Victor Siasia

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Victor Siasia
Personnel
birthday October 1, 1980
position midfield player
Juniors
Years station
0000-1999 Werder Bremen
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1999-2001 Eintracht Braunschweig 21 (3)
1999-2002 Eintracht Braunschweig II
2002-2003 Ratingen 04/19 15 (2)
2003-2004 FC Geistingen
2004-2006 Shooting Stars FC
1 Only league games are given.

Victor Siasia (born October 1, 1980 ) is a retired Nigerian football player on the position of midfielder .

Career

In the later 1990s, the Nigerian midfielder Victor Siasia, born on October 1, 1980, appeared for the A-youth of SV Werder Bremen . He was also involved in the so far (as of 2020) greatest success of the A-youth in the club's history, when the so-called Golden Generation of Bremen won the German youth championship . Shortly after winning the title, it drew the Nigerians but for the third-tier Regionalliga Nord gambling Eintracht Braunschweig . Here he made his debut in men's football in the first round match against Lüneburger SK on August 1, 1999, when he was substituted on by his coach Reinhold Fanz in the 70th minute for the veteran René Deffke , who was just ending his career with the Braunschweig team . After that, however, he hardly got beyond his reserve role. After he was used more regularly until the beginning of October 1999, his appearances in Germany's third division decreased more and more over time. After two missions in December, Fanz did not let him appear again until the season ended in April 2000. At the same time, he was already playing his first games for the second men's team in Lower Saxony . As third place in the Regionalliga Nord, Siasia qualified with the Braunschweig team in the end for participation in the two-track Regionalliga, which was played for the first time from the 2000/01 season.

This season, the Nigerian-born player was only used in four first-team league games, and he was never on the pitch for the full length of the game. In addition to players such as Alessandro da Silva , Milton Griffiths , Patrick Falk , Tobias Rau , Darius Scholtysik or Andreas Wieczorek , he was one of the least used players in the Braunschweiger this season in midfield. Mainly he was already in this season for the second team of the club to which he officially changed for the following season 2001/02 and thus no longer belonged to the regional league squad. For the second team, he entered the Lower Saxony League East . The team became champions at the end of the season and then played in the Lower Saxony Oberliga; At this point, Siasia was no longer part of the squad. In the winter break of 2001/02 he left Lower Saxony and instead switched to Ratingen 04/19 in North Rhine-Westphalia with play in the Oberliga Nordrhein .

In a mixed season, in which Ratinger Spielvereinigung Germania 04/19 had four different coaches (including interim coach), the Nigerian made his team debut on February 17, 2002 in a 4-1 away defeat against SV Adler Osterfeld when he was the 63rd minute of play for Dalibor Zjacic was substituted on. In the following games under coach Wolfgang Bergemann, Siasia was always used as a substitute, before he was on the field for the first time over the full game on March 10, 2002 in a 0-1 home defeat against Bonner SC and also had a chance to score . On April 7, the midfielder scored his first for the team in a 2-2 away draw against the amateurs of 1. FC Köln . Shortly before that, Bergemann had been dismissed as a coach after only six league games, whereupon Detlev Czoske succeeded him as an interim coach for a game. Another round later, the Nigerian appeared under the new coach, the German-Turkish Hakan Katırcıoğlu , who was active in the 2nd Bundesliga for a long time in the 1980s and 1990s . Until the end of the season, mostly employed as a regular, Siasia made 15 league appearances and two goals. In the final ranking of the Oberliga Nordrhein 2001/02 he finished with the team in 15th place in the table, which meant that they were able to stay up. After that, the African hung on for another season at the club. Nothing is known about the exact numbers of Siasias, who continued to be deployed under Katırcıoğlu. In the sometimes closely staggered final table, the football club from Ratingen came in 13th.

In March 2003, the midfielder joined the FC Geistingen , founded in 1968 in a north-eastern suburb of Bonn . In his debut game, a 2-1 away win against Baris Spor Hackenberg , he also scored his first goal. The 22-year-old Nigerian also appeared as a goal scorer in later games of FC Geistingen , which merged with TuRa Hennef in 2005 and became FC Hennef 05 . According to the website Transfermarkt.de , he then belonged to the team from the Landesliga Mittelrhein until the winter break of 2003/04, before he returned to his home country. There he was signed by Shooting Stars FC from the Nigeria Professional Football League . At the club from Ibadan he finished tenth in the 2004 game year and came in at least fifth place in the following year 2005 in the final standings . At the club from the Nigerian professional league, he appears until 2006. With the relegation of the club at the end of the 2006 game year , Siasia's trail is lost.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ↑ Mission data only from the 2001/02 top division
  2. German A-Youth Championship 20 years ago - What happened to Werder's golden generation? , accessed on March 14, 2020
  3. Tobias Bahn provides collective relief , accessed on March 16, 2020
  4. Schäfer Provides Late Redemption , accessed March 16, 2020
  5. a b The last contingent ends the dry spell , accessed on March 16, 2020
  6. Günther Hohn: ?? It's fun again ?? , accessed on March 16, 2020
  7. Eouasse shocks TuRa with winning goal , accessed on March 16, 2020
  8. Jakurtaj ensures a furious start , accessed on March 16, 2020
  9. Thomas Schneider keeps his dream of advancement , accessed on March 16, 2020
  10. Nigeria 2004 on the official website of the Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation , accessed on March 16, 2020
  11. Nigeria 2005 on the official website of the Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation , accessed on March 16, 2020
  12. Nigeria 2006 on the official website of the Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation , accessed on March 16, 2020