About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 31. Chapters: Andreas Diebitz, Andre Weiss, Benjamin Girke, Benjamin Kirsten, Christopher Beck, Christoph Klippel, Daniel Rosin, Daniel Zacher, Dirk Oberritter, Eduard Geyer, Enrico Keller, Exauce Mayombo, Frank Schulze, Frank Schuster, Hans-Jurgen Dorner, Horst Walter (footballer), Jan Koch, Jens Jeremies, Jens Ramme, Karsten Neitzel, Lars Jungnickel, Maik Kegel, Maik Wagefeld, Marcel Franke, Marc Hensel, Matthias Doschner, Matthias Maucksch, Meinhard Hemp, Mirko Soltau, Nico Dabritz, Nikica Maglica, Oliver Merkel, Paul-Max Walther, Philipp Zeiger, Rene Beuchel, Rene Groth, Rico Kuhne, Robert Bohme, Robert Heisse, Robert Koch (footballer), Robert Scannewin, Rocco Milde, Ronny Ernst, Ronny Kreher, Ronny Surma, Sascha Licht, Sepp Kunze, Silvio Schroter, Stefan Suss, Steffen Buttner, Sven Ratke, Thomas Ritter, Tom Starke, Toni Leistner, Tony Mamodaly, Torsten Gutschow, Ulf Kirsten, Uwe Jahnig, Volker Oppitz (footballer). Excerpt: Torsten Gutschow (born 28 July 1962 in Gorlitz) is a German former footballer who played as a striker. He is most associated with Dynamo Dresden, with whom he had two successful spells, playing top level football in East Germany and after reunification. In between these he played for three other German clubs, and spent six months with Galatasaray of the Turkish Super Lig. A strong and instinctive goalscorer, Gutschow was top scorer in each of the last three seasons of the DDR-Oberliga, and was the last ever East German Footballer of the Year. He won three international caps for East Germany, scoring two goals between 1984 and 1989. Since retiring he has taken up coaching, and has been manager of TuS Heeslingen since 2006. Gutschow played as a youth for Traktor Zodel and Dynamo Gorlitz, before joining Dynamo Dresden in 1976. After four years in their youth setup, he was promoted to the