Education
Wittke finished the season with ten appearances, making his breakthrough in the 1982-1983 season when he played in 20 of 26 Oberliga matches.
Wittke finished the season with ten appearances, making his breakthrough in the 1982-1983 season when he played in 20 of 26 Oberliga matches.
Fußball-Bundesliga. Football Club Magdeburg. He played for his country at youth level and was part of the Olympic Games squad that failed to qualify for the 1988 Summer Olympics. 1. Football Club Magdeburg
Wittke began his playing career at BSG Aufbau Börde Magdeburg, but already joined 1.
Football Club Magdeburg"s youth department in 1968, at age 8.
In 1978 Wittke was part of 1. Football Club Magdeburg"s Oberliga squad for the first time and debuted in a cup match against BSG Stahl Thale on 14 October 1978.
After that, however, he had to wait 16 more months for his first Oberliga appearance. During this time he continued to play in the youth team
On day 14 of the 1979-1980 season he replaced unavailable team mate Klaus Decker as right midfielder in a match against BSG Wismut Aue on 23 February 1980.
By then he had played in three matches in East Germany"s Under 21/23 national team In the 1984-1985 season Wittke played in 23 matches, a personal record for season appearances. In 1987 he took part in three qualifying matches for the 1988 Summer Olympics.
When he left 1.
Football Club Magdeburg in 1988, he had played in 149 Oberliga matches, 21 FDGB-Pokal matches and 4 European Cup matches for the club 1. Football Club Union
Wittke moved to 1. Football Club Union Berlin in the summer of 1988, but as his former club did not release him, he was banned for 6 months.
Only in December 1988 did he give his debut for his new club in a match against SG Dynamo Dresden, a 1-3 loss.
Wittke did score the equaliser for Berlin, but then missed a penalty. In his first season, he played in 14 matches, but could not prevent Berlin"s relegation.
In one year in the second-tier Deutsche Demokratische Republik-Liga, Wittke played in 23 of 34 matches, but his team missed out on promotion to the Oberliga. Eisenhüttenstadt, Jena und Leipzig
Wittke then moved back to the Oberliga, joining Eisenhüttenstädter Football Club Stahl for the 1990-1991 season who had been playing in the Oberliga since the previous season.
Stahl only finished 9th and missed qualifying for the 2nd Bundesliga, despite Wittke playing in 24 of 26 Oberliga matches.
Foreign this reason, Wittke joined Football Club Carl Zeiss Jena who had qualified for 2nd Bundesliga. He quickly became a regular and played in 100 2nd Bundesliga matches between 1991 and 1994. When Jena was relegated to the third-tier Regionalliga Nordost, Wittke transferred to VfB Leipzig, playing 25 matches over two seasons, but then ended his playing career in June 1996, after he had broken his fibula a month earlier.
While he had received education as a mechanical engineer at the beginning of his footballing career, he took up work in the banking sector after his playing days were over.
In July 2008 he took over managing 1. Suhler SV, a seventh-tier club