Horst Witzler

German football manager
Horst Witzler
Personal information
Date of birth (1932-08-18) 18 August 1932 (age 91)
Managerial career
Years Team
1961–1964 SV Meppen
1965–1966 SV Arminia Hannover
1966–1970 Schwarz-Weiß Essen
1970–1971 Borussia Dortmund
1972–1973 Rot-Weiss Essen
1974 1. FC Mülheim
1974–1976 Alemannia Aachen
1980 SC Herford
1980 K.A.S. Eupen
1985–1987 K.A.S. Eupen

Horst Witzler (born 18 August 1932) is a retired German football manager.[1]

References

  1. ^ Horst Witzler at WorldFootball.net
  • v
  • t
  • e
SV Meppenmanagers
  • Richter (1956–57)
  • Heyduck (1957)
  • Opitz (1957–59)
  • Timmer (1959–61)
  • Witzler (1961–64)
  • Zele (1964–65)
  • Otto (1965–66)
  • van Zoest (1966–67)
  • Michel (1967–74)
  • Basikow (1974–76)
  • Michel (1976–78)
  • Kugler (1978)
  • Schmidt (1978–83)
  • Persike (1983–91)
  • Ehrmantraut (1991–96)
  • Linz (1996–97)
  • Rolff (1997–98)
  • Votava (1998–99)
  • Persike (1999)
  • Bücker (1999–2000)
  • Weusthoff (2000–02)
  • Helmer (2002–03)
  • Friedemann (2003–04)
  • Belke (2004–05)
  • Weusthoff (2005–07)
  • Hüring (2007–09)
  • Claaßen (2009)
  • Hüring (2009–10)
  • Lünemann (2010–12)
  • Persike & Bujan (2012)
  • Flottmann (2012–13)
  • Neidhart (2013–20)
  • Frings (2020–21)
  • Neumann (2021)
  • Schmitt (2021–22)
  • Krämer (2022–23)
  • Middendorp (2023)
  • Alipour (2023–)
  • v
  • t
  • e
Borussia Dortmundmanagers
  • v
  • t
  • e
Rot-Weiss Essenmanagers
  • v
  • t
  • e
Alemannia Aachenmanagers
  • v
  • t
  • e
K.A.S. Eupenmanagers
  • Bastin (1979–80)
  • Witzler (1980)
  • Lenaers (1980–82)
  • Lemaire (1982)
  • Semianov (1982–85)
  • Witzler (1985–87)
  • Raskin (1987–88)
  • Haag (1988)
  • Pirnay (1988)
  • Ćurčić (1988–89)
  • Van Dormael (1989)
  • Broeders (1989–90)
  • Heymann (1990)
  • Neumann (1990–94)
  • Fagot (1994–96)
  • Chauveheid (1996–2004)
  • Grosjean (2004–08)
  • Gehoulet (2008)
  • Claesen (2008)
  • Neumann (2008)
  • Ost (2008–10)
  • Capuano (2010)
  • Cartier (2010–11)
  • Ost (2011)
  • Frank (2011–12)
  • Márquez (2012–15)
  • Condom (2015–17)
  • Makélélé (2017–19)
  • San José (2019–21)
  • Krämer (2021–22)
  • Valkanis (2022)
  • Storck (2022)
  • Andersen & Kohnen (a.i.) (2022)
  • Still (2022–23)
  • Kohfeldt (2023–24)
  • Andersen & Fèvre (2024–)


Flag of GermanySoccer icon

This biographical article relating to German football is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e