Manfred Schwabl
Manfred Schwabl | ||
Manfred Schwabl (2013)
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Personnel | ||
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birthday | April 18, 1966 | |
place of birth | Holzkirchen , Germany | |
size | 170 cm | |
position | midfield | |
Juniors | ||
Years | station | |
until | 1977FC Holzkirchen | |
1977-1984 | FC Bayern Munich | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
1984-1986 | FC Bayern Munich | 7 (0) |
1986-1989 | 1. FC Nuremberg | 88 (8) |
1989-1992 | FC Bayern Munich | 80 (4) |
1993-1994 | 1. FC Nuremberg | 45 (1) |
1994 | FC Tirol Innsbruck | 7 (0) |
1994-1997 | TSV 1860 Munich | 83 (1) |
National team | ||
Years | selection | Games (goals) |
1982-1984 | Germany U-18 | 7 (1) |
1985-1987 | Germany U-21 | 13 (1) |
1987-1988 | Germany | 4 (0) |
1 Only league games are given. |
Manfred "Manni" Schwabl (born April 18, 1966 in Holzkirchen ) is a former German football player .
Athletic career
Club career
Schwabl's career in paid football began when he, coming from the youth department of FC Bayern Munich , received a professional contract with Munich for the 1984/85 season . He made his Bundesliga debut on October 8, 1985 (4th matchday) in a 6-0 home win over Hannover 96 . However, he scored his first professional goal for 1. FC Nürnberg , to which he moved in 1986/87 , on matchday 10 against FC Schalke 04 . After three seasons together with Andreas Köpke and Dieter Eckstein , he returned to the Munich team in 1989 , where Stefan Reuter , Schwabl's two-year companion from Nuremberg, had been under contract for a year and was now one of the regular players. In the winter break of the 1992/93 season he moved again to the "Club" in Nuremberg, with which he was relegated in the spring of 1994 . Schwabl remembers his missed “penalty in the ominous game against Bayern with Thomas Helmer's phantom goal . If I had scored, the game would have ended 2-2, the game would not have been repeated and we would not have been relegated. But we lost the new edition with 0: 5 and had to go down. "
After the relegation of Nuremberg, Schwabl moved to Austria to continue his career at FC Tirol Innsbruck. After seven games in the upper house of the Alpenland until the beginning of September 1994, the ex-national player used an offer from TSV 1860 Munich to return to the German elite division. From the 5th match day of the 1994/95 season he ran for the "lions" back on in the Bundesliga. After the 1996/97 season, when TSV 1860 qualified for the UEFA Cup for the first time , team captain Schwabl was identified as the mastermind behind a boycott of President Karl-Heinz Wildmoser's end-of-season celebration , the "party affair". The team had organized their own closing party at the same time. The President did not like this and it resulted in Schwabl's departure.
Schwabl then signed a contract with the northern Italian second division club FC Treviso , but asked for the contract to be terminated before he had played for the club and ended his playing career. The midfielder played 303 games in the Bundesliga and scored 14 goals.
Selection bets
Schwabl made his debut on October 13, 1982 in Homburg (Saar) in the U-18 national team , which was 3-0 over the selection of Belgium. He scored his only goal against the Belgians on January 6, 1984 in Leningrad as part of the Granatkin memorial tournament in a 7-0 victory. He played his last game on April 10, 1984 in Kufstein in a 1-0 victory over Austria.
He played for the U-21 national team for the first time on November 16, 1985 in Regensburg in a 3-1 win over Czechoslovakia , scored his only goal on October 28, 1987 in Luxembourg in a 4-1 win over Luxembourg and last played on December 2, 1987 in Sofia in the 1: 2 defeat against Bulgaria .
Schwabl played four times for the senior national team . The Bayern player made his debut on September 23, 1987 in Hamburg in a 1-0 victory over Denmark . His last international match also ended 1-0 when Germany defeated Switzerland in Kaiserslautern in a friendly.
successes
Further career
After his active career, Schwabl ran a sports park in his hometown of Holzkirchen, which he later sold. After the unsuccessful restructuring of a construction company he had acquired, he had to file for bankruptcy. On October 7, 2008 he was sentenced to a suspended sentence of two years and a fine of 4,800 euros after a confession of fraud and bankruptcy delay.
Since May 2010 he has been the youth coordinator, since September 2011 sporting director of SpVgg Unterhaching. Since June 28, 2012 Schwabl has been President of SpVgg Unterhaching e. V. and since the end of 2018 managing director of Haching Verwaltungs GmbH , which runs the business of Profi-KGaA. He also holds 19.34 percent of the shares in Profi-KGaA through Schwabl GmbH (as of October 1, 2019).
Trivia
His son Markus plays in Unterhaching's first team.
Web links
- Manfred Schwabl in the database of weltfussball.de
- Manfred Schwabl in the database of fussballdaten.de
- Manfred Schwabl in the database of transfermarkt.de
- Manfred Schwabl in the database of the German Football Association
- Manfred Schwabl in the database of kicker.de
- Manfred Schwabl in the database of National-Football-Teams.com (English)
- Manfred Schwabl in the database of EU-Football.info (English)
- Profile at glubberer.de
Individual evidence
- ^ The "party affair" at TSV 1860 Munich is drawing circles: Minister Waigel takes sides for Schwabl , Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung , July 8, 1997
- ^ Matthias Arnhold: Manfred Schwabl - Matches and Goals in Bundesliga . RSSSF.com . February 12, 2020. Accessed February 12, 2020.
- ^ Matthias Arnhold: Manfred Schwabl - International Appearances . RSSSF.com . February 12, 2020. Accessed February 12, 2020.
- ↑ Probation for ex-professional kicker Manfred Schwabl. Evening newspaper , October 7, 2008, accessed on December 23, 2015 .
- ↑ Kicker No. 91 of November 11, 2010, p. 47
- ↑ General Assembly elects Manfred Schwabl as new President ... SpVgg Unterhaching , June 28, 2012, accessed on December 23, 2015 .
- ↑ SpVgg Unterhaching football share , boerse.de, accessed on October 1, 2019.
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Schwabl, Manfred |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Schwabl, Manni (nickname) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German soccer player |
DATE OF BIRTH | April 18, 1966 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Wooden churches |