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Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Frank Baum | ||
Date of birth | 30 January 1956 | ||
Place of birth | Zwenkau, Bezirk Leipzig, East Germany | ||
Position(s) | Defender | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1963–1968 | BSG Aktivist Zwenkau | ||
1968–1974 | 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig | ||
1974–1979 | BSG Chemie Leipzig | ||
1979–1989 | 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig | ||
1989–1990 | BSG Chemie Böhlen | ||
1990–1992 | FC Sachsen Leipzig | ||
1992–1995 | VfB Zwenkau | ||
1995–1997 | SV LVB Leipzig | ||
International career | |||
1979–1984 | East Germany | 17 | |
Managerial career | |||
1995–1997 | SG LVB Leipzig (player-coach) | ||
Kickers 94 Markkleeberg | |||
2003– | SG LVB Leipzig | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Olympic medal record | ||
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Representing East Germany | ||
Men's Football | ||
1980 Moscow | Team Competition |
Frank Baum (born 30 January 1956) is a retired German footballer, who played as a defender for several German football clubs and the East Germany national football team between 1963 and 1997.
Baum spent his youth playing for BSG Aktivist Zwenkau and 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig. Between 1974 and 1979 Baum played for BSG Chemie Leipzig and by the 1978–79 season was a regular first-team player. On 28 February 1979 he gained his first cap for East Germany in a 1–0 loss to Bulgaria. The same year saw Baum transfer to city rivals Lokomotiv Leipzig, where he played for the next ten years. Following the transfer, he won the FDGB Pokal three times and played the European Cup. He was part of the team who reached the final of the 1986–87 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in Athens, losing 1–0 to AFC Ajax.
In total, Baum played in 248 games in the DDR-Oberliga, scoring ten goals. [1]
Between 1979 and 1984 he made 17 appearances for East Germany. [2] He won a silver medal in the 1980 Olympics in Moscow [3] with the GDR Olympic team.
After leaving Lokomotive Leipzig in 1989, Baum had spells at Chemie Böhlen, Sachsen Leipzig and VfB Zwenkau.
Baum became first-team player-coach at SV LVB Leipzig and also coached Kickers 94 Markkleeberg in 1995. Currently, he is coaching the men's first team of the Leipzig Transport Authority team in the Leipzig District League.
1. Fußballclub Lokomotive Leipzig e.V. is a German football club based in the locality of Probstheida in the Südost borough of Leipzig, Saxony. The club was previously known as VfB Leipzig and was the first national champion of Germany. It has also been known as SC Leipzig. The club won four titles in the FDGB-Pokal and the 1965–66 Intertoto Cup during the East German era. It also finished runner-up in the 1986–87 European Cup Winners' Cup. 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig was renamed VfB Leipzig after German re-unification and managed to qualify for the Bundesliga in 1993. However, like many clubs of the former DDR-Oberliga, VfB Leipzig faced financial difficulties in reunified Germany and a steady decline soon followed. 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig was relaunched in 2003 and began climbing through the divisions. As of 2021, the team competes in the fourth-tier division, Regionalliga Nordost. The 1. in front of the club's name indicates that it was the first to be founded in the city.
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