Klaus Fick

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Klaus Fick (born August 24, 1930 ) was a soccer player in the Oberliga , the top soccer division of the East German sports committee . There he played for the company sports club (BSG) Motor Wismar .

Athletic career

At the beginning of the 1950s, the brothers Ernst and Klaus Fick were active in Wismar football , Klaus was five years younger than him. While Ernst Fick has been working for SG Wismar Süd since 1948played, his brother Klaus only joined the successor association BSG Motor in 1951 at the age of 21. It was the second football season after 1949/50 in which the Wismar team were represented in the East German league. In the 1951/52 season, which ran over 36 point games, Klaus Fick played in 26 games between the 5th and 36th matchday. His regular position was on the right attacking side, and with his eight goals he was the third top scorer in the Ostseestädter. The BSG played from the start only to stay up, but gambled it away with 22 defeats and had to relegate to the second-rate GDR league at the end of the season .

In the GDR league season 1952/53, Klaus Fick rose to become an unrestricted regular in the Wismar team. He played all 24 point games again as a right winger and was again the third best scorer with eleven goals. With six points behind the season winner Einheit Ost Leipzig, BSG Motor missed the rise as second in the table, so that Klaus Fick should play another year in Wismar in the second division. 1953/54 was his last season at Motor Wismar, in which he only played the first three point games with the first team. The last game was the encounter Motor Wismar - Chemie Glauchau (0: 1) on October 4, 1953. Before that, he had scored one goal in each of the two games.

In his three years Klaus Fick played 53 point games for the first team of BSG Motor Wismar, 26 of them in the top division. He scored a total of 21 goals, eight in the league.

footnote

  1. according to http://www.ralman.de/fussball-fg48-49.htm , written by Baingo / Horn "Viek"

literature

  • Andreas Baingo, Michael Horn: The History of the GDR Oberliga. Verlag Die Werkstatt, Göttingen 2003, ISBN 3-89533-428-6 (in addition to the misspelled name, the number of league games given is also incorrect).