Pierre Littbarski

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Pierre Littbarski
Personal information
Full name Pierre Littbarski
Date of birth April 16, 1960 (1960-04-16) (age 48)
Place of birth    West Berlin, West Germany
Height 1.68 m (5 ft 6 in)
Playing position Attacking midfielder, Striker, Winger
Club information
Current club Avispa Fukuoka (manager)
Youth clubs
VfL Schöneberg
F.C. Hertha 03 Zehlendorf
1. FC Köln
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1978-1986
1986-1987
1987-1993
1993-1995
1996-1997
1. FC Köln
Racing Club de Paris
1. FC Köln
JEF United Ichihara
Brummell Sendai
234 (89)
34 (4)
172 (27)
63 (10)
29 (5)   
National team2
1981-1990 West Germany 73 (18)
Teams managed
1999-2000
2001
2001-2002
2003-2004
2005-2006
2006-
Yokohama FC
Bayer Leverkusen (Assistant Manager)
MSV Duisburg
Yokohama FC
Sydney FC
Avispa Fukuoka

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only and
correct as of June 30, 1999.
2 National team caps and goals correct
as of June 30, 1990.
* Appearances (Goals)

Pierre Littbarski (born April 16, 1960) is a German football manager and former player, and was a FIFA World Cup winner with West Germany in 1990. He was also runner up twice in 1982 and 1986 with West Germany. He was born in Berlin.

Contents

[edit] Life and work

Littbarski spent most of his playing career at 1. FC Köln, winning the German Cup once, in 1983, and was three times runner up in the Bundesliga (1982, 1989 and 1990). He has also played for Racing Club de Paris in Ligue 1 as well as for JEF United and Brummel Sendai in Japan. In his career, he was initially used as a striker before being utilised as an attacking midfielder. "Litti", as he was nicknamed by german fans, was widely known for his excellent dribbling abilities and humorous attitude, being one of the fan favourites in german Bundesliga during this decade.

He was manager of Australian A-League side Sydney FC, and lead them to the FIFA Club World Championship in 2005, and a win in the inaugural A-League Championship. He was famous amongst Sydney FC supporters for his stylish brown suits [1][2]. Sydney under Littbarski were often criticised for boring, unimaginative football, but the results could seldom be argued with and Sydney FC went on to claim the innaugral A-League Championship under his reign.[citation needed] Littbarski and Sydney FC severed ties on Wednesday, May 5, 2006, with Littbarski announcing he would not re-sign for the club following disputes over training locations and a cut-price contract offer.[citation needed]

In December 2006, Littbarski was appointed the manager of Avispa Fukuoka, a J-League side that was newly demoted to the second division after the 2006 season.

Previously, he has been the manager of Yokohama FC (twice), as well as assistant manager of Bayer 04 Leverkusen and manager of MSV Duisburg.

In October 2007, Littbarski announced his interest in taking the managerial vacancy at Norwich City F.C., possibly with his current assistant, former City player Ian Crook. [1]

[edit] Club career

[edit] International playing career

73 internationals for West Germany - 18 goals.

German U21 side: 21 internationals

[edit] Managerial career

[edit] Trivia

  • His wife is Japanese and they have two sons. He is fluent in Japanese.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Football365.com - All The News - Football365 News

[edit] External links