Holger Wehlage
Holger Wehlage | ||
Personnel | ||
---|---|---|
birthday | 3rd July 1976 | |
place of birth | Meppen , Germany | |
size | 179 cm | |
position | midfield player | |
Juniors | ||
Years | station | |
since 1983 | SV Meppen | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
1996-1998 | SV Meppen | 7 (0) |
1998-1999 | VfB Lübeck | 34 (3) |
1999-2001 | FC St. Pauli | 46 (3) |
2001-2003 | Werder Bremen | 10 (1) |
2003 | 1. FC Union Berlin | 15 (1) |
2003-2004 | Werder Bremen | 4 (0) |
2004-2005 | MSV Duisburg | 28 (0) |
2005-2007 | Red and white food | 50 (8) |
2007-2009 | Eintracht Braunschweig | 15 (2) |
2009-2010 | BSV Ölper 2000 | 5 (0) |
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
2009-2010 | BSV Ölper 2000 | |
since 2011 | SSV Didderse | |
1 Only league games are given. |
Holger Wehlage (born July 3, 1976 in Meppen im Emsland ) is a former German soccer player with 14 Bundesliga games.
biography
The 1.79 m Wehlage played on the right side in defense or in midfield. He played a total of 14 Bundesliga games and scored one goal. There are also 118 games in the 2nd Bundesliga, in which he scored five goals. In the UI Cup Wehlage had a commitment to Werder Bremen. He began his career at SV Meppen , where he played until 1998, initially in the youth, the last two years in the 2nd Bundesliga , but could not prevail.
In 1999 he moved to VfB Lübeck in the Regionalliga-Nord and a year later to FC St. Pauli , where he impressed over the next two years and was able to play his way into the field of vision of larger clubs. For the 2001/02 season Wehlage moved to Werder Bremen . A broken tibia before the change made it difficult to get used to it. For the second half of the 2002/03 season Wehlage was loaned to the then second division club Union Berlin , where he was a regular. But even after his return to Bremen he was unable to assert himself at Werder. At the beginning of the 2003/04 season he was briefly on the move to the starting eleven, but then only played five competitive games for Werder Bremen, in which he was usually substituted shortly before the final whistle. As a substitute, he was German champion and DFB Cup winner with Werder Bremen this season . In 2004 Wehlage moved again to the 2nd league, this time to MSV Duisburg , where he was a regular player in the first half of the season, but in the second half of the season he barely got beyond the status of a substitute.
For the 2005/06 season Wehlage moved to the Regionalliga-Nord for the second division relegated Rot-Weiss Essen , with whom he managed to gain direct promotion in 2006. In May 2007 he signed for two years with the second division relegated Eintracht Braunschweig . After a tibia and fibula fracture, he could no longer recommend himself for the first team of the third division and played in the club's second team after the winter break of 2008/09 until the contract expired. In October 2009 he moved to the top division soccer club BSV Ölper 2000 . Since November 2009 he has been the player-coach of the first team of the BSV. In 2010/11 he switched to the Lower Saxony regional league club SSV Didderse as a coach / player coach.
Since 2010, Wehlage has been running a football school for children in Braunschweig together with ex-professional Marco Dehne .
Web links
- Holger Wehlage in the database of weltfussball.de
- Holger Wehlage in the database of transfermarkt.de
- Holger Wehlage in the database of fussballdaten.de
Individual evidence
- ↑ Holger Wehlage. In: My dream elf. September 9, 2019, accessed on September 11, 2019 (German).
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Wehlage, Holger |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German soccer player |
DATE OF BIRTH | 3rd July 1976 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Meppen |