Heinz Schönberger (soccer player)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Heinz Schönberger
Personnel
birthday December 30, 1949
place of birth HeringenGermany
size 170 cm
position midfield
Juniors
Years station
0000-1965 VfB pegs
1965-1968 Kickers Offenbach
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1968-1971 Kickers Offenbach 58 0(7)
1971-1972 Tasmania Berlin 29 0(1)
1972-1975 RFC Tilleur-Saint-Nicolas 89 0(8)
1975-1977 KRC Mechelen 64 (18)
1977-1985 KSK Beveren 239 (41)
1985-1986 VC Westerlo 1 0(0)
1 Only league games are given.

Heinz Schönberger (born December 30, 1949 in Heringen ) is a former German football player . The midfielder played 29 games (1 goal) in the Bundesliga for the Kickers Offenbach club .

Career

Heinz Schönberger grew up playing football in the youth of his home club VfB Heringen . From the 1965/66 season his further training began in the youth department of Kickers Offenbach. After the promotion to the Bundesliga in 1968, the players Rudolf Koch , Hubert Genz and Schönberger were taken over from the youth department in the squad of the professional team from coach Paul Oßwald am Bieberer Berg. In addition, Dieter Koulmann , Hans Nowak , Peter Werner (all from FC Bayern Munich), Helmut Siber (Wacker Innsbruck) and goalkeeper Karlheinz Volz from SpVgg Neu-Isenburg came to the OFC. Offenbach made his debut on August 17, 1968 with the attacking formation Koch, Egon Schmitt , Siber, Schönberger and Gerd Becker in the away game against 1. FC Cologne with a 1: 2 defeat in the Bundesliga. At the end of the round, Schönberger had completed 14 Bundesliga games with one goal and the Hessians were relegated to the Regionalliga Süd in 18th place. The enthusiastic and technically good combination player Schönberger contributed to the championship win in the Football Regionalliga Süd in 1969/70 in front of Karlsruher SC and 1. FC Nürnberg in 29 missions with six goals under coach Zeljko Cajkovski . In the promotion round Offenbach with Schönberger (6-2) prevailed against the rivals Hertha Zehlendorf, VfL Wolfsburg, FK Pirmasens and VfL Bochum with 12: 4 points and thus returned immediately to the Bundesliga. In the 1970 DFB Cup he scored a goal in the 4-1 win in the first main round against Munich 1860 and was used in the semi-final game on August 19, 1970 against 1. FC Nürnberg at the beginning of extra time for Egon Schmitt. In the final against 1. FC Köln it was not used. The Bundesliga season 1970/71 was overshadowed by the manipulation of the Bundesliga scandal and at Offenbach was made even more difficult by the work of three different coaches. OFC went into the round with Aki Schmidt , from September 28, 1970 Rudi Gutendorf took over , before the third man, Kuno Klötzer, directed as coach from February 24, 1971 . The strongest competitors in the OFC midfield for Schönberger were Walter Bechtold , Winfried Schäfer and Roland Weida . After the 2-4 defeat on the 34th matchday, June 5, 1971, at 1. FC Köln, Offenbach rose tied with RW Oberhausen - both teams showed 27:41 points - as 17th in the Regionalliga Süd. Schönberger had played 15 Bundesliga games.

He moved to Tasmania Berlin in 1971 , where he played 29 games as a Libero in the Berlin Regional Football League and scored one goal. Through the runner-up, he took part in the promotion round to the Bundesliga in 1972 with fellow players Horst Grunenberg , Norbert Siegmann , Lothar Groß , Helmut Nerlinger and Wulf-Ingo Usbeck , in which he played all eight games against Wuppertaler SV, VfL Osnabrück, Borussia Neunkirchen and FC Bayern Court denied. From the 1972/73 season he continued his career in Belgium and played football for RFC Tilleur-Saint-Nicolas , KRC Mechelen , KSK Beveren and VC Westerlo . His activity at KSK Beveren was very successful. He won with his club in 1978/79 and 1983/84 the championship and twice in 1977/78 and 1982/83 the Belgian Football Cup .

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 .

Web links