Klaus Taube

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Klaus Taube
Personnel
birthday October 18, 1935
place of birth BreslauGerman Empire
position attack
Juniors
Years station
0000-1951 FSV Hansa 07 Berlin
1951-1953 Hertha BSC
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1953-1961 Hertha BSC 146 (78)
Lichtenberg 47
0000-1974 SG unit Pankow
1 Only league games are given.

Klaus Taube (born October 18, 1935 in Breslau ) is a former German football player .

Club career

Klaus Taube first played in the youth team at FSV Hansa 07 Berlin , before moving to Hertha BSC in 1951 at the age of 16 .

When Hertha played second class for the first time in club history after relegation in 1953, Taube was appointed to the first team's squad for the first time by trainer Paul Gelhaar . In the amateur league in Berlin Taube scored 14 goals in 23 appearances, which was only exceeded by Helmut Faeder's 19 goals this season. At the end of the season, Hertha was able to relegate BFC Südring to second place due to the direct comparison. The championship allowed Hertha to take part in the 1954 German Amateur Championship. After Horst Thiel , who scored five times, Taube was again the second most accurate Herthaner with four hits. However, even he could not prevent the end in the group stage. After the recovery, Hertha managed sovereignly to stay in the league season 1954/55 . Klaus Taube became Hertha’s top scorer for the first time with eight goals this season. 1955/56 Taube helped his club to stay up with seven goals this season. In 1956/57 Klaus Taube scored a goal on the last day of the game in the championship duel against Tennis Borussia . By winning the title, Hertha BSC was allowed to take part in the final round of the 1957 German Championship . There, however, they already got under the wheels in the opening game against 1. FC Kaiserslautern with 1:14 and also in the games against Kickers Offenbach and Borussia Dortmund the Berliners were left behind. In 1957/58 Taube could only score four goals and Hertha could not confirm the previous year's performance with sixth place. But things went better again in the following season . So Taube scored twelve goals this season and Hertha was able to take third place. For the 1959/60 season , Hanne Sobek was the new Hertha coach. Taube lost his regular place under him and only played every second game, but was still able to score seven goals. In the end, however, Hertha was missing a point for winning the title, which Tasmania was able to secure. In 1960/61 Hertha was then champion ahead of the Tasmanians. Taube only played eleven games, but scored twelve goals, five of them on the last two game days against Wacker 04 and BFC Viktoria 89 . With the Berlin championship, Hertha qualified for the final round of the German championship for the first time in four years . There Taube played five of the six group games. Hertha could not keep up with the competition and ended the group stage in last place. Only one victory at 1. FC Köln succeeded, in which Taube had already taken the lead after six minutes.

After the Berlin Wall was built in 1961 , Taube, who lived in East Berlin , could no longer play for Hertha, which is based in West Berlin . Due to his West Berlin past, Klaus Taube then had no opportunity to play for a large club in East Berlin, but instead played for Lichtenberg 47 and Einheit Pankow , where he ended his career in 1974.

Selection career

Due to his strong performance in the club, Klaus Taube was also appointed to the city selection of West Berlin.

successes

swell

  • Hardy Grüne , Lorenz Knieriem: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 8: Player Lexicon 1890–1963. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2006, ISBN 3-89784-148-7 .
  • Harald Tragmann, Harald Voß: The Hertha Compendium. 2., revised. and exp. Edition. Harald Voß, Berlin 2002, ISBN 3-935759-05-3 .

Individual evidence

  1. a b Jutta Braun, René Wiese: Hertha's point division. In Tagesspiegel. August 12, 2011
  2. a b c Jutta Braun: Sports city Berlin during the Cold War. Prestige struggles and system competition . Ch. Links Verlag, 2006, ISBN 978-3-86153-399-3 , p. 141 ff .
  3. Ludwig Rosenzweig: Ha, Ho, He, Hertha BSC . Copress-Verlag, Munich 1971, ISBN 978-3-926983-07-7 , pp. 89 .