Helmut Schröder

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Helmut Schröder
Personnel
birthday March 1, 1958
place of birth SudhagenGermany
size 186 cm
position midfield
Juniors
Years station
SV Sudhagen
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
000? –1977 SV Sudhagen
1977-1988 Arminia Bielefeld 313 (34)
1988-1990 FC Gütersloh 33 (1)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1978 Germany amateurs 1 (1)
1978-1981 Germany B 8 (1)
1 Only league games are given.

Helmut Schröder (born March 1, 1958 in Sudhagen ) is a German former football player . He played for Arminia Bielefeld in the first and second Bundesliga .

Career

Club player

The midfielder Helmut Schröder began his career at SV Sudhagen from Delbrück in the Paderborn district and played there in the 2nd district class. In the summer of 1977 he moved to Arminia Bielefeld in the 2nd Bundesliga North . On August 12, 1977 Schröder made his professional debut when he came on for Willi Cryns in the 1: 3 home defeat of Arminia against Bayer 04 Leverkusen . Four days later, Schröder scored his first professional goal in a 4-1 away win at Rot-Weiß Lüdenscheid . After a short time, Schröder became a regular at the side of Norbert Eilenfeldt , Lorenz-Günther Köstner and Wolfgang Pohl and won the championship and promotion to the Bundesliga with his team at the end of the 1977/78 season. In the decisive 2-0 win at SC Fortuna Köln on the last day of the match, Schröder scored the opening goal.

On August 11, 1978, Helmut Schröder played in the Bundesliga for the first time and also scored his first Bundesliga goal in a 1-1 draw at MSV Duisburg . Despite a 4-0 victory for Arminia at FC Bayern Munich , in which Schröder ensured the final score, Bielefeld missed relegation as third-bottom of the 1978/79 season. Since the club was largely able to hold the team together, the Arminia succeeded in the 1979/80 season with 66:10 points and 120:31 goals, the direct rise. Five years in the Bundesliga followed, in which Schröder took all ups and downs with him. In Arminia's 3-2 win against TSV 1860 Munich, he equalized two minutes before the final whistle, paving the way for relegation in the 1980/81 season . On November 6, 1982, Schröder was also part of Arminia's team, which lost 1:11 at Borussia Dortmund. It was the only game in Bundesliga history so far in which a team conceded ten goals in one half.

In the 1984/85 season , Arminia had to relegate to the 2nd Bundesliga after losing relegation against 1. FC Saarbrücken . Financially stricken, the Bielefeld team went down to the Oberliga Westfalen in 1988 . On October 18, 1986, Schröder was part of the Bielefeld team, which, due to the rules at the time, only ran up to ten in the game against 1. FC Saarbrücken . Many Bielefeld players were injured or ill and Arminia was not allowed to use more than three amateur players. After the professional Thomas Ostermann injured himself in the tenth minute, the Bielefeld team had to finish the game nine. The game against VfL Osnabrück on November 7, 1987, when Schröder came on for Leo Spielberger in the 63rd minute and only saw the red card a minute later, was curious .

Schröder left Arminia and moved to future league rivals FC Gütersloh in the summer of 1988 . With an own goal in the last game of the 1989/90 season , he sealed the relegation of Gütersloher to the association league . Later he was still active as a player coach at Fortuna Schlangen .

National player

Helmut Schröder ran on September 26, 1978 for the first and only time for the amateur national team . He scored a goal in the 2-1 win against the senior national team of China on the Bielefelder Alm . In this game, Schröder's club mate Uli Stein was in the goal of the German team . This was followed by eight appearances in the German B national team by 1981 . He made his debut on October 10, 1978 against Czechoslovakia . On November 18, 1980 against France, Helmut Schröder and Norbert Eilenfeldt were two Arminia players on the pitch. Schröder scored a goal on May 21, 1981 in a game against the senior national team of Ireland .

Achievements and honors

Helmut Schröder played 148 Bundesliga and 165 second division games for Arminia in eleven years, scoring twelve and 22 goals respectively. With 313 appearances, Helmut Schröder is Arminia Bielefeld's record player in the professional camp. At the end of the 2018/19 season , Helmut Schröder topped the club's internal ranking of players with the most second division appearances for Arminia Bielefeld. In the 100 Years of Passion chronicle published by Arminia Bielefeld for the 100th anniversary of the club , Helmut Schröder was listed as one of 16 players in the Legendary Armines category .

There Schröder is described as a “moody diva ” who was “blessed with a great understanding of the game and enormous speed”. With his “elegant technique and brilliant flashes of inspiration” Schröder was able to “embarrass the opposing defense”. He also had a tough left shot. Schröder quickly became a favorite with the public in Bielefeld. When he was on the ball, you could hear drawn out "Helmuuuut, Helmuuuut" calls. However, there were always days when things didn't work out for Schröder and quickly seemed dejected. This constant change earned Schröder the nickname "Anneliese".

Life

Helmut Schröder is a trained hairdresser . Today Helmut Schröder works for an international company in Gütersloh as a commercial clerk. His son André Schröder played at Delbrücker SC in the Oberliga Westfalen and NRW League at the end of the 2000s .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e Jens Kirschneck, Marcus Uhlig , Volker Backes, Olaf Bentkämper, Julien Lecoeur: Arminia Bielefeld - 100 years of passion . Verlag Die Werkstatt, Göttingen 2005, ISBN 3-89533-479-0 , p. 185-186 .
  2. Kirschneck, Uhlig, Backes, Bentkämper, Lecoeur. P. 202
  3. Kirschneck, Uhlig, Backes, Bentkämper, Lecoeur. P. 203
  4. Kirschneck, Uhlig, Backes, Bentkämper, Lecoeur. P. 205
  5. Kirschneck, Uhlig, Backes, Bentkämper, Lecoeur. P. 207
  6. Arminia Bielefeld - VfL Osnabrück 0-0. DFB , accessed on September 22, 2019 .
  7. "If the environment is right, the FCG can also think of the first division". Gütersloh TV, accessed on September 22, 2019 .
  8. ^ Frank Müller: Bielefeld's amateur national team. Blue data, accessed September 20, 2019 .
  9. ^ Frank Müller: Bielefeld's B national player. Blue data, accessed September 20, 2019 .
  10. ^ Frank Müller: List of missions in the 2nd division. Blue data, accessed September 20, 2019 .