- Dirk Bremser
-
Dirk Bremser Personal information Date of birth 1 October 1965 Place of birth Bochum, West Germany Height 1.77 m (5 ft 10 in) Playing position Midfielder Club information Current club 1. FC Nuremberg (assistant coach) Youth career Adler Dahlhausen Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† –1986 VfL Bochum II 1986–1989 VfL Bochum 1989–1990 SC Preußen Münster 35 (4) 1990–1992 MSV Duisburg 43 (6) 1992–1993 Bayer Uerdingen 28 (4) 1993–1997 Hertha BSC 82 (6) 1997–1999 VfB Lübeck 1999–2000 Holstein Kiel Teams managed 2000 VfB Lübeck (assistant) 2000–2001 VfB Lübeck 2001–2004 VfB Lübeck (assistant) 2004–2006 Alemannia Aachen (assistant) 2006 Alemannia Aachen (caretaker) 2006–2010 Hannover 96 (assistant) 2010– 1. FC Nuremberg (assistant) * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).Dirk Bremser (born 1 October 1965 in Bochum) is a German football coach and a former player.[1]
Contents
Career
He spent two seasons in the Bundesliga with MSV Duisburg and Bayer Uerdingen.
Coaching career
In the 2006–07 he was a caretaker manager for Alemannia Aachen for a few days, coaching them in the DFB-Pokal game against Chemnitzer FC.
References
- ^ "Bremser, Dirk" (in German). kicker.de. http://www.kicker.de/news/fussball/bundesliga/vereine/1998-99/1547/vereinsspieler_dirk-bremser.html. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
External links
- Dirk Bremser at transfermarkt.de (German)
- Dirk Bremser at fussballdaten.de (German)
Alemannia Aachen – managers Emunds (1920–21) · Pekarna (1921) · Rottenberger (1921–22) · Schmitz, J. Pelzer & Emunds (1922–23) · Knappe (1924) · Baumgartner (1925) · Rumbold (1926–27) · Emunds (1927–28) · Berninger & Jennes (1928) · Jennes (1928) · Zolper (1929–30) · Weisz (1930–31) · Melcher (1931–33) · Halpern (1933) · Rumbold (1933–34) · Münzenberg (1934–36) · Frauenkron (1936–37) · Wieder (1937–39) · Flink (1939–40) · Schrenk (1940–42) · Emunds & van Heiß (1942–43) · Hymnen (1943–44) · Flink (1946–47) · Havlicek (1947–48) · Kratz (1948–49) · Goffart, Gruber, Kölling & Münzenberg (1949) · Pölsterl (1949–50) · Kölling & Münzenberg (1950) · Melcher (1950–51) · Lindemann (1951–55) · Knöpfle (1955–58) · Schütt (1958) · Sárosi (1958–59) · Kronsbein (1959–62) · Pfau (1962–65) · Weth (1965–66) · Hoffmann (1966–67) · Pfeiffer (1967–69) · Stollenwerk (1969) · Weth (1969–70) · Lindemann (1970) · Kottmann & Schütt (1970–71) · Baumann (1971–72) · Schütt (1972) · Thomas (1972–73) · Pfeiffer (1973–74) · Prokop (1974) · Witzler (1974–76) · Prokop (1976–78) · Haag (1978) · Ahmann (1978–81) · Habig (1981) · Martinelli (1981) · Buhtz (1981–82) · Cendic (1982–83) · Ahmann (1983–84) · Grünther (1984) · Fuchs (1984–87) · Ferner (1987) · Neururer (1987–89) · Grünther (1989) · Denizli (1989–90) · Krautzun (1990) · Wagner (1990–91) · Schleiden (1991) · Hannes (1991–94) · Graf (1994) · vom Bruch (1994–96) · Fuchs (1996–99) · Winkhold (1999) · Hach (1999–2001) · Berger (2001–04) · Hecking (2004–06) · Bremser (2006) · Frontzeck (2006–07) · Buchwald (2007) · Schmadtke (2007) · Seeberger (2008–09) · Kronhardt (2009) · Krüger (2009–10) · Hyballa (2010–11) · Außem (2011) · Funkel (2011–)
Categories:- German footballers
- Fußball-Bundesliga players
- VfL Bochum players
- VfL Bochum II players
- MSV Duisburg players
- KFC Uerdingen players
- SC Preußen Münster players
- Hertha BSC players
- VfB Lübeck players
- Holstein Kiel players
- German football managers
- Alemannia Aachen managers
- 1965 births
- Living people
- German football midfielder, 1960s birth stubs
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.