Milton Tembo

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Milton Tembo
Personnel
birthday December 8, 1980
place of birth LusakaZambia
size 175 cm
position striker
Juniors
Years station
0000-1998 Lusaka dynamos
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1998-2000 Lusaka dynamos
1999-2000 →  Beerschot AC  (loan)
2000-2001 VfB Stuttgart amateurs 9 0(1)
2001-2006 SSV Ulm 1846 114 (45)
2006-2008 SSV Ulm 1846 II
2008-2009 SpVgg Au / Iller 17 0(3)
2009-2010 SV Grimmelfingen
2010-2011 SV Offenhausen
2011–2012 GSV Dürnau
2013-2016 FC Straß
2016– SV Offenhausen 24 (17)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
Zambia 9 0(0)
1 Only league games are given.
Status: end of season 2017/18

Milton Tembo (born December 8, 1980 in Lusaka ) is a Zambian football player . The nine-time national player has played in German amateur football since 2000. In autumn 2003 and the following months he made headlines across Germany due to his HIV infection .

Career

In the summer of 2000 Tembo, who had previously distinguished himself as a player in the Zambian U-19 selection team, came from the Zambian first division club Lusaka Dynamos as a striker to the second team of VfB Stuttgart . Under coach Rainer Adrion , however, he did not make a breakthrough in the regional league , only nine games and one goal was recorded for him at the end of the season. Therefore, after only one season, he moved on to the Württemberg Association League . With SSV Ulm 1846 he caused a stir nationwide when the club was the first fifth division team in the history of the DFB Cup to throw a Bundesliga club out of the competition with a 2-1 win over 1. FC Nürnberg on the occasion of the 2001/02 event - Dragan Trkulja 's 2-1 winner from the penalty spot was preceded by a foul in the penalty area. The team failed in the following round at 1. FC Union Berlin , but at the end of the season they were promoted to the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg . After he had contributed to promotion with twelve goals, he was one of the top performers in the Sparrows with 18 goals this season, as second in the table he almost made it through to the regional league. At the same time, he had established himself as a national player in the Zambian national team and took part in qualifying for the 2004 African Cup with her . It came to an unpleasant event in the summer of 2003 when, after an international match, he and his team-mate Lloyd Mumba from Ulm were to be sold to South Africa while his heavily pregnant wife was waiting in Ulm. After almost two weeks he was able to return to Germany, while Mumba went to South Africa.

In October 2003, the SSV Ulm 1846 announced the HIV infection Tembos on its homepage, making it the first such case in German football. Subsequently, the DFB dealt with the case at the request of the club and confirmed that the statutes do not speak against further missions. In the following months he was also the focus of various reports in Germany. Although he continued to run regularly for the club in the following years, he increasingly moved into the second tier and later played primarily for the second team of the Ulm club.

In 2008 Tembo left SSV Ulm, followed by a small odyssey with various clubs in the region. First he played a season overshadowed by injuries for SpVgg Au / Iller in the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg, then he was in the squad from summer 2009 at SV Grimmelfingen and from the following season at the district league club SV Offenhausen . In 2011 he moved to GSV Dürnau , where he worked full-time for the main sponsor in the manufacture of precision turned parts. In July 2013 Tembo switched to FC Straß, encouraged by Harald Schwarzmann, who was his new employer and teammate.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c "'Chu Chu' is very proud of its successors" in the online edition of the Südwest Presse
  2. ^ "Does Tembo bring more momentum to the VfB attack?" In the Stuttgarter Zeitung of June 29, 2000, p. 36
  3. "Assauer and the Terminator, Ferguson and the stallion" in Die Welt from November 23, 2003, p. 21
  4. FuPa.net : Dachdecker am Straßer Kupferdach from September 19, 2013, accessed on August 24, 2020.