Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 163. Not illustrated. Chapters: Reinhard Hafner, Norbert Nachtweih, Jurgen Pommerenke, Benno Mohlmann, Winfried Schafer, Ronald Borchers, Hansi Muller, Gerd Zewe, Herbert Neumann, Matthias Liebers, Dietmar Danner, Andreas Trautmann, Wolfgang Dremmler, Heinz Grundel, Hans-Uwe Pilz, Christian Schreier, Wolfgang Sidka, Hans-Jurgen Gede, Axel Tyll, Erwin Hadewicz, Rudiger Schnuphase, Hans-Gunter Bruns, Gerhard Kleppinger, Gerhard Strack, Winfried Berkemeier, Peter Lubeke, Herbert Heidenreich, Hartmut Schade, Thomas Kroth, Jurgen Bahringer, Jurgen Groh, Michael Henke, Norbert Siegmann, Edgar Gess, Armin Gortz, Matthias Doschner, Uwe Dittus, Franz-Josef Tenhagen, Bernd Durnberger, Axel Neumann, Christian Kulik, Caspar Memering, Peter Hermann, Bernd Wehmeyer, Karsten Heine, Jurgen Glowacz, Holger Willmer, Dieter Lieberwirth, Wolfgang Grobe, Hermann Bitz, Detlef Raugust, Norbert Eilenfeldt, Wolfgang Schuler, Michael Tonnies, Michael Harforth, Hans-Jurgen Wloka, Johannes Riedl, Siegfried Susser, Hans-Gunther Plucken, Michael Schroder, Werner Melzer, Ulrich Surau, Wolfgang Trapp, Franz Michelberger, Wolfgang Patzke, Werner Schneider, Klaus Heinlein, Karl-Heinz Geils, Dieter Kramer, Dietmar Klinger, Ralf Dusend, Walter Oswald, Meinolf Koch, Uwe Bracht. Excerpt: Reinhard Hafner (born February 2, 1952 in Sonneberg) was a German footballer who now works as a football (soccer) coach. Hafner played children's and youth football for his hometown club BSG Motor Sonneberg. As a junior player he was assigned to FC Rot-Weiss Erfurt before joining Dynamo Dresden in 1971. He stayed with the Dresden club until his retirement as a player in 1988 having played in 366 East German first division DDR-Oberliga matches, scoring 49 goals. He is second to Hans-Jurgen Dorner in matches played for Dynamo. Hafner was part of four DDR championship and FDGB Pokal (Ea...