Uli Hoeneß

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Uli Hoeneß
Uli Hoeneß 2019.jpg
Uli Hoeneß (2019)
Personnel
Surname Ulrich Hoeneß
birthday 5th January 1952
place of birth UlmGermany
size 181 cm
position Midfield / attack
Juniors
Years station
0000-1967 VfB Ulm
1967-1969 TSG Ulm 1846
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1969-1970 TSG Ulm 1846 (22)
1970-1979 FC Bayern Munich 239 (86)
1978-1979 →  1. FC Nürnberg  (loan) 11 0(0)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1966-1967 DFB student selection 3 0(4)
1968-1970 DFB youth selection 17 0(5)
1969-1972 Germany amateurs 22 0(3)
1971-1973 Germany U23 2 0(1)
1972-1976 Germany 35 0(5)
1 Only league games are given.
Uli Hoeneß (2013)

Ulrich "Uli" Hoeneß (born January 5, 1952 in Ulm ) is a former German football player , today's functionary and entrepreneur . As a player in the 1970s, he won almost every important title in club football with FC Bayern Munich . With the German national team he was European champion in 1972 and world champion in 1974 .

After he had to end his playing career at the age of 27 due to an injury in 1979, he became manager of FC Bayern Munich and made a significant contribution to putting the indebted and recently moderately successful club on a healthy economic and sporting basis. From 2009 he was president of the association.

In 2014 he resigned from his functions as president of the association and as chairman of the supervisory board of FC Bayern München AG due to a prison sentence for tax evasion . After early release, he held both offices again from 2016 to 2019. He has been a simple member of the Supervisory Board since he did not stand for re-election as President.

Origin and education

Uli Hoeneß grew up in a conservative and Catholic family background as the son of the Ulm master butcher Erwin Hoeneß and his wife Paula. Together with his younger brother Dieter , who later also became a professional soccer player and manager, he started playing soccer in the youth department of VfB Ulm. He later moved to TSG Ulm in 1846 (today SSV Ulm 1846 ). At the age of 15 he became the captain of the DFB's student selection. He shared a room with Paul Breitner for the first time during the courses of the South German A youth selection at the Schöneck sports school in Baden . A close friendship developed between the player from the youth team of Baden-Württemberg and the player from the Bavarian team. They moved into their first own apartment in the Trudering district of Munich . In 1971 he finished school at the Schubart-Gymnasium in Ulm with the Abitur . Hoeneß was released from military service because wearing a combat helmet gave him headache and knee pain.

Hoeneß 'Abitur grade was 2.4. Originally he wanted to study business administration for the 1971/72 winter semester . In order to be admitted to this subject at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich , an applicant had to have an average grade of at least 3.0. As a non-Bavarian applicant, however, Hoeneß received a penalty (deduction of a whole grade), so that he could not study this subject there with an average of 3.4. So he decided to become a teaching degree in English literature and history . He broke this off after two semesters.

Playing career (1969 to 1979)

In the club

As a 17-year-old Hoeneß was already an integral part of the amateur league squad of TSG Ulm 1846 from 1969 , where he was the most successful club scorer with 22 goals in the 1969/70 season .

In 1970 Hoeneß signed an amateur contract with FC Bayern, which was trained by Udo Lattek . In addition to Hoeneß were u. a. Paul Breitner and Rainer Zobel are also newcomers. On August 15, 1970 (1st matchday of the 1970/71 season ), the 18-year-old Hoeneß made his debut at 1-1 in Stuttgart . In this (first) season he became a regular player alongside established players such as Franz Beckenbauer , Gerd Müller and Sepp Maier . FC Bayern was runner-up and won the DFB Cup . Until 1972 Hoeneß kept the amateur status in order to be able to participate in the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich . Hoeneß was trained as a winger. He ran 100 meters in 11.0 seconds and for a while was considered the “fastest living striker in Europe” until the Soviet left winger Oleg Blochin ran even faster. Together with Gerd Müller, Hoeneß formed the “most dangerous” storm duo in the Bundesliga; it scored 53 goals each in 1971/72 and 1972/73 . This mark was exceeded by one goal in 2009 by Edin Džeko and Grafite ( VfL Wolfsburg ). 1972 to 1974 Hoeneß won the German championship three times with Bayern . In 1974 Hoeneß won the European Cup with the team , where he scored two goals in the replay of the final against Atlético Madrid (4-0). In 1975 and 1976, FC Bayern Munich repeated this success. In 1975 Hoeneß suffered a serious injury to his right knee in the final against Leeds United (2-0). It made him inoperative for over half a year and should be the cause of the early end of his playing career.

At the end of the 1970s, FC Bayern could no longer match the successes of previous years in terms of sport, and Hoeneß was no longer in top form. In the 1978/79 season he had lost his regular seat under coach Gyula Lóránt and was loaned to 1. FC Nürnberg for 200,000 DM . Hoeneß played eleven games for the Franconians, could not convince and at the end of the season the team relegated to the 2nd Bundesliga. He didn't manage to score in the club jersey.

In spring 1979 Hoeneß returned to Bayern and ended his career at the age of 27 due to irreparable cartilage damage.

As a national player

Uli Hoeneß in the 1974 World Cup final

As a national player of the DFB, Uli Hoeneß made his debut in 1967 in a student international. In the Berlin Olympic Stadium, he scored two goals against England (6-0). After further appearances for DFB youth selections, the amateur national team and the U23, Hoeneß made his debut in the senior national team against Hungary on March 29, 1972 under national coach Helmut Schön . In the 2-0 win he scored one goal. A month later he played with the national team in the European Championship quarter-finals at London's Wembley Stadium against England and won 3-1. Hoeneß had played well, scored 1-0 and, like Breitner, was celebrated as a sky striker or sorcerer's apprentice . This was a decisive step towards winning the European Championship (3-0 victory over the Soviet Union ).

In the summer of 1972 Hoeneß took part in the Summer Olympics in Munich . During the second round there was the first meeting of two German national soccer teams. The later bronze medalist GDR won the decisive intermediate round match 3-2.

In 1974 he was a regular player in the German national soccer team at the 1974 World Cup in Germany. He was used in all seven games; he scored a goal with a penalty kick in the game against Sweden (4-2). He missed a penalty against Poland , which is why it was not he, but Paul Breitner who took the penalty in the final against the Netherlands . In the end, the German team became world champions. With only 22 years Hoeneß had won all important titles.

Together with the world championship team, he received the silver laurel leaf in 1974 .

Two years later met Germany in the final of Euro 1976 on Czechoslovakia . The game ended with 2: 2 at the end of regular time. After a goalless extension, the penalty shoot-out followed. Hoeneß shot the fourth penalty over the gate when the score was 3: 4 from a German perspective. The Czechoslovak team became European champions after Antonín Panenka converted his team's fifth penalty to 5-3. The 1976 European Championship final was remembered as the “ Night of Belgrade ”.

His last international match completed Hoeneß on November 17, 1976 in another game against Czechoslovakia; the German team won the game 2-0. In his 35 appearances for the national team, he scored five goals.

Title wins as a player

Career as a club manager

Hoeneß (2014)
Hoeneß (left) next to Karl-Heinz Rummenigge (Chairman of the Board of FC Bayern München AG ; 2014)

During his time as a player, Hoeneß brokered a sponsorship contract between Bayern Munich and Magirus-Deutz in 1978 . This enabled Paul Breitner's return from Eintracht Braunschweig to Munich to be financed. In 1979 Hoeneß ended his playing career due to the aftermath of a knee injury and switched to the management of FC Bayern Munich on May 1, 1979. At the age of 27 he became the youngest manager in the history of the Bundesliga. At the time the association had an annual turnover of twelve million marks with debts of seven million marks.

Hoeneß's first year as a manager ended with winning the German championship , the first in six years. Hoeneß had succeeded in building a new, powerful team around the Breitner / Rummenigge duo . In the following years he made a significant contribution to the economic rise of FC Bayern. Hoeneß, who was inspired by professional merchandising in the USA in the 1970s , introduced this sales promotion instrument to Bavaria, which from then on generated additional millions in income for the association.

Under his sporting direction, the Bavarians rose to become the most successful German football club: between 1980 and 2008, the club was German champions 16 times, DFB Cup winners nine times, League Cup winners six times and UEFA Cup winners once (1996). In the European Cup (later Champions League ), the club lost the finals in 1982 (1: 0 against Aston Villa ), 1987 (2: 1 against FC Porto ) and 1999 (2: 1 against Manchester United ). It wasn't until 2001 that he won the title. Hoeneß brought coaches such as Udo Lattek , Giovanni Trapattoni , Ottmar Hitzfeld , Jürgen Klinsmann , Otto Rehhagel , Louis van Gaal , Felix Magath , Jupp Heynckes and Pep Guardiola to Munich.

In 2001 the construction of a new Munich soccer stadium began, which was to replace the Olympic stadium and was heavily sponsored by Uli Hoeneß: the Allianz Arena was put into operation in 2005. It is one of the largest and most modern football stadiums in the world. FC Bayern München AG has been its sole owner since April 2006.

From 2002 to 2009, Hoeneß was Deputy Chairman of the Board of Bayern München AG, responsible for all licensed player matters, the junior team , sponsoring, licenses and represented the AG in the Stadion GmbH.

At the end of November 2009, Uli Hoeneß ended his 30-year career as manager of FC Bayern Munich, because at the annual general meeting on November 27, 2009 he was 99.3 percent president of FC Bayern Munich e. V. and was elected to the board of directors of FC Bayern München AG . On March 4, 2010, in a constituent meeting of the Supervisory Board, he was elected to succeed Franz Beckenbauer as Chairman of the Supervisory Board. His successor was sports director Christian Nerlinger , who held the position of manager from July 1, 2009 to July 2, 2012. In 2012 the members confirmed Hoeneß as president with 97.1 percent. In the years up to 2013 Hoeneß drove the economization of football in Germany.

After his release from prison in February 2016, Hoeneß announced on August 8, 2016 that he would run for the next FC Bayern presidential election in November 2016. On November 25, 2016, Hoeneß was again President of FC Bayern München e.V. with 98.5 percent of the votes. V. elected. In February 2017 he again took over the chairmanship of the supervisory board of FC Bayern München AG and was re-elected in this position for the next four years in December 2018. In July 2019 it was announced that Hoeneß would no longer run for re-election as President of FC Bayern in November of the same year and would also give up the post of Chairman of the Supervisory Board.

Title wins while he was a manager

Title wins during his presidency

Entrepreneur

In addition to his work as a soccer manager, Hoeneß founded today's HoWe Wurstwaren in Nuremberg together with Werner Weiß in 1985 , where HoWe stands for Hoeneß and Weiß. Today the company is run by his two children. Daughter Sabine is general partner and son Florian has individual prokura over HoWe Wurstwaren KG. Among other things, Aldi , the beer tent of Feinkost Käfer at the Munich Oktoberfest , McDonald’s on a test basis and numerous other food companies throughout Europe are supplied. In July 2010, Hoeneß presented himself as the inventor of the Nürnburg in a blog for the cooperation with McDonald's. In the fall of 2010, the food-gourmet-restaurants union (NGG) criticized the company for not having a works council, for not applying any sectoral collective agreements and for using a large number of temporary workers. This still applies today (April 2013), according to the Nuremberg NGG managing director Regina Schleser.

tax evasion

Research by the star

On January 16, 2013, Stern Online claimed that “a top representative of the German Bundesliga” had hidden a three-digit million amount in Swiss francs in a numbered account with the name “40… A” at the Swiss private bank Vontobel . In the printed edition, which appeared the following day, there was talk of "allegedly one of the top personalities from the first Bundesliga".

According to later reports, the numbered account had existed since 1975. In addition, numerous forward exchange transactions with a volume of 20 to 30 million euros were settled. At times, Hoeneß is said to have collateral of more than 200 million euros and thus regularly carried out transactions in the three-digit million euro range. In 2003 Hoeneß is said to have made a profit of 52 million euros, in 2005 78 million. Within a decade, Hoeneß had made over 52,000 transactions. Most of these were currency forwards . Hoeneß placed the orders by telephone. Most of the assets had been withdrawn to numbered accounts at other banks by 2010. Hoeneß was at times the most important customer in the bank's foreign exchange trading.

On the afternoon of January 15, 2013, the bank called Hoeneß because a star editor would be researching them for a celebrity from the sports sector and asking them “stupid questions”.

The publishing house Gruner + Jahr as well as a star reporter was from the end of March 2014. Hamburg Regional Court sentenced in first instance to four previously spread in the journal statements refrain .

Self-disclosure, house search and arrest

According to his testimony in court, Hoeneß decided to file a voluntary report after the Stern research was known . According to other sources, Hoeneß's tax advisor was made aware of the research at the bank in Zurich on January 16.

According to his own statements, Hoeneß submitted a voluntary disclosure through his tax advisor on January 12, 2013. This date later turned out to be untrue. A tax advisor, a business lawyer and a long-time head of the Munich tax investigation department in partial retirement , against whom disciplinary proceedings were therefore initiated, supported Hoeneß. According to another report, Vontobel is said to have urged Hoeneß to legalize his undeclared account with the German tax authorities.

The complaint, which was put together overnight, was filed in the early morning of January 17, 2013 at the Fines and Criminal Matters Office in Rosenheim. The tax office denied a complete and flawless voluntary disclosure - a prerequisite for impunity - and routinely forwarded the tax file to the Munich II public prosecutor's office, which began proceedings for tax evasion on February 1, 2013 at the latest .

“Then on March 20th my life changed, at seven in the morning. Then the doorbell rang at my house on the Tegernsee, I was in my bathrobe and the public prosecutor was at the door. That's when hell began for me. [...] Two or three public prosecutors, a few tax investigators, a few police officers, there were only two or three cars in front of the door. I have to say, it was really discreet, without a big spectacle. The search was calm and clean. They took computers and cell phones and looked for bank records. They showed me the search warrant and the arrest warrant and told me to pack my bag, they would take me with them. "

- Uli Hoeneß : Interview with Die Zeit

On March 20, 2013, the public prosecutor's office searched Hoeneß's house on Tegernsee . He was provisionally arrested, but shortly afterwards the arrest warrant based on the risk of escape was suspended in return for a security of five million euros. At the same time, Hoeneß's offices at FC Bayern Munich were searched. After the arrest warrant was suspended, Hoeneß had to report regularly to the Bad Wiessee police station.

Public disclosure of the suspicion

On April 20, 2013, the investigation into suspected tax evasion was made public through a pre-notification from Focus magazine . Hoeneß filed a criminal complaint against unknown persons for violating tax secrecy . After the search for the informant was initially unsuccessful, officials searched the Miesbach tax office and a data center of the tax authorities on January 23, 2014. The proceedings were discontinued in August 2014 because no specific suspicion against a particular public official could be determined.

Also on April 20, 2013, Hoeneß confirmed the existence of the account, but contradicted the size of the deposits.

At the regular meeting of the FC Bayern München AG Supervisory Board on May 6, 2013, the first after the voluntary disclosure became known, Hoeneß offered to suspend his mandate as Chairman of the Supervisory Board. The supervisory board rejected this.

In the first half of 2013, more than 8,000 voluntary reports for tax evasion were filed in Germany - more than in the entire previous year. The reporting on the Hoeneß case ("Hoeneß effect") is considered to be an essential factor , along with the purchase of tax evaders CDs and changed business practices by foreign banks.

Indictment and conviction

On July 30, 2013, the Munich II public prosecutor brought charges against Hoeneß. The Munich II district court admitted the indictment on November 4, 2013. At the annual general meeting of FC Bayern Munich in mid-November 2013, Hoeneß announced that after the verdict, the club members would decide in an extraordinary general meeting about his future at the head of the club. Hoeneß announced that he would resign from the supervisory board of Allianz Beratungs- und Vertriebs-AG on November 30, 2013.

The public trial began on 10 March 2014 the 5th  Economic Criminal Chamber of the Landgericht München II ; four days of trial were scheduled in the Munich Palace of Justice .

The indictment accused Hoeneß of evading 3.5 million euros in taxes from capital gains . The defense put further tax liabilities from currency bets on the first day of the trial at at least 15 million euros. The tax investigator in charge put the tax liability on the second day of the trial on the basis of bank documents at 27.2 million euros, with the solidarity surcharge resulting in a tax liability of 28.5 million euros. The tax liability was recognized on the third day of the trial by Hoeneß's defense lawyer Hanns Feigen , along with the information that all the figures were already included in the voluntary disclosure from January 2013. The public prosecutor's spokesman denied this, but was confirmed by SPIEGEL editor Rafael Buschmann.

In the closing arguments on March 13, 2014, the public prosecutor initially classified Hoeneß's voluntary disclosure as ineffective and demanded a prison sentence of five years and six months. Hoeneß's defense attorney argued on the last day of the hearing, however, that “an effective voluntary disclosure had only just been missed” and argued that a maximum suspended sentence should be imposed.

With the judgment announced on the fourth day of the trial, the criminal chamber of the Munich district court Hoeneß found tax evasion in seven cases (for the years 2003 to 2009) amounting to 28.5 million euros and sentenced him to a total imprisonment of three years and six months. She classified his voluntary disclosure as invalid. On October 30, 2014, the Regional Court of Munich II published the anonymized and, subject to tax secrecy, abbreviated judgment . The 50-page document lists the profits from currency forwards that are relevant to tax and criminal law in the years 2003 to 2009 as well as the annual amounts of the tax reduction and gives an overview of the timing of the tax affair, insofar as this was legally ascertainable.

Hoeneß declared on March 14, 2014 that he did not want to appeal . In a personal statement he spoke of the "mistake [s] of a life", the consequences of which he now faces, since it corresponds to his "understanding of decency, attitude and personal responsibility". He will therefore resign as President and Chairman of the Supervisory Board of FC Bayern Munich. The public prosecutor's office also waived an appeal. The sentence with a prison sentence against Hoeneß thus became final.

In the course of the tax affair, Hoeneß resigned from his position as President of FC Bayern München e. V. and as chairman of the supervisory board of FC Bayern München AG. His successor was Karl Hopfner . At the extraordinary general meeting on May 2, 2014, Hoeneß announced that he wanted to return to FC Bayern in an official capacity after his prison sentence had expired.

Imprisonment and prison relief

On June 2, 2014, Uli Hoeneß began his imprisonment in the Landsberg correctional facility , according to a press article at the beginning in the prison's health department. This includes u. a. less strict prison conditions with regard to food and accommodation. Hoeneß spent a few days in a clinic because of a heart operation. Then it was incorporated into the normal execution, this includes u. a. Work in the prison dressing room. He paid his remaining tax liability of 30 million euros. On September 20, 2014, Hoeneß was granted one day of imprisonment leave for the first time . After he was allowed to spend Christmas and New Year's Eve 2014 at home, Hoeneß was transferred to the Rothenfeld detention center on January 2, 2015 as an outdoor prisoner in open prison . He worked 8.5 hours a day as "Assistant to the Head of the Junior Team" in the junior division of FC Bayern Munich. According to a press report from mid-June 2015, Hoeneß was allowed to spend the night with his family on almost every weekend as a relief. On January 18, 2016, the Augsburg Regional Court approved the application for “ semi-penalty ” and early release from prison. He announced that his detention would end on February 29, with the remainder of the detention being suspended on a three-year probationary period. The responsible public prosecutor's office in Munich waived an objection to this decision. Hoeneß was released after serving half his prison term. The bridging allowance to which Hoeneß is entitled, d. H. Hoeneß donated his wages for the time he was outdoors.

In mid-May 2017, Hoeneß caused some media turmoil with the personal assessment of his conviction and prison sentence. During an appearance at the “meet the president” event in Vaduz / Liechtenstein , he announced: “I am the only German who reported himself and was still in prison. An acquittal would have been perfectly normal. But in this game I clearly lost to the media. ”This statement was taken by NRW Minister of Justice Thomas Kutschaty as an opportunity to publicly reflect on a violation of the probation conditions:“ With such statements you can already check the revocation of probation. ”This in turn prompted Hoeneß's lawyer Steffen Ufer to launch a public counter-offensive.

Controversy

Relationships with colleagues

Christoph Daum , from 1986 to 1990 and from 2006 to 2009 head coach of 1. FC Köln , started in 1989 as coach of the strongest at that stage rivals Bayern in the battle for the German championship a verbal battle with Bayern Munich and whose coach Jupp Heynckes , who in the current sports studio on May 20, 1989 found its climax, when Daum and sports director Udo Lattek on the Cologne side and Hoeneß and Heynckes on the Bavarian side delivered a verbal exchange of blows. A few days later, FC Bayern won the decisive game for the German championship at 1. FC Köln.

A decade later, Daum's so-called "coke affair" followed (see below). On December 17, 2006, Hoeneß heated up the conflict with the trainer who had just started again in Cologne in the program Doppelpass by saying "Christoph Daum is a self-promoter with an extraordinary tendency to megalomania".

Hoeneß had arguments with Willi Lemke , the long-time manager of Werder Bremen and later politician, who saw FC Bayern as the “gravedigger of German football”, and Hellmut Krug , former German FIFA referee, who accused Hoeneß of “playing” FC Bayern. whistled ”. The mutual "enmity" between Hoeneß and Lemke is considered to have been resolved at the latest since Hoeneß visited the celebration of Lemke's 70th birthday.

Allegations in the "coke affair" around Christoph Daum

In an interview with the Munich tabloid Abendzeitung in the autumn of 2000, Hoeneß had put the designated national coach Christoph Daum into the twilight. "The DFB cannot start an action ' No power to drugs ' and Mr Daum may have something to do with it," said Hoeneß literally. In this context, the words "snuff thumb" were used to describe cocaine use. Far-reaching media coverage followed. Hoeneß was insulted for over a week. Hoeneß was ultimately right: the result of a hair test that Daum himself had arranged for cocaine use was positive. The DFB then withdrew from the agreement, Daum should be the new national coach in 2001.

Private

Uli Hoeneß has lived in Bad Wiessee am Tegernsee since 2006 . Before that he had lived in a semi-detached house in Ottobrunn for over 30 years . He has been married since 1973 and has two children and four grandchildren.

On February 17, 1982, the then 30-year-old survived the nightly crash of a twin-engine propeller plane of the Piper PA-34 Seneca type . Together with three friends, including the pilot and former ski racer Wolfgang Junginger , he was on the way from Munich to Hanover for an international match against Portugal . Shortly after 8 p.m., the aircraft crashed before the intended landing at Hanover-Langenhagen Airport in the Black Moor between Resse and Heitlingen . About an hour later, a hunter found Hoeneß, who was in shock and was crawling through the forest, disoriented and covered in blood. Hoeneß was the only survivor. Experts later came to the conclusion that Hoeneß 'seat in the back right of the plane saved his life - and the fact that he was not buckled up and was thrown out of the plane. He broke his arm and ankle and suffered a concussion. He once said he hardly remembered anything.

In the context of the tax affair, Hoeneß stated that he had suffered from "stock market addiction". According to his own statements, he now thinks he is "cured".

Awards

Awards returned

Hoeneß on a special stamp "WM 1974" for 40 Pfennig of the Deutsche Bundespost (Michel no. 812), issued on May 15, 1974 from the series "FIFA World Cup"

Postage stamps

  • 1974: A special stamp issued by the Deutsche Bundespost for the 1974 World Cup , issued on May 15, 1974, shows Uli Hoeneß in a slightly alienated manner, since until 1977, traditionally living personalities , with the exception of the Federal President, were not depicted on German postage stamps.
  • 1982: Hoeneß on a postage stamp from Paraguay for the 1982 World Cup with a scene with Branko Oblak in the game Germany - Yugoslavia at the 1974 World Cup

Uli Hoeneß Cup

As a subsequent gift from FC Bayern for Uli Hoeneß's 60th birthday in January 2012, the game for the Uli Hoeneß Cup took place on July 24, 2013 . All proceeds were donated to charity. FC Bayern Munich's opponent was FC Barcelona in the 71,000-strong crowd at the Allianz Arena . Bayern won the game 2-0 with goals from Lahm and Mandžukić . Sky and ZDF broadcast the game live on television.

TV portraits

  • Uli Hoeneß. Attack with a heart. 45 minutes, by Nick Golüke and Uli Köhler, Bayerisches Fernsehen , first broadcast January 2, 2010.
  • Uli Hoeneß - The Patriarch. 90 minutes, documentary / drama by Juan Moreno , Annette Ramelsberger , Johanna Behre (screenplay), Christian Twente (director), ZDF , first broadcast on August 27, 2015
  • The Bayern boss: final whistle for Uli Hoeneß 44:22 min, a film by Johanna Behre, Juan Moreno and Tim Klimes, first broadcast November 4, 2019, available until November 4, 2020

theatre

  • Sarah Kohrs: The rise and fall of Uli H. - A German Wurstiade , world premiere at Theater Ulm on November 23, 2018

literature

Web links

Commons : Uli Hoeneß  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

References and comments

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  3. a b Thomas Hüetlin : The apparent saint from the Tegernsee. In: Spiegel Online . April 23, 2013, accessed February 11, 2016 .
  4. Own statement in: Attacke mit Herz ; ARD TV portrait about Uli Hoeneß, 2010.
  5. Thomas Hüetlin : Gute Freunde , Heyne, 2006. P. 61.
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  18. Hoeneß is again chairman of the board of directors of FC Bayern. In: SZ.de. Süddeutscher Verlag, February 6, 2018, accessed on August 12, 2020 .
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  30. ^ Hans Leyendecker : Omission in four points . In: Süddeutsche Zeitung . March 29, 2014, p. 37 (similar version under other title: 4: 0 ).
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