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Erich Ribbeck

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1962–1965
  
Viktoria Koln

Position
  
Defender

1959–1962
  
Wuppertaler SV

Height
  
1.84 m

Years
  
Team

Role
  
Footballer

Playing position
  
Defender

Name
  
Erich Ribbeck


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Date of birth
  
(1937-06-13) 13 June 1937 (age 78)

Team coached
  
Germany national football team (Manager, 1998–2000)

Similar People
  
Jupp Derwall, Berti Vogts, Helmut Schon, Otto Nerz, Rudi Voller

Place of birth
  
Wuppertal, Germany

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Erich Ribbeck (born 13 June 1937 in Wuppertal, North Rhine-Westphalia) is a former German footballer and manager, best known for coaching in the German Bundesliga.

Contents

Erich Ribbeck FuballWM Weisheiten quotKonzepte sind Kokoloresquot Erich

Playing career

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As a player, Ribbeck had a career spanning most of the 1950s into the early 1960s with SSV 1904 Wuppertal, which has since merged with TSG Vohwinkel to form Wuppertaler SV. The highest level Ribbeck played was the Oberliga, part of the first tier of Germany which was then split into five regional divisions.

Club

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His very first coaching position he held at the age of 30 in 1967/68, when he took Rot-Weiss Essen to the second place in the western division of Germany's Level 2 league and thus to the promotion tournament, where the club ended up losing out against Hertha Berlin.

Erich Ribbeck ExBundestrainer Erich Ribbeck im tzInterview Fuball

The next ten years he shared evenly with engagements with Eintracht Frankfurt and 1. FC Kaiserslautern. In the Bundesliga these clubs remained on mediocre levels during his tenure. With Kaiserlautern he reached the German Cup final of 1976, losing 0–2 to Hamburger SV.

He achieved his only trophy when he won the UEFA Cup 1988 with Bayer Leverkusen. In the finals Leverkusen came back from 0–3 away to Espanyol Barcelona to win the eventual penalty shoot-out at home.

He was also runner-up in the German Championship of 1993 with Bayern Munich.

International

Erich Ribbeck was originally considered as a candidate for the national team manager role after the resignation of Helmut Schön in 1978. Instead, Jupp Derwall was selected and it was not until 20 years later on 9 September 1998 that Ribbeck emerged from retirement in the Canary Islands to take over the German national team when other candidates had declined. At 61, he was the oldest appointee to the job. His two-year tenure marked the worst period in the modern history of Germany's national side. Ribbeck resigned after a string of results culminating in a group-stage exit from Euro 2000. Ribbeck resigned on 21 June 2000.

His results as Germany's coach were 10 wins, six draws, and eight losses, the worst managerial performance of all time for a coach of the German national team.

Retirement

These days Ribbeck shares his residence between Pulheim and Tenerife.

Career statistics

As of 22 January 2014

Managerial honours

Bayer 04 Leverkusen
  • UEFA Cup: 1987–88
  • References

    Erich Ribbeck Wikipedia


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