Paul Pidancet

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Paul Pidancet
Personnel
birthday September 8, 1937
position Midfield , attack
Juniors
Years station
DJK St. Matthias Trier
VfL Trier
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
0000-1958 VfL Trier
1958-1961 Eintracht Trier 79 (26)
1961-1966 Borussia Neunkirchen 89 (28)
1966-1970 Eintracht Trier 84 0(8)
1970-1972 SV Leiwen
Stations as a trainer
Years station
VfL Trier
SV Leiwen
FSV Salmrohr
1 Only league games are given.

Paul Pidancet (born September 8, 1937 ) is a former German football player and coach. The offensive player completed a total of 136 games from 1958 to 1963 in what was then the first-class Southwest football league , scoring 44 goals for Eintracht Trier (1958–1961) and Borussia Neunkirchen (1961–1963).

career

Amateur and Oberliga Südwest until 1963

Pidancet started his career at the age of 9 with the DJK St. Matthias Trier. He then moved to VfL Trier and at the age of 17 was already considered a top performer in the third-class 1st Amateur League Rhineland (until 1955) and the second-class II. Southwest Division (from 1955). In 1958 he moved to the top division and city rival Eintracht Trier . The attacker made his debut in the Oberliga Südwest on August 17, 1958 at the home game against Mainz 05. In the 4-2 win, he contributed two goals at the side of right winger Elmar May . After three years with 79 league appearances with 26 goals, he moved to Borussia Neunkirchen together with May . With the club from the Ellenfeldstadion , he celebrated the championship in the southwest in his first season in 1961/62 and thus moved into the final round of the German football championship . In the last year of the old first-class league system, 1962/63 , Pidancet reached the runner-up with the Saarlanders and made it back to the finals. Since the southwest was only granted two places when the Bundesliga was founded, these were awarded to 1. FC Kaiserslautern and 1. FC Saarbrücken, the man from Trier played in the 1963/64 series with Neunkirchen in the Regionalliga Südwest .

Regional league and Bundesliga, 1963 to 1970

In 1963/64 he was only able to contribute six goals in nine games to the championship in the Regional League due to injury. In the promotion round, however, he was only missing in one game and also belonged to the Borussia team on June 20, 1964, which scored two decisive points with 2-0 goals at the favored Bayern Munich and thus promoted to the Bundesliga. After promotion to the Bundesliga Pidancet celebrated under manager Horst Buhtz on 22 August 1964 it was the starting day of the round in 1964/65, against 1. FC Nürnberg made his Bundesliga debut. The climber surprised with 10th place. On May 28, 1966, he played his 23rd and last game in the league against Karlsruher SC . After relegation Pidancet went back to Eintracht Trier and completed another 84 league games with eight goals between 1966 and 1970.

Amateur leagues, 1970 to 1980

Then he said goodbye to the amateur camp, where he played as a player- coach for SV Leiwen until 1972 and then trained until 1975. He then moved in the 1976/77 season to the district league for later second division club FSV Salmrohr. He then returned to his hometown club VfL Trier as a coach at the end of his career. He ended his active coaching career there in 1980.

Pidancet lives in his hometown Trier-Medard .

literature

  • Werner Skrentny (Ed.): The fear of the devil in front of the pea mountain. The history of the Oberliga Südwest 1946–1963. Klartext, Essen 1996, ISBN 3-88474-394-5 .
  • Hardy Grüne , Lorenz Knieriem: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 8: Player Lexicon 1890–1963. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2006, ISBN 3-89784-148-7 .

Web links

  • Paul Pidancet ( German ) In: fussballdaten.de . Retrieved April 15, 2012.
  • Paul Pidancet ( German ) In: weltfussball.de . Retrieved April 15, 2012.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ VfL Trier: The seasons since 1947 ( German ) In: vfl-trier.de . Archived from the original on August 28, 2012. Retrieved on April 15, 2012.
  2. The old rival from the south ( German ) In: volksfreund.de . Archived from the original on June 21, 2012. Retrieved on April 15, 2012.