought KSC 2-1 in the 72nd minute of the game. With this game he surprisingly ended his career in the Bundesliga. According to Bonans in an interview with the KSC stadium newspaper Wildpark Live in January 2006, the possible contract extension failed because he was only offered a one-year contract. However, he insisted on a long-term position, as he did not want his family to move again after only one year. In retrospect, he regretted this decision, as it put him in a year or two of first division football. So he left the KSC, for which he played 53 games in the Bundesliga from 1993 to 1995 and scored six goals.

1995-2005: Regionalliga, Oberliga and 2. Liga

The man from Saxony-Anhalt moved to the 1995/96 round in the Regionalliga West / Südwest for FC Gütersloh . With eight goals in 31 games, he contributed to promotion to the 2nd Bundesliga . In the second league he appeared in the 1996/97 round in 28 games with four goals for FC Gütersloh. Bonan then moved on to LR Ahlen in the regional league. About the other stations SV Wilhelmshaven and RW Essen he came in the Regionalliga on 126 missions. After Rot-Weiss Essen was promoted to the 2nd Bundesliga in 2004, Bonan ended his active career in competitive football, but played for another year in the Oberliga Westfalen at his old place of work, FC Gütersloh 2000, and ended his active football player here -Career.

Selection bets

Until the summer of 1984 he was part of the youth and junior teams of the German Football Association. With the national soccer team of the GDR (U-18 juniors) , the Magdeburg player qualified for the Junior European Championship in 1984 . In the previous summer, this newly formed junior representation had secured the only victory for a GDR team in the friendship youth competitions .

From 1984 to 1989 Bonan was called up in 27 games of the GDR's U-21 team. On February 13, 1989, he celebrated his first appearance in the senior national team of the DFV in the game against Egypt in Cairo . Bonan played his second and last international match when he left the GDR team in September 1990.

Coaching career

In the 2005/06 season he coached together with Dirk van der Ven , who, Arminia Bielefeld (1. Bundesliga) had been and Japan contract footballers previously at FC Gütersloh 2000, LR Ahlen, KFC Uerdingen, the women's team of FC Gütersloh 2000 , which played in the 2nd Bundesliga. Then he switched to the amateurs of RW Ahlen and looked after the first team as an assistant coach. After Bonan had acquired the coaching license, he was able to become head coach of Rot Weiss Ahlen. In the 2007/08 season he was in charge of the regional division Rot-Weiss Essen, where he was on leave in March 2008.

In January 2009 Bonan returned to FC Gütersloh, where he has been responsible for the club's women's team again. After the division of the women's department from FC Gütersloh in 2000 and the creation of his own club, Bonan had been a trainer and sporting director at FSV Gütersloh since June 2009 . On March 29, 2010, BFC Dynamo announced that Bonan would be the coach of the league club. On August 26, 2011, he announced at a press conference that he was moving to the coaching staff of Al-Hilal in Saudi Arabia. There he trains the U23, which includes many Olympic selection players. Contact with the Saudi record champions came through his coach Thomas Doll , with whom Bonan had played at BFC Dynamo.

In August 2013 Bonan took over the training at the Höxteraner district league club TuS Bad Driburg and led the team to promotion to the district league. In October 2014 Bonan moved to FC Gütersloh 2000 and managed to stay in the Oberliga Westfalen twice with the team. Since the 2016/17 season, Bonan has been coaching the Westphalian district division club FC Blau-Weiß Weser from Beverungen and Lauenförde .

Stations

  • 2005/06
    • Coach of the first women's soccer team of FC Gütersloh 2000. League: 2nd women's soccer Bundesliga north. Place: 2nd place behind VfL Wolfsburg
  • 2006/07
    • Trainer of the RW Ahlen Amateure (Oberliga Westfalen) and assistant trainer of the first team
    • From October 30, 2006 head coach of Rot Weiss Ahlen after the resignation of Bernard Dietz
  • 2007/08
    • Trainer at RW Essen until March 22, 2008
  • 2008/09
    • From January 16, 2009 coach of the first women's soccer team of FC Gütersloh 2000 in the 2nd women's soccer Bundesliga
  • 2009/10
    • From June 2009 coach of the first women's soccer team of FSV Gütersloh 2009 in the 2nd women's soccer Bundesliga
    • From March 29, 2010 coach of BFC Dynamo (Oberliga Nordost / Nord)
  • 2010/11
    • From September 2011 coach of the U23 of Al-Hilal Riyadh
  • 2013/14
    • From August 2013 coach at TuS Bad Driburg (Kreisliga A Nord Höxter)
  • 2014/15
    • From October 13, 2014 coach at FC Gütersloh 2000 in the Oberliga Westfalen
  • 2016/17
    • Since July 1, 2016 coach at FC Blau-Weiß Weser in the district league St. 3 / Westf.
  • 2019/20
    • Since July 1, 2019 coach at FC 99 Aa Nethetal in the district league B North.

literature

  • Matthias Kropp: Triumphs in the European Cup. All games of the German clubs since 1955 (= "AGON Sportverlag statistics." Volume 20). AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-75-4 .
  • Matthias Weinrich: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 5: 35 years of the Bundesliga. Part 3. Boom Years, Money & Stars 1987 to today. Stories, pictures, constellations, tables. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1999, ISBN 3-89784-134-7 .
  • Andreas Baingo , Michael Hohlfeld: Soccer selection player of the GDR. The lexicon . Sportverlag Berlin , Berlin 2000, ISBN 3-328-00875-6 , page 22.
  • Michael Peter: The way to the west. A contribution to the German-German (soccer) understanding. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2001, ISBN 3-89784-176-2 , pages 79-86.
  • Bernd Rohr , Günter Simon : Football Lexicon . The great football encyclopedia Copress Sport, Munich 2004, ISBN 3-7679-0829-8 .
  • Horn, Michael, Weise, Gottfried : The great lexicon of GDR football . Schwarzkopf & Schwarzkopf, Berlin 2004, ISBN 3-89602-536-8 , page 57/58.
  • Christian Karn, Reinhard Rehberg: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Player Lexicon 1963–1994 . AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2012. ISBN 978-3-89784-214-4 , page 64.
  • Hanns Leske : The GDR league players. A lexicon . AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2014, ISBN 978-3-89784-392-9 , page 45/46.

Web links

Commons : Heiko Bonan  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Michael Peter: Heiko Bonan. It all started with Grandpa in Hillersleben. In: The Way to the West. A contribution to the German-German (soccer) understanding ... 2001, page 81.