Hans-Jürgen Dörner
Hans-Jürgen "Dixie" Dörner (born 25 January 1951 in Görlitz, East Germany) is a former German football player and who now coaches. He distinguished himself during his career by being named East Germany's player of the year three times (1977, 1984 and 1985) – the only East German player to do this besides goalkeeper Jürgen Croy.
Dörner's playing career began in 1960 with amateur club BSG Energie WAMA Görlitz and he joined Dynamo Dresden in 1968 where he won five first division DDR-Oberliga titles and five FDGB-Pokale (East German Cup), twice winning the DDR-Oberliga and FDGB-Pokal double. He captained Dynamo Dresden from 1977 to his retirement, and is the clubs most decorated captain and he was voted the teams greatest ever player in 1999.
During his time at Dynamo Dresden the club only finished outside the top three in the DDR-Oberliga once which was in the season 1982–83 when they finished seventh.
He captained the team to their best European seasons, twice reaching the Quarter finals of the European Clubs' Champions Cup in 1977 and 1979. He also guided his team to Quarter finals in the 1975–76 UEFA Cup and both the 1984–85 and the 1985–86 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup. This was seen as a big success against teams from Europe's big leagues. Dörner scored an amazing 65 goals in 392 top-flight games[2] for Dynamo Dresden which is a record for a defender in the DDR-Oberliga.
He was capped 96 times for East Germany,[3] winning a gold medal as vital part of that country's Olympic team at the 1976 Montreal Olympics.
His time as a player ended in summer 1985 and he first took on the role of trainer for the East German Olympic squad in 1990. After German re-unification he coached the Olympic youth side of the united country. From 6 January 1996 until 20 August 1997 he was the trainer for Bundesliga club SV Werder Bremen. From 2006 to 2010 he coached Radebeuler BC 08 in the city league known as the Bezirksliga Dresden.
Honours
- DDR-Oberliga winner (5):1970–71, 1972–73, 1975–76, 1976–77, 1977–78
- DDR-Oberliga runners-up (5): 1978–79, 1979–80, 1981–82, 1983–84, 1984–85
- FDGB-Pokal winners (5): 1970–71, 1976–77, 1981–82, 1983–84, 1984–85
References
External links
|
---|
|
- Müller (1949)
- Ulbricht (1949–50)
- Melzer (1950)
- Dietel (1950–55)
- Höfer (1955–57)
- Dittes (1957–64)
- Oettler (1964–65)
- Heinz Werner I (1965–66)
- Oettler (1966–67)
- Seiler (1967–68)
- Fuchs (1968–69)
- Scherbaum (1969–71)
- Kluge (1971–76)
- Speth (1976–78)
- Bäßler (1978–79)
- Hentschel (1979–81)
- Kunstmann (1981–82)
- Kupferschmied (1982–84)
- Croy (1984–88)
- Schmuck (1988–91)
- Schädlich (1991–96)
- Streich (1996–97)
- Heinz Werner II (1997)
- Körbel (1997–98)
- Pilz (1998)
- Dörner (1998–99)
- Pilz (1999)
- Weise (1999–2002)
- Doege (2002–03)
- Brändel (2003)
- Tipold (2003–04)
- Große (2004–2005)
- Georgi (2005)
- Ferl (2005–2006)
- Dietzsch (2006–2007)
- Keller (2007–09)
- Barsikow (2009)
- Zimmerling (2009–10)
- Barsikow (2010)
- Quade (2010–2012)
- Ziegner (2012–)
|
|
|
---|
|
- Walseck (1951–52)
- Winter (1952–53)
- Fischer (1953–54)
- Krügel (1954–56)
- Welzel (1956–59)
- Brunnert (1959–60)
- Schwendler (1961–63)
- Krause (1963–65)
- Konzack (1965–66)
- Studener (1966–69)
- Holke (1969–71)
- Scherbaum (1971–76)
- Pfeifer (1976–78)
- Joerk (1978–79)
- Miller (1979–85)
- Thomale (1985–90)
- Böhme (1990–91)
- Sundermann (1991–93)
- Stange (1993–94)
- Sundermann (1994)
- Halata (1994)
- Woodcock (1994)
- Starek (1994–96)
- Halata (1996)
- Held (1996–97)
- Halata (1997–98)
- Thomale (1998–99)
- Stepanović (1999)
- Steffens (1999–2001)
- Dörner (2001–03)
- Schößler (2003)
- Andreev (2003–04)
- Breitkopf and Engelmann (2004)
- Sadlo (2004)
- Lisiewicz (2004–09)
- Seydler (2009)
- Trommer (2009–10)
- Steffens (2010–11)
- Sadlo (2011)
- Kronhardt (2012)
- Rose (2012–13)
- Hänsel (2013)
- Scholz (2013–)
|
|