Oliver Schröder

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Oliver Schröder
Personnel
birthday June 11, 1980
place of birth BerlinGermany
size 183 cm
position Midfield , defense
Juniors
Years station
SC Tegel
0000-1996 Reinickendorfer foxes
1996-1998 Spandauer BC
1998-1999 Hertha BSC
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1999-2002 Hertha BSC II 73 0(5)
2002-2006 Hertha BSC 31 0(1)
2002-2003 →  1. FC Köln II  (loan) 18 0(2)
2002-2004 →  1. FC Köln  (loan) 45 0(1)
2006-2009 VfL Bochum 56 0(1)
2009 VfL Bochum II 1 0(0)
2009-2010 FC Hansa Rostock 25 0(1)
2010-2015 FC Erzgebirge Aue 113 0(3)
2015 FC Erzgebirge Aue II 1 0(0)
2015-2017 SC Fortuna Cologne 38 0(0)
1 Only league games are given.
Status: end of season 2016/17

Oliver Schröder (born June 11, 1980 in Berlin ) is a former German soccer player .

Career

Schröder, who comes from Berlin-Heiligensee , went through the youth departments of the clubs SC Tegel , Reinickendorfer Füchse and Spandauer BC in his hometown, before he moved to the A-youth of Berlin Hertha in 1998 . A year later, Schroeder moved into the men's area of Hertha on and completed for the second team in the Regional -Spielzeit 1999/00 a total of 23 missions. At the end of the season, however, Hertha's reserve rose to the fourth-class Oberliga Nordost , in which Schröder completed a total of 50 games and scored five goals in the following seasons 2000/01 and 2001/02 . Schröder had also recommended himself for the Bundesliga squad in Berlin, but could not assert himself there, which is why he was awarded to the second division club 1. FC Köln in the summer of 2002 .

In Cologne, Schröder was initially also assigned to the reserve team, but was also recommended for the club's first team with two goals in 18 missions during the 2002/03 regional league season . So he came to his first appearance in a professional league on November 18 of the second division season 2002/03 and subsequently contributed to Cologne's promotion to the Bundesliga with 16 further second division appearances. In this, Schröder completed 28 games for Cologne in 2003/04 , in which he also scored his first goal in a professional league, before returning to Hertha in Berlin at the end of the season.

At the BSC, Schröder was able to establish himself in the Bundesliga squad and completed five appearances on the starting line-up at the beginning of the 2004/05 season . However, he subsequently lost his regular place and was temporarily used again in the reserve team of the capital city. After a total of 31 Bundesliga appearances, he left Berlin at the end of the 2005/06 season to join Bundesliga rivals VfL Bochum .

With VfL, Schröder played differently than with the Berliners, for whom he had also made two appearances in the UEFA Cup , mostly against relegation from the Bundesliga. He was part of Bochum's regular team in 2006/07 with 28 appearances, but completed only 15 in 2007/08 and only 13 in the top German league in 2008/09 . For the 2009/10 season , Oliver Schröder then moved to FC Hansa Rostock in the 2nd Bundesliga. After 25 second division appearances, however, he rose with Hansa to the third division after the Ostseestädter had lost the relegation games against Ingolstadt without Schröder's participation . He then moved to FC Erzgebirge Aue for the 2010/11 season . There he had a changeable season, which was interrupted by two major injury breaks, so that he only came to 18 missions. But he was always on the starting line-up in all games.

The last club of his professional career was the third division club SC Fortuna Köln , where Schröder moved for the 2015/16 season. After two years and 38 appearances, his contract expired on June 30, 2017 and he ended his career at the age of 37.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. From FC Erzgebirge Aue - Oliver Schröder comes to Fortuna Cologne. In: rundschau-online.de . June 19, 2015, accessed September 17, 2017 .
  2. Transfer reports - Fortuna says goodbye to Schröder. In: kicker.de . May 24, 2017. Retrieved September 17, 2017 .