Holger Hieronymus
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Holger Hieronymus | ||
Personal information | ||
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Full name | Holger Hieronymus | |
Date of birth | January 22, 1959 | |
Place of birth | Hamburg, West Germany | |
Height | 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in) | |
Playing position | sweeper | |
Club information | ||
Current club | retired | |
Youth clubs | ||
TuS Hamburg FC St. Pauli |
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Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1979-1984 | Hamburger SV | 121 (7) |
National team2 | ||
1981-1982 | West Germany | 3 (0) |
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
Holger Hieronymus (born January 22, 1959 in Hamburg) is a former German football player.
Hieronymus started his career with local side TuS Hamburg at the age of six and was a promising talent for the sweeper position when then Hamburger SV general manager Günter Netzer snapped him up from local counterpart FC St. Pauli for 75,000 Deutsche Mark following Hamburger SV's Bundesliga title in 1979. The proximate Bundesliga season saw the technically gifted player coming to his first games, being a starter in the European Cup final defeat of his side against Nottingham Forest at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium on May 28, 1980. Failing to claim the Bundesliga trophy of 1980 and 1981, on both occasions Hamburg finished second, Hieronymus won his first trophy in 1982 when Hamburg won the league. The same summer he and his side crashed to Sven-Göran Eriksson's IFK Göteborg in the two-legged UEFA Cup final. In 1983 his club retained the Bundesliga title and, further, beat Juventus in the European Cup final in Athens. He was back a regular in the line-up's of Hamburg manager Ernst Happel after his career had, for some time, been called to a halt due to his club signing veteran German legend Franz Beckenbauer in November 1980.
The most tragic moment of his life in the game, however, happened on March 31, 1984, in the Bundesliga tie against Waldhof Mannheim. With less than fifteen minutes left on the clock, Hieronymus received a career-killing injury. A cruciate ligament rupture synchronized with a deltoid ligament rupture and, together with, a caused menisci and knee cartilage damage forced him to retire in 1985, over a year after that incident. At the time he finally abandoned the hope of recovery, merely 26 years of age, the talented sweeper had played in 121 Bundesliga matches (7 goals) for Hamburger SV.
For West Germany Holger Hieronymus was capped three times in between September 1981 and October 1982, each as a substitute and just the final of those (he came on for injured Karlheinz Förster in the 5th minute in a friendly win over England at Wembley on October 13, 1982) for a duration of more than parts of the second-half. Still, he was selected by Jupp Derwall for the 1982 FIFA World Cup, staying unused throughout the competition.
Looking for a different occupation after his retirement, Hieronymus first founded a sports center for obese and was later, together with his former team-mate Ditmar Jakobs (whose career had also abruptly been ended by horrible injury), co-founder of an injury rehabilitation centre. Leaving these jobs aside, Hieronymus enjoyed a return to Hamburger SV in 1997 as the new marketing manager of Die Rothosen. From June 1998 to August 2002 he operated as general manager of the club. On February 1, 2005 he took a leading job at DFL Deutsche Fußball Liga GmbH, which can be seen as the governing entity that carries the Bundesliga competitions into effect.
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