- East Germany national football team
-
East Germany Nickname(s) "Weltmeister in Freundschaftsspielen" (World champion in friendly games) Association Deutscher Fussballverband
der DDR — DFVConfederation UEFA (Europe) Most caps Joachim Streich (102) Top scorer Joachim Streich (55) Home stadium Various FIFA code GDR Home coloursAway coloursFirst international Poland 3 - 0 East Germany
(Warsaw, Poland; 21 September 1952)
Last International
Belgium 0 - 2 East Germany
(Brussels, Belgium; 12 September 1990)Biggest win Ceylon 1 - 12 East Germany
(Colombo, Ceylon; 12 January 1964)Biggest defeat East Germany 1 - 4 Czechoslovakia
(Leipzig, East Germany; 25 May 1957)World Cup Appearances 1 (First in 1974) Best result Round 2, 1974 (Rank 6) The East Germany national football team was from 1952 to 1990 the football team of East Germany, playing as one of three post-war German teams, along with Saarland and West Germany.
After German reunification in 1990, the Deutscher Fußball Verband der DDR (DFV), and with it the East German team, joined the Deutscher Fußball Bund (DFB) and the German national football team that had just won the World Cup.
Contents
History
In 1949, before the GDR was founded and while regular private clubs were still banned under the Soviet occupation, efforts were made to play football anyway. Helmut Schön coached selections of Saxony and the Soviet occupation zone before moving to the West. On 6 February 1951, the GDR applied for FIFA membership, which was protested against by the German Football Association, which was already a full member. FIFA accepted the GDR association (later called DFV) on 6 October 1951 as a provisional member, and on 24 July 1952 as a full member.
The first international game, not competitive but rather a display of good will, took place on 21 September 1952 against Poland in Warsaw, losing 3-0 in front of a crowd of 35,000. The first home game was on 14 June 1953 against Bulgaria, a 0-0 in front of a crowd of 55,000 at Heinz-Steyer-Stadion in Dresden. Only three days later, the Uprising of 1953 in East Germany would have prevented the permitted assembly of that many Germans. On 8 May 1954 games resumed, with a 1-0 loss against Romania. The East Germans had not even considered to enter the World Cup which was won by the West Germans two months later. This caused much euphoria not only in the West, and the GDR tried to counter this by abandoning their policy of presenting a group of socialist role models of their "new German state"; instead, players were selected purely according to ability. The GDR entered the qualification for the WC 1958 and were hosts to Wales on 19 May 1957 at the Zentralstadion in Leipzig. 500,000 tickets were requested, officially 100,000 were admitted, but 120,000 in the crowded house witnessed a 2-1 victory.
Olympic medal record Men’s Football Bronze 1964 Tokyo GER1 Bronze 1972 Munich GDR Gold 1976 Montreal GDR Silver 1980 Moscow GDR 1 as United Team of Germany East Germany was not as successful as its Western counterpart in World Cups or European Championships. It never qualified for the finals of the European Championship and only qualified for one World Cup, in 1974. However, they were always serious contenders in qualifying throughout their history.
That tournament was staged in West Germany, and both German teams were drawn in the same group in the first round. With successful games against Chile and Australia, both German teams had qualified early for the second round, with the inter-German game determining first and second in group. Despite this lack of pressure to succeed, the match on 22 June 1974 in Hamburg was politically and emotionally charged. East Germany beat West Germany 1-0, thanks to a goal by Jürgen Sparwasser. This was rather a Pyhrric victory, as the DFV wound up in the possibly stronger second round Group A. The GDR lost to Brazil and the Netherlands, but secured 3rd place in a final game draw with Argentina. On the other hand, the DFB team changed its line-up after the loss, and went on to win all games in the other second round group B, against Yugoslavia, Sweden, Poland, and the World title against the Netherlands.
East Germany did however achieve significantly greater success in Olympic football than the amateur teams fielded by the Western NOC of Germany. In 1956, 1960, and 1964 both states had sent a United Team of Germany. For 1964, the East German side had beaten their Western counterparts in order to be selected. They went on to win Bronze for Germany. As GDR, they won Bronze in 1972 in Munich, Gold in 1976, and Silver medal in 1980 in Moscow, In absence of boycotting Western nations. In the 1980s, football declined in the GDR, as did other parts of public life.
Millions of East Germans had moved to the West before the Berlin Wall was erected in 1961, and some escaped in a successful Republikflucht attempts also afterwards. All East Germans were automatically entitled to receive a West German passport, but players who had caps for the DFV, like Norbert Nachtweih and Jürgen Pahl who flew in October 1976 at a U21-match in Turkey, were ineligible for international competition for the DFB due to FIFA rules. Lutz Eigendorf had escaped to the West in 1979 and died in 1983 in a mysterious car crash in which East German Stasi agents were involved.
Shortly after the reunification, players who had played for the East German team were allowed by FIFA to be eligible for the now un-rivalled German team of the DFB. See players with caps for both East Germany and unified Germany, like Matthias Sammer and Ulf Kirsten.
East vs. West
Over the years of their separate existence, the GDR and FRG played each other only a handful of times. The only notable meeting with professionals from the West was at the 1974 World Cup, which East Germany won 1-0. Three other games were played in Olympic Football where only players with amateur status could represent West Germany, like the young Uli Hoeneß who delayed his pro career in 1972. In the inter-German qualification prior to the 1964 Olympic Games, the two played a two-legged preliminary round tie, the GDR advancing to represent Germany as they won their home leg 3-0, while the FRG won the return 2-1. In the 1972 Olympic Games, the GDR and FRG, having qualified from their First Round groups, met in the Second Round, with the GDR winning 3-2.
Euro 92 qualifying
The draw for 1992 UEFA European Football Championship qualifying took place on 2 February 1990, with East Germany drawn in Group 5 along with Belgium, Wales, Luxembourg - and West Germany. By 23 August that year, the East German parliament confirmed reunification for 3 October. The planning for the opening fixture away to Belgium on 12 September was too far along to be cancelled, and so it was played as a friendly. It was also planned to play East Germany's home fixture against West Germany, scheduled for 21 November 1990 in Leipzig as a friendly to celebrate the unification of the DFB and DFV, but the game was cancelled due to rioting in East German stadia.
World Cup record
- 1950 - Did not enter (GDR applied for FIFA membership on 6 February 1951)
- 1954 - Did not enter
- 1958 to 1970 - Did not qualify
- 1974 - Round 2 (final eight)
- 1978 to 1990 - Did not qualify
European Championship record
- 1960 to 1988 - Did not qualify
- 1992 - Withdrew from qualification
Player records
Main article: List of East Germany international footballersMost capped players
Below is a list of the 25 players with the most caps for East Germany. The numbers are from the website of the DFB, which include ten qualifying and final tournament games of the Olympics that are no longer counted by FIFA. The numbers counted by FIFA are shown in parentheses.
# Player East Germany career Caps 1 Joachim Streich 1969–1984 102 (98) 2 Hans-Jürgen Dörner 1969–1985 100 (96) 3 Jürgen Croy 1967–1981 94 (86) 4 Konrad Weise 1970–1981 86 (78) 5 Eberhard Vogel 1962–1976 74 (69) 6 Bernd Bransch 1967–1976 72 (64) 7 Peter Ducke 1960–1975 68 (63) 8 Martin Hoffmann 1973–1981 66 (62) = Lothar Kurbjuweit 1970–1981 66 (59) 10 Ronald Kreer 1982–1989 65 (65) 11 Gerd Kische 1971–1980 63 (59) 12 Matthias Liebers 1980–1988 59 (59) 13 Reinhard Häfner 1971–1984 58 (54) 14 Jürgen Pommerenke 1972–1983 57 (53) 15 Rainer Ernst 1981–1990 56 (56) = Henning Frenzel 1961–1974 56 (54) 17 Jürgen Sparwasser 1969–1977 53 (48) 18 Andreas Thom 1984–1990 51 (51) 19 Hans-Jürgen Kreische 1968–1975 50 (46) 20 Ulf Kirsten 1985–1990 49 (49) 21 Dieter Erler 1959–1968 47 (45) = Jörg Stübner 1984–1990 47 (47) 23 René Müller 1984–1989 46 (46) = Dirk Stahmann 1982–1989 46 (46) 25 Rüdiger Schnuphase 1973–1983 45 (45) Top goalscorers
Below is a list of the 15 top goalscorers for the GDR. The numbers are from the website of DFB, which include goals scored in ten qualifying and final tournament games of the Olympics that are no longer counted by FIFA. The numbers counted by FIFA are shown in parentheses.
# Player Goals 1 Joachim Streich 55 (53) 2 Hans-Jürgen Kreische 25 (22) = Eberhard Vogel 25 (24) 4 Rainer Ernst 20 (20) 5 Henning Frenzel 19 (19) 6 Martin Hoffmann 16 (15) = Jürgen Nöldner 16 (16) = Andreas Thom 16 (16) 9 Peter Ducke 15 (15) = Jürgen Sparwasser 15 (14) 11 Ulf Kirsten 14 (14) 12 Günter Schröter 13 (13) 13 Wolfram Löwe 12 (12) = Dieter Erler 12 (12) 15 Willy Tröger 11 (11) Players with caps for both East Germany and Germany after 1990
The rules of FIFA prevented players who had caps for the DFV team from playing for the DFB team before the unification of DFB and DFV in 1990. The numbers are from the website of the DFB.
Player East Germany Unified Germany Overall Caps Goals Caps Goals Caps Goals Ulf Kirsten 49 14 51 20 100 34 Matthias Sammer 23 6 51 8 74 14 Andreas Thom 51 16 10 2 61 18 Thomas Doll 29 7 18 1 47 8 Dariusz Wosz 7 0 17 1 24 1 Olaf Marschall 4 0 13 3 17 3 Heiko Scholz 7 0 1 0 8 0 Dirk Schuster 4 0 3 0 7 0 Coaches
- 1952-1953 Willi Oelgardt
- 1954 Hans Siegert
- 1955-1957 János Gyarmati
- 1958-1959 Fritz Gödicke
- 1959-1961 Heinz Krügel
- 1961-1967 Károly Soós
- 1967-1969 Harald Seeger
- 1970-1981 Georg Buschner
- 1982-1983 Rudolf Krause
- 1983-1988 Bernd Stange
- 1988-1989 Manfred Zapf
- 1989-1990 Eduard Geyer
See also
External links
- DFB statistics of the national team (contains information on East Germany caps and goalscorers)
- RSSSF archive of East Germany results
- RSSSF history of East Germany national team
- RSSSF record of East Germany international caps and goals
1896:No football tournament · 1900: United Kingdom · 1904: Canada · 1908: United Kingdom · 1912: United Kingdom · 1916:cancelled · 1920: Belgium · 1924: Uruguay · 1928: Uruguay · 1932:No football tournament · 1936: Italy · 1940:cancelled · 1944:cancelled · 1948: Sweden · 1952: Hungary · 1956: Soviet Union · 1960: Yugoslavia · 1964: Hungary · 1968: Hungary · 1972: Poland · 1976: East Germany · 1980: Czechoslovakia · 1984: France · 1988: Soviet Union · 1992: Spain · 1996: Nigeria · 2000: Cameroon · 2004: Argentina · 2008: Argentina
Football in East Germany National teams MenWomenNational teamLeague system MenWomenLeagueDomestic cups MenWomenCupAwards Footballer of the Year · TopscorersLists Men's clubs · Women's clubs · Men's players · Women's players · Expatriate players · Managers · Referees · Venues · Records · SeasonsInternational association football FIFA · World Cup · Confederations Cup · U-20 World Cup · U-17 World Cup · Olympics · Minor tournaments · World Rankings · Player of the Year · FIFA Ballon d'Or · Teams · Debuts · Competitions · Federations · CodesAsia Africa North,
Central America
and CaribbeanSouth America Oceania Europe Non-FIFA Games All-Africa Games · Asian Games · CARIFTA Games · East Asian Games · Francophonie Games · IOIG · Lusophony Games · Mediterranean Games · Pan American Games · Pan Arab Games · Pacific Games · South Asian Games · Southeast Asian GamesSee also International women's football.Defunct and altered national football teams Recognised as defunct by FIFA Teams whose names and borders
both differ from the presentCIS · Czechoslovakia · Ireland · Netherlands Antilles · North Vietnam · USSR · SFR Yugoslavia · Serbia and Montenegro · United KingdomCategories:- East Germany national football team
- Former national association football teams in Europe
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.