Klaus Mirwald

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Klaus Mirwald
Personnel
birthday September 11, 1968
position Defense
Juniors
Years station
0000-1980 Spfr. Stuttgart
1980-1987 VfB Stuttgart
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1986-1991 VfB Stuttgart amateurs 23 (0)
1987-1991 VfB Stuttgart 25 (1)
1991-1993 1. FC Pforzheim 43 (3)
1993-1995 VfR Pforzheim
1995-1996 SV Sandhausen 27 (2)
1996-1998 SSV Reutlingen 05 56 (1)
1999 SSV Ulm 1846 7 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2003-2005 SpVgg 07 Ludwigsburg
1 Only league games are given.

Klaus Mirwald (born September 11, 1968 ) is a former German soccer player who briefly worked as a soccer coach.

Athletic career

Mirwald came to VfB Stuttgart as a teenager from Sportfreunde Stuttgart . The young talent - he won the silver medal in the 1985 World Cup with the German U16 team and played all six games - made his debut in the 1986/87 season for the amateur team of VfB in the adult division when he was in the third-class Oberliga Baden-Württemberg ran up. In the following season he was promoted to the professional squad, on October 9, 1987 he made his debut in the game against Bayer 05 Uerdingen in the Bundesliga - he scored his only professional goal with the goal to make it 5-2. At the same time, he still played for the amateur team, with which he was relegated to the Württemberg Association League in 1988 . Due to two torn cruciate ligaments , Mirwald played his last Bundesliga game for Stuttgart in November 1988, in 1991 he finally ended his professional career and moved to the ambitious 1. FC Pforzheim in the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg.

Under coach Manfred Krafft and his successors Jürgen Geigle and Gerd Störzer , however, the club slipped into the middle of the table, Mirwald played almost two thirds of the season's games alongside players such as Steffen Menze , Rainer Widmayer , Guido Streichsbier and Wolfgang Fisel . In the 1993/94 season he moved to local rivals VfR Pforzheim , sponsored by patron Peter Häberle , where other ex-first and second division professionals such as Manfred Kastl , Thomas Siegmund , Jürgen Schmidt , Jörg Wolff and Marc Rapp were under contract and the himself Menze and Fisel also joined. When the regional league was introduced as the new third-highest division at the end of the season, the team, which had only been promoted to the major league in 1992, missed qualification in the final standings despite a fifth place in the table - Mirwald had contributed to this with a goal in 23 games, as the results have been in the determination since 1991 of the participants. In the Oberliga season 1994/95 a second place in the table behind SV Sandhausen was enough to participate in the relegation round to the Regionalliga Süd . After a clear 4-0 win over SpVgg Bayreuth in the first round game, the Badeners met the amateur team from Eintracht Frankfurt , in the Hardtwald Stadium in Sandhausen , the future professional Matthias Hagner was match winner with three goals and led the Hessians with a 3-1 -Success in the regional league.

After the missed regional league participation, the VfR Pforzheim, plagued by financial problems, withdrew its competition team from the league, Mirwald then joined the regional league promoted SV Sandhausen, for whom he kicked the ball for one season. After the direct relegation he moved on to SSV Reutlingen 05 within the league . Under coach Martin Hägele , the club qualified as third in the table of the Regionalliga Süd 1996/97 for the German amateur championship 1997 , when winning the title through a 2-1 final win over Rot-Weiß Oberhausen , he was not used. In January 1999, the defender moved to SSV Ulm 1846 for 130,000 D-Marks , where he had seven missions in the 2nd Bundesliga . There he ended his active career.

In the summer of 2003, Mirwald took over the coaching position at SpVgg 07 Ludwigsburg . After a bad start to the season, he resigned from his position in 2005.

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