Egon Coordes
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | 13 July 1944 | ||
Place of birth | Wesermünde, Germany | ||
Height | 1.86 m (6 ft 1 in) | ||
Position(s) | Defender | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1968–1969 | TuS Bremerhaven 93 | ||
1969–1971 | Werder Bremen | 50 | (1) |
1971–1976 | VfB Stuttgart | 107 | (8) |
Managerial career | |||
1977–1982 | OSC Bremerhaven | ||
1986–1987 | VfB Stuttgart | ||
1992 | Hamburger SV | ||
1993–1994 | Al-Ahli | ||
1994–1995 | Austria Vienna | ||
1995–1996 | Hannover 96 | ||
1998–1999 | FC Luzern | ||
1999 | Iran Under-23 | ||
2001–2002 | Al Khaleej | ||
2002–2003 | FC Gatt | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Egon Coordes (born 13 July 1944, Wesermünde, Germany)[1] is a German former professional football player and coach.
Football player career
[edit]Egon Coordes originally played football for the Leher TS youth side.[2] Coordes later started his professional game career in the late 60s with Regionalliga North TuS Bremerhaven 93 and became well-known beyond the team.[3] Coordes quickly moved to the top-ranked Bundesliga in 1971, playing through the rest of his career as "Defender" at SV Werder Bremen and VfB Stuttgart.[4][5]
On 26 January 1974[6] Coordes managed to score the 10,000th Bundesliga goal against Eintracht Frankfurt. Coordes played a final season with Stuttgart before retiring as a player in 1976, aged 31.[7]
Issues with the press
[edit]Egon Coordes often had little respect for journalists and news photographers through the years, which resulted in his often poor coverage in the press.[8][9] As follows, Coordes never liked giving interviews,[10] and at one point stated that his repeated negative press stories "reminds me of the Nazi era".[11]
Football coaching career
[edit]When Egon Coordes first entered professional football coaching (with OSC Bremerhaven on 13 March 1982) he declared that his players should "fight and bite like the lions."[12] Coordes was indeed widely considered a "passionate athlete" who preferred training cones and a stopwatch. He felt tactics were overrated.[13]
However, Egon Coordes was roughly viewed for most of his football career as a coach who "leads a hard regiment, which does not necessarily result in an increased affection of its professionals."[14] Coordes' style of leadership long carried the nickname "Schleifer" (in English "Grinder"). For one of many examples, in 1994 while Coordes was coaching for FK Austria Wien he once dropped legendary player Andreas Ogris from the squad for being five minutes late. Ogris was forcefully pardoned soon after.[15]
In 1984 Egon Coordes coached in the Regionalliga North and later moved to the post of Assistant Coach at FC Bayern Munich.[16] Coordes then stepped up to Head Coach at his former VfB Stuttgart club in 1986, but for only a single season as the team finished behind in 12th place.
In 1992 Egon Coordes returned to his former post at Bayern Munich before again becoming Head Coach of Hamburger SV, but was sacked by Hamburger management after a mere six months.[17][18]
In 1993 Egon Coordes moved via the Shabab Al Ahli Club to the Al-Nasr, the first and oldest football league in the United Arab Emirates.[19] A year onward he returned to Germany and joined with the 2. Bundesliga side, Hannover 96. Coordes struggled with Hannover management as the club plunged into the Regionalliga dilemma for the first time in their history. Coordes was promptly sacked.[20]
In 1998 Egon Coordes returned to Bayern Munich as Assistant Coach. He later moved to Switzerland for a season with FC Lucerne[21] before returning to the Middle East as the Iranian "under-23" and National Olympia Trainer.[22] Coordes then transitioned again to Al-Khaleej of the UAE.[23]
In 2011 Egon Coordes represented Bayern as a keen football scout rather than coach. He traveled to Croatia to negotiate a transfer of Dino Špehar to Munich.[24] The discussion failed and years later Špehar said, "I do not regret that I refused Manchester and Bayern. I came to make history and become one of the best players in the championship."[25]
In late 2012 Egon Coordes was asked to seriously advise and rescue FC Bayern Munich's basketball team, a move seen by some as odd.[26] Coordes said during interview that, "the job was 'new territory' but the sport speaks one language. I had no concerns."[27] In the similar period Coordes became credited with originally discovering Hansi Flick, a legend in the European football world.[28][29]
By 2020 Egon Coordes was considered one of the best scouts in world football.[30] He later retired from football except for casual appearances as consultant.
Personal life
[edit]As of 2024 Egon Coordes has a daughter living in Las Vegas Nevada, name of Claudia, a top real estate agent in her region with a record sale (in 2015) of baseball star Orel Hershiser's Vegas home.[31]
In June 2023 Egon Coordes was publicly thanked for "wisdom, views, and fabulous cigars" when an artist returned from Dachau after Coordes insisted he make the trip.[32]
References
[edit]- ^ Archive - Sport - Egon Coordes, Birthday on 13th July, IMAGO, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Leher TS: Talent Production Line Set for DFB Pokal First Round, Deutscher Fussball-Bund (in German), 26 July 2017, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ 'Mythos Zolli': Documentary Traces Bremerhaven's Great Football History, Buten un Binnen (in German), 24 April 2022, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ 14 April 1970 - Hamburger SV vs Werder Bremen, BeSoccer, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Egon Coordes, Fussball Daten, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ 21st Game Day - 26th January 1974 3:30 PM Neckarstadion, Stuttgart, Germany, Deutscher Fußball-Bund (in German), retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Egon Coordes' Career, BeSoccer (in German), retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ The 30 Predecessors of Heiko Vogel in Austria, LAOLA1 (in German), 1 April 2014, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Order Fanatic and Grinder: Coordes Celebrated His 70th Birthday, Saarbrüecker Zeitung (in German), 14 July 2014, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ 'Ekel-Egon' Combined Expertise With a Rude Tone, NWZ Online (in German), 11 July 2014, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Pure Hatred: In Stuttgart, the Ongoing Feud Between the Local Press and Bundesliga Coach Egon Coordes Escalated, Der Spiegel (in German), 6 June 1987, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Former Assistant Coach of FC Bayern Meets Companion In the Allgäu, Augsburger Allgemeine (in German), 17 November 2021, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Trainer Types: From Choleric to 'Grinder', Fussball.de, 30 June 2018, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Als Coordes Job und Nerven Verloru, Sport1 (in German), 16 April 2002, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ A Big Rascal Is 50, Der Standard (in German), 7 October 2014, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Fritz Scherer: 'I Was Immediately Fascinated by FC Bayern', FC Bayern München, 16 January 2020, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ And You're Out!, Der Spiegel (in German), 30 October 2013, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Bochum Sacks Coach Osieck, The Straits Times, 5 November 1992, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Dubai - A Magnet for Celebrities to Work and Vacation, Dubai News (in German), 30 May 2017, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ The Traditional Duel Against the 'Reds', Holstein Kiel (in German), 28 November 2020, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Switzerland – Trainers of First and Second Division Clubs, The Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Egon Coordes, Bäda's Bayern-Datenbank, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Iran U23 Team Coaches, Team Melli - The Home of National Football Team of Iran, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Bayern Woos Father for Teen Talent, Kreisbote (in German), 1 March 2011, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ The Most Promising Foreigner Transferred to Romania, ProSport (in Romanian), 2 February 2017, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Coordes to Make the Red Giants Fit, TZ (in German), 12 April 2012, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Fußball-Coach Coordes: 'Ich Mache die Jungs Frisch', Abendzeitung München (in German), 4 December 2012, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Miracles and Failures of Hans-Dieter Flick: The Communicator Waiting for Xavi Who Surpassed Pep Guardiola's Records, Relevo (in Spanish), 21 March 2024, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Hansi Flick As a Player: This Is How the National Coach's Football Career Went, Heidelberg 24 (in German), 12 January 2022, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Egon Coordes FM 2020 Profile, FmDatabase, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Former Dodger Orel Hershiser Gets His Price in Vegas, Los Angeles Times, 9 January 2015, retrieved 15 June 2024
- ^ Sheol, Internet Archive, 26 June 2023, retrieved 15 June 2024
- Living people
- 1944 births
- German men's footballers
- German football managers
- Hannover 96 managers
- Men's association football defenders
- FC Bremerhaven players
- SV Werder Bremen players
- VfB Stuttgart players
- Khor Fakkan Club players
- UAE Pro League players
- Bundesliga players
- 2. Bundesliga players
- Expatriate football managers in Austria
- Expatriate football managers in Iran
- Expatriate football managers in Switzerland
- Expatriate football managers in the United Arab Emirates
- Hamburger SV managers
- FK Austria Wien managers
- FC Bayern Munich non-playing staff
- VfB Stuttgart managers
- FC Luzern managers
- Bundesliga managers
- German expatriate sportspeople in Austria
- German expatriate sportspeople in Iran
- German expatriate sportspeople in Switzerland
- German expatriate sportspeople in the United Arab Emirates
- Footballers from Bremerhaven
- Al Ahli Club (Dubai) managers