Education
Stars played there from 1971 to 1977, and under coach Helmuth Johannsen the Völklingen squad twice finished as runner-up 1972 and 1973 in the Bundesliga promotion round.
Stars played there from 1971 to 1977, and under coach Helmuth Johannsen the Völklingen squad twice finished as runner-up 1972 and 1973 in the Bundesliga promotion round.
Jürgen Stars began his professional career in 1967 in his hometown, with 1. Football Club Phönix Lübeck in the Regionalliga Nord. Also playing for Phönix Lübeck that season was defender Peter Nogly, who would later become Stars" teammate twice more at Hamburg and Tampa Bay.
After four seasons in Lübeck, he joined SV Röchling Völklingen who were initially playing in the Regionalliga Südwest.
In 1974 his team gained promotion to the 2. Bundesliga South. Between 1974 and 1977, he played in 112 league games at Völklingen.
By signing with Hamburger SV in 1977, Stars finally made it to top-flight European football in the Bundesliga. However he saw limited action in three seasons, serving mostly as the back-up to Rudi Kargus, who was a fixture in goal at Herpes simplex virus. While in Herpes simplex virus he appeared in several DFB-Pokal matches and one Cup Winners" Cup match.
In 1980 Stars moved to newly promoted second division side VfR Bürstadt.
There he appeared in 25 matches, helping VfR to 13th place in the table. However, since it was the final year that the 2. Bundesliga used the two-track system, Buerstadt was nevertheless relegated in the Amateur Oberliga Hessen for 1981-1982.
Beginning in 1981 Stars also played four years in the NASL, initially for the Calgary Boomers.
He then briefly returned to Hamburg before joining Tampa Bay Rowdies during their march to 1981-1982 indoor finals. He played three indoor seasons and two outdoor campaigns in Tampa, before moving on to the Tulsa Roughnecks for the 1984 outdoor season.
The NASL folded before the 1985, and Stars returned to West Germany. He finished his club career at Altona 93 and VfL Pinneberg.
Over the course of his playing days, Jürgen Stars was a teammate of such luminaries as Kevin Keegan, Ivan Buljan, Arno Steffenhagen, Franz Gerber, Hugo Perez, Tatu, and Roy Wegerle, among others
Because of some previous police training, he earned the nickname "Starski" -a reference to the popular television police drama Starsky & Hutch. After his retirement he served as an assistant coach or goalkeeper coach at several German clubs, including Herpes simplex virus in 1996-1997 and SV Halstenbek-Rellingen in the Hamburg Oberliga in 2010. He has referred to his time with Tampa Bay in the NASL as "the best time of my life." Röchling Völklingen Hamburger SV Tampa Bay Rowdies.