Markus Hayer

Markus Hayer (born 18 August 1985) is a German footballer who plays for FV Wiehl.

Markus Hayer
Personal information
Date of birth (1985-08-18) 18 August 1985
Place of birth Germany
Height 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)
Playing position(s) Right-Winger / Striker
Club information
Current team
FV Wiehl
Number 7
Youth career
0000–2003 Bayer Leverkusen
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2003–2004 Bayer Leverkusen II 2 (0)
2004–2010 Germania Windeck
2010–2012 Kickers Offenbach 24 (4)
2012–2014 1. FC Saarbrücken 13 (1)
2014 Bayer Leverkusen II 0 (0)
2014–2015 Sportfreunde Siegen 19 (2)
2015– FV Wiehl 9 (3)
Teams managed
2015– FV Wiehl (playing assistant)[1]
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 15 October 2015

Career

Hayer played in the youth team of Bayer Leverkusen, but made his breakthrough in senior football with seven years at Germania Dattenfeld (later renamed Germania Windeck). In 2010, he signed for Kickers Offenbach of the 3. Liga, and made his debut in a surprise 3–0 win over VfL Bochum in the first round of the DFB-Pokal, as a late substitute for Olivier Occean. After two years without fully establishing himself at Offenbach, he signed for 1. FC Saarbrücken in July 2012. He was released by Saarbrücken in January 2014, after an injury-hit eighteen months with the club, and returned to his first club, signing for Bayer Leverkusen II. He left Leverkusen for a second time when the club disbanded its reserve team at the end of the 2013–14 season.

gollark: There are lots of problems with all the models. I think at least trying to come up with and consider different ones is worth doing, though, because pretending IP is not-intellectual property is problematic.
gollark: I like reading (e)books myself.
gollark: Or to have people be paid per use of a thing out of a pool of input money, like Kindle Unlimited and whatever.
gollark: One idea for that is to have people pay upfront kickstarter-style, but that has its own problems too.
gollark: I don't really know how intellectual property issues "should" work, although I don't think the current approach of "just pretend they work like non-duplicable physical goods as much as possible" is a very good one.

References


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