Sportspeople from Cologne - Albert Richter, Alexander Mronz, Andreas Lesch, Andrea Weiermann-Lietz, Anna Felicitas Sarholz, Bahadir Incilli, Birgi (Paperback)


Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 44. Chapters: Albert Richter, Alexander Mronz, Andreas Lesch, Andrea Weiermann-Lietz, Anna Felicitas Sarholz, Bahadir Incilli, Birgit Kahler, Britta Heidemann, Can Akkaya, Carl Kockelkorn, Carsten Cullmann, Chalid Arrab, Christian Clemens, Christoph Langen, Cilly Aussem, Corinna Scholz, Dagmar Bremer, Dirk Lottner, Dominik Roels, Eberhard Nourney, Elvira Possekel, Ernst Streng, Esther Cremer, Eva Hegener, Ferdinand Schmitz, Frank Schaefer, Frank Stippler, Fredy Schmidtke, Fritz Herkenrath, Gerald Ciolek, Gero Kretschmer, Gokhan Tore, Hans-Jurgen Pohmann, Hans Schafer, Helga Arendt, Herbert Neumann, Jan Frodeno, Jean Loring, Jens Hegeler, Josef Rohrig, Jutta Kleinschmidt, Kai Hospelt, Karl-Heinz Kunde, Kirsten Bolm, Leena Gunther, Manfred Germar, Marcel Wust, Martin Lauer, Mike Wunderlich, Nicolas Meitinger, Otto Pfister, Patrick Helmes, Peco Bauwens, Petra Zindler, Philipp Crone, Robert Hubner, Robin Dutt, Rolf Wolfshohl, Sandra Schumacher, Simon Senft, Stella Heiss, Stephan Thonnessen, Taner Yalc n, Toni Merkens, Uwe Krupp, Werner Delmes, Wolfgang von Trips, Wolfgang Wienand. Excerpt: Otto Pfister (born November 24, 1937 in Cologne) is a German football manager, and one of Germany's most successful coaching exports, voted Africa's Manager of the Year in 1992. He has been to four African Cup of Nations competitions with Upper Volta (now: Burkina Faso), Zaire, Cameroon, and Ghana and has reached the African Cup of Nations final twice, with Cameroon and Ghana. Pfister has won the FIFA U-17 World Cup with Ghana. He has also won the U19 African Cup of Nations with Cote d'Ivoire and led Togo in the 2006 World Cup. Pfister also qualified for 1998 FIFA World Cup with Saudi Arabia. Pfister has won the League Title in two different Countries (Egypt and Lebanon). He has also won domestic cups in four different Countries (Tunisia, Egypt, Lebanon and Sudan). Otto Pfister has been involved in Association football for almost 60 years, he began his coaching career in Switzerland as player-coach in 1961 at the age of just 23. Pfister's early coaching experience was gained with FC Vaduz, FC St. Gallen, FC Nordstern Basel, FC Moutier and finally FC Chur 97. He has worked as Head Coach for 10 International football teams, eight from Africa and two from Asia. In June 1972, at the age of 34, Pfister retired from his playing days and left Switzerland for Africa, taking the reins as the Head Coach of Rwanda. Pfister would stay in Africa for 23 years until 1995 working as the Head Coach for five other African Nations. Upper Volta (now Burkina Faso), Senegal, Cote d'Ivoire, Zaire (now DR Congo) and Ghana. In 1995, Pfister worked inside the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) as the Head Coach of Bangladesh National Team and also Saudi Arabia from 1997 - 1999. Pfister returned to club football over the following six years with Egyptian team Zamalek, Tunisian club CS Sfaxien, Lebanese club Nejmeh and Egyptian club Al-Masry. Pfister was selected as the head coach of Togo on February 18, 2006, after former coach Stephen Keshi was dismissed from the post despite having secure

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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 44. Chapters: Albert Richter, Alexander Mronz, Andreas Lesch, Andrea Weiermann-Lietz, Anna Felicitas Sarholz, Bahadir Incilli, Birgit Kahler, Britta Heidemann, Can Akkaya, Carl Kockelkorn, Carsten Cullmann, Chalid Arrab, Christian Clemens, Christoph Langen, Cilly Aussem, Corinna Scholz, Dagmar Bremer, Dirk Lottner, Dominik Roels, Eberhard Nourney, Elvira Possekel, Ernst Streng, Esther Cremer, Eva Hegener, Ferdinand Schmitz, Frank Schaefer, Frank Stippler, Fredy Schmidtke, Fritz Herkenrath, Gerald Ciolek, Gero Kretschmer, Gokhan Tore, Hans-Jurgen Pohmann, Hans Schafer, Helga Arendt, Herbert Neumann, Jan Frodeno, Jean Loring, Jens Hegeler, Josef Rohrig, Jutta Kleinschmidt, Kai Hospelt, Karl-Heinz Kunde, Kirsten Bolm, Leena Gunther, Manfred Germar, Marcel Wust, Martin Lauer, Mike Wunderlich, Nicolas Meitinger, Otto Pfister, Patrick Helmes, Peco Bauwens, Petra Zindler, Philipp Crone, Robert Hubner, Robin Dutt, Rolf Wolfshohl, Sandra Schumacher, Simon Senft, Stella Heiss, Stephan Thonnessen, Taner Yalc n, Toni Merkens, Uwe Krupp, Werner Delmes, Wolfgang von Trips, Wolfgang Wienand. Excerpt: Otto Pfister (born November 24, 1937 in Cologne) is a German football manager, and one of Germany's most successful coaching exports, voted Africa's Manager of the Year in 1992. He has been to four African Cup of Nations competitions with Upper Volta (now: Burkina Faso), Zaire, Cameroon, and Ghana and has reached the African Cup of Nations final twice, with Cameroon and Ghana. Pfister has won the FIFA U-17 World Cup with Ghana. He has also won the U19 African Cup of Nations with Cote d'Ivoire and led Togo in the 2006 World Cup. Pfister also qualified for 1998 FIFA World Cup with Saudi Arabia. Pfister has won the League Title in two different Countries (Egypt and Lebanon). He has also won domestic cups in four different Countries (Tunisia, Egypt, Lebanon and Sudan). Otto Pfister has been involved in Association football for almost 60 years, he began his coaching career in Switzerland as player-coach in 1961 at the age of just 23. Pfister's early coaching experience was gained with FC Vaduz, FC St. Gallen, FC Nordstern Basel, FC Moutier and finally FC Chur 97. He has worked as Head Coach for 10 International football teams, eight from Africa and two from Asia. In June 1972, at the age of 34, Pfister retired from his playing days and left Switzerland for Africa, taking the reins as the Head Coach of Rwanda. Pfister would stay in Africa for 23 years until 1995 working as the Head Coach for five other African Nations. Upper Volta (now Burkina Faso), Senegal, Cote d'Ivoire, Zaire (now DR Congo) and Ghana. In 1995, Pfister worked inside the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) as the Head Coach of Bangladesh National Team and also Saudi Arabia from 1997 - 1999. Pfister returned to club football over the following six years with Egyptian team Zamalek, Tunisian club CS Sfaxien, Lebanese club Nejmeh and Egyptian club Al-Masry. Pfister was selected as the head coach of Togo on February 18, 2006, after former coach Stephen Keshi was dismissed from the post despite having secure

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Books LLC, Wiki Series

Country of origin

United States

Release date

December 2012

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

December 2012

Authors

Creators

Dimensions

246 x 189 x 3mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

192

ISBN-13

978-1-156-13836-6

Barcode

9781156138366

Categories

LSN

1-156-13836-1



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