Richard Golz

Richard Golz (born 5 June 1968) is a German former football goalkeeper.[1] He has had a long career in German football, spending the vast majority of which at just two clubs, Hamburger SV and SC Freiburg. He works as goalkeeper coach for Hamburger SV II.

Richard Golz
Personal information
Date of birth (1968-06-05) 5 June 1968
Place of birth Berlin, Germany
Height 1.99 m (6 ft 6 in)
Playing position(s) Goalkeeper
Club information
Current team
Hertha BSC (goalkeeper coach)
Youth career
1975–1979 Wacker 04 Berlin
1979–1981 SC Tegel Berlin
1981–1983 Wacker 04 Berlin
1983–1985 SC Tegel Berlin
1985–1987 Hamburger SV
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1987–1998 Hamburger SV 273 (0)
1998–2006 SC Freiburg 219 (0)
2006–2008 Hannover 96 0 (0)
Total 492 (0)
National team
1987–1990 West Germany U-21 6 (0)
Teams managed
2008–2013 Hamburger SV II (assistant)
2013– Hertha BSC (goalkeeping coach)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Playing career

Born in Berlin, Golz was discovered by Hamburger SV youth coach Gerd-Volker Schock and joined the club in 1985, studying at the Gymnasium Heidberg, like many HSV youngsters. He made his professional debut on 1 August 1987 in a 2–5 defeat to FC Schalke 04 and managed five appearances in his debut season. By the October of his second season, he had claimed the number one jersey that he would retain for almost a decade.

Although the club did not manage to win any trophies during this period, Golz achieved several top five finishes here and enjoyed European action in the 1991–92 UEFA Cup where Hamburger SV reached the third round (their exit at the hands of Sigma Olomouc was a doubly unhappy occasion for Golz as he was sent off).

In the 1997–98 season Golz lost his first choice position, as Hamburg signed Hans-Jörg Butt. Golz was relegated to reserve status at this point, making just one final appearance for the HSV on 31 January 1998 in a 0–3 defeat at Bayern Munich. After over 10 years and 273 Bundesliga games, Golz's time at Hamburg was up and he moved onto newly promoted SC Freiburg.

Golz immediately got back into first team action with his new club, as they enjoyed four years at the top level, before sliding back down to the 2. Bundesliga in 2002. However, Golz was an ever-present as they immediately won promotion back as champions. He and the club survived for two further seasons before again being relegated in 2005.

The following year saw Golz activate a clause he had previously put in his contract guaranteeing him a one-year position in the club's marketing department. He made only six further appearances for the team as new signing Alexander Walke replaced him after 219 games for the club.

Golz added to his new off the field role by gaining the German Football Association football coaching licence (A-list), which built upon the sports management open university course he had competed in 2000. However, his position within the club wasn't extended beyond the initial year and he seized the chance to reactivate his playing career by joining top flight Hannover 96 in August 2006 as a backup goalkeeper, but he made no appearances until his contract ran out in 2008.

Coaching career

On 4 June 2013, he was appointed as the goalkeeping coach of Hertha BSC.[2]

gollark: We mostly use CC for that.
gollark: Oh, OpenComputers? Interesting.
gollark: Milo (requires expensive hardware), Artist (requires *somewhat* expensive hardware), Turtlegistics and the many forks (very outdated, doesn't support modern features, a bit slow, but cheap and easy), and... okay, there aren't really any other somewhat good ones.
gollark: There are... four of those around, at least?
gollark: 1.12.2™

References

  1. "Golz, Richard" (in German). kicker.de. Retrieved 13 February 2011.
  2. "Richard Golz wird neuer Torwarttrainer" (in German). herthabsc.de. Retrieved 4 June 2013.
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