Peter Loof

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Peter Loof
Personnel
birthday September 23, 1947
size 179 cm
position Defense
Juniors
Years station
BSV Bad Harzburg
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1966-1971 Hannover 96 51 (3)
1971-1972 Arminia Bielefeld 13 (0)
1972-1974 FC Winterslag
1 Only league games are given.

Peter Loof (born September 23, 1947 ) is a former German soccer player . The defensive player played 64 league games and scored three goals at the Hannover 96 and Arminia Bielefeld clubs from 1968 to 1972 in the Bundesliga .

Career

Peter Loof (left) in a duel against Piet Keizer . Scene from the Messestädte Cup game of the 1st round in the second leg against Ajax Amsterdam , 24 September 1969

Peter Loof played in his youth at BSV Bad Harzburg , for which he played a game in the youth national team . On November 7, 1965, he was a member of the DFB team in Belgrade, which lost a friendly international match 0-1 against Yugoslavia. The player from Bad Harzburg competed alongside other players such as Norbert Nigbur , David Scheu , Horst Köppel , Karl-Heinz Handschuh , Rainer Budde and Heinz Flohe . He started his professional career at Hannover 96 in the Bundesliga . Since 1966 he has played for the amateurs of Hannover 96. At the start of the season in 1968/69, like Claus Brune , he switched from the amateurs to the professional camp. From Uelzen, Rainer Zobel was brought to the “Reds”. But the most prominent newcomer was the new coach Zlatko Čajkovski from FC Bayern Munich. After only 10th place was occupied in the past 1967/68 season despite the star purchases with Jupp Heynckes and Josip Skoblar , the new coach should now finally move forward. Before the start of the round, the new coach was very optimistic and stated that he wanted to make the “Bad Harzburg amateur player Peter Loof a national player and Peter Anders a second Franz Beckenbauer .” Loof, like Brune and Zobel, made his debut on the start of the round on August 17th 1968, in a 2: 3 away defeat at SV Werder Bremen in the Bundesliga. Things did not go well for Hanover, at the end of the lap the team finished 11th. Loof was used in 27 league games (1 goal). For the second year coach Cajkovski got the desired winger with Zvezdan Čebinac , but on December 8, 1969 his activity in Hanover was over. The 96ers finished the round in 13th place and Loof had scored two goals in 24 league games. His last Bundesliga appearance for 96 dates from April 18, 1970, a 1-0 home win against Borussia Mönchengladbach, when he came on for Klaus Bohnsack in the 71st minute . He did not come to any further Bundesliga use in the 1970/71 season under the new coach Helmuth Johannsen . He stayed in Hanover for a total of five years. In Hanover he played 51 Bundesliga games in which he scored 3 goals. He also made five appearances for the Reds and one goal in the DFB Cup and four appearances in the Exhibition City Cup , including in the two matches against Ajax Amsterdam in September 1969.

For the 1971/72 season he joined the league competitor Arminia Bielefeld . But it was a round that was massively shaped by the processing of the Bundesliga scandal . In mid-February 1972, the decision was made to punish Arminia from Bielefeld, who was most deeply and obviously in the scandalous chaos, with relegation to the amateur league. The East Westphalia were still allowed to play the season to the end, but they could no longer hope for points. Later, the sports court weakened the forced transfer to the amateur league in the demotion to the regional league and the deduction of ten points in the 1972/73 season. Loof had played 13 league games alongside other players like Dieter Burdenski , Ulrich Braun , Gerd Knoth , Georg Damjanoff , Gerd Kasperski , Karl-Heinz Brücken , Dieter Brei , Jürgen Jendrossek and Roland Stegmayer .

After a year in Bielefeld, Loof moved to FC Winterslag in the second division in Belgium for the 1972/73 season . There he played until the end of the 1974 season. He said goodbye to Winterslag with promotion to the first division.

literature

  • Christian Karn, Reinhard Rehberg: Player Lexicon 1963–1994. Agon Sportverlag. Kassel 2012. ISBN 978-3-89784-214-4 . P. 311.
  • Emergency brake, Hardy Greens: The Reds. The story of Hanover 96. Verlag Die Werkstatt. Göttingen 2006. ISBN 978-3-89533-537-2 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Jürgen Bitter: Germany's football. The encyclopedia. FA Herbig. Munich 2008. ISBN 978-3-7766-2558-5 . P. 448
  2. 25 years of the Bundesliga , p. 193; Ed .: Sport + Spielverlag
  3. ^ Karl-Heinz Heimann, Karl-Heinz Jens: Kicker-Almanach 1989. Copress-Verlag. Munich 1988. ISBN 3-7679-0245-1 . P. 408
  4. ^ Emergency brake, Greens: The Reds. P. 136
  5. Hardy Greens: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Bundesliga & Co. 1963 until today. Agon Sportverlag. Kassel 1997. ISBN 3-89609-113-1 . P. 66