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・ Hans-Josef Fell
・ Hans-Josef Klauck
・ Hans-Jörg Bliesener
・ Hans-Jörg Bullinger
・ Hans-Georg Dreßen
・ Hans-Georg Dulz
・ Hans-Georg Gadamer
・ Hans-Georg Herzog
・ Hans-Georg Hess
・ Hans-Georg Jaunich
・ Hans-Georg Jörger
・ Hans-Georg Koitz
・ Hans-Georg Kraus
・ Hans-Georg Leyser
・ Hans-Georg Maaßen
Hans-Georg Moldenhauer
・ Hans-Georg Panczak
・ Hans-Georg Pflaum
・ Hans-Georg Reimann
・ Hans-Georg Schierholz
・ Hans-Georg Schwarzenbeck
・ Hans-Georg Stephan
・ Hans-Georg Stümke
・ Hans-Georg Tersling
・ Hans-Georg Tutschek
・ Hans-Georg von Charpentier
・ Hans-Georg von der Marwitz
・ Hans-Georg von der Osten
・ Hans-Georg von Friedeburg
・ Hans-Georg von Seidel


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Hans-Georg Moldenhauer : ウィキペディア英語版
Hans-Georg Moldenhauer

Hans-Georg Moldenhauer (born 25 November 1941 in Senst near Wittenberg) is a former football goalkeeper, playing for 1. FC Magdeburg and its predecessors. After his career he became a sports functionary in East German football and later in unified Germany.
==Playing career==
Moldenhauer's career began in 1954 at BSG Motor Mitte Magdeburg, the football department of which formed a section of SC Aufbau and later became 1. FC Magdeburg during Moldenhauer's playing days. Aged 12, Moldenhauer played as a midfielder, but when the Handball section tried to persuade him to switch sports, teammates suggested he try his hand at goalkeeping, and Moldenhauer showed his real potential. After Moldenhauer had joined the juniors team of SC Aufbau, officials of the East German national team took notice of his consistently good performances, and on 27 March 1960 Moldenhauer played his first match for the East German youth national team. He stood in goal in the next four matches, and played six times for the youth national team altogether.
Aside from his footballing career, Moldenhauer passed the abitur and studied mechanical engineering at Magdeburg's Technische Hochschule. He later earned a doctorate degree and worked in one Magdeburg's heavy engineering companies.
Aged 18 Moldenhauer appeared in his first DDR-Oberliga match on 2 July 1960, when SC Aufbau Magdeburg lost 0-1 to SC Einheit Dresden. However, he remained the back-up goalkeeper behind East German international Wolfgang Blochwitz. Only after Blochwitz had left for FC Carl Zeiss Jena when Magdeburg were relegated in 1966 did Moldenhauer become the regular keeper. But Moldenhauer won his first title already in 1964 when he played in the 3–2 FDGB-Pokal final win against SC Leipzig. Five years later he won his second cup final when Magdeburg beat FC Karl-Marx-Stadt 4–0 in 1969. By winning the cup, Moldenhauer gained the chance to play in the European Cup Winners' Cup, but due to injuries he missed the first matches of the 1969-70 season and first played in the 2nd round against Portuguese side Academica Coimbra. After a 1–2 aggregate loss Magdeburg were eliminated from the competition. In the meantime, Moldenhauer faced internal competition in the club in young goalkeeper Ulrich Schulze, eventually losing his status as first-choice goalkeeper in the 1970-71 season As he had already turned 30, Moldenhauer stepped down from 1. FC Magdeburg's Oberliga squad at the end of the 1970-71 season.
In his twelve years in the first team of the Magdeburg club, Moldenhauer played in 152 competitive matches, 134 in the Oberliga, 16 in the FDGB-Pokal and two matches in the Cup Winners' Cup.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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