Ronald Worm

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Ronnie Worm
Ronald Worm.jpg
Ronald Worm (2006)
Personnel
Surname Ronald Worm
birthday October 7, 1953
place of birth DuisburgGermany
size 179 cm
position Storm
Juniors
Years station
1965-1971 MSV Duisburg
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1971-1979 MSV Duisburg 231 (71)
1979-1987 Eintracht Braunschweig 244 (92)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1972 Germany amateurs 10 0(3)
1973 Germany U-21 3 0(1)
1974-1981 Germany B 12 0(5)
1975-1988 Germany 7 0(5)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1993-1994 Hertha BSC (assistant coach)
1996-1997 FC Sachsen Leipzig (assistant coach)
2000-2001 TSV Havelse
2013–201? TSV My 09
2015– Eintracht Braunschweig (women)
1 Only league games are given.

Ronald "Ronnie" (actually "Ronny") Worm (born October 7, 1953 in Duisburg ) is a former German football player and coach . He made 380 games and 119 goals in the Bundesliga with the clubs MSV Duisburg and Eintracht Braunschweig from 1971 to 1985. Worm lives in Braunschweig.

School and youth national team

The striker , who first grew up as a goalkeeper in the youth of the MSV, made his international debut in 1969 in the DFB's national student team . In the three games of the year he was used against the Netherlands and in two games against England. On November 25, 1970, he made his debut in the youth national team , he scored the winning goal for the 1-0 win against Sweden. He was also the goalscorer in the 1-0 win against Denmark four days later. In 1971 he was in all 12 games of the DFB youth under DFB coach Herbert Widmayer , including the UEFA youth tournament in Czechoslovakia. In 1972 that continued with eleven appearances from January to May and culminated in the final of the UEFA youth tournament in Spain against England, which was lost 2-0 .

Professional at MSV Duisburg and Eintracht Braunschweig

In the Bundesliga, he celebrated his debut for MSV on February 5, 1972 at the encounter at Fortuna Düsseldorf . On April 22nd he became the decisive man in the 3-0 home win against FC Bayern Munich as a two-time goalscorer. On March 15, 1972 he was appointed to the amateur national team by DFB coach Jupp Derwall (with a view to the Olympic tournament in Munich ). He also played for the German championship with the A-youth colleagues of the MSV .

For the MSV, which in the following years should mostly fight against relegation, Worm was often in action as a lone fighter or as a “special guard” for strong opponents. After the 1978/79 season - MSV was in 13th place and Worm had scored 10 goals in 32 appearances - he changed clubs and went to Eintracht Braunschweig for a transfer fee of more than 1 million Deutschmarks. Worm was the first “million dollar transfer” within the Bundesliga. At Eintracht he experienced relegation in the first season. With 30 goals in the 2nd Bundesliga North in the 1980/81 season, however, he was instrumental in the immediate resurgence. He demonstrated that he was still one of the best strikers in the Bundesliga with his 17 goals after his promotion in the 1981/82 season. Worm ended his professional career in 1987 with Braunschweig in the second division.

National team

Worm wore the national team's jersey seven times from 1975 to 1978 and scored five goals. On December 20, 1975, he made his team debut in a 5-0 win in Turkey with two goals. Although he was a member of the squad at the 1976 European Football Championship in Yugoslavia and the 1978 World Cup in Argentina, he was not used in either tournament.

In the first international match under the new national coach Jupp Derwall on October 11, 1978 in Prague against Czechoslovakia, he was substituted in the 71st minute for Hansi Müller in a 4-3 victory and in the 87th minute for Klaus Allofs .

With his twelve international B matches between 1974 and 1981, he is the record national player for the German B team , in which he is third on the all-time list with five goals.

Activities as a trainer

After the end of his career, Worm first tried to run a toto lottery business, but then made all coaching certificates up to and including football teacher. In 1993 he became Uwe Reinders' assistant coach at Hertha BSC , with whom he later worked at FC Sachsen Leipzig . Worm also trained TSV Havelse . From 2001 he worked as head coach at the Intersport Kicker soccer camps, from 2009 as a trainer for the German soccer boarding school in Marl . In the summer of 2013 he took over the coaching position at the regional league club TSV Meine 09 at Gifhorn in Meine in Lower Saxony .

statistics

DFB appointments

  • 4 games in the youth U-15
  • 25 games in the youth under 18
  • 3 games Juniors U-23
  • 10 games in the amateur national team
  • 12 games in the B national team
  • 7 games in the national team (club: MSV Duisburg)

Bundesliga games

  • 231 for the MSV Duisburg
  • 149 for Eintracht Braunschweig

Bundesliga goals

  • 71 for the MSV Duisburg
  • 48 for Eintracht Braunschweig

2. Bundesliga games

  • 95 for Eintracht Braunschweig

2. Bundesliga goals

  • 44 for Eintracht Braunschweig

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c When Ronny met Worm after 14 seconds , Westdeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung , Duisburg local section, October 13, 2014.
  2. Interview in RevierSport 72/2011, p. 46.
  3. cf. Interview in: RevierSport 81/2011, p. 33.
  4. ^ Matthias Arnhold: Ronald Worm - Matches and Goals in Bundesliga. Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation, January 21, 2016, accessed February 3, 2016 .
  5. ^ Matthias Arnhold: Ronald Worm - Goals in International Matches. Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation, January 21, 2016, accessed February 3, 2016 .
  6. cf. Interview in: RevierSport 81/2011, p. 33.
  7. Alex Heinen: "Sometimes that's worth more than eleven stars". Berlin Football Week , September 27, 2015, accessed on August 29, 2016 .