Buchwald with Urawa in 2004.
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Personal information | |||
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Full name | Guido Ulrich Buchwald | ||
Date of birth | 24 January 1961 | ||
Place of birth | West Berlin, West Germany | ||
Height | 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in) | ||
Playing position | Defender | ||
Club information | |||
Current team
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Stuttgarter Kickers (Director of football) | ||
Youth career | |||
1969–1977 | SV Wannweil | ||
1977–1978 | TSV Pliezhausen | ||
1978–1979 | Stuttgarter Kickers | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1979–1983 | Stuttgarter Kickers | 146 | (18) |
1983–1994 | VfB Stuttgart | 325 | (28) |
1994–1997 | Urawa Reds | 127 | (11) |
1997–1999 | Karlsruher SC | 40 | (3) |
Total | 638 | (60) | |
National team | |||
1980 | West Germany U-21 | 1 | (0) |
1983–1984 | West Germany Olympic | 9 | (1) |
1984–1994 | Germany | 76 | (4) |
Teams managed | |||
2004–2006 | Urawa Reds | ||
2007 | Alemannia Aachen | ||
2012 | Stuttgarter Kickers (interim) | ||
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only. |
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
Guido Ulrich Buchwald (born 24 January 1961) is a German former football defender who is currently director of football of Stuttgarter Kickers.
The best game of Buchwald's career was probably the final of the 1990 FIFA World Cup where he effectively marked the skilled footballer Diego Maradona, earning him the nickname "Diego". He was also part of Germany's disappointing 1994 FIFA World Cup squad and collected in his career 76 caps.
Buchwald began his professional football career in 1983 with VfB Stuttgart. He played 325 games in the German Bundesliga for this club, scoring 28 goals. The low-point of his career was in 1986 when coach Franz Beckenbauer did not include him in his team for the World Cup in Mexico. He was however part of the squad which won the World Cup in Italy four years later.
The same year Stuttgart lost the final of the German Cup against FC Bayern Munich and in 1989 the final of the UEFA Cup was also lost, but they managed to win two German championships (1984, 1992).
His personal highlight in his Bundesliga-Career was on the last day of play in the 1991–92 season, when he scored the deciding goal against Bayer Leverkusen that won Stuttgart the match and the Championship – just six minutes before the games' end.
In 1994 he signed with the Japanese team Urawa Red Diamonds before returning to Germany in 1998 to help Karlsruhe avoid relegation. He could not save the team and after one more season playing in the second division he retired but stayed with the club as a director of sports.