Thomas Herbst (footballer) explained

Thomas Herbst
Fullname:Thomas Herbst
Birth Date:5 October 1962
Birth Place:West Berlin, West Germany
Height:1.87m (06.14feet)
Position:Midfielder/Forward
Youthclubs1:Hertha BSC
Youthyears2:–1981
Youthclubs2:Hertha Zehlendorf
Youthyears3:1981–1982
Youthclubs3:FC Bayern Munich
Years1:1982
Caps1:2
Goals1:0
Clubs1:FC Bayern Munich
Years2:1982–1983
Caps2:17
Goals2:3
Clubs2:Eintracht Braunschweig
Years3:1983–1986
Caps3:43
Goals3:1
Clubs3:Borussia Mönchengladbach
Years4:1986–1987
Caps4:22
Goals4:4
Clubs4:SV Darmstadt 98
Years5:1987–1988
Caps5:22
Goals5:0
Clubs5:Borussia Mönchengladbach
Years6:1988–1990
Caps6:32
Goals6:25
Clubs6:Hertha Zehlendorf
Years7:1990–1995
Clubs7:Türkiyemspor Berlin
Years8:1995–1999
Caps8:70
Goals8:7
Clubs8:Hertha Zehlendorf
Years9:1999–2001
Caps9:2
Goals9:0
Clubs9:Türkiyemspor Berlin
Totalcaps:210
Totalgoals:40
Nationalyears1:1979
Nationalcaps1:3
Nationalgoals1:0
Nationalteam1:Germany U-16
Nationalyears2:1980–1981
Nationalcaps2:16
Nationalgoals2:8
Nationalteam2:Germany U-18
Nationalyears3:1981
Nationalcaps3:6
Nationalgoals3:0
Nationalteam3:Germany U-19
Nationalyears4:1983
Nationalcaps4:6
Nationalgoals4:2
Nationalteam4:Germany U-21
Manageryears1:1997–1999
Managerclubs1:Hertha Zehlendorf
Manageryears2:1999–2006
Managerclubs2:Türkiyemspor Berlin
Manageryears3:2006–2007
Managerclubs3:Berliner AK 07
Manageryears4:2007–2008
Managerclubs4:Türkiyemspor Berlin
Manageryears5:2008–2010
Managerclubs5:Tennis Borussia Berlin
Manageryears6:2011–2014
Managerclubs6:BFC Viktoria 1889 / Viktoria Berlin
Manageryears7:2017–2018
Managerclubs7:FC Viktoria 1889 Berlin

Thomas Herbst (born 5 October 1962 in West Berlin[1]) is a German football manager and former player. He was most recently the head coach of FC Viktoria 1889 Berlin.

Playing career

Herbst won the 1981 FIFA World Youth Championship in Australia with the Germany U18 team, three months after winning the 1981 UEFA European Under-18 Football Championship with the German U-18 squad in Düsseldorf. It was in this time that Herbst signed for reigning Bundesliga champions FC Bayern Munich from the youth team of Hertha Zehlendorf. However, it was not until the latter half of the season that Herbst made his professional footballing debut, on 21 May 1982, as a substitute in the 3–2 home win over Arminia Bielefeld.[2] His second, and only other appearance for Bayern, came the following weekend when he replaced Dieter Hoeneß in the 84th minute of a 3–1 loss away to VfL Bochum.[3]

In the following season, Herbst's three goals in 17 games, including a brace[4] in the 3–3 away draw at FC Schalke 04, helped Eintracht Braunschweig successfully escape relegation.

Herbst signed for Borussia Mönchengladbach for the 1983–84 season and over the following five years, with the exception of one season at SV Darmstadt 98, played in 65 league games for the Borussen, including six DFB-Pokal and nine UEFA Cup appearances.

In the twilight of his playing career, Thomas Herbst signed for Hertha Zehlendorf in the Regionalliga Nordost and after two years became player-manager.[5] He could not, however, stop Zehlendorf from being relegated to the Oberliga. He departed the club in 1999.

Managerial career

Herbst became player-manager of Türkiyemspor Berlin in 1999.[6] He played two games for the club and got them promoted back to the Oberliga in his first season as Verbandsliga Berlin champions, and carried on as manager until 2006. A short spell at the helm of Berlin AK 07 saw Herbst return to Türkiyemspor for one more season, before moving to Tennis Borussia Berlin on 1 July 2008.[1] In his first season at the Mommsenstadion he guided TeBe to the 2009 NOFV-Oberliga Nord title,[7] becoming division champions after winning 23 out of 30 games, beating runners-up Berliner FC Dynamo by 18 points and only marginally losing out on being crowned Berliner Landespokal winners after a 2–1 final defeat to 1. FC Union Berlin at the Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Sportpark.[8] After Tennis Borussia's financial difficulties in 2010, Herbst left the club.[9] On 1 July 2011 he became first team manager at fellow Berliner club BFC Viktoria 1889.[10]

Honours

Player

Manager

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Portrait – Thomas Herbst. Tennis Borussia Berlin. 11 March 2010. German.
  2. Web site: FC Bayern München gegen Arminia Bielefeld 3:2. fussballdaten.de. 11 March 2010. German.
  3. Web site: VfL Bochum gegen FC Bayern München 3:1. fussballdaten.de. 11 March 2010. German.
  4. Web site: FC Schalke 04 gegen Eintracht Braunschweig 3:3. fussballdaten.de. 11 March 2010. German.
  5. Web site: Chronik – 100 Jahre F.C. Hertha 03 Zehlendorf. Hertha Zehlendorf. 11 March 2010. German.
  6. Web site: Das Integrationsmittel Fussball. https://web.archive.org/web/20080207033115/http://de.fifa.com/aboutfifa/worldwideprograms/footballforhope/news/newsid=684708.html. dead. 7 February 2008. FIFA. 6 February 2008. 11 March 2010. German.
  7. Web site: Tennis Borussia feiert. Karsten. Doneck. Der Tagesspiegel. 25 April 2009. 11 March 2010. German.
  8. Web site: Pokalsieger! Biran erlöst Union in letzter Sekunde. Klaus-Dieter. Vollrath. Sebastian. Karkos. Bild. 6 May 2009. 11 March 2010. German.
  9. Web site: TeBe: Das Überleben ist gesichert. Stefan. Hermanns. Der Tagesspiegel. 3 August 2010. 6 August 2010. German.
  10. Web site: Pressemitteilung. BFC Viktoria 1889. 27 May 2011. 2 June 2011. German.