Marion Isbert

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Marion Isbert (* 25. February 1964 in Vallendar , born Feiden) is a former German football - German international .

Career

societies

Marion Isbert's career began as a striker at TuS Ahrbach , with whom she reached the final of the German championship in 1989 and was the top scorer. A year later she and her team failed to qualify for the new Bundesliga . She then moved to TSV Siegen with Jutta Nardenbach , with whom she became German champion in 1991 and 1992 and also reached the final of the DFB Cup .

Since the summer of 2008, Isbert has trained various junior teams for the 1936 Niederwerth e. V., currently she is active in the old men team and thus provides a novelty for the German Football Association.

National team

Isbert took part in the first official DFB international match for women on November 10, 1982 against Switzerland . The high point of her career was the semi-finals of the European Championship in 1989 . In the penalty shoot-out against Italy , she initially saved three penalties before converting the decisive one personally. In 1989 and 1991 she became European champion.

Also in 1991 she took part in the first world championship and finished fourth with her team. The "small final" against Sweden was also her last of 58 international matches. Then she resigned from the national team for family reasons .

successes

Awards

Like her national team players, she was awarded the Silver Laurel Leaf for winning the European Championship in 1989 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Marion Isbert in the Munzinger archive ( beginning of article freely accessible)
  2. ^ SV Niederwerth: Men over 40 start winning streak - home win against Niederfell. Unique in the DFB: National goal woman Marion Isbert reinforces AH over 40. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on July 27, 2009 ; Retrieved July 29, 2013 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.sv-niederwerth.de
  3. 1982–1993: Difficult early years and first successes
  4. 20 years ago: Penalty drama in the EM semifinals. (Video) In: DFB-TV. Retrieved July 29, 2013 .
  5. Süddeutsche Zeitung of May 17, 2010, award with the silver laurel leaf, .... A selection of excellent athletes ... excellent teams .... German women's national football team for the European championship in 1989 ...
predecessor Office Successor
Silvia Neid Record national player of the DFB
August 26, 1984 - September 7, 1985
(together with Silvia Neid)
Sivia envy