Jaro Deppe

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Jaro Deppe (born April 10, 1948 in Braunschweig ) is a former German soccer player . The striker played 57 games in the Bundesliga for Eintracht Braunschweig from 1967 to 1973 , scoring 17 goals.

career

Jaro Deppe, who started playing football at SV Süd Braunschweig , played for Eintracht Braunschweig when he was young . His offensive talent led the young hopes into the youth national team of the DFB. On April 23, 1966 he stormed at the side of the teammates Horst Köppel , Rainer Budde and Hans-Jürgen Hellfritz in the attack of the DFB selection, which lost an international match against France with 0-1 goals in Turin. For the 1967/68 round - Horst Berg , Gerhard Elfert , Michael Polywka and Burkhardt Öller came to Braunschweig - he was promoted to the Bundesliga team of the reigning Bundesliga champions . He made his debut on matchday 30, April 20, 1968, in the Bundesliga under coach Helmuth Johannsen in Eintracht's 4-2 win against Borussia Neunkirchen alongside Horst Wolter , Lothar Ulsaß , Joachim Bäse , Klaus Gerwien and Hans- Georg Dulz . In the Bundesliga Chronicle 1967/68 it is noted on his debut:

Especially the debut of the young Deppe was very impressive. With his great start and his courageous duels, the boy therefore also received special praise from his mentor: "Immediately Deppe met all expectations. Here we have a very talented young striker who promises a lot. "

Three days after his Bundesliga debut, he was also used by coach Johannsen in the DFB Cup replay on April 23 at 1. FC Köln. Eintracht lost in the quarterfinals with 1: 2 goals. In the remaining games of the round, he made three more appearances and is thus led with a total of four Bundesliga appearances.

In Otto Knefler's first year as a coach , 1970/71 , he made his breakthrough as a regular player. In 30 missions he scored eleven goals and Eintracht took fourth place. Only Wolfgang Grzyb and Franz Merkhoffer played all 34 league games. In addition to Lothar Ulsaß (18) and Dietmar Erler (7), he led the internal goalscorer list. On the first day of the season, in a 3: 3 home draw against FC Schalke 04, he scored the first goal of the season. Against Borussia Dortmund (3-0 victory) and MSV Duisburg (5-0 victory) he distinguished himself as a two-time goalscorer.

In 1971 Deppe was sentenced to a fine of 4,400 DM for his involvement in the Bundesliga scandal .

From the 1971/72 season, the center forward began a streak of bad luck. Bronchitis was dragged on for months, which then resulted in several nose, jaw and throat operations. Deppe almost completely lost the two rounds in 1971/72 and 1972/73, where he only made ten league appearances with two goals.

With Eintracht he was relegated from the Bundesliga in 1973. For the championship in the 1973/74 season in the Football Regionalliga Nord , he contributed eleven goals in 19 games. Among them were three hits on January 20, 1974 in a 7-1 home win against FC St. Pauli , when Eintracht Sturm presented themselves as accurate in the line-up with Hartmut Konschal , Deppe and Dietmar Erler. In the following round of promotion to the Bundesliga, he could only participate in the opening game on May 9, 1974 in the Noris against 1. FC Nuremberg. Another injury did not allow any further league appearances.

The offensive man played for Eintracht Braunschweig from 1967 to 1974 in the Bundesliga and Regionalliga Nord and played 78 league games for Eintracht, in which he scored 28 goals. 57 of them were in the 1st Bundesliga, in which he scored 17 goals. He was also used four times in the DFB Cup. Until 1976 he was still under contract with Eintracht. Under coach Branko Zebec he was only used in friendly games.

Deppe lived in the Braunschweig district of Watenbüttel and was considered one of the greatest Braunschweig talents in the post-war period.

literature

  • Jochen Döring: The way to the top. 80 years of Eintracht Braunschweig. Dasbach-Verlag. Breckenheim 1976
  • Ulrich Merk, André Schulin: Bundesliga chronicle 1967/68. Volume 5: Nuremberg's ninth championship. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2006, ISBN 3-89784-087-1 .
  • Merk, Schulin, Großmann: Bundesliga Chronicle 1970/71. Points for money. AGON Sportverlag. Kassel 2007. ISBN 978-3-89784-090-4
  • 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 .

Individual evidence

  1. Merk, Schulin, Großmann: Bundesliga Chronicle 1967/68 . P. 168
  2. Jochen Döring: The way to the top. P. 46

Web links