Lutz Lindemann

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Lutz Lindemann
Personnel
birthday July 13, 1949
place of birth HalberstadtGermany
size 176 cm
position midfield player
Juniors
Years station
1958-1965 BSG construction / Empor Halberstadt
1965-1967 SC (construction) Magdeburg /
1. FC Magdeburg
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1967-1969 BSG locomotive Halberstadt
1969-1970 BFC Dynamo II 8 0(0)
1970-1971 BSG Motor Nordhausen West 21 0(9)
1971-1977 FC Rot-Weiß Erfurt 134 (42)
1977-1981 FC Carl Zeiss Jena 90 (14)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1966 GDR U-18 4 (0)
1974-1975 DDR U-23 5 (1)
1977 DDR U-21 3 (0)
1976-1977 GDR B 2 (0)
1977-1980 GDR 21 (2)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1982-1983 BSG Motor Hermsdorf
1983-1989 BSG Progress Weida
1992-1995 FC Erzgebirge Aue
1996-1998 FC Erzgebirge Aue
1999 FC Erzgebirge Aue (assistant coach)
2004-2005 Hallescher FC
2007 FC Carl Zeiss Jena II
1 Only league games are given.

Lutz Lindemann (born July 13, 1949 in Halberstadt ) is a former German soccer player. In the top division of GDR football , the Oberliga , he played for FC Rot-Weiß Erfurt and FC Carl Zeiss Jena . After his footballing career, the former GDR national player was, among other things, coach at FC Erzgebirge Aue and club president at FC Carl Zeiss Jena.

Athletic career

BSG and club stations

In his youth, Lutz Lindemann played for the company sports association Aufbau / Empor Halberstadt and 1. FC Magdeburg or its predecessor club SC (Aufbau) Magdeburg . In 1967, after a change from Magdeburg to BSG Stahl Eisenhüttenstadt was not permitted, he went back to his hometown and there to BSG Lokomotive Halberstadt . He then came to FC Rot-Weiß Erfurt in spring 1971 through the second agency of BFC Dynamo and BSG Motor Nordhausen West . After relegation to the second-rate GDR league and immediate resurgence, Lindemann played continuously in the upper league at FC Rot-Weiß until 1977.

He then moved to the Thuringian rival FC Carl Zeiss Jena, where he stayed until the end of his career in 1981 and celebrated his greatest successes. Among them was the FDGB Cup victory in 1980 in the final against his old club from Erfurt. With the Jena team he reached the final of the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1981 , which the Jena team lost 2-1 to Dinamo Tbilisi at the Rheinstadion in Düsseldorf .

In the GDR league, Lindemann played a total of 205 games and scored 42 goals. In the GDR league, he scored 23 goals in 50 games. In the European Cup , the midfielder scored seven times in 21 games.

Selection bets

As a member of the newly founded 1. FC Magdeburg Lindemann graduated in 1966 four caps with the U-18 selection of the DFV . He was not nominated for the GDR squad of his age group, which was eliminated in the preliminary round of the UEFA youth tournament in Turkey in the spring of 1967 . In the 1970s, when the U-21s and U-23s sometimes acted in parallel, the midfielder, who is now active at FC Rot-Weiß, was called up in eight meetings with the GDR youth team.

On September 7, 1977, he made his debut in the senior national team of the GDR in a 1-0 win against Scotland in East Berlin . Three years later he played his last international match against Spain (0-0) in Leipzig . He played a total of 21 international matches for the A-selection and scored two goals. Before that, he played twice for the B national team.

Further career

Positions as trainer and manager

After his playing career, Lutz Lindemann began a coaching career. His first position was in 1982/83 with the GDR league promoted Motor Hermsdorf . There he did not manage to stay up and moved to the 1983/84 season for the GDR league newcomer progress Weida . Lindemann also got down with Weida by return of post, but was able to continue working with the team and in 1987 led them again to the GDR league. In July 1989 he went back to Jena, where he took over the position of team leader. From 1992 to 1995, Lindemann was a coach at FC Erzgebirge Aue and then manager at Veilchen. After Ralf Minge was kicked out , he also took over the coaching position in Aue from April 1996 to June 1998. From July 1998 to 2003 Lindemann was then almost exclusively only as a manager - briefly accompanied by an activity as assistant coach under Holger Erler in the spring of 1999 - at FC Erzgebirge Aue. From 2004 to 2006 Lindemann was manager at Halleschen FC and was also a coach there for seven months.

Since January 28, 2007, Lindemann has been the sporting director in Jena. However, he had to give up this post on December 22, 2007, as he was responsible for the poor table situation of FC Carl Zeiss at the end of the first half of the 2007/08 season. From January to June 2008 Lutz Lindemann then worked as chief scout at FC Carl Zeiss Jena . On July 1, 2008, the club separated from him.

On September 24, 2009, Lindemann was introduced as a "board member with responsibility for youth work" at the NRW league club Sportfreunde Siegen . From October 29, 2009, Lindemann was responsible for the entire sporting area of Sportfreunde , and on March 29, 2010 he also took over the post of Chairman of the Board on a temporary basis. After four years in the Siegerland, he ended his activity there in the summer of 2013. For the 2013/14 season he became the sporting director of the regional league team FC Viktoria 1889 Berlin . On April 4, 2014, Lindemann was confirmed as the new President of FC Carl Zeiss Jena. On March 1, 2016, Lindemann announced his resignation as managing director of FC Carl Zeiss Jena Fußball Spielbetriebs GmbH , and he also resigned from the position of sporting director. In July 2016, Lindemann became sports director of the Kosovar first division club KF Prishtina . In January 2017 he also took over the coaching post of the club from the Vala Superleague of Kosovo , before he was replaced as coach of Prishtina by Ahmet Beselica in August 2017 , but he remained sports director.

Television career

Since July 2018, Lindemann has been an expert for the 3rd soccer league and the Northeast Regionalliga at Sport im Osten on Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk .

Fonts

A passionate optimist. My life. (Autobiography with Frank Willmann ) Structure Berlin, 2019, ISBN 978-3-351-03744-4 .

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Christoph Dieckmann : I'll hit you until you laugh. In: THE TIME . July 31, 2019, accessed March 10, 2020 .
  2. ^ Report "DerWesten", viewed September 25, 2009
  3. ^ Report "DerWesten", viewed March 30, 2010
  4. Lutz Lindemann leaves the Sportfreunde. Report "DerWesten" from May 30, 2013
  5. Sports director Lindemann changes to Carl Zeiss Jena. Report "tagesspiegel.de" from April 4, 2014
  6. ^ FC Carl Zeiss Jena ; Lutz Lindemann: Resignation as managing director and sports director on March 1, 2016
  7. Lindemann: "Such a challenge is also a gift" - MDR.DE ( Memento from August 8, 2017 in the Internet Archive )
  8. Lutz Lindemann is a construction worker in Kosovo - Sportbuzzer.de
  9. Prishtina prezanton skuadrën prej 24 futbollistëve, pritet end përforcime
  10. Infosat: Lutz Lindemann new football expert at MDR on May 19, 2018