This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in German. (December 2021)Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | 8 December 1960 | ||
Place of birth | East Germany | ||
Position(s) | Left Back | ||
Youth career | |||
1974–1983 | 1. FC Magdeburg | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1980–1994 | 1. FC Magdeburg | 299 | (12) |
1994–1999 | Fortuna Magdeburg | ||
1999–2000 | MSV Börde | ||
International career‡ | |||
East Germany Under-19 | 19 | ||
East Germany Under-21 | 4 | ||
Managerial career | |||
2000–2003 | MSV Börde | ||
2003–2008 | 1. FC Magdeburg II | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals, correct as of 11:03, 31 May 2010 (UTC) ‡ National team caps and goals, correct as of 11:03, 31 May 2010 (UTC) |
Frank Siersleben (born 8 December 1960) is a former football player turned manager. He spent the majority of his career with 1. FC Magdeburg playing in the DDR-Oberliga, East Germany's top flight. He also won 23 caps for the East German youth national teams.
Siersleben joined the 1. FC Magdeburg youth team in 1974. As a youth he won 19 caps for the East German youth national teams, later winning another four for the Under-21 team. In 1978, he was nominated as a defender for the Nachwuchsoberliga (a youth competition) side. At age 18 he was made part of the DDR-Oberliga squad for the 1979–80 DDR-Oberliga season, playing in his first match on 25 August 1979 as a leftback against BSG Chemie Leipzig. During his first Oberliga season he played in ten matches. In the following season Siersleben played in the Nachwuchsoberliga exclusively, having begun studying for a Diplomsportlehrer degree in 1980. Only in the 1983–84 DDR-Oberliga season could he establish himself in the Oberliga squad, playing in 16 matches.
Siersleben played six matches on European level for 1. FC Magdeburg. His first match came in the First Round of the 1986–87 UEFA Cup against Athletic Bilbao on 17 September 1986. He played in the return leg as well. [1] In the 1990-91 season he played in four more UEFA Cup matches, the last in the history of the club. [2]
From 1984 onwards Siersleben was an Oberliga regular, never playing in less than 20 matches per season until the end of the DDR-Oberliga in 1991. After his club had missed out on qualifying for the 2nd Bundesliga in 1991, Siersleben spent three seasons in the then third-tier NOFV-Oberliga until 1994. In this division he played in 98 league matches, no longer as a defender, but as a midfielder. In his final season with the club, Siersleben was made team captain. After the Saxony-Anhalt Cup final against Hallescher FC, he ended his career with 1. FC Magdeburg. All in all he had played in 299 league matches, 42 national cup matches and 6 UEFA Cup matches. Aside from his 12 league goals, Siersleben scored twice in the national cup competitions.
When 1. FC Magdeburg did not qualify for the new Regionalliga Nordost in 1994, Siersleben followed former teammate Rolf Döbbelin who was now manager of Fortuna Magdeburg. With Fortuna he won promotion to the fourth-tier NOFV-Oberliga. He stayed at Fortuna until 1999, leaving for lower league side MSV Börde where he ended his playing career in 2000.
After ending his playing career, Siersleben took over the manager position at his last club MSV Börde. In 2003, he moved back to 1. FC Magdeburg where he led the reserve team from the then eight-tier Stadtklasse to the then fifth-tier Verbandsliga within four years. After internal differences he was let go in April 2008. [3]
The DDR-Oberliga was the top-level association football league in East Germany.
1. FC Magdeburg is a German association football club based in the city of Magdeburg. The club was founded in 1965 from the football department of SC Magdeburg and spent all but one season in East Germany top flight, the DDR-Oberliga, winning three championships and seven cup titles. It is the only East German club to have won a European title, winning the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1974. After German reunification, the club fell on hard times and only returned to professional football in 2015 when the side was promoted to the 3. Liga.
Joachim Streich was a German footballer who won the bronze medal with East Germany at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich.
Jürgen Sparwasser is a retired German football player and later briefly a football manager.
Uwe Reinders is a German former footballer and manager.
Peter Ducke 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.
Wolfgang "Paule" Seguin is an East German former professional footballer.
Frank Lieberam is a German former football player and manager.
Manfred Zapf is a German former footballer, later a coach. A defender, Zapf spent his entire senior career with 1. FC Magdeburg, and captained the club to its greatest successes – three DDR championships, four cups, and the Cup Winners' Cup of 1974. In his time with the club he appeared in 327 league matches in the DDR-Oberliga and played 30 matches in the second-tier DDR-Liga.
Dirk Stahmann is a former East German football player. He spent his entire career with 1. FC Magdeburg.
Dirk Heyne is a former German football goalkeeper turned manager.
Wolfgang "Maxe" Steinbach is an East German former footballer and manager who spent most of his career playing for 1. FC Magdeburg in the DDR-Oberliga. In 2006, he was elected Best 1. FC Magdeburg Player of All Times in a telephone vote.
Damian Halata is a German former professional football player and manager. Born in Poland, he represented the East Germany national team internationally.
Markus Wuckel is a German football manager and former player.
Siegmund Mewes is a retired East German football player and manager.
Axel Wittke is a former footballer who played as a right midfielder in the DDR-Oberliga and the 2. Bundesliga. In 1983, he won the FDGB-Pokal, the East German cup with 1. FC Magdeburg. He played for his country at youth level and was part of the Olympic Games squad that failed to qualify for the 1988 Summer Olympics.
Claus Kreul is a former football player and manager. He played in the DDR-Oberliga for FC Karl-Marx-Stadt and BSG Wismut Aue and later managed several Oberliga teams.
Klaus Decker is a former East German football player who spent his entire senior career with 1. FC Magdeburg in the DDR-Oberliga.
Joachim Walter was a German footballer who played as a forward for SC Aufbau Magdeburg, later renamed 1. FC Magdeburg in the DDR-Oberliga, the East German top flight. He won the East German cup competition FDGB-Pokal three times and played for his country four times at junior level.
Lutz Lindemann is a German professional football coach and former player. In the top division of East German football, the DDR-Oberliga, he played for FC Rot-Weiß Erfurt and FC Carl Zeiss Jena. After his football career, the former GDR international was, among other things, a coach at FC Erzgebirge Aue and club president at FC Carl Zeiss Jena.