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・ Thomas Limberger
・ Thomas Linacre
・ Thomas Linard
・ Thomas Lincoln
・ Thomas Lincoln (disambiguation)
・ Thomas Lincoln Casey, Jr.
・ Thomas Lincoln Casey, Sr.
・ Thomas Lincoln Tally
・ Thomas Lindhqvist
・ Thomas Lindrup
・ Thomas Lindsay
・ Thomas Lindsay (academic)
・ Thomas Lindsay (bishop)
・ Thomas Linehan
・ Thomas Linière Taschereau
Thomas Linke
・ Thomas Linley
・ Thomas Linley the elder
・ Thomas Linley the younger
・ Thomas Lionel Hodgkin
・ Thomas Lippman
・ Thomas Lips
・ Thomas Lipson
・ Thomas Lipton
・ Thomas Lisieux
・ Thomas Lister
・ Thomas Lister (died 1718)
・ Thomas Lister (Jesuit)
・ Thomas Lister (regicide)
・ Thomas Lister Parker


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Thomas Linke : ウィキペディア英語版
Thomas Linke

Thomas Linke (born 26 December 1969) is a retired German professional footballer who played as a central defender. He is currently working as sports director for FC Ingolstadt.
Linke was remembered as a hard-nosed tackler with tremendous heading ability, and played in 13 Bundesliga seasons in representation of Schalke 04 and Bayern Munich, totalling 340 games.
Having gained his first cap for Germany in his late 20's, Linke went on to represent the nation in one World Cup and one European Championship.
==Club career==
Born in Sömmerda, Thuringia, East Germany, Linke began his football career in 1977, with local BSG Robotron Sömmerda. In 1983, he transferred to FC Rot-Weiß Erfurt, eventually making the breakthrough into the first team in 1989; with the latter, he had the opportunity to gain experience by playing in the East German first division.
After finishing third in the last year of the competition, the club was placed into the newly consolidated 2. Bundesliga in 1991, as part of the German reunification process. Linke was a starter throughout the club's campaign but was ultimately unable to prevent it from being relegated at the end of the season, while also appearing in four UEFA Cup contests.
During Rot-Weiß Erfurt’s German Cup win over FC Schalke 04, the latter team's management took notice of Linke and brought the defender into the club the following season. At Schalke he was also able to quickly earn his way into the starting line-up, and, from 1992 until 1998, he appeared in a total of 175 Bundesliga games for the ''Royal Blues'', his debut coming on 1 September 1992, in a 0–0 home tie against SV Werder Bremen.
Linke's crowning achievement during his tenure with Schalke was the penalty shootout win over Inter Milan, in the 1996–97 UEFA Cup. He appeared in 11 matches during the victorious run, scoring twice.
In 1998, Linke transferred to national giants FC Bayern Munich, where he would go on to experience the most successful chapter of his professional career. In his first season, he scored his first goal for the Bavarians in a 3–1 derby home win over TSV 1860 München, on 7 November, but would also start in the notorious UEFA Champions League final against Manchester United.
With Bayern, Linke won five leagues, three German Cups and four league cups, in addition to the 2001 editions of the Champions League and the Intercontinental Cup. In the final of the former, he scored the final penalty to give Bayern the victory in the shootout against Valencia CF.
Since first joining Bayern, numerous critics prophesied that Linke would never be able to hold on to his starting spot in the center of defense. The player made it a point to prove his critics wrong by continually impressing with solid, if unspectacular, performances. Not until his final season, under coach Felix Magath, did he end up losing his starting role to Croatian Robert Kovač, appearing in only 11 games, but helping in another league conquest.
At the beginning of the 2005–06 season, 35-year-old Linke made the decision to extend his playing career by transferring to the Austrian Bundesliga, linking up with newly re-tooled FC Red Bull Salzburg alongside former Bayern teammate Alexander Zickler. Soon after arriving, he was appointed team captain, and became a regular fixture. During his second season with the Red Bulls, he added one last piece of silverware to his extensive collection by winning the league; on 3 May 2007, the club informed him that his initial two-year contract would not be extended.
On 13 June 2007, aged almost 38, Linke agreed to a Bayern return, linking with the club's amateur side in the third division. In early 2008, he re-joined Salzburg, serving as assistant to director of Football Heinz Hochhauser and subsequently retiring from playing.

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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