Jürgen Jendrossek

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Jürgen Jendrossek (born February 24, 1948 in Berlin ) is a former German soccer player . From 1966 to 1972, the offensive player played a total of 82 league games and scored 18 goals in the Bundesliga for clubs 1. FC Köln and Arminia Bielefeld . At the NEC Nijmegen Jendrossek scored 23 goals in 63 league games in the first-class Eredivisie in the two rounds from 1969 to 1971. In his second season 1973/74 at SG Wattenscheid 09 , the offensive midfielder / striker won the championship in the second -rate regional football league West . In 34 league games he scored 24 goals for the western champions.

career

Start in the Bundesliga, Eredivisie, Bielefeld

For the 1966/67 season, Jürgen Jendrossek, who came from the FC youth team, started his professional career at 1. FC Köln , as did Karl-Heinz Struth and Heinz Flohe (Euskirchen) . Externally, President Franz Kremer's club signed goalkeeper Milutin Šoškić and right-winger Roger Magnusson for the new coach Willi Multhaup's squad . The offensive talent proved his qualification for the Bundesliga in 19 appearances with five goals and the FC took seventh place. In the second Multhaup year, 1967/68, the competition was intensified by the newcomers Carl-Heinz Rühl and Heinz Simmet . In the Bundesliga, the team improved to fourth place and Jendrossek had scored three goals in 15 league appearances. 1. FC Köln celebrated the real success in the DFB-Pokal . After victories over FC Homburg (4: 1), Eintracht Frankfurt (1: 1 n.V .; replay 1: 0 by Jendrossek), Eintracht Braunschweig (2: 1) and a 3: 0 in the semifinals in front of 53,000 spectators in Cologne Borussia Dortmund was Cologne in the final. Jendrossek formed the victorious attack against Dortmund with Johannes Löhr and Heinz Hornig . In the final, Rühl stormed in his place and FC beat VfL Bochum 4-1. But the season was overshadowed by the death of President Kremer in November 1967. Jendrossek came under Multhaup's successor Hans Merkle in the 1968/69 season on 19 missions with three goals. In the table, however, the FC fell to 13th place. In goal represented Paul Heyeres (21 games) and Rolf Birkhölzer (12 games) with little success the injured goalkeeper Soskic (2 missions). In the European Cup Winners' Cup , Jendrossek made five appearances with a goal against ADO Den Haag, Randers Freja and in the second leg against FC Barcelona, ​​which the Catalans won 4-1 and threw FC out of the race in the semi-finals.

After he had played 69 games for 1. FC by 1969, Jendrossek left the billy goats and joined the NEC Nijmegen in the Eredivisie for two years . In two rounds, the man from Cologne played 63 league games for the Goffertstadion team and scored 23 goals. In the 1970/71 season he only failed in the semi-finals of the KNVB Cup with 0-2 at Ajax Amsterdam .

In the 1971/72 season he returned to the Bundesliga with Arminia Bielefeld . Bielefeld went through a round that was shaped more by the consequences of the Bundesliga scandal than by the sporting performance in the league. On February 19, 1972, Arminia was sentenced by a sports court ruling by the DFB for proven manipulation in five cases to relegation to the top amateur league. All games of the team in the current BL round were counted for the opponent. In the appeal hearing on April 20, the forced relegation to the Regionalliga West was softened, but provided with a mortgage of 10 minus points.

In addition to Jendrossek, Dieter Burdenski (goalkeeper), Gerd Kasperski , Georg Damjanoff , Roland Stegmayer and Peter Loof also signed a contract with DSC for the 1971/72 season. Under coach Egon Piechaczek , Bielefeld started the round on August 14, 1971 with a 0-1 home defeat against Rot-Weiß Oberhausen. Jendrossek formed the Arminen midfield with Gerd Knoth and Ulrich Braun . The first double point win came on September 11th with a 1-0 home win against VfB Stuttgart, where Jendrossek scored the winning goal in the 34th minute. The first half of the season ended after 17 matchdays with 9:25 points in 16th place. On January 28, 1972, the Dutchman Jan Notermans took over as coach. At the end of the round, Jendrossek had scored seven goals for Bielefeld in 29 Bundesliga games. For the round 1972/73 he joined the SG Wattenscheid 09 in the second-class football regional league West.

Regionalliga West and 2nd Bundesliga, 1972 to 1981

In the Lohrheidestadion team , largely supported by entrepreneur Klaus Steilmann , Jendrossek experienced the last two rounds of the old second-rate Regionalliga West. In the first year, 1972/73, the newcomer came on 32 missions and scored 13 goals, the SG finished fifth. On the first round match day, July 30, 1972, Wattenscheid had lost the home game against Sportfreunde Siegen with 0-2. With coach Friedhelm Schulte the two following games were also lost, so that from the seventh game day (October 1, 1972; 2-0 against Erkenschwick) Karl-Heinz Feldkamp took over the training management in the Lohrheide. In the last season of the second-rate regional league, 1973/74, a three-way battle for the championship developed between Wattenscheid, RW Oberhausen and Bayer Uerdingen. Jendrossek played an outstanding round: the technician, combined footballer and goalscorer in one person completed all 34 round matches and scored 24 goals. Behind Manfred Burgsmüller (29) and Lothar Kobluhn (25) he finished third in the West goalscorer list. Much more important was winning the championship with the SG 09. With one point ahead of RW Oberhausen, the Steilmann team decided the championship race in its favor. The master's offensive was largely determined by Jendrossek and Hannes Bongartz (34-18). Other valuable opponents in the offensive game were Ewald Hammes (33-16), Helmut Horsch (34-7), Detlef Rosellen (23-1) and Wolfgang Schmitt (26-13). The West Champion started the BL promotion round with a 3-2 away win against favorites Eintracht Braunschweig. Two defeats against 1. FC Nürnberg prevented success in the promotion round; Braunschweig prevailed over the tied Nürnbergers and returned to the Bundesliga. Jendrossek had scored two goals in seven promotion games. After two years with 66 regional league games and 37 goals, Jendrossek and Wattenscheid began the new 2nd Bundesliga in the 1974/75 season . The hoped-for breakthrough did not come in the first two rounds with seventh ((1974/75) or eighth (1975/76) rank with the SG, in the third year the Steilmann team even slipped to 15th place after 76 games In the 2nd Bundesliga with 31 goals, Jendrossek ended his activity at Wattenscheid in the summer of 1977 and returned to Viktoria in his hometown of Cologne .

With the black-and-white-reds from Viktoria, he became champion in the amateur league Mittelrhein in 1977/78 and prevailed with his team in the promotion games against rivals DSC Wanne-Eickel, VfL Wolfsburg and SC Göttingen 05 and rose to 2. Bundesliga North. In the first year, 1978/79, he managed to stay in the league with Viktoria (32:44 points) and teammates such as goalkeeper Horst Holubeck , Manfred Kreis , Hermann Bredenfeld , Bernhard Hermes , Kurt Pinkall and Klaus Czizewski in 16th place. Promotion coach Fritz Pott was replaced by Ernst-Günter Habig in March 1979 . In the second year, 1979/80 , Jendrossek ran in 33 league games and scored eleven goals. Viktoria Köln made it to fourth place with 46:30 points. The newcomers Bernd Helmschrot (goalkeeper), Roland Mall , Frank-Michael Schonert , Wolfgang Lüttges and Burkhard Segler contributed significantly to this . Local rivals SC Fortuna Köln were relegated to sixth place with one point ahead . The 1980/81 season was the last round of the two-tier 2. Bundesliga; Viktoria Köln came 11th in a season of 22 and was therefore not qualified for the single-track 2. Bundesliga from 1981/82. After 83 second division games with 18 goals for Viktoria Köln, the 33-year-old Jendrossek ended his professional career in the summer of 1981 and became an amateur player at FC Pesch in Cologne.

statistics

societies

Games and goals

successes

  • 1968 DFB Cup winner
  • 1974 Champion Regionalliga West with SG Wattenscheid 09

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 .
  • Thomas Hardt, Thomas Hohndorf, Bruno Morbitzer, Hubert Dahlkamp, ​​Hardy Grüne: Hennes & Co. The history of 1. FC Cologne. Publishing house Die Werkstatt. Göttingen 2005. ISBN 3-89533-470-7 .
  • Ulrich Homann (Hrsg.): Hellfire on Ascension. The history of the promotion rounds to the Bundesliga 1963–1974. Klartext, Essen 1990, ISBN 3-88474-346-5 .
  • Matthias Weinrich: Second League Almanac. All players. All clubs. All results. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2001, ISBN 3-89784-190-8 .