Horst HRUBESCH

Horst Hrubesch - Germany - FIFA Weltmeisterschaft 1982 World Cup Finals.

Photo/Foto: George Herringshaw

Date: 11 July 1982

Click on image to enlarge

    • POSITION
      Stürmer
    • DATE OF BIRTH
      Tuesday, 17 April 1951
    • PLACE OF BIRTH
      Hamm, West Germany.
  • INTERNATIONAL
  • Germany
  • WORLD CUP
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Horst HRUBESCH - Germany - FIFA Weltmeisterschaft 1982 World Cup Finals.

Das foto oben zeigt den deutschen fußballer Horst Hrubesch während der Weltmeisterschaft 1982.

Horst Hrubesch pictured at the 1982 World Cup in Spain.

  

 

DEUTSCHLAND 1:2 ALGERIEN (0:0) 16.06.82 Gijon, Estadio El Molinón (42000)

Harald Schumacher, Manny Kaltz, Karlheinz Förster, Ulrich Stielike, Hans-Peter Briegel, Wolfgang Dremmler, Paul Breitner, Felix Magath (83 Klaus Fischer), Pierre Littbarski, Horst Hrubesch, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge (c)
.
DEUTSCHLAND 4:1 CHILE (1:0) 20.06.82 Gijon, Estadio El Molinón (42000)
Harald Schumacher, Manny Kaltz, Karlheinz Förster, Ulrich Stielike, Hans-Peter Briegel, Wolfgang Dremmler, Paul Breitner (61 Lothar Matthaus), Felix Magath, Pierre Littbarski (79 Uwe Reinders), Horst Hrubesch, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge (c)
.
DEUTSCHLAND 1:0 OSTERREICH (1:0) 25.06.82 Vigo, Estadio Balaidos (41000)
Harald Schumacher, Manny Kaltz, Karlheinz Förster, Ulrich Stielike, Hans-Peter Briegel, Wolfgang Dremmler, Paul Breitner, Felix Magath, Pierre Littbarski, Horst Hrubesch (69 Klaus Fischer), Karl-Heinz Rummenigge (c - 66 Lothar Matthäus)
.
DEUTSCHLAND 3:3 FRANKREICH (1:1) (Deutschland 5-4 strafstoß) 08.07.82 Seville (63000)
Harald Schumacher, Manny Kaltz (c), Karlheinz Förster, Ulrich Stielike, Hans-Peter Briegel (96 Karl-Heinz Rummenigge), Bernd Förster, Wolfgang Dremmler, Paul Breitner, Pierre Littbarski, Felix Magath (72 Horst Hrubesch), Klaus Fischer
.
DEUTSCHLAND 1:3 ITALIEN (0:0) Weltmeisterschaft Finale 11.07.1982 Madrid, Estadio Bernabeu (90000)
Harald Schumacher, Manny Kaltz, Ulrich Stieleke, Karlheinz Förster, Bernd Förster, Wolfgang Dremmler (63 Horst Hrubesch), Paul Breitner, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge (70 Hans Müller), Hans-Peter Briegel, Pierre Littbarski, Klaus Fischer.

 

 

INTERNATIONAL CAREER.

 

West Germany's match-winning hero in the UEFA Euro 1980 Final against Belgium, Hrubesch scored two goals in Rome, the second of them a trademark bullet header in the 89th minute. It was a day of glorious redemption for the big, bulky Hamburger SV centre forward who a few weeks earlier had hobbled around the field with an ankle injury as his club lost the European Champion Clubs' Cup final to Nottingham Forest FC. A latecomer to the international scene, Hrubesch had only been called into the West Germany squad after Klaus Fischer broke his leg, and the game against Belgium was only his fifth international appearance. He would win just 21 caps in all, the last of them in the 1982 FIFA World Cup final.

 A German champion three times, he also won the European Cup with Hamburg in 1983, captaining the team to a sensational 1–0 win against favourites Juventus in the Athens final. His greatest successes were the win of the European Championship in 1980, where he decided the finals with two of his late Ungeheuer header goals, and 1983, where he won the Champions Cup against Juventus Turin. He also was German champion in 1979, 1982 and 1983. He scored 136 goals in 224 games in the Bundesliga and was capped 21 times. He is also famous for having scored the winning penalty which knocked France out of the 1982 FIFA World Cup semi-finals after an epic game which was tied 3–3 after extra-time. Irish television commentator Jimmy Magee during the shoot-out coined the phrase that made Hrubesch best known in the English-speaking world: "The man they call 'The Monster'."

Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License: from wikipedia.

 

CLUB CAREER:

1971             Germania Hamm       
1971–1972    Hammer SpVg       
1972–1975    SC Westtünnen       
1975–1978    Rot-Weiss Essen    93    (80)
1978–1983    Hamburger SV    159    (96)
1983–1985    Standard Liège    43    (17)
1985–1986    Borussia Dortmund    17    (2)

 

Managerial career:


1986–1987 Rot-Weiss Essen

1988–1989 VfL Wolfsburg

1991–1992 Swarovski Tirol

1993           Hansa Rostock

1994–1995 Dynamo Dresden

1995–1996 Austria Wien

1997           Samsunspor

2000–2016 Germany U-21

2016           Germany U-23

2018           Germany women

2021           Hamburger SV