Markus Loew

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Markus Loew
Personnel
birthday April 4, 1961
place of birth Schönau in the Black ForestGermany
position Defense , midfield
Juniors
Years station
TuS Schönau 1896
FC Schönau 08
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1980-1982 Sc freiburg 37 0(4)
1982-1983 FV Biberach 26 0(2)
1983-1985 FC Rastatt 04 62 (11)
1985-1988 SV Sandhausen 77 0(1)
1989 VfL Neckarau 11 0(1)
1989-1990 FV 09 Weinheim 17 0(0)
1990-1993 SG Loerrach-Stetten 25 0(1)
1 Only league games are given.

Markus Löw (born April 4, 1961 in Schönau in the Black Forest ) is a former German soccer player .

Life

Löw is the second of four sons of an independent stove maker . He spent childhood and youth in his native Schönau in the Black Forest. Löw is the younger brother of the German national soccer coach Joachim Löw . He has been married since 1991.

Player career

Markus Löw began his career in the youth of TuS Schönau 1896 and FC Schönau 08.

In the summer of 1980 he was signed as a defender by the then second division club SC Freiburg . In his first season in 1980/81 at SC Freiburg, he played 18 games, scored two goals and was seventh with the team in the end. In his second season Loew was on the field 19 times and scored two goals; with the SC he was table fifteenth at the end of the season. Then he left the sports club. Löw played a total of 37 second division games for SC Freiburg and scored four goals. In the DFB Cup , he played four games and scored one goal.

Between July 1982 and June 1983 Löw was active as a midfielder for FV Biberach in the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg . For Upper Swabia , he scored two goals in 26 games. From July 1983 to June 1985 Löw played for FC Rastatt 04 . In his first season he scored ten goals in 32 games, in his second one in 30 games.

In July 1985, Löw moved within the league to SV Sandhausen . He stayed there until December 1988, played 77 games and scored one goal. With SV Sandhausen, he reached the quarter-finals of the DFB Cup in 1986 . During the winter break of the 1988/89 season, Löw moved to VfL Neckarau . After the club was relegated - by then he had played 11 games for the club and scored one goal - he moved to FV 09 Weinheim in the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg. Here he stayed for a year and played 17 times. After the season he signed with SG Lörrach-Stetten , which was promoted to the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg for the 1992/93 season . Here Löw was on the field in 25 games and scored one goal; at the end of the season he was relegated with the southern Baden team.

successes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ D youth district championship team of TuS Schönau from 1970 with Markus and Joachim Löw
  2. ^ History of FC Schönau 08.
  3. Data from the 1992/93 season
  4. Ralf Köttker, Klaus Schlütter: In the footsteps of Jogi Löw , Welt am Sonntag, June 8, 2008, accessed on December 17, 2011.
  5. ^ Dagmar von Taube: National coach: Joachim Löw and the last question about the toupee , Welt online, April 26, 2011.
  6. "Tickle the few percent increase in performance from the players" In: rund-magazin.de, in the print edition of February 19, 2007.
  7. ^ D youth district championship team of TuS Schönau from 1970 with Markus and Joachim Löw
  8. ^ History of FC Schönau 08.