Jörg Schwanke

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Jörg Schwanke
Personnel
birthday January 12, 1969
place of birth PeitzGDR
size 179 cm
position midfield
Juniors
Years station
1978-1981 BSG Energie Cottbus
1981-1986 BFC Dynamo
1986-1987 BSG Energie Cottbus
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1987-1991 BSG / FC Energie Cottbus 64 (2)
1991-1995 VfL Bochum 84 (2)
1995-1996 1. FC Union Berlin 31 (0)
1996-1997 LR Ahlen 29 (0)
1997-1998 SV Babelsberg 03 11 (0)
1998-2000 1. FC Union Berlin 59 (2)
2000-2001 LR Ahlen 17 (0)
2002-2002 SC Paderborn 07 2 (0)
2002-2003 Dresdner SC 15 (2)
2003-2004 BFC Dynamo 22 (4)
2004-2005 SV Babelsberg 03 31 (4)
2005-2006 1. FC Union Berlin 10 (0)
2006 1. FC Union Berlin II 4 (0)
2007 SV Germania 90 Schöneiche 11 (0)
2007-2008 RSV Waltersdorf 09 12 (?)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1990 GDR B 1 0(0)
1990 GDR 1 0(0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2009-2010 ESV Lokomotive Elstal (youngsters)
2010-2011 Club Italia 80
2011-2017 Hertha BSC (youngsters)
2017-2018 SV Empor Berlin
2018– Borussia Mönchengladbach (youngsters)
1 Only league games are given.

Jörg Schwanke (born January 12, 1969 in Peitz ) is a former German soccer player and today's coach .

Career

Born in Peitz , Schwanke began playing football in Cottbus in 1978 at BSG Energie , before he was delegated to the KJS in East Berlin at the age of twelve, where he joined the offspring of the top club BFC Dynamo for five years . In 1986 he returned to Cottbus and initially played in the junior team, for which he was banned for three months by the officials of BSG Energie for disciplinary reasons the year he returned from the BFC. In the 1987/88 season , the 19-year-old midfielder made it into the first team in the second half of the season. He made his debut in April 1988 in the second-rate league in the team of the later promoted team. In 1988/89 he played his first 13 games in the GDR league . By 1991 he came to Energie Cottbus on a total of 58 first division games, in which he was able to score two goals. His only international match for the senior national team , which he had previously made his debut for the B-Elf in spring 1990, was also the last game for the GDR-Elf . It took place on September 12, 1990 in Brussels and ended with a 2-0 victory for the GDR against Belgium . Schwanke played the entire 90 minutes in the right midfield of the team trained by Eduard Geyer .

In the summer of 1991 he left Energie Cottbus and joined the Bundesliga club VfL Bochum . In its first season at VfL, the team reached a 15th place in the table and was able to secure relegation. But just one season later, the Bochum team was out of luck and had to relegate to the 2nd Bundesliga . In the 1993/94 season, Bochum was able to dominate the second division and rose as first in the table back to the Bundesliga. However, when the following season brought relegation again, Schwanke left Bochum in 1995 for the regional division 1. FC Union Berlin .

In Berlin he became the team captain and leading player, but the club had to give him up to LR Ahlen shortly after the start of the 1996/97 season due to financial difficulties . In Ahlen, Schwanke got his salary on time, but was not happy in the Westphalian province and left the club after a year for SV Babelsberg 03 , where his old coach from Union days Karsten Heine was now on the bench. However, after Babelsberg also got financial problems, Union brought Schwanke back to Köpenick together with ex-Unioner Tom Persich in the summer of 1998 .

With his second engagement for the Unioner, Schwanke was again the captain and darling of the public. However, he failed in the 1999/2000 season with the club in the relegation for the second Bundesliga, when first VfL Osnabrück and then LR Ahlen were too strong for Union. After the missed promotion he left the club against the will of the fans and his coach Georgi Wassilew , because he had fallen out with club president Heiner Bertram. Ironically, with his ex-club Ahlen, which he had left dissatisfied two and a half years earlier, Schwanke then signed so that he could still play in the second division.

In the following years Schwanke developed into a real "wanderer" and practically changed his clubs every year. After a year and a half with little success in Ahlen (he only made 17 appearances in the second division), he played for SC Paderborn 07 for half a year before moving to Dresdner SC in 2002 . After the descent of DSC from the regional league a year later, Schwanke went back to Berlin, but this time to his youth club BFC Dynamo. With the BFC, Schwanke won the championship and promotion to the NOFV-Oberliga in the fifth-class Association League Berlin . Nevertheless, he moved again, going to league rivals and ex-club Babelsberg 03.

At the beginning of the 2005/06 season, Schwanke finally hired for the third time in his career at 1. FC Union. His last job with the Wuhlheidern was not as successful for him as the two previous ones. Although he was appointed captain again, he only played ten games due to injuries and was even retired by the new coach Christian Schreier at the end . Thus he was no longer significantly involved in the re-emergence of the Iron in the regional league. The disputes finally escalated when Schwanke - whose contract ran until 2007 - wanted to participate in the training by court order. In the end he left Union and went to the upper division Germania 90 Schöneiche , where he moved on to RSV Waltersdorf 09 after only eleven games (without scoring) due to internal quarrels during the first half of the 2007/08 season . His former teammate Enrico Röver from Babelsberg awaited him there as a coach .

In summer 2009, through Steffen Freund's mediation, Schwanke took over the B junior team as a trainer at ESV Lokomotive Elstal . In 2010 he came back to Berlin to train the men's team from Club Italia .

From 2011 to 2017 Schwanke worked at Hertha BSC in the junior academy in various functions, as assistant to the management, junior scout, individual trainer and head trainer of the U-23, U-19, U-16. In July 2016 he took over the U-17, which he directed together with Andreas Thom . In October 2017 he switched to the Berlin division SV Empor Berlin as a coach .

Private

Schwanke is the brother of the actress and singer Momo Kohlschmidt .

statistics

  • DDR-Oberliga: 58 games / 2 goals (all for Energie Cottbus)
  • GDR League: 6/0 (all for Energie Cottbus)
  • Bundesliga: 59 games / 2 goals (all for VfL Bochum)
  • 2nd Bundesliga: 42/0 (including VfL Bochum - 25/0; LR Ahlen - 17/0)
  • Regional league: 147/4
    • 1. FC Union Berlin - 90/2
    • LR Ahlen - 29/0
    • SV Babelsberg 03-11 / 0
    • SC Paderborn 07 - 2/0
    • Dresdner SC - 15/2
  • Oberliga: 43/4
    • SV Babelsberg 03-32 / 4
    • 1. FC Union Berlin - 10/0
    • Germania Schöneiche - 11/0
  • Association League Berlin: 26/4
    • BFC Dynamo - 22/4
    • 1. FC Union Berlin II - 4/0
  • State League Brandenburg South: 12 /? (all for RSV Waltersdorf)

literature

  • Andreas Baingo, Michael Hohlfeld: Soccer selection player of the GDR. The encyclopedia. Sportverlag, Berlin 2000, ISBN 3-328-00875-6 , p. 166.
  • Michael Peter: The way to the west. A contribution to the German-German (soccer) understanding. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2001, ISBN 3-89784-176-2 , page 378.
  • 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 , p. 465.
  • Michael Peter: Ballack, Sammer & Co. How football Germany benefited from reunification . AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2012. ISBN 978-3-89784-398-1 , pages 367-369.
  • Hanns Leske : The GDR league players. A lexicon. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2014, ISBN 978-3-89784-392-9 , p. 492.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Matthias Arnhold: Jörg Schwanke - Matches and Goals in Oberliga . RSSSF . June 9, 2017. Retrieved June 9, 2017.
  2. ^ Matthias Arnhold: Jörg Schwanke - International Appearances . RSSSF . June 9, 2017. Retrieved June 9, 2017.
  3. Jens Weinreich: "Debt burden" article in the Berliner Zeitung of October 5, 1996.
  4. Michael Jahn and Matthias Wolf: "The Odyssey of Jörg Schwanke is over" Article in the Berliner Zeitung of August 13, 1998.
  5. Michael Jahn: "Still does not fluctuate" Article in the Berliner Zeitung of May 15, 2000.
  6. Matthias Wolf: “Lawyers in a duel” article in the Berliner Zeitung of September 16, 2006.
  7. Rainer Rosenthal: “Noch 'ne Schippe drauf!” Article in the Märkische Allgemeine on February 9, 2008.
  8. Axel Eifert: Jörg Schwanke is training the B-Juniors in the new season. In: Märkische Allgemeine . June 26, 2009. Retrieved July 21, 2009 .
  9. Ex-professional Jörg Schwanke new trainer of SV Empor. In: Berlin Football Week. fussball-woche.de, October 13, 2017, accessed on October 14, 2017 .
  10. ^ "Oberliga Nordost Nord 2004/05; SV Babelsberg 03; Players used “ Statistics on www.diefussballecke.de .
  11. ^ "Oberliga Nordost Nord 2006/07; Germania Schöneiche; Players used “ Statistics on www.diefussballecke.de
  12. ^ "Landesliga Süd Brandenburg 2007/08; Detailed player statistics; Jörg Schwanke “ Statistics on www.vfb-hohenleipisch.de .