Uwe Szangolies

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Uwe Szangolies
Personnel
birthday August 10, 1962
place of birth NeubrandenburgGDR
size 190 cm
position Defender
Juniors
Years station
BSG Post Neubrandenburg
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
0000-1983 BSG Post Neubrandenburg II
1983-1984 ASG forward Neubrandenburg 9 0(0)
1984-1985 BSG Post Neubrandenburg 25 0(5)
1985 BSG Rotation Berlin 8 0(6)
1986 BSG Chemie Velten
1987-1989 BSG Rotation Berlin 84 (19)
1989-1990 BSG Stahl Eisenhüttenstadt /
Eisenhüttenstädter FC Stahl
32 0(1)
1990-1991 FC Berlin 18 0(1)
1991-1994 FC Carl Zeiss Jena 90 0(7)
1994-1998 SV Funkwerk Kölleda
1 Only league games are given.

Uwe Szangolies (born August 10, 1962 in Neubrandenburg ) is a former German football player. He played in the GDR league for Stahl Eisenhüttenstadt and FC Berlin and later in the 2nd Bundesliga for FC Carl Zeiss Jena .

Athletic career

Career start in Neubrandenburg and East Berlin

Szangolies played in the junior teams of the company sports community (BSG) Post Neubrandenburg and was initially active in the men's division in the 2nd team, which competed in the third-class district league. In the early 1980s, the trained locksmith did his military service with the NVA and played with the first team of the army sports community Vorwärts Neubrandenburg in the second-rate GDR league .

From the beginning of the 1984/85 season he played again for the BSG Post Neubrandenburg and was also used there in the GDR league. After 25 matches with five goals, the 1.90 meter tall Szangolies moved to league rivals BSG Rotation Berlin for the 1985/86 season . There he scored six goals this season, but only played eight games. In the 1986/87 season, Szangolies first played at BSG Chemie Velten in the Potsdam district league , but then returned to the BSG rotation in the GDR league at the beginning of the second half of the season and played 16 point games by the end of the season in which he scored three goals .

In the 1987/88 season Szangolies finally made the breakthrough as a regular player with rotation. He played all 34 point games and was the most accurate player in Berlin with ten goals. In 1988/89 he was not missing in any league game, but was now used in the defensive area by coach Dieter Fuchs and only scored six goals. After 92 GDR league games and 25 goals, Szangolies retired from Rotation Berlin in the summer of 1989.

Jump into the GDR league

In July 1989 Szangolies joined the league promoted BSG Stahl Eisenhüttenstadt. Coach Günter Reinke used him as a libero from the first day of the match , and Szangolies occupied this position in all 26 league games. After another six games in the 1990/91 league season, Szangolies moved in October 1990 to the league club FC Berlin , the former BFC Dynamo, and was there from the 9th matchday to the end of the season. As a result of German reunification, it was the last season of the GDR Oberliga in which the clubs could qualify for one of the three top divisions of the German Football Association .

Since FC Berlin only qualified for the third-class NOFV amateur league , Szangolies left the Berlin club after only nine months. In his two league seasons he made 50 league appearances and scored one goal each for Eisenhüttenstadt and for FC Berlin.

2nd Bundesliga in Jena

From the 1991/92 season Szangolies played for the former GDR upper division club FC Carl Zeiss Jena in the 2nd Bundesliga. In his first season in Jena, he played 21 of the 32 point games in a goal. In the 13 games in which he was called up from the start, he played Libero again. In 1992/93 he was a full-fledged regular player and played 40 of the 46 games in the 2nd Bundesliga as a Libero.

In 1993/94, FC Carl Zeiss played its third second division season with Szangolies. It went over 38 rounds that season, and Libero Szangolies was in 29 games. After this season, Jena had been relegated, Szangolies ended his professional career after 99 competitive games and seven goals and joined the Thuringian league club SV Funkwerk Kölleda . When he got into financial difficulties in 1998, Szangolies ended his footballing career for good.

literature

  • Hanns Leske : Encyclopedia of GDR football . Verlag Die Werkstatt, Göttingen 2007, ISBN 978-3-89533-556-3 , p. 425.
  • Andreas Baingo , Michael Horn: The History of the GDR Oberliga. Verlag Die Werkstatt, Göttingen 2003, ISBN 3-89533-428-6 , 295, 309.
  • Uwe Nuttelmann (Ed.): GDR Oberliga. 1962-1991. Self-published, Jade 2007, ISBN 978-3-930814-33-6 .
  • DSFS (Ed.): GDR Chronicle 1949–1991. GDR football in data, facts and figures. Volume 7: 1984 / 85-1988 / 89. Berlin 2010.
  • DSFS (Ed.): GDR Chronicle 1949–1991. GDR football in data, facts and figures. Volume 8: 1989 / 90–1990 / 91 as well as player and coach ABC. Berlin 2011.
  • Christian Karn, Reinhard Rehberg: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Player Lexicon 1963–1994 . AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2012. ISBN 978-3-89784-214-4 , page 501.
  • Hanns Leske : The GDR league players. A lexicon . AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2014, ISBN 978-3-89784-392-9 , page 451.

Web links