Manfred Mannebach
Manfred Mannebach | ||
Personnel | ||
---|---|---|
birthday | July 14, 1954 | |
place of birth | Langenfeld , Germany | |
date of death | March 2, 1999 | |
Place of death | Hamburg , Germany | |
size | 178 cm | |
position | midfield | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
TuS Mayen | ||
TuS Langenfeld | ||
1976-1988 | FC St. Pauli | 36 | (4)
1978-1980 | Red and white food | 74 (12) |
1980-1981 | Rot-Weiß Oberhausen | 39 | (9)
1981-1984 | SV Lurup | 50 (10) |
1984-1986 | Hummelsbütteler SV | 67 (29) |
1986-1989 | TuS Hoisdorf | 17 | (2)
1989-1991 | SC Concordia Hamburg | 35 | (4)
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
SC Concordia Hamburg | ||
Meiendorfer SV | ||
SC Forward Wacker 04 | ||
1 Only league games are given. |
Manfred Mannebach (born July 14, 1954 in Langenfeld , † March 2, 1999 in Hamburg ) was a German football player and coach . From 1976 to 1981, the midfielder played a total of 146 games for the clubs FC St. Pauli , Rot-Weiss Essen and Rot-Weiss Oberhausen in the 2nd Bundesliga and scored 25 goals.
Career
Manfred Mannebach played late in a club after he switched to TuS Mayen at the age of 13 . There he was discovered in the 1975/76 season in the amateur league Rhineland by St. Pauli's coach Diethelm Ferner and brought to the Millerntor. The "running miracle" in defensive midfield debuted on the first day of the 1976/77 season, on August 14, 1976, in the 0-1 away defeat at Wuppertaler SV in the 2nd Bundesliga. After five matchdays, St. Pauli had four draws and one defeat, and it wasn't until the sixth matchday that they won their first double point with a 3-1 home win against Alemannia Aachen. After the preliminary round, the team of coach Ferner had worked their way up to 2nd place after 19 games with 26:12 points and Mannebach counted next to the teammates Jürgen Rynio (goalkeeper), Niels Tune Hansen , Rolf Höfert , Dietmar Demuth , Walter Frosch , Walter Oswald , Franz Gerber and Søren Skov to the regular cast. At the end of the round, Mannebach celebrated the championship with FC St. Pauli in the 1976/77 season . Four points ahead of runner-up Arminia Bielefeld - with players like Uli Stein , Roland Peitsch , Norbert Eilenfeldt , Ewald Lienen , Hans-Werner Moors - and seven points ahead of third-placed Wuppertaler SV - with players like Günter Pröpper , Reinhold Fanz , Bernhard Hermes , Rainer Budde -. Mannebach made a significant contribution to the 16 draw games of the Bundesliga promoter through his intensive defensive performance in midfield.
When St. Pauli successfully opened the Bundesliga season 1977/78 on August 6, 1977 with a 3-1 home win against Werder Bremen, the man from the Eifel was on the Millerntor team. After the second match day, August 13, in the 2: 4 away defeat at Bayern Munich, adductor problems put him out of action for the first time. His third and last Bundesliga appearance took place on September 3, 1977 in a 2-0 win against Hamburger SV with their stars Manfred Kaltz , Peter Nogly , Ivan Buljan , Kevin Keegan , Felix Magath , Arno Steffenhagen and Georg Volkert . After relegation Mannebach followed his coach Ferner and moved to Rot-Weiss Essen in the 2nd Bundesliga. In two rounds as a regular player, he made 74 appearances in the second division on Hafenstrasse and scored twelve goals. In the 1979/80 season, RWE won the runner-up under the new coach Rolf Schafstall . In the two relegation games against the Südvize Karlsruher SC , however, the team from Baden prevailed and rose to the Bundesliga. Mannebach had played in both games - in Karlsruhe in front of 43,000 spectators in the Wildpark Stadium there was a 1: 5 defeat - on the side of Frank Mill and Willi Lippens . It was followed by a year in 1980/81 at the league rivals Rot-Weiß Oberhausen . Also in the team from the Niederrheinstadion , the midfielder was part of the regular team of coach Manfred Rummel with 39 missions and nine goals . Mannebach played his last game in the 2nd Bundesliga on May 30, 1981 in the catch-up game against Göttingen 05.
He returned to Hamburg in 1981 for professional and private reasons. This was followed by player positions at SV Lurup , Hummelsbütteler SV and TuS Hoisdorf , where he worked as a player-coach in the 1988/89 season . He had coaching stations at SC Concordia Hamburg , Meiendorfer SV and SC Vorwärts-Wacker 04 , where he died of cardiac death on March 2, 1999 in an evening training game.
literature
- Christian Karn, Reinhard Rehberg: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 9: Player Lexicon 1963-1994. Bundesliga, regional league, 2nd league. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2012, ISBN 978-3-89784-214-4 .
- Hardy Greens (Ed.): Of gray mice and great masters. The book about the Bundesliga. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1999, ISBN 3-89784-114-2 , pp. 191-198.
- Ronny Galczynski, Bernd Carstensen: FC St. Pauli. Club Encyclopedia. Publishing house Die Werkstatt. Göttingen 2009. ISBN 978-3-89533-613-3 . P. 189
Web links
- Manfred Mannebach in the database of fussballdaten.de
- Manfred Mannebach in the database of kicker.de
Individual evidence
- ↑ only data from the orienteering seasons 1981/82 and 1983/84
- ↑ only data from the orienteering seasons 1988/89 and 1983/84
- ↑ Sport Bild 49/1988, p. 28
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Mannebach, Manfred |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German soccer player and coach |
DATE OF BIRTH | July 14, 1954 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Langenfeld |
DATE OF DEATH | March 2, 1999 |
Place of death | Hamburg |