词条 | Paul Steiner |
释义 |
| name = Paul Steiner | image = | caption = | fullname = Paul Steiner | birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1957|1|23|df=yes}} | birth_place = Waldbrunn, West Germany | death_date = | death_place = | height = {{height|m=1.82}} | position = Centre back | currentclub = | youthyears1 = {{0|0000}}–1975 | youthclubs1 = TSV Strümpfelbrunn | years1 = 1975–1979 | clubs1 = Waldhof Mannheim | caps1 = 144 | goals1 = 16 | years2 = 1979–1981 | clubs2 = MSV Duisburg | caps2 = 58 | goals2 = 7 | years3 = 1981–1991 | clubs3 = 1. FC Köln | caps3 = 291 | goals3 = 20 | totalcaps = 493 | totalgoals = 43 | nationalyears1 = 1983 | nationalteam1 = West Germany U21 | nationalcaps1 = 2 | nationalgoals1 = 1 | nationalyears2 = 1987 | nationalteam2 = West Germany Olympic | nationalcaps2 = 2 | nationalgoals2 = 0 | nationalyears3 = 1990 | nationalteam3 = West Germany | nationalcaps3 = 1 | nationalgoals3 = 0 | medaltemplates = {{medalTeam|1. FC Köln}}{{medalW|DFB-Pokal|1983}}{{medalRU|UEFA Cup|1986}}{{medalRU|DFB-Pokal|1991}}{{medalTeam|{{fb|West Germany}}}}{{medalW|FIFA World Cup|1990}} }} Paul Steiner (born 23 January 1957) is a retired German footballer who played mainly as a central defender. Club careerBorn in Waldbrunn, Baden-Württemberg, Steiner began playing football in his hometown with TSV Strümpfelbrunn. He started his professional career in 1975, going on to spend four seasons in the second division with SV Waldhof Mannheim. Steiner appeared in 349 games in the Bundesliga, scoring 27 times from 1979 until 1991 with MSV Duisburg and 1. FC Köln. With the latter side, he was instrumental in five league finishes in the top three, also winning the German Cup in 1983 and losing the 1985–86 UEFA Cup to Real Madrid. After retiring at 34, Steiner later worked as a scout for Köln's Rhine rival, Bayer 04 Leverkusen, before taking up the same role back at the former club.[1] International careerSteiner was one of the oldest debutants in the German national team, when he appeared as a 33-year-old substitute in the final friendly match ahead of the 1990 FIFA World Cup in Italy, against Denmark at Gelsenkirchen's Parkstadion on 30 May. He was surprisingly selected for the World Cup squad in favour of Bayer Uerdingen's Holger Fach, who had been the expected pick of coach Franz Beckenbauer as Klaus Augenthaler's understudy.[2] Steiner was not recalled again after the tournament, where Germany defeated Argentina in the final. Personal lifeSteiner was commonly quoted in Germany as stating in a talk show that homosexuals were "too soft" for playing football.[3] References1. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.rp-online.de/sport/fussball/bayer-04/auch-steiner-zum-1-fc-koeln-aid-1.411247|title=Auch Steiner zum 1. FC Köln|trans-title=Steiner to 1. FC Köln as well|newspaper=Rheinische Post|language=de|date=25 June 2008|accessdate=21 January 2016}} 2. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.zeit.de/sport/2015-07/wm-1990-fussball-weltmeister-deutschland-franz-beckenbauer/seite-2|title=Die Klasse von 1990|trans-title=The class of 1990|newspaper=Die Zeit|language=de|date=July 2015|accessdate=21 January 2016}} 3. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.sueddeutsche.de/sport/fussball-und-homosexualitaet-footballs-coming-homo-1.73611|title="Football's coming homo"|newspaper=Süddeutsche Zeitung|language=de|date=17 May 2010|accessdate=21 January 2016}} External links
14 : 1957 births|Living people|German footballers|Association football defenders|Bundesliga players|2. Bundesliga players|SV Waldhof Mannheim players|MSV Duisburg players|1. FC Köln players|Germany international footballers|Germany B international footballers|Germany under-21 international footballers|1990 FIFA World Cup players|FIFA World Cup-winning players |
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