Horst Trimhold

Horst " Scot " Trimhold ( born February 4, 1941 in Essen) is a former German football player who in 1959 won the DFB-Pokal with ETB SW Essen. He played for Eintracht Frankfurt (1963-1966) and Borussia Dortmund (1966-1971) in the Bundesliga and let his career finally at FSV Frankfurt (1971-1978) in the Hessian Amateur camp and the 2nd Bundesliga finish.

Career

ETB SW Essen

Who grew up in the Altenessen Trimhold had by his father Henry, who went as Gauliga player for ETB hunting for goals, from childhood - as well as his younger brother Holger - closely related to football. At 18, he was already able to celebrate with ETB SW Essen triumph in the DFB Cup in 1959. His start in the Oberliga West he gave on 27 September 1959 the 2:3 defeat at Fortuna Dusseldorf. Eight days before the cup final he won in his second league game in the 5-0 home win against Westfalia Herne on December 20 such that it actually came with his two goals in the final as 18 -year-old to use. On December 27, 1959 SWE won the Cup final 5-2 goals against Borussia Neunkirchen. The young talent was able to contribute on the side of Theo Klöckner, Hans Küppers and Heinz Steinmann a hit to the superior played out victory. The sporty high on Uhlenkrug in December 1959 was followed but in the spring of 1960, the athletic Tristesse. The Cup Winners' Cup in 1959, got off from the Oberliga West at the end of the season 1959/60. Also belonging to the experience of the young talent. Immediately succeeded the black and whites of the ascent, where Horst Trimhold was the best ETB - scorer in the 2nd League West. From the 1961/62 season played Trimhold and his comrades Theo Klöckner and Heinz Steinmann again with ETB in the big leagues. Hans Küppers had but the Gruga leave town Munich.

In the Oberliga West Trimhold came from 1959 to 1963 in 71 games with 31 goals. National coach Sepp Herberger tested the Essenes talent on 6 May 1962 with a match in the junior national team in Aachen against France. In the first international game after the World Cup in Chile in 1962 Horst Trimhold debut in a 3-2 victory on September 30, 1962 in Zagreb against Yugoslavia in the national team. After the second application on 24 October 1962 in the junior national team in Lyon at the 0:1 defeat against France ended but already his career in the DFB - selected teams. After the 1962/63 season he also returned as Klöckner, hype and Steinmann ETB back.

Bundesliga players

With the start of the Bundesliga, he moved 1963/64, to Eintracht Frankfurt. He played for the German champion of the year 1959-1966 and came up in the Bundesliga to 71 games and 15 goals. In the first season 1963/64, he moved back into a DFB Cup final. Eintracht lost the final but with 0:2 goals against TSV 1860 Munich. In the three rounds at Eintracht Frankfurt he came up with the team on the courts three, eight and seven and had to deal with three coaches. Veteran Paul Oswald was responsible for the premiere round. The former stopper Ivica Horvath took over 1964/65, and in the third round of the Bundesliga was Elek Schwartz on the director's desk. Under his guidance, the conversion from the technically assessed combination players took on the wing in a strong run ball distributor and playmaker in midfield. Trimhold but it moved back to the West. He signed with the European champions of 1966, Borussia Dortmund, a new contract for the 1966/67 season and moved to the Borsigplatz. However, in the European Cup, the defending champion had already failed in the 2nd round at Glasgow Rangers. In the scarce 1:2 first leg defeat in Glasgow Trimhold scored the meantime 1:1 for Borussia, but not enough by the goalless draw at home for the next round. The good 3.Tabellenrang in the Bundesliga under new coach Heinz Murach was not recognized as a success. Heinz Murach had the habit of his predecessor Willi Multhaup nothing to oppose, also because of the failure of the European Cup. Horst Trimhold experienced in the following two rounds 1967/68 and 1968/69 then slipping in the table on the ranks 14 and 16 after the interim high of fifth in the season 1969/70 he finished after the round 1970/71 his Bundesliga career. On the 32nd Round at home to Borussia Mönchengladbach on 22 May 1971, he graduated as a substitute in the 75th minute game his last Bundesliga minutes. On the side of Siegfried Held, Willi Neuberger, Jürgen Schütz and Werner Weist he had again contributed for Borussia Dortmund in the midfield as a technical worker diligence to the success of the round in the round 1970/71. Overall, he was from 1963 to 1971 to 167 games in the Bundesliga, scoring 27 goals. Trimhold pulled it back to Frankfurt, but this time in the stadium at the Bornheimer Hang for FSV Frankfurt in the Hessian amateur league and building a corporate existence.

FSV Frankfurt

From the summer of 1971 played " Jock " Trimhold with the FSV Frankfurt in Hessen amateur league. On July 8, 1972, the captain of the Bornheimer scored in the 90th minute winner to make it 2-1 win for the FSV in the final of the German Amateur Championship against TSV Marl- Hüls. The following year, the promotion to the Regionalliga Süd. In the last Regional Round in 1973/74 as base the Bundesliga he played 33 games and came up with seven goals for the Bornheimer. From December 1973, he was additionally served as interim coach in use. In the season 1974/75 the FSV along with his veteran playmaker tried and failed to climb to the 2nd League South as a master of Hesse league. Trimhold brought it in the three rounds from 1975 to 1978 in the 2nd Bundesliga South on 103 games with six goals. At 37, he competed in his last season even 31 games. With a football gala for the honorary captain of the FSV appointed Horst Trimhold adopted in 1978 at the Bornheimer Hang of his career and his friends.

Finale

The typesetter built next to his sporting activities at FSV to a thriving printing in Hanau and became the " home printer " of the DFB.

Swell

  • Germany's national soccer player, Lexicon, Sports Verlag Berlin, 1997, ISBN 3-328-00749-0
  • Germany Soccer, The lexicon, Sports Verlag Berlin, 2000, ISBN 3-328-00857-8
  • German Cup history, AGON, 2000, ISBN 3-89784-146-0
  • Encyclopedia of German football, AGON, 1998, ISBN 3-89784132-0
  • 25 years second league, AGON, 2000, ISBN 3-89784-145-2
  • History of the Oberliga West, plain text, 1988, ISBN 3-88474-332-5
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