Lothar Huber

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Lothar Huber
Personnel
birthday May 5th 1952
place of birth KaiserslauternGermany
size 172 cm
position Defender
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1970-1974 1. FC Kaiserslautern 63 0(2)
1974-1987 Borussia Dortmund 330 (46)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1983 Olympic team 1 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
VfR Sölde (B-Youth)
1986-1992 Borussia Dortmund (assistant coach)
1986-1992 Borussia Dortmund (amateurs)
1992-1993 SpVg Beckum
1994-1995 STV Horst-Emscher
1996-1997 Brummell Sendai (Assistant Trainer)
1997 STV Horst-Emscher
1998-2004 SC Hassel
2004-2005 Borussia Dortmund (assistant coach)
2005-2007 TSG Sprockhövel
2007-2008 SpVgg Radevormwald
2008-2014 TSG Sprockhövel
2016– Kirchhörder SC
1 Only league games are given.

Lothar Huber (born May 5, 1952 in Kaiserslautern ) is a former German soccer player and active soccer coach .

Career as a player

The right defender began his Bundesliga career in Kaiserslautern. From 1970 to 1974 he played for 1. FC Kaiserslautern and was German vice-cup winner in the 1972 season. During this time he was appointed three times to the German national soccer team of amateurs . In 1972 Huber was supposed to be part of the Olympic selection under Jupp Derwall , but was ousted from his promised place by the surprisingly recovered Ottmar Hitzfeld , under whom he later worked as an assistant coach. In the 1974/75 season Huber moved to Borussia Dortmund in the 2nd Bundesliga . In Dortmund Huber became a regular and in 1976 he was promoted to the top German league with BVB. Here he played until the 1986/87 season. In addition to Manfred Kaltz from Hamburger SV , Lothar Huber was also known for his banana flanks .

Lothar Huber had 317 appearances in the Bundesliga and scored 30 Bundesliga goals in his active career. For Borussia Dortmund he made 75 games in the second division and scored 18 goals. He also played 34 DFB Cup games for BVB and scored three goals. He also ran twice in the European Cup ( UEFA Cup games 1982 against Glasgow Rangers ). From 1977 to 1979 he was team captain of BVB.

Coaching career

As an active Bundesliga player, Huber looked after the youth of VfR Sölde. Later, shortly before the end of his professional career, he was assistant coach at BVB from 1986 to 1992 as an assistant to Reinhard Saftig , Horst Köppel and later also to Ottmar Hitzfeld , at times as a "playing assistant coach". As assistant trainer to Reinhard Saftig, he also looked after the BVB amateurs. From BVB it went to SpVg Beckum in the upper league, to the association division Horst-Emscher and in 1996 to Japan.

At Brummell Sendai , a Japanese second division club, he worked for a year as an assistant to Pierre Littbarski . Just back from Japan, it went back to Horst-Emscher, then to SC Hassel, which he led from the national to the top division.

From 2005 to 2007 Lothar Huber coached the Westphalian league club TSG Sprockhövel . Huber rose with the team in the Oberliga Westfalen. Nevertheless, the club management surprisingly separated from their coach.

Huber had a brief coaching appearance from September 20, 2007 at the association league club SpVgg Radevormwald, until he returned to the coaching job at his old place of work TSG Sprockhövel in the 2008/09 season and made it to the NRW league again. At the end of the 2013/14 season, Huber ended his coaching career for the time being. For the 2016/17 season he took over the Dortmund Westphalia league team Kirchhörder SC.

Others

Huber is a trained bricklayer and currently lives in Dortmund within sight of the stadium. His main job is the groundskeeper at his old club Borussia Dortmund. Huber is married for the second time and has three children. His second wife Bärbel is an employee of BVB and responsible for the fan shop at the office. Furthermore, she is the host mother of the youth center in the football school of the current main sponsor of Borussia Dortmund.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Interview in "11 Friends"
  2. see: http://www.schwatzgelb.de/die_bvb_player_datenbank.html&endung=details&sid=349
  3. So Huber in an interview with 11 friends.
  4. Henning Schlüter: "Lothar does it" ; Rheinische Post, issue of September 21, 2007.
  5. ^ "Lothar Huber ends his coaching career", Siegener Zeitung of March 7, 2014.
  6. Lothar Huber takes over Kirchhörder SC [1]
  7. http://www.dfr-nrw.de/Lothar-Huber.355.0.html
  8. Report in: Echt- das Stadionmagazin, Issue 44 v. September 15, 2012, p. 33.