You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German. (March 2023) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
View a machine-translated version of the German article.
Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at [[:de:Bernard Dietz]]; see its history for attribution.
You may also add the template {{Translated|de|Bernard Dietz}} to the talk page.
A defender in his professional career, Bernard Dietz played in 495 Bundesliga matches for MSV Duisburg and FC Schalke 04, scoring 70 goals in his Duisburg years and seven in his days with Schalke 04 in the top tier of German football. Leaving Duisburg for Schalke in 1982 caused him to feature 34 times (one goal) for the Gelsenkirchen outfit in the 2. Bundesliga of 1983–84 after the club had been relegated from Bundesliga in Dietz' first season with them. With the German Cup final participation in 1975 his biggest success in his club career, the defender made several other stir. He is still both the top-scoring defender in the history of the Bundesliga across all clubs and second in the list of goal-scorers for MSV Duisburg in the top flight. Although he took part in over 500 games he just received 11 bookings (and no red cards). On 5 November 1977, the down-to-earth defender scored four goals in MSV Duisburg's 6–3 against Bayern Munich and was, in 1978–79, the captain of MSV Duisburg when they reached the round of the last four in the UEFA Cup.
To honour the efforts of Dietz for MSV Duisburg in his career, the fans of the club decided to dub the club's mascot, a zebra, Ennatz. Ennatz is the nickname of Dietz.
Dietz stayed in the game after his retirement, working as a coach on professional and amateur level. He was head coach of ASC Schöppingen from 1 July 1987[2] He left the club on 30 June 1992.[2] Then he was manager of SC Verl from 1 July 1992 to 1 Februar 1994.[3] He then took over VfL Bochum II from 1 July 1994[4] to 30 June 2001.[5] He was interim head coach of VfL Bochum from 26 October 1999[6] to 23 December 1999.[7] No intention to do the job permanently, Bochum won five league matches[6] along with a draw and a loss under Dietz' guidance.[8] He also had a win and a loss in the German Cup.[8] Dietz returned to coaching Bochum's youth when they found Ernst Middendorp's successor in Ralf Zumdick, but was straight back in charge of Bochum's first-team affairs after Zumdick failed to avoid the drop straight back to 2. Bundesliga in 2001.[5] His appointment started for the 2001–02 season.[5] His second spell on top of Bochum's coaching worked out no success and made him resign on 3 December 2001.[9] He had a record of seven wins, six draws, and three losses in 16 matches.[8] Switching to his old club MSV Duisburg to take charge of Duisburg's reserves in 2002,[10] Dietz returned to 2. Bundesliga coaching later on as interim head coach.[11] However, just as caretaker to bridge the time until Duisburg replaced Pierre Littbarski[11] with Norbert Meier.[12] He finished his interim reign with five wins and two losses from seven matches.[13] On 15 May 2006, Dietz decided not to extend his deal as reserve-team coach with Duisburg and to take charge of LR Ahlen in the third division.[10] His first match in–charge was a 3–0 win against Fortuna Düsseldorf.[14] He resigned from his position on 29 October 2006.[15] His final match was a 3–0 loss to Kickers Emden.[14]