- Dieter Schatzschneider
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Dieter Schatzschneider Personal information Full name Dieter Schatzschneider Date of birth April 26, 1958 Place of birth Hannover, West Germany Height 1.87 m (6 ft 2 in) Playing position Striker Youth career 1970–1971 Sachsenross Hannover 1971–1974 Hannover 1893 1974–1975 OSV Hannover Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 1975–1978 OSV Hannover 67 (40) 1978–1982 Hannover 96 160 (131) 1982–1983 Fortuna Köln 19 (17) 1983–1984 Hamburger SV 31 (15) 1984–1986 Schalke 04 74 (19) 1986–1987 Fortuna Köln 22 (5) 1987–1988 Grazer AK 27 (4) 1988–1989 Hannover 96 18 (3) 1989–1990 FC Augsburg Total 418 (234) National team 1980–1981 West Germany U-21 7 (2) 1982–1984 West Germany Olympic 11 (8) Teams managed 1996–1998 Sportfreunde Ricklingen 1998–2000 FC Augsburg HonoursFortuna Köln Runner-up DFB-Pokal 1983 Hamburger SV Runner-up European Super Cup 1983 Runner-up Intercontinental Cup 1983 * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).Dieter Schatzschneider (born April 26, 1958) is a former German footballer, who holds the record for the highest number of 2.Bundesliga goals (154). He is perhaps most associated with Hannover 96, for whom he is their record goalscorer too.
He played in the 1984 Olympics for the West Germany football team.[1]
Since retiring from playing, he has coached as various clubs including Emden, SF Ricklingen, Arminia Hannover and SVG Göttingen 07.
References
- ^ "Dieter Schatzschneider Biography and Statistics". Sports Reference. http://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/sc/dieter-schatzschneider-1.html. Retrieved 2009-10-28.
West Germany squad – 1984 Summer Olympics 2. Bundesliga top scorers 1975: Graul · 1976: Granitza · 1977: Gerber · 1978: Hrubesch · 1979: Kirschner · 1980: Sackewitz · 1981: Mill · 1982: Völler · 1983: Schatzschneider · 1984: Wohlfarth · 1985: Burgsmüller · 1986: Bunk · 1987: Reich · 1988: Sané · 1989: Demandt · 1990: Banach · 1991: Tönnies · 1992: Drulák · 1993: Reich · 1994: Wegmann · 1995: Rische · 1996: Walter · 1997: Vier · 1998: Vier · 1999: Labbadia · 2000: Marić · 2001: Djappa/Wichniarek · 2002: Wichniarek · 2003: Voronin · 2004: Copado/Mintál · 2005: Podolski · 2006: Eigler · 2007: Federico · 2008: Novakovič · 2009: Auer/Makiadi/Mintál · 2010: Thurk · 2011: PetersenCategories:- 1958 births
- Living people
- German footballers
- Germany under-21 international footballers
- Olympic footballers of West Germany
- Footballers at the 1984 Summer Olympics
- Fußball-Bundesliga players
- Hannover 96 players
- SC Fortuna Köln players
- Hamburger SV players
- FC Schalke 04 players
- FC Augsburg players
- Grazer AK players
- FC Augsburg managers
- German sportspeople stubs
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