Kay-Uwe Jendrossek

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Kay-Uwe Jendrossek (born October 25, 1971 in Leipzig ) is a former German soccer player who spent most of his career at Chemnitzer FC and Erzgebirge Aue . He is currently the coach of the upper division Chemnitzer FC II.

Athletic career

Kay-Uwe Jendrossek began his career in the south of Leipzig, where he initially played for the BSG activist Espenhain and the BSV Borna . For a short time he moved to Probstheida for 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig , but was ultimately unable to establish himself in the club. After a stopover at FC Bayern Hof , the midfielder joined FC Sachsen Leipzig . In Leutzsch, Jendrossek was able to assert himself as a regular player in the regional league, whereupon the league rivals Chemnitzer FC signed him in 1996 .

Jendrossek had his most successful sporting period in Chemnitz. Although the CFC had just been relegated, he returned to the 2nd Bundesliga in 1999 . In the next two seasons he was an integral part of the Himmelblauen team , and he won the Saxony Cup in 1997 and 1998 . After the CFC's relegation in 2001, Jendrossek moved to local rivals Erzgebirge Aue, where he was active for a total of three seasons. Analogous to Chemnitz, he also made promotion to the 2nd Bundesliga with Erzgebirge Aue. In April 2004 he was suspended for six games because a drug containing cortisone was detected during a doping control . In the 2004/05 season he no longer played a role in coach Gerd Schädlich's plans .

Jendrossek then moved back to Gellertstrasse , but only made six appearances due to an injury. In the 2005/06 season he was still part of the squad, but ended his career prematurely as a sports invalid due to a knee injury. He has been coaching the club's second team since 2008, but alongside Torsten Bittermann is also part of the third division team's coaching team.

Stations

statistics

  • 2. Bundesliga: 58 appearances (3 goals)
  • Regionalliga North / Northeast: 112 appearances (4 goals)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Doping in football - from cortisone to cannabis www.sueddeutsche.de February 22, 2009