Rolf Rohrberg

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rolf Rohrberg
Personnel
birthday December 26, 1920
place of birth German Empire
date of death February 20, 1976
position Right winger
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
0000-1939 Büssing Braunschweig
1939 - ???? VfB Peine
1940 VfB Königsberg (guest)
1940-1941 LSV Stettin (guest)
1941-1944 Hertha BSC (guest) 5 0(3)
1945 Hamburger SV (guest)
1945-1949 Eintracht Braunschweig 43 (20)
1949-1952 Hamburger SV 58 (34)
1952-1955 Eimsbüttel TV 81 (31)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1955-1957 Green-white 07
1957-1960 FTSV Comet Blankenese
1960-1963 Eimsbüttel TV
1963-1966 SC Victoria Hamburg
1966-1968 TuS Hamburg 1880
1968-1970 Duvenstedt / Wohldorf 08
1970-1973 VfL Pinneberg
1973-1974 Eidelstedter SV
1 Only league games are given.

Rolf Rohrberg (born December 26, 1920 , † February 20, 1976 ) was a German football player and coach .

Player career

societies

The Right Wing Rohrberg began his career with the Werkself the Büssing in Braunschweig . In 1939 he joined VfB Peine , for which he could only play occasionally in the following years, as he soon became a soldier .

As a war guest player in East Prussia with VfB Königsberg in 1940, he immediately became a Gaumeister . As a result, the qualification for the final round of the German championship was achieved, in which Rohrberg was not used. So he could not prevent Königsberg from having to line up behind SC Union Oberschöneweide only because of two fewer goals scored , and so did not survive the group stage.

Afterwards Rohrberg made a guest appearance at LSV Stettin and there he was immediately successful. In 1941, the Pomeranian Gaume Championship was celebrated. However, surviving the group stage at the championship finals in 1941 was again missed. Despite Rohrberg's three goals in four appearances, they had to be satisfied with second place with one point behind Vorwärts-Rasensport Gleiwitz .

Rohrberg played in Stettin for about a season, from 1941 he then worked sporadically at Hertha BSC . With the Berliners , the Braunschweig player only made five appearances in the league in three years, in which he scored three goals. In the Tschammerpokal 1943 it went even better for him personally and he scored seven goals in two games, with his six goals in the 11-2 preliminary round victory over SC Union Oberschöneweide outstanding. After two untitled seasons, Rohrberg won the Berlin-Brandenburg Gaume Championship in 1944 . In the final round of the German championship achieved in this way, it was only in the quarter-finals against HSV Groß Born , although Rohrberg scored two goals in the 2-3 defeat.

When football was out of the question in Berlin towards the end of the war , Rohrberg managed to find his way back to Braunschweig via Hamburg . The Hamburger SV archives recorded the guest's use in a private game on April 29, 1945, in which he scored three goals. By May 8 Everything came to a standstill. The Gauklasse Hamburg had been able to close their game operations almost regularly beforehand.

From the spring of 1946 Rohrberg then kicked at Eintracht Braunschweig , before he moved again in 1949 and now for a longer period to Hamburger SV. By profession a teacher , he could not become a contract player , but remained an amateur . With HSV, he triumphed three times in a row in the Oberliga Nord and qualified for the DM finals. After a 2-0 break lead could not be defended in the quarter-finals at Kickers Offenbach in 1950 and the Rothosen were eliminated, they were eliminated in 1951 (third behind Prussia Münster and 1. FC Nuremberg ) and 1952 (third behind 1. FC Saarbrücken and again Nuremberg ) already in the group stage.

After three years, Rolf Rohrberg intended to move to Holstein Kiel , but after a short stay with stints in friendly games, he decided on Eimsbütteler TV , with which he played in the Oberliga Nord for three years until Rohrberg ended his playing career in 1955.

Selection team

His qualities and many club changes were also reflected in Rohrberg's appointments to the various selection teams. He played for the selection teams of Berlin, Hamburg, Pomerania , Lower Saxony , the North German Football Association and the selection of the British zone of occupation .

successes

Coaching career

As a trainer, Rohrberg looked after his former club Eimsbütteler TV for three years, as well as the FTSV Komet Blankenese , Grün-Weiß 07 , SC Victoria Hamburg and TuS Hamburg 1880 . In particular, he was the coach of Victoria, which he supervised from 1963 in the Regionalliga Nord and attracted attention at Komet Blankenese, which he supervised as the coach of the so-called "Century Elf", with which he even rose in 1958 to the second-rate Hamburg amateur league . In 1973 he led VfL Pinneberg to the regional league, but the club dismissed him in the summer of the same year. With the Eidelstedter SV he coached his last club from October 1973 to June 1974.

Others

Parallel to his playing career, Rohrberg was a teacher at an elementary school. In 1950, the official and soccer amateur was withheld part of his salary outside of the school holidays due to a trip to the USA with HSV.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Player data at jr-pruess.de ( memento from July 19, 2011 in the Internet Archive ), viewed on August 15, 2010
  2. Rolf Rohrberg in the football data center ( Memento from July 9, 2012 in the web archive archive.today )
  3. ^ Association news of the FTSV KOMET Blankenese v. 1907 EV (PDF; 2.7 MB), viewed on August 15, 2010.
  4. Page no longer available , search in web archives: Sport in the West: 100 Years of Sport!@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.kloenschnack.de
  5. ^ Personal details - Rolf Rohrberg , viewed on August 15, 2010

literature

  • Hardy Grüne , Lorenz Knieriem: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 8: Player Lexicon 1890–1963. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2006, ISBN 3-89784-148-7 .
  • Harald Tragmann, Harald Voß: The Hertha Compendium. 2., revised. and exp. Edition. Harald Voß, Berlin 2002, ISBN 3-935759-05-3 .