Peter Ducke
Ducke in 1974 | ||||||||||||
Personal information | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | 14 October 1941 | |||||||||||
Place of birth | Bensen, Germany | |||||||||||
Playing position | Forward | |||||||||||
Youth career | ||||||||||||
1950–1959 | BSG Motor Schönebeck | |||||||||||
Senior career* | ||||||||||||
Years | Team | Apps† | (Gls)† | |||||||||
1959–1977 | FC Carl Zeiss Jena | 352 | (153) | |||||||||
National team | ||||||||||||
1962–1975 | East Germany | 68 | (15) | |||||||||
Honours
| ||||||||||||
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only. |
Peter Ducke (born 14 October 1941) is a Sudeten German and a former East German football player. He was born in Bensen, Sudetenland, Germany during World War II. His older brother Roland was also a successful footballer.
Ducke played most of his career for FC Carl Zeiss Jena (1959–1977). On the national level he played for East Germany national team (68 matches/15 goals), and was a participant at the 1974 FIFA World Cup.[1] In 1971 he won the award for the GDR Footballer of the Year.
Early life
Peter Ducke and his brother Roland were both born in Bensen but Roland was born there in 1934, while it was part of Czechoslovakia, but Peter was born there while it was part of Sudetenland, Germany during World War II. Their hometown is now, however, known as Benešov nad Ploučnicí, Czech Republic. After the Second World War Ducke's family left their home in Sudetenland to settle in Schönebeck near Magdeburg, Germany.
Following both his father and his three brothers into football Ducke began his career in 1950 for a Betriebssportgemeinschaft (English: Company sports community) Schönebecker SV 1861 whose first Men's team played in the Saxony-Anhalt league.
In 1957, his older brother Roland went to play for DDR-Oberliga in the FC Carl Zeiss Jena league and was able to take his 16-year-old brother Peter with him. Ducke failed to impress the team during training camp and was sent home.
DDR-Oberliga
Only after convincing performances in five international matches with the East German youth team from 1959 to 1960 was Jena interested in Ducke. He moved to SC Motor Jena for the start of the 1959 season. In just his second season in the league he was achieving success. On 7 October 1960, he took his team to a 3–2 victory over F.C. Hansa Rostock win the FDGB-Pokal. With his two goals he was instrumental in his team's success. With that cup victory Jena laid the foundation for a successful era which lasted over 20 years.
In Duckes' career with Jena, and later as FC Carl Zeiss Jena, he was a three time East German champion and cup winner. As a center forward on the team Ducke, within 18 years, scored 153 goals which was a significant contribution to their success. He ranks third in scoring for the East German Oberliga.
From 1960 to 1964 and again in 1969 Ducke was the top goal scorer for Jena and in 1963 he was top scorer in the league with 19 goals. This led the league coaches, in a survey by the newspaper Deutsches Sportecho, to nominate Ducke as the best striker of the 1962/63 season. His league career would have been more successful had it not been for serious leg injuries in 1966 and a meniscus injury in 1974.
A ten-week suspension for his outburst during the 1–2 loss to SC Magdeburg during the 1965 Cup Final contributed to the fact that Ducke, with 352-point games, only ranks in twelfth place on the list of league games played. His emotional temperament brought a large number of game ejections and match suspensions.
Despite his skill, his spectacular play and despite being a fan favorite in the GDR he was given the nickname Schwarzer Peter (English: Black Peter). In 1965 he was an athlete of the year award in 1971 as a footballer of the year. He ended his career at the conclusion of the 1976–77 season.
See also
References
Further reading
- Stridde, Thomas (2005). Die Peter-Ducke-Story. Glaux. ISBN 978-3-931743-91-8.
External links
- Weltfussball (German)
|
|
|
|