Ulrich Biesinger

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Ulrich Biesinger
Personnel
birthday August 6, 1933
place of birth AugsburgGerman Empire
date of death June 18, 2011
Place of death Augsburg,  Germany
position Storm
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1952-1960 BC Augsburg 187 (105)
1960-1963 SSV Reutlingen 05 78 0(44)
1963-1965 BC Augsburg 35 0(16)
1965-1966 TSV Schwaben Augsburg 8 00(0)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1953-1958 Germany B 7 00(3)
1954-1959 Germany 7 00(2)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1968-19 ?? Amateur clubs in the Augsburg area
1 Only league games are given.

Ulrich "Uli" Biesinger (born August 6, 1933 in Augsburg ; † June 18, 2011 there ) was a German football player .

Career

societies

In the 1952/53 season , Ulrich Biesinger's career began in the Oberliga Süd with the blue-whites of the Augsburg Ball Game Club . He made his debut in the top German division on August 24, 1952 in a 3-2 defeat in the away game against VfB Stuttgart , where the 19-year-old scored a goal. The storm talent played a total of 30 missions with 13 goals alongside top performers Georg Platzer , Ludwig Schlump and Franz Bachl . With the BCA he could never compete for the top spots in the Oberliga Süd, so he never made it to the final round of the German championship . Even when the outstanding half-striker Helmut Haller moved to Biesinger's side in the 1957/58 season, the BCA didn't get more than twelfth place. In the following year, 1959, Biesinger scored 18 goals for his club, but that didn't prevent relegation at the end of the round. From 1952 to 1959, the center forward played 187 league games with 105 goals with shooting power and good ball handling. Biesinger rose in 1959 with his club in the 2nd League South.

Since the immediate ascent did not succeed, the BCA took 6th place, he switched to SSV Reutlingen 05 for the 1960/61 season . For Reutlingen he played 78 point games and scored 44 goals in the last three seasons of the Oberliga era (1960/61 to 1962/63). In the first season at SSV, together with goalkeeper Karl Bögelein and attacker Hans-Georg Dulz, he brought the club at the foot of the Achalm to an excellent fifth place. Ulrich Biesinger ranks third on the all-time top scorer list of the Oberliga Süd with his 149 goals in 265 games. With the Bundesliga start in 1963, he returned to his hometown Augsburg and joined the BCA in the Regionalliga Süd for the 1963/64 season . In 35 missions, the veteran scored 16 goals, but the club rose as 19th in the amateur Oberliga Bayern, which he finished second with the team at the end of the 1964/65 season.

Local rivals TSV Schwaben Augsburg , who played in the Regionalliga Süd, persuaded the 32-year-old to move to the city center for the 1965/66 season . After the first six match days, Ulrich Biesinger suffered a meniscus injury and therefore had to survive an injury break from October 1965 to February 1966. On March 6, 1966, he made the first attempt to continue his career in the home game against SpVgg Weiden , in the away game against VfR Mannheim on April 24, 1966, the second attempt followed, but the active career was after eight games due to knee problems in the Regionalliga Süd Finished in the 1965/66 season.

National team

On June 4, 1953, the 19-year-old center forward Ulrich Biesinger stormed a half-time in the South German selection in a test match against a DFB selection so convincingly in front of the eyes of national coach Sepp Herberger that he immediately won him for the B international match on 14. June 1953 in Düsseldorf against the selection of Spain nominated and also substituted in the 5: 2 success. On April 24, 1954, the second mission followed in Offenburg against the selection of Switzerland. At the beginning of May 1954 he was registered by the FIFA DFB for the 40-man squad for the 1954 World Cup in Switzerland. In the years 1955 to 1958 Biesinger played five more games for the German B national team. He scored three goals. He last played representative for southern Germany on April 12, 1959 at the game in Hanover against northern Germany.

Although he was only a substitute player without use at the 1954 World Cup, he received the Silver Laurel Leaf with the team.

Ulrich Biesinger played his first international match on September 26, 1954 in Brussels against the selection of Belgium, since he had already seen winning the 1954 World Cup in Switzerland as a substitute player without a commitment. National coach Sepp Herberger sent the debutants to the side of world champions Rahn, Morlock, Ottmar Walter and Klodt in the first encounter after the World Cup tournament in Switzerland. In 1955, two appearances against the selections of Ireland and Norway followed and in 1956 three more international appointments, in which he also scored two goals. For the five full international matches in 1957 he was not called up. When the national coach announced the 40 list for the 1958 World Cup in Sweden in mid-April 1958 , from which the 22 Sweden drivers had to be selected, he named the center strikers Alfred Kelbassa , Uwe Seeler and Ulrich Biesinger. The center forward from BCA was then able to try his suitability for the defending champions' team in the test matches of an A selection against a B selection on April 23 in Kassel, on April 29 in Essen against a junior selection and on May 1 against Luxembourg Proving proof, but to no avail. He was no longer invited by the national coach to the World Cup course from May 12 to 24, 1958 at the Grünwald sports school. After the tournament in Sweden, Biesinger was called back to the national team. He was in the squad for the international match on December 21, 1958 in the Augsburger Rosenaustadion against the selection of Bulgaria, but was not used in the 3-0 success. He then played his seventh international match on December 28, 1958 in Cairo against the selection of Egypt. On January 1, 1959, he was used in a German selection in Cairo against an Egyptian selection. Ulrich Biesinger's international career ended with a 2-1 win.

Others

After his active time, Ulrich Biesinger worked in the Augsburg area as a trainer for various amateur clubs. The trained mechanic earned his living on an expedition for a large company.

Biesinger got involved in the team of the Augsburg benefit football team Datschiburger Kickers , which is committed to fundraising for charitable purposes.

On June 18, 2011, Biesinger died in inpatient treatment, leaving behind his wife Elfriede, with whom he had been married since 1956.

On August 22, 2018, FC Augsburg announced that the standing stand of the WWK-Arena would be renamed “Ulrich Biesinger-Tribüne”. This was preceded by a campaign by the active fan scene who wanted to use this measure to save Biesinger's achievements and merits.

successes

See also

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ↑ Mission data with the exception of the second division seasons 1959/60.
  2. a b Augsburger Allgemeine : One of the heroes of Bern: Augsburg mourns football idol Uli Biesinger
  3. FC Augsburg : FCA mourns Biesinger
  4. Sports report of the Federal Government of September 29, 1973 to the Bundestag - printed matter 7/1040 - p. 57.
  5. FCA names grandstand after Ulrich Biesinger - FC Augsburg . In: FC Augsburg . August 22, 2018 ( fcaugsburg.de [accessed August 24, 2018]).
  6. ^ Uli-Biesinger-Tribune. Retrieved on August 24, 2018 (German).