Rainer Ohlhauser

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Rainer Ohlhauser
Personnel
birthday January 6, 1941
place of birth DilsbergGerman Empire
size 178 cm
position Forward / midfield
Juniors
Years station
1950-1958 1. FC Dilsberg
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1958-1961 SV Sandhausen ? 00(?)
1961-1970 FC Bayern Munich 286 (186)
1970-1975 Grasshopper Club Zurich 125 0(26)
1975-1976 FC Winterthur 2 00(0)
1976-1977 FC Emmenbrücke ? 00(?)
1977-1980 VfB Friedrichshafen ? 00(?)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1968 Germany 1 00(0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1975-1976 FC Winterthur
1976-1977 FC Emmenbrücke
1977-1980 VfB Friedrichshafen
1980-1981 Hamburger SV (youth)
1981-1982 Borussia Dortmund ( assistant coach )
1982-1983 FC Basel
1 Only league games are given.

Rainer Ohlhauser (born January 6, 1941 in Dilsberg (today in Neckargemünd , Baden-Württemberg )), also known as "Oki", is a former German soccer player who was active at FC Bayern Munich from 1961 to 1970 and from 1965 to 1969 extremely was successful.

Life

Ohlhauser learned the trade of steel construction fitter and practiced it for the first few years of his football career in Munich while playing football.

Club career

At the age of nine, Rainer Ohlhauser, who was also talented as a track and field athlete (North Baden youth champion in the 100 m sprint and long jump), began playing soccer at 1. FC Dilsberg, the club based in his birthplace and in the Heidelberg soccer district in North Baden. Due to his pronounced speed and scoring danger, he attracted the attention of SV Sandhausen , who played in the 1st amateur league in North Baden , and played in the Hardtwald Stadium there from 1958 to 1961 . After winning the Baden championship - to which Ohlhauser had contributed 29 goals - and the games in the promotion round to the 2nd Oberliga Süd against FC Hanau 93 , SC Schwenningen and TSV 1860 Munich Amateurs in the 1960/61 season , the talented striker had several offers from clubs from the Oberliga Süd .

He decided on the offer from FC Bayern Munich and moved to the Bavarian capital in the summer of 1961. Playing alongside Willi Giesemann , Peter Grosser and Werner Olk , he scored 23 goals in 26 appearances in his first season in 1961/62 , making it third in the table . In the second season of 1962/63 he scored 24 goals and Bayern Munich took third place. Since local rivals TSV 1860 Munich with coach Max Merkel won the t-title in this final round of the Oberliga era and qualified for the new Bundesliga from the 1963/64 season, FC Bayern Munich had to play in the second division of the 1963/64 regional football league Regionalliga Süd compete.

Under the new coach Zlatko Čajkovski , signed by 1. FC Köln , the talents Sepp Maier , Dieter Brenninger , Rudolf Nafziger , Dieter Koulmann , Franz Beckenbauer , Gerd Müller and Rainer Ohlhauser developed in the regional league . They developed their own game that was geared towards winning. Rainer Ohlhauser was even more of the outstanding goalscorer of FC Bayern Munich in the two rounds in the Regionalliga than before in the Oberliga. In 71 games he scored 75 goals. His 42 goals in the promotion round of the regional football league in 1964/65 made him the top scorer in the regional league south and were a record in all regional league seasons this season - and are in the "season south" to this day. With his seven goals in the promotion round in 1965 against Alemannia Aachen , 1. FC Saarbrücken and Tennis Borussia Berlin , he was the top scorer in front of Jupp Heynckes and Gerd Müller.

With the goal of 1-0 on the second match day of the 1965/66 season against Eintracht Frankfurt , Ohlhauser became the first Bundesliga scorer for Bayern Munich. With the club he collected numerous titles from the 1965/66 season . Ohlhauser and his teammates won the DFB Cup three times in 1966 , 1967 and 1969 and also celebrated the double in 1969 by winning the German football championship . On May 31, 1967 , the club in Nuremberg was already successful in the European Cup Winners' Cup against Glasgow Rangers with a 1-0 extra time. When winning the championship in 1969 , however, Branko Zebec directed as a coach and brought Gerd Müller in particular physically in good shape, so that Rainer Ohlhauser now intervened in the Bayern game from midfield. From 1965 to 1970 he played 160 Bundesliga games and scored 64 goals. Overall, he is listed in the statistics of FC Bayern Munich with 331 games and 208 goals.

After nine years he left Bayern Munich in 1970 and moved to Switzerland to the Grasshopper Club Zurich . He won the Swiss football championship in 1971 , and in the following two years he achieved second place in the championship with the club.

From 1975 to 1980 he was active as a player-coach for the Swiss first division club FC Winterthur , the Swiss amateur club FC Emmenbrücke and VfB Friedrichshafen . From 1980 to 1982 he was a junior and assistant coach at Hamburger SV and Borussia Dortmund in the Bundesliga . As the successor to Helmut Benthaus , he took over as coach at FC Basel in the 1982/83 season . However, he was unable to continue his successes as a player as a coach.

National team

As part of a trip to South America by the senior national team in December 1968, he made his debut in the DFB-Elf on December 18 in Santiago de Chile against the selection of the host. The game that was lost with 1: 2 goals remained his only one.

After the career

In the mid-1980s, Ohlhauser withdrew from football and until 2004 ran a lottery sales point in his home town of Dilsberg, which had been incorporated into Neckargemünd since January 1, 1973 .

successes

Awards

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. derwesten.de from June 25, 2015: How FC Bayern rose to the Bundesliga 50 years ago (interview with Ohlhauser) , accessed on July 6, 2015.
  2. 1st Bundesliga club of Bavaria on fussballdaten.de.
  3. Article on morgenweb.de (from the Mannheimer Morgen of July 2, 2012, p. 21 by Kevin Hagen)

literature

  • Jürgen Bitter : Germany's football. The encyclopedia. Sportverlag, Berlin 2000, ISBN 3-328-00857-8 .
  • Matthias Weinrich, Hardy Greens : Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 6: German Cup history since 1935. Pictures, statistics, stories, constellations. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2000, ISBN 3-89784-146-0 .
  • Matthias Kropp: Triumphs in the European Cup. All games of the German clubs since 1955 (= AGON Sportverlag statistics. Volume 20). AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-75-4 .
  • Ulrich Homann (Hrsg.): Hellfire on Ascension. The history of the promotion rounds to the Bundesliga 1963–1974. Klartext, Essen 1990, ISBN 3-88474-346-5 .
  • Matthias Weinrich: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 3: 35 years of the Bundesliga. Part 1. The founding years 1963–1975. Stories, pictures, constellations, tables. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1998, ISBN 3-89784-132-0 .