Jens Duve

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Duve (2015)

Jens Duve (born September 25, 1962 in Hamburg ) is a former German soccer player . The defender played for Hamburger SV and FC St. Pauli in the Bundesliga .

Career

Duve played in his youth with Viktoria Harburg and the Harburger TB , as well as the SC Concordia from 1907 , where he ran alongside Frank Neubarth , and the SC Urania Hamburg . After completing his service in the German Armed Forces , he did an apprenticeship as a banker and played at the same time for the amateur club Hummelsbütteler SV . In 1985 he joined Hamburger SV, for which he came to six Bundesliga games in the 1985/86 season . Duve was considered a hopeful talent. Since he couldn't get past players like Ditmar Jakobs , Gérard Plessers or Michael Schröder , the club awarded him to the second-rate local rivals FC St. Pauli in the following season from November.

With the Kiezklub, Duve only missed promotion to the Bundesliga in the relegation games against FC 08 Homburg . There he convinced in his 20 league games until the end of the season, so that the club signed him as an exchange object for coach Willi Reimann , who was poached by HSV. At the side of Klaus Thomforde , Rüdiger Wenzel , André Trulsen and André Golke , he was one of the guarantors for promotion to the Bundesliga in the following season. As team captain, regular player and leader, he reached tenth place in the table with the team at the end of the Bundesliga season in 1988/89 . After this season he was voted into the Kicker Elf of the year. At the age of 29, Duve had to end his professional career in 1991 because of two torn cruciate ligaments in his left knee. By then he had played 55 Bundesliga and 49 second division games.

Parallel to his active career, he studied business administration at the University of Hamburg .

In the 1993/94 season Duve worked briefly as a coach at VfL 93 Hamburg in the Oberliga Nord , but withdrew from the engagement after almost six months. Helmut Schulte later tried to sign him as the successor to the dismissed St. Pauli coach Uli Maslo , but the plan was not carried out, and Klaus-Peter Nemet took over the coaching post in April 1997.

During his rehabilitation stays because of knee injuries, Duve discovered his interest in this area and opened rehabilitation centers in Wandsbek and Harburg in 1992 together with an orthopedic surgeon, which he managed for the following twelve years. He then teamed up with the Damp Group to get involved in outpatient rehabilitation. Duve founded a joint company with the group, which is still working successfully today.

In addition to his business activities in the Damp group, he took care of the development of an MVZ network. After the steam group was bought by Helios , Europe's largest private clinic operator, in 2013 , Duve shifted its activities to projects in the health sector and the like. a. with Helios and Vamed , both of whom belong to the Fresenius Group.

Examples of this project work are the establishment of China Medical Transfer (CMT) and other activities with Helios in China.

From 2010 to 2014 he was one of the Vice Presidents of FC St. Pauli . Duve and his colleagues from the Presidency played a key role in the construction of the new Millerntor stadium .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Eleven of the day | 33rd matchday | Bundesliga 1988/89. Retrieved October 11, 2019 (German).
  2. Wolfgang Horch: Jens Duve - restarted after an accident. March 7, 2013, accessed on October 11, 2019 (German).
  3. Playmaker in rehab. Retrieved October 11, 2019 .
  4. Jens Duve. Retrieved October 11, 2019 (German).
  5. ^ Casemanagement Reha GmbH, Hamburg. Retrieved October 11, 2019 .
  6. 郑 栅 洁 会见 德国 医疗 代表团 一行 赫里奥斯 医疗 集团 海外 医疗 转诊 中国 区 总部 拟 落户 宁波. Retrieved October 11, 2019 .
  7. [1]
  8. ^ Buttje Rosenfeld: Vice President Jens Duve: St. Pauli: "We make our stars ourselves". January 21, 2013, accessed on October 11, 2019 (German).
  9. Pauli Vice Jens Duve, called the "boss": "I'm not the smart guy here". Retrieved October 11, 2019 .
  10. Jens Duve in an interview on Rachid Azzouzi. Retrieved October 11, 2019 (German).