Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 23. Chapters: Alois Schwartz, Andreas Brehme, Dietrich Weise, Eckhard Krautzun, Egon Piechaczek, Erich Ribbeck, Eric Gerets, Ernst Diehl, Friedel Rausch, Gyula Lorant, Hans-Werner Moser, Hans Bongartz, Karl-Heinz Emig, Karl-Heinz Feldkamp, Kjetil Rekdal, Krasimir Balakov, Kurt Jara, Marco Kurz, Michael Henke, Milan a i, Otto Knefler, Otto Rehhagel, Rainer Zobel, Richard Schneider, Werner Liebrich, Wolfgang Funkel, Wolfgang Wolf. Excerpt: Otto Rehhagel (born 9 August 1938 in Essen) is a German football coach and former football player. Along with Helmut Schon, Ottmar Hitzfeld, Udo Lattek and Hennes Weisweiler, he is considered one of the most successful German managers. Rehhagel is the only person who, as player and as manager combined, has participated in over 1000 Bundesliga matches. In the Bundesliga, he holds the records for the most victories (387), most draws (205), most losses (228), and his teams have scored the most goals (1473) and conceded more (1142) than any other. Internationally, Rehhagel coached the Greece national team from 2001 to 2010 in what has been the nation's most successful footballing era - during that period, the Greek team won the 2004 European Championship and qualified for the 2010 World Cup, their second ever World Cup finals participation. Rehhagel began his playing career with local club TuS Helene Altenessen in 1948 before moving to Rot-Weiss Essen (1960-63), after the start of the Bundesliga for Hertha BSC (1963-65), and until 1972 for Kaiserslautern. He played 201 games in the Bundesliga. As a player, Rehhagel was known as a tough-as-nails defender. He first became a coach in 1974 with Kickers Offenbach, but failed to make an immediate impact. Most famously, with Borussia Dortmund, he suffered a historical, record-setting 12-0 loss after which the tabloids called him Otto...