Fritz Gödicke
East German footballer and manager
Gödicke (center) in 1959. | |||
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | (1919-10-21)21 October 1919 | ||
Place of birth | Zeitz, Province of Saxony, Weimar Republic[1] | ||
Date of death | 28 April 2009(2009-04-28) (aged 89) | ||
Position(s) | Defender | ||
Youth career | |||
1931–1933 | Freie Turnerschaft Zeitz | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1933–1945 | TuRa Leipzig | ||
1945–1949 | SG Leutzsch | ||
1949–1950 | ZSG Industrie Leipzig | ||
1950–1951 | Chemie Leipzig | 20 | (1) |
Managerial career | |||
1955–1958 | SC Wismut Karl-Marx-Stadt | ||
1958–1959 | East Germany | ||
1962–1965 | SC Dynamo Berlin | ||
1969–1970 | 1. FC Union Berlin | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals, correct as of 20 May 2015 (UTC) |
Fritz Gödicke (21 October 1919 – 28 April 2009) was an East German footballer and manager.[2]
In 1951 Gödicke was the shared winner (together with fellow footballer Werner Oberländer) in a poll conducted by the East German sports daily Deutsches Sportecho to determine East Germany's most popular sportsman.[3]
Honours
As player:
- DDR-Oberliga champion: 1950–51
As manager:
- DDR-Oberliga champion: 1956, 1957
References
- v
- t
- e
FC Erzgebirge Aue – managers
- Gogosch (1946–50)
- Fritzsch (1950–52)
- Kukowitsch (1952)
- Dittes (1952–65)
- Gödicke (1955–58)
- Horst (1958)
- Hofmann (1958–60)
- M. Fuchs I (1960–62)
- Günther (1962–75)
- Müller (1965–67)
- Hofmann (1967–71)
- Müller (1971–77)
- M. Fuchs II (1977–81)
- Thomale (1981–85)
- Fischer (1985)
- Schaller (1985–86)
- Speth (1986–88)
- Escher (1988)
- Schulze (1988–90)
- Escher (1990)
- Toppmöller (1990–91)
- Eisengrein (1991–92)
- Lindemann (1992–95)
- Minge (1995–96)
- Lindemann (1996–98)
- Lieberam (1998–99)
- Erler (1999)
- Schädlich (1999–2007)
- Seitz (2008)
- Weber (2008–09)
- Schmitt (2009–12)
- Baumann (2012–13)
- Götz (2013–14)
- Stipić (2014–15)
- Dochev (2015–17)
- Tedesco (2017)
- Letsch (2017)
- Lenk (a.i.) (2017)
- Drews (2017–18)
- Meyer (2018–19)
- Hensel (2019)
- Schuster (2019–21)
- Shpilevsky (2021)
- Hensel / Müller (2021–22)
- Dochev (2022)
- Rost (2022)
- Müller (2022)
- Dochev (2022–)
This biographical article related to association football in Germany, about a defender born in the 1910s, is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e