Klaus Fock

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Klaus Fock
Personnel
birthday July 13, 1947
place of birth HamburgGermany
size 180 cm
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
0000-1968 TuS Finkenwerder
1968-1970 Hamburger SV 25 0(5)
1970-1972 HSV Barmbek-Uhlenhorst 64 (29)
1972-1974 FC Beringen 39 0(5)
1974 VfL Osnabrück 9 0(1)
1974-1975 HSV Barmbek-Uhlenhorst 24 0(6)
1975-1976 FC St. Pauli 9 0(3)
1 Only league games are given.

Klaus Fock (born July 13, 1947 in Hamburg ) is a former German football player . From 1968 to 1970 the striker played 25 league games with Hamburger SV in the Bundesliga and scored five goals.

Career

For the 1968/69 season Fock came from TuS Finkenwerder in 1893 to Hamburger SV in the Bundesliga . In the summer of 1968, Hans-Jürgen Dringelstein , Gert Girschkowski , Robert Pötzschke , Hans-Werner Kremer , Hubert Schöll and Jürgen Seifert joined the team with the “diamond” . Under Technical Director Georg Knöpfle and trainer Kurt Koch , the attacker from Finkenwerder played 14 games in his first season in the Bundesliga and scored three goals. He made his Bundesliga debut at the start of the round on August 17, 1968, in the 0-1 defeat at Eintracht Braunschweig. Fock was substituted on 20 minutes before the end of the game. He played his 14th game on March 29, 1969 in a 3-1 home win against 1. FC Kaiserslautern. The HSV attack started with Fock, Werner Krämer , Uwe Seeler , Franz-Josef Hönig and Gert Dörfel . In the 77th minute of the game, Fock scored the goal to make it 3-1. Before that, center forward Uwe Seeler had scored two goals. In his first HSV year, he also played in the trade fair cup against Slavia Prague and in the DFB Cup against Mönchengladbach and FC Bayern Munich. Before the 1969/70 season, the attacker played international friendly matches against Feyenoord Rotterdam, FC Barcelona and Real Mallorca. Fock played his last Bundesliga game for the "Rothosen" on April 30, 1970 in the 3: 4 defeat at Borussia Mönchengladbach. He scored the next goal in the 85th minute to make it 3: 4. In addition to the two wingers Siegfried Beyer and "Charly" Dörfel, he represented the injured Uwe Seeler in the middle of the storm. With the Intertoto appearance on May 23, 1970, 1-0 success against RSC Anderlecht, Fock ended his two years at Hamburger SV. In two years he played 25 games in the Bundesliga and scored five goals. In 1970 he moved to the North Regional Football League for HSV Barmbek-Uhlenhorst .

Ernst Kreuz and Jürgen Dudda also signed contracts with the Blue-Yellows from Wilhelm-Rupprecht-Platz on Steilshooper Straße . The team of coach Eduard Preuss started with 12: 2 points in the round. With three points behind the champions VfL Osnabrück, BU finished fifth at the end of the round. At the side of the teammates like Erhard Schwerin (goalkeeper), Willi Giesemann , Horst Engel , Rolf Höfert and Harald Münster , Klaus Fock completed 31 league games and scored 14 goals. Under the new coach Reinhold Ertel , he was able to increase his record in 1971/72 to 33 games with 15 goals and BU took fourth place. In the 1-1 draw against champions FC St. Pauli, Fock scored the goal for BU on April 15, 1972. For the 1972/73 season, Fock moved to Belgium for FC Beringen after 64 regional league games with 29 goals for Barmbek-Uhlenhorst . With the Red-Blacks from the De Mijn Stadium in Flanders, he celebrated promotion to the First Division in his first season . In 1973/74 he finished 14th with Beringen. For the 1974/75 round he returned to Germany and played for VfL Osnabrück in the newly introduced 2nd Bundesliga .

He did not stay at the Bremer Brücke for a whole season; he switched to his old employer HSV Barmbek-Uhlenhorst in November 1974. Gerd-Volker Schock took over his intended role as a goalscorer at VfL under coach Klaus-Dieter Ochs with 26 goals . From the first to the ninth match day he competed for VfL, then from November he put on the blue and yellow dress from BU again. In 24 games he scored six goals, but BU was relegated from the 2nd Bundesliga. The attacker signed a new contract with FC St. Pauli for the 1975/76 season. Under coach Kurt Krause , he played his ninth game for St. Pauli on October 4, 1975 in the away game against Arminia Bielefeld. An injury from the seventh minute prematurely ended the footballing career of the aircraft construction engineer.

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