sport.wikisort.org - AthleteFritz Walter (born 21 July 1960) is a German former professional footballer who played as a striker,[1] and who was nicknamed "Little Fritz". Born in Mannheim, he is of no relation to German legend of the same name Fritz Walter.
German former footballer
For other people named Fritz Walter, see Fritz Walter (disambiguation).
Fritz Walter|
Full name |
Fritz Walter |
---|
Date of birth |
(1960-07-21) 21 July 1960 (age 62) |
---|
Place of birth |
Mannheim, West Germany |
---|
Height |
1.72 m (5 ft 8 in) |
---|
Position(s) |
Striker |
---|
|
1965–1976 |
SG Hohensachsen |
---|
1976–1978 |
FV Weinheim |
---|
|
Years |
Team |
Apps |
(Gls) |
---|
1978–1981 |
FV Weinheim |
87 |
(55) |
---|
1981–1987 |
Waldhof Mannheim |
196 |
(87) |
---|
1987–1994 |
VfB Stuttgart |
216 |
(102) |
---|
1994–1997 |
Arminia Bielefeld |
50 |
(25) |
---|
1997–1999 |
SSV Ulm 1846 |
9 |
(6) |
---|
Total |
|
558 |
(275) |
---|
|
1987–1988 |
West Germany Olympic |
8 |
(3) |
---|
|
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
With 22 goals in the 1991–92 Bundesliga season, Fritz Walter was crowned the league's top scorer when he won the German Championship with VfB Stuttgart.
Career statistics
Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
Club |
Season |
League |
Division | Apps | Goals |
Waldhof Mannheim |
1981–82 |
2. Bundesliga |
32 | 11 |
1982–83 |
2. Bundesliga |
35 | 21 |
1983–84 |
Bundesliga |
34 | 16 |
1984–85 |
Bundesliga |
31 | 7 |
1985–86 |
Bundesliga |
31 | 9 |
1986–87 |
Bundesliga |
33 | 23 |
Total |
196 | 87 |
VfB Stuttgart |
1987–88 |
Bundesliga |
33 | 16 |
1988–89 |
Bundesliga |
33 | 13 |
1989–90 |
Bundesliga |
31 | 13 |
1990–91 |
Bundesliga |
26 | 12 |
1991–92 |
Bundesliga |
38 | 22 |
1992–93 |
Bundesliga |
28 | 13 |
1993–94 |
Bundesliga |
27 | 13 |
Total |
216 | 102 |
Arminia Bielefeld |
1994–95 |
Regionalliga |
14 | 4 |
1995–96 |
2. Bundesliga |
33 | 21 |
1996–97 |
Bundesliga |
3 | 0 |
Total |
50 | 25 |
SSV Ulm |
1997–98 |
Regionalliga |
6 | 6 |
1998–99 |
2. Bundesliga |
3 | 0 |
Total |
9 | 6 |
Career total |
471 | 220 |
Honours
VfB Stuttgart
- UEFA Cup runner-up: 1988–89
- Bundesliga: 1991–92
- DFL-Supercup: 1992[2]
Germany
- Olympic bronze medal: 1988
Individual
- Bundesliga top scorer: 1991–92
References
External links
Awards |
---|
1983–84 kicker Bundesliga Team of the Season |
---|
|
1989–90 kicker Bundesliga Team of the Season |
---|
|
DFB-Pokal top scorers |
---|
- 1935: Kuzorra
- 1936: Budde & Poertgen
- 1937: Männer
- 1938: Schön
- 1939: Adamkiewicz & Binder
- 1940: Machate
- 1941: Conen
- 1942: Wilimowski
- 1943: Decker & Noack
- 1953: Islacker
- 1954: Stollenwerk & Waldner
- 1955: Kohn, Kunkel, Sadlowski, D. Seeler, Sommerlatt & Traub
- 1956: Ruppenstein, U. Seeler & Termath
- 1957: Jobst
- 1958: Geiger
- 1959: Rummel
- 1960: Brülls & Witlatschil
- 1961: Hänel
- 1962: Flachenecker, Haseneder, Wild & Wolfframm
- 1963: U. Seeler
- 1964: Brunnenmeier
- 1965: Breuer, Emmerich, Gerhardt, Haseneder, Koslowski & Wild
- 1966: Ohlhauser & Osterhoff
- 1967: G. Müller
- 1967: G. Müller
- 1968: Löhr
- 1969: G. Müller
- 1970: Löhr
- 1971: G. Müller
- 1972: Fischer & Löhr, Overath & Rupp
- 1973: Löhr
- 1974: Hölzenbein
- 1975: Lindner
- 1976: Toppmöller
- 1977: D. Müller
- 1978: D. Müller
- 1979: Hoeneß
- 1980: Allofs & Burgsmüller
- 1981: Hartwig, Hrubesch & Remark
- 1982: Rummenigge
- 1983: Engels
- 1984: Fischer & Worm
- 1985: Dum
- 1986: Allgöwer
- 1987: Kurtenbach
- 1988: Kuntz
- 1989: Schreier
- 1990: Kuntz & Rufer
- 1991: Tönnies
- 1992: Walter
- 1993: Thom
- 1994: Rufer
- 1995: Herrlich
- 1996: Beschastnykh, Häßler & Kuka
- 1997: Winkler
- 1998: Jancker
- 1999: Weber
- 2000: Kevrić
- 2001: Van Lent
- 2002: Berbatov
- 2003: Élber
- 2004: Aílton & Klasnić
- 2005: Jancker & Pizarro
- 2006: Pizarro
- 2007: Cacau
- 2008: Gómez
- 2009: Džeko & Olić
- 2010: Barrios, T. Müller & Senesie
- 2011: Lakić
- 2012: Lewandowski
- 2013: Gómez
- 2014: T. Müller
- 2015: Kießling & Schipplock
- 2016: Mkhitaryan
- 2017: Lewandowski
- 2018: Lewandowski
- 2019: Lewandowski
- 2020: Lewandowski
- 2021: Sancho
- 2022: Glatzel
|
2. Bundesliga top scorers |
---|
2. Bundesliga North | |
---|
2. Bundesliga South | |
---|
2. Bundesliga | |
---|
|
Authority control  |
---|
General | |
---|
National libraries | |
---|
Biographical dictionaries | |
---|
На других языках
[de] Fritz Walter (Fußballspieler, 1960)
Fritz Walter (* 21. Juli 1960 in Heidelberg[1]) ist ein ehemaliger deutscher Fußballspieler.
- [en] Fritz Walter (footballer, born 1960)
[es] Fritz Walter (futbolista nacido en 1960)
Fritz Walter (Mannheim, 21 de julio de 1960) es un exfutbolista alemán. En 1992, cuando ganó la Liga con el VfB Stuttgart, fue máximo goleador de la Bundesliga anotando 22 goles.
[fr] Fritz Walter (football, 1960)
Fritz Walter, né le 21 juillet 1960 à Mannheim, est un ancien attaquant de football allemand.
[it] Fritz Walter (calciatore 1960)
Fritz Walter (Mannheim, 21 giugno 1960) è un ex calciatore tedesco, di ruolo attaccante.
[ru] Вальтер, Фриц (футболист, 1960)
Фриц Ва́льтер (нем. Fritz Walter; род. 21 июля 1960, Гейдельберг[1]) — немецкий футболист[2].
Текст в блоке "Читать" взят с сайта "Википедия" и доступен по лицензии Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike; в отдельных случаях могут действовать дополнительные условия.
Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.
2019-2025
WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии