Joachim Ziesche

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Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR  Joachim Ziesche Ice hockey player
IIHF Hall of Fame , 1999
Date of birth July 3, 1939
place of birth Dresden , German Empire
size 193 cm
Weight 91 kg
position striker
Shot hand Right
Career stations
1952-1957 BSG unit Berlin Bear
1957-1958 SC unit Berlin
1958-1970 SC Dynamo Berlin
GermanyGermany  Joachim Ziesche
Coaching stations
1970-1990 SC Dynamo Berlin
1970-1976 GDR national team
1980-1990 GDR national team
1992-1993 SC Riessersee
1994-1995 Polar bears Berlin

Joachim Ziesche (born July 3, 1939 in Dresden ) is a former German ice hockey player (striker) and coach . With the national ice hockey team of the GDR , he took part as a player in a total of nine world championships and the 1968 Winter Olympics. After the end of his career, he was GDR national coach and head coach of SC Dynamo Berlin until 1990 . As a player and coach of SC Dynamo Berlin , he was a GDR champion a total of 15 times .

Career

Joachim Ziesche started ice hockey in 1952 (or 1954) with the BSG unit Berliner Bär . In 1957 he was delegated to SC Dynamo Berlin , for which he played until 1970, scoring 284 goals and 370 scorer points in 179 games. Particularly noteworthy were his eight goals in one game (two times) and a total of 44 hat tricks over the course of his career. In 1963 he received a contract offer from the National Hockey League - a move abroad was not approved by the GDR Ice Hockey Association. With Dynamo Berlin he was a GDR champion as a player in 1966 , 1967 and 1968 .

As a player, he was consistently one of the most successful goal scorers ( top scorers ) in international tournaments. Ziesche played 197 international matches for the GDR . As a player, he took part in eight A World Championships and one B World Cup, and in 1968 at the Winter Olympics in Grenoble . In 1966 he won the bronze medal of the European ice hockey championship - which was subsequently awarded - with the GDR .

After his active career, he coached SC Dynamo Berlin from 1970 to 1989 and won 12 championships with his team. He was also head coach of the GDR national team from 1970 to 1976 (together with Klaus Hirche ) and 1980 to 1990 (together with Hartmut Nickel ). Further coaching stations were the SC Riessersee in the 1992/93 season and, from December 1994, the Eisbären Berlin as successor to Jaroslav Walter .

Honors

In June 1970 Joachim Ziesche was awarded the honorary title of Honored Master of Sport in Berlin . His jersey number has been hanging under the roof of the Berlin Wellblechpalast since 2004 . For his services in sport he was honored in 1990 with the admission into the Hall of Fame Germany and in 1999 with the admission into the IIHF Hall of Fame .

His son Steffen Ziesche is also a former ice hockey player (striker).

Individual evidence

  1. Polar bears pay tribute to Ziesche, Peters, Frenzel and Bielke. In: hockeyweb.de. Retrieved June 27, 2019 .
  2. Ice hockey: An ice hockey icon turns 70. In: Focus Online . July 3, 2009, accessed June 27, 2019 .
  3. Eisbären Berlin celebrate 50 years of the 1st championship. In: eishockey-magazin.de. January 20, 2016, accessed June 27, 2019 .
  4. ^ IIHF Honor Roll: Joachim Ziesche. In: legendsofhockey.net. Retrieved June 27, 2019 .
  5. ^ Gunnar Leue: Later triumph in the GDR: After 33 years, ice hockey teams get their bronze medals. In: taz.de . July 17, 1999, accessed June 27, 2019 .
  6. High honor for athletes - honorary titles "Honored Master of Sports" and "Master of Sports" awarded. In: New Germany . Archives of the Berlin State Library, June 30, 1970, accessed on March 14, 2013 .
  7. ^ Ziesche in the Hall of Fame , Berliner Zeitung , September 7, 1999
  8. Klaus Wolf: A Place of Honor in Toronto , Berliner Zeitung, September 22, 1999

Web links