Jörg Stübner
Jörg Stübner | ||
In a game scene on the ball (1990)
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Personnel | ||
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birthday | July 23, 1965 | |
place of birth | Freiberg , GDR | |
date of death | June 24, 2019 | |
Place of death | Dresden , Germany | |
size | 173 cm | |
position | midfield | |
Juniors | ||
Years | station | |
1973-1979 | BSG Motor Hall | |
1979-1983 | SG Dynamo Dresden | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
1983-1993 | SG / 1. FC Dynamo Dresden | 182 (14) |
1988 | SG Dynamo Dresden II | 2 | (0)
1993 | FC Sachsen Leipzig | 6 | (1)
1994 | FC Neubrandenburg | 1 | (0)
National team | ||
Years | selection | Games (goals) |
1980-1982 | DDR U-16 | 9 | (1)
1982-1983 | GDR U-18 | 14 | (2)
1983-1985 | DDR U-21 | 10 | (2)
1984-1990 | GDR | 47 | (1)
1 Only league games are given. |
Jörg Stübner (born July 23, 1965 in Freiberg ; † June 24, 2019 in Dresden ) was a German football player . He played 47 times for the GDR national team .
Career
societies
Born in the Karl-Marx-Stadt district , Sachse began playing football in 1973 at BSG Motor Halle and was delegated to SG Dynamo Dresden in 1979 , where he, having outgrown the youth division, started 14 goals as a midfielder in 177 GDR league games from 1983 onwards lap. With Dresden, Stübner was twice champion (1988/89 and 1989/90) and three times FDGB cup winner . In the 1988/89 season , the team reached the semi-finals of a European cup competition for the first time, but failed in the semi-finals at VfB Stuttgart . In total, Stübner played 29 European Cup games in which he was able to score two goals. After the fall of the Wall, Stübner really wanted to stay in Dresden and turned down lucrative offers. However, he did not succeed in building on his old achievements. Thrown back several times due to injuries, he only played five games in the 1st Bundesliga . Alcohol problems finally led to his resignation by Dynamo in the summer of 1993. Eduard Geyer then brought him to FC Sachsen Leipzig . But neither this engagement nor the following guest appearances at FC Neubrandenburg and SV Eresburg-Obermarsberg (under his former teammate Matthias Döschner ) were of long duration; later comeback attempts at VfL Pirna-Copitz or VfB Sangerhausen also failed.
National team
Stübner made his first documented selection steps in the GDR youth national team in the early 1980s. With this he failed in the intermediate round of the U-16 EM in 1982 on the West German counterpart . As an 18-year-old, the talented Dynamo player was on the field for the East German U-21 team after 14 international junior matches in autumn 1983 .
After eight appearances in the youth team, he made his way to the GDR senior national team , in which Stübner played 47 games until they left in September 1990. In the World Cup qualifier against Luxembourg (5-0) on November 17, 1984, he made his debut for the senior national team. He played his last selection game on September 12, 1990 in a 2-0 away win against Belgium in Brussels; it was the last A international match of the GDR national team. In addition to 30 international friendly matches, Stübner was also present in twelve World Cup and five European Championship qualifying games, where he missed the final round with the selection of the GDR in 1986 and 1990 ( soccer world championship ) as well as in 1988 ( soccer European championship ). He scored his only goal on April 13, 1988 in a friendly against the Bulgarian national team (1-1) in Burgas .
Others
Jörg Stübner trained to be a machine and system fitter. With the sporting and social consequences of the time of reunification and life in the reunified Germany , he got along worse than many of his former teammates from the dynamo heyday at the end of the 1980s. Without the usual support from the club and without a consultant, Stübner failed to meet the requirements of all-German professional football. He was also not up to the social challenges and increasingly struggled with health and social difficulties.
He lived in Dresden and died there on June 24, 2019.
literature
- German sport echo : born 1982–1990. ISSN 0323-8628
- Uwe Karte: STÜBNER - Pop star against his will . Sportfrei Verlag, 2019, ISBN 978-3-00063-003-3
- Hanns Leske : Encyclopedia of GDR football . Verlag Die Werkstatt, Göttingen 2007, ISBN 978-3-89533-556-3 , p. 479.
- Andreas Baingo , Michael Horn: The History of the GDR Oberliga . Verlag Die Werkstatt, Göttingen 2004, ISBN 3-89533-428-6 , p. 306.
- Klaus Querengässer: Football in the GDR 1945–1989, part 4 . Verlag Agon, Kassel 1977, ISBN 978-3897841024 .
Web links
- Jörg Stübner in the database of the German Football Association
- Jörg Stübner in the database of weltfussball.de
- Jörg Stübner in the database of National-Football-Teams.com (English)
- Matthias Arnhold: Jörg Stübner - Matches and Goals in Oberliga. In: RSSSF.com . April 15, 2015 .
- Death at the age of 53: the tragic story of the GDR national player Jörg Stübner. In: Spiegel Online . June 25, 2019.
- Sven Geisler: Dresden's lost football son. In: Saxon newspaper . September 24, 2010, archived from the original on June 10, 2015 .
Individual evidence
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↑ a b Markus Völker: From the slow disappearance of the footballer Jörg Stübner. In: Berliner Zeitung . November 14, 2003, accessed May 14, 2019 . Lars Gartenschläger: On the way to becoming a world star - and now a social case. In: Welt Online . September 13, 2015, accessed May 14, 2019 .
- ↑ Jörg Stübner died at the age of 53. In: DNN.de . June 25, 2019, accessed June 25, 2019 .
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Stübner, Jörg |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German soccer player |
DATE OF BIRTH | July 23, 1965 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Freiberg |
DATE OF DEATH | June 24, 2019 |
Place of death | Dresden |