Peter Krobbach

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Peter Krobbach (born January 15, 1954 in Neuwied ) is a former German soccer player . The midfielder and defender played a total of 160 league games (11 goals) in the Bundesliga with the clubs Hamburger SV , Eintracht Frankfurt and Arminia Bielefeld from 1972 to 1982 .

Career

The technically and playfully talented youth player of SpVgg Andernach made his debut on February 25, 1972 in an international match against Yugoslavia in the A-junior team of the DFB. In May 1972, he took the DFB talents at UEFA youth tournament in Spain in part and moved there with age peers as Helmut Roleder , Rainer Blechschmidt , Karl-Heinz Korbel , Wolfgang Kraus , Ronald Worm , Dieter Müller , Kurt Eigl and Bernhard Dürnberger in the Final one. That was lost 2-0 to England in Barcelona on May 22nd. As a Libero with Vorstopper Körbel, Krobbach was the center of the defensive game of the German junior team. The bustling youth manager Gerhard Heid brought the talent to Hamburger SV into the Bundesliga. In addition to the talent from Andernach, Peter Hidien , Kurt Eigl, Dieter Hochheimer and Walter Krause also signed contracts with the "diamond bearers". Last but not least, the outstanding club icon Uwe Seeler had to be replaced, and long-time regular defender Jürgen Kurbjuhn also ended his career at HSV in the summer of 1972. On the fourth round match day, September 30, 1972, Krobbach made his debut in a home game against MSV Duisburg (1: 2) in the Bundesliga. He was substituted on by coach Klaus-Dieter Ochs in the 59th minute for Hans-Jürgen Ripp as a left full-back. The World Cup hero of the tournament days of 1966, Willi Schulz , acted as cleaner and head of defense this season . In his stylistic devices, Krobbach was the stark opposite of the pure and rustic defensive strategist Schulz. He was a playful libero, both technically strong on both feet and equipped with playful possibilities for building up the game. But he could also be used as a left full-back and in defensive midfield. The fact of the fight for relegation, which brought the young coach Ochs like the Heid talents into question, brought additional difficulties. At the end of the round, the "Rothosen" finished 14th and Krobbach was used in 19 league games. When HSV won the final of the league cup 4-0 against Borussia Mönchengladbach on June 6, 1973 , Krobbach was substituted on for Hidien as a left defender in the 86th minute.

From the 1973/74 season, Kuno Klötzer took over the coaching position at Hamburger SV and on November 26, 1973 Dr. Peter Krohn elected as the new HSV President. The "diamond bearers" started the round with an international friendly against Manchester United on August 3rd. At 0-0, Krobbach organized the defense as a Libero. In the other international friendlies in February and March 1974 against Spartak Moscow (6-0) and Glasgow Rangers (3-0), the all-rounder acted in the defensive midfield. This was also the case on April 11 in the semi-finals of the DFB Cup against Kickers Offenbach (1-0). Before the cup final on August 17th, HSV played another game against FC Barcelona on August 7th and tested the central defense with the two technicians Klaus Winkler and Krobbach in the 3-2 win . The Cup final lost the HSV against Eintracht Frankfurt with 1: 3 after extra time and Krobbach had it with Ole Bjørnmose and Klaus Zaczyk formed the midfield. In the Bundesliga he had scored two goals in 22 league games and the Klötzer squad came in 12th.

In the first half of the 1974/75 season, the legendary cup game on October 26, 1974 at the North Baden amateur league club VfB Eppingen stood out. Before goalkeeper Rudi Kargus , Krobbach was responsible as Libero for the compactness of the defensive game of the former Bundesliga leader and was supported primarily by Manfred Kaltz , Peter Hidien, Caspar Memering and Ole Björnmose. In front of 12,000 spectators in the completely overcrowded home stadium of the eleven from Kraichgau , their attacking midfielder Gerd Störzer became the hero of the day. With two goals in the second half, he decided the game 2-1 for Eppingen. In the round of 16 of the UEFA Cup , Krobbach and colleagues did it better in November and December 1974 in the games against Dynamo Dresden and prevailed with Libero Krobbach 4-1 and 2-2. Also in the quarter-final game on March 5, 1975 at Juventus Turin, which was lost 2-0 goals, Krobbach was in action as a Libero. He ended the round on June 14, 1975 with a 1-0 away win at Bayern Munich, when he defended HSV against Bayern attackers Conny Torstensson , Gerd Müller and Jupp Kapellmann in front of goalkeeper Kargus with Kaltz, Peter Nogly and Hidien , Franz Roth and Rainer Zobel . Hamburger SV took 4th place and signed the “cleaner” Horst Blankenburg from Ajax Amsterdam as head of defense for the new season. Krobbach moved to Eintracht Frankfurt after three years in Hamburg with 62 Bundesliga appearances (6 goals) for the 1975/76 season.

In three years with the "Eagle Bearers", 1975 to 1978, he never made it to become a regular player. Under coach Dietrich Weise , he completed all nine rounds in a row from the start of the Bundesliga in 1975/76 and then found his place on the bench for the rest of the season. Willi Neuberger , an almost identical type of player as Krobbach, played Libero and Gert Trinklein was the next defender in 1976/77. His third Eintracht year, 1977/78, was with 14 Bundesliga appearances and his five games (1 goal) in the 1977/78 UEFA Cup , including the 4-3 away win on November 2, 1977 at FC Zurich with his winning goal in the 87th minute to 4: 3, his best lap in Frankfurt. After a total of 26 Bundesliga appearances, he joined Arminia Bielefeld for the 1978/79 season.

At DSC he started under his new coach Milovan Beljin on August 5, 1978 with a 2-1 win after extra time in the DFB Cup. Due to a weak start with 4:12 points, Beljin was replaced by Otto Rehhagel on October 10, 1978 . At the end of the round, Bielefeld was relegated to the 2nd division in 16th place and Krobbach had made 17 league appearances (1 goal). The 1979/80 season in the 2nd Bundesliga turned out to be an overwhelming triumph for Krobbach and colleagues. Five weeks before the end of the season, the “blues” had been chosen as champions. Arminia's lead over runner-up Rot-Weiss Essen was 12 points, the Arminen remained in 28 games in a row without defeat and they scored 120 goals with only 31 goals in the promotion round. Krobbach was at the side of teammates like Uli Stein , Roland Peitsch , Wolfgang Pohl , Norbert Eilenfeldt , Lorenz-Günther Köstner , Frank Pagelsdorf , Helmut Schröder , Gerd-Volker Schock , Christian Sackewitz , Ulrich Büscher , Eduard Angele and Roland Weidle played in 26 second division games and scored two goals. In the Bundesliga season 1980/81 Bielefeld started with promotion coach Hans-Dieter Tipphauer , but ended on December 1, 1980 with Horst Franz in 15th place. Krobbach had again worked as a libero, left full-back and in midfield and, alongside Stein's successor Wolfgang Kneib , Kees Bregman and Karl-Heinz Geils, made his contribution to staying in the league in 29 league games (1 goal). In the following year, 1981/82, Arminia improved to 12th place with newcomers like Dirk Hupe, Ewald Lienen, Herbert Reiss and Johannes Riedl and Krobbach had scored three goals in 26 league appearances.

As a winter transfer, he moved with Bernd Krumbein to TuS Schloß Neuhaus in the 2nd Bundesliga in November 1982 and played 14 second division games (1 goal) alongside teammates like Peter Hobday , Jürgen Sobieray and Dieter Dannenberg for the relegated from Paderborn. This was followed by a round at SC Verl in 1983/84 before he ended his career at FC Gohfeld. After his playing career, he was coach of the 2nd team and various youth teams of Arminia Bielefeld in the early 90s and from 2002 junior manager. Krobbach worked in the insurance industry and built up a second mainstay as a player consultant.

literature

  • Christian Karn, Reinhard Rehberg: Player Lexicon 1963–1994. Agon Sportverlag. Kassel 2012. ISBN 978-3-89784-214-4 . P. 281.
  • Werner Skrentny, Jens R. Prüß: With the diamond in the heart. The great history of Hamburger SV. Publishing house Die Werkstatt. Göttingen 2008. ISBN 978-3-89533-620-1 .
  • Ulrich Matheja: Schlappekicker and sky striker. The story of Eintracht Frankfurt. Publishing house Die Werkstatt. Göttingen 2004. ISBN 3-89533-427-8 .
  • Jens Kirschneck, Klaus Linnenbrügger: Arminia Bielefeld. A club wants to go up. Publishing house Die Werkstatt. Göttingen 1997. ISBN 3-89533-182-1 .

Individual evidence

  1. Peter Krobbach - player profile. Retrieved June 3, 2019 .
  2. ^ Jürgen Bitter: Germany's football. The encyclopedia. FA Herbig. Munich 2008. ISBN 978-3-7766-2558-5 . P. 408
  3. ^ Matthias Weinrich, Hardy Green: German Cup History since 1935. Agon Sportverlag. Kassel 2000. ISBN 3-89784-146-0 . P. 286
  4. ^ Matthias Weinrich: Encyclopedia of German League Football. 35 years of the Bundesliga, part 1: The founding years 1963–1975. Agon Sportverlag. Kassel 1998. ISBN 3-89784-132-0 . P. 386
  5. ^ Kirschneck, Linnenbrügger: Arminia Bielefeld. A club wants to go up. P. 144

Web links