Werner Friese

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Werner Friese
Personnel
birthday March 30, 1946
place of birth DresdenGermany
date of death September 28, 2016
Place of death DresdenGermany
size 180 cm
position goal
Juniors
Years station
1958-1964 TSG blue-white Zschachwitz
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1964-1968 SC unit /
FSV locomotive Dresden
86 (0)
1968-1979 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig 209 (0)
1979 ASG forward Cottbus-Süd
1979-1981 BSG Chemie Böhlen 18 (0)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1968-1969 GDR offspring 5 (0)
1976 GDR B 1 (0)
1974 GDR 0 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1986-1989 BSG locomotive Halberstadt
1989-1990 FSV Frankfurt
Rot-Weiss Frankfurt
0 goalkeeping coach:
1992-1993 Eintracht Frankfurt
1993-2001 Bayer 04 Leverkusen
2001-2002 Eintracht Frankfurt
2004-2005 Shakhtar Donetsk
2005-2006 Dynamo Dresden
1 Only league games are given.

Werner Friese (born March 30, 1946 in Dresden - Kleinzschachwitz , † September 28, 2016 in Dresden) was a German football goalkeeper . He became known for his 184 appearances in the GDR league for 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig and BSG Chemie Böhlen . After his active career he worked as a trainer .

Athletic career

BSG / Club stations

Werner Friese's first sports association was TSG Blau-Weiß Zschachwitz in Großzschachwitz , a southern district of Dresden . Here he began at the age of twelve, went through all the youth teams until he was eligible to play in the men's division in 1964 and moved to SC Einheit Dresden , whose first team was playing in the second-rate GDR league at the time. There he was first for one season in the goal of the 2nd team, which was represented a class lower in the Dresden district league . For the 1965/66 season, Friese was accepted into the GDR league squad after he had helped out once in the league eleven in 1964/65, and remained the goalkeeper of Dresden until 1968, who started as FSV Lokomotive Dresden in 1966 .

In the summer of 1968, Friese moved to the first division club 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig , where he should replace the 31-year-old Peter Nauert in the gate. In the official cadre list, Friese was named an engineer, and his height was given as 1.82 meters. He played his first league games in the 1968/69 season and only one year later he was number one in the Leipzig goal. This first league season was disappointing for Friese, because his new team descended from bottom of the table in the GDR league. So he had to spend another year in the second division before 1. FC Lok immediately managed to get promoted again.

Friese was compensated by the fact that the Leipziger at the end of the season surprisingly reached the final of the GDR soccer cup as the second division . With Friese in the goal, it was not enough for the big sensation, because the Leipziger were defeated by FC Vorwärts Berlin 2: 4. After the finals in 1973 ended with a 2: 3 defeat against 1. FC Magdeburg , Friese won the cup in 1976 with 1. FC Lok by beating FC Vorwärts Frankfurt (Oder) 3-0 . A year later Friese was again in the cup final, but this time there was another defeat with 2: 3 against Dynamo Dresden . Together with Claus Boden from Dresden , Friese had held the record among goalkeepers with four cup finals before he was overtaken by Bodo Rudwaleit from BFC Dynamo with a total of six appearances in 1985 and overtaken in 1988.

Until the end of the 1978/79 season Friese remained goalkeeper at Lok Leipzig. At the age of 33 he made room for his successor René Müller and after a brief interlude at the Vorwärts Cottbus-Süd army sports club , where he had to do his NVA reservist service, he moved to the GDR league team Chemie Böhlen. As a substitute goalkeeper, he made the rise of the Böhlener in the league, where he was used in 1980 in three point games. After Böhlen's one-year stint in the league, Friese ended his competitive sports career in 1981. In this, the native of Dresden was in goal in 184 first division and 130 second division games.

Selection bets

After Friese already five games with the East German National Selection had denied he was in 1974 in the cadre of senior team of communications called that for the final round of the World Cup in Germany had qualified. Since he was only nominated as number three behind Jürgen Croy and Wolfgang Blochwitz , Friese was not used in this tournament and was never called up later in the A-Elf. Only for one game of the B selection he was in the selection goal again in 1976.

Further career

During his time as a top division player, Friese had already completed a sports degree at the Leipzig Sports University DHfK and thus acquired the qualification to work as a coach. From 1986 to 1989 he coached the third-class Lokomotive Halberstadt team . He then obtained a new trainer diploma at the Sports University in Cologne and settled in Frankfurt / Main , where he became a trainer at FSV Frankfurt and Rot-Weiss Frankfurt . From 1992 Friese specialized as a goalkeeping coach at Eintracht Frankfurt , from 1993 for eight years at Bayer 04 Leverkusen . In 2001 he returned to Eintracht Frankfurt for a year. After a one-year engagement with the Ukrainian first division club Schachtar Donezk , Friese returned to Dresden in 2005, where he worked as a goalkeeping coach at Dynamo Dresden for another year . He then returned to his family in Frankfurt am Main as a retiree. Friese died in autumn 2016 at the age of 70.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Werner Friese becomes goalkeeping coach , May 28, 2001, accessed November 4, 2016
  2. Goalkeeper legend Friese dies. In: Bild.de . Axel Springer , September 29, 2016, accessed on July 21, 2019 .