Background
He is the son of Erwin Nöldner, a resistance fighter killed by the Nazis in 1944.
journalist association football player
He is the son of Erwin Nöldner, a resistance fighter killed by the Nazis in 1944.
Nöldner began his senior career in 1959, with Vorwärts Berlin. He was to spend his entire career with the club, even staying when it was moved to Frankfurt/Oder in 1971. He also played internationally for East Germany, winning 30 caps and scoring 16 goals, including a first minute goal against Austria which was the fastest in the national team"s history.
He was part of the all-East German team that represented Germany at the 1964 Summer Olympics, winning the bronze medal.
In 1966 he was voted East German Football player of the Year, and such was his reputation that he was nicknamed "the Puskás of the Deutsche Demokratische Republik". Honours Nöldner retired in 1973, and became a sports journalists.
He edited the Neue Fußballwoche, an East German football magazine, from 1984 to 1990, and served as Berlin editor of Kicker sportmagazin from 1990 until his retirement in 2006.