Keith Bertschin

Keith Bertschin
Personal information
Full name Keith Edwin Bertschin[1]
Date of birth (1956-08-25) 25 August 1956[1]
Place of birth Enfield, England[1]
Playing position Striker
Club information
Current team
Solihull Moors
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1972–1973 Barnet
1973–1977 Ipswich Town 32 (8)
1977–1981 Birmingham City 118 (29)
1981–1984 Norwich City 114 (29)
1982Jacksonville Tea Men (loan) 14 (3)
1984–1987 Stoke City 88 (29)
1987–1988 Sunderland 36 (7)
1988–1990 Walsall 55 (9)
1990–1991 Chester City 19 (0)
1991–1992 Aldershot
1992–1993 Solihull Borough
1993–1994 Evesham United
1994 Barry Town
1994–1995 Worcester City
1995–1996 Hednesford Town
1996 Tamworth
1996–1998 Stafford Rangers
Total 476 (114)
National team
1977–1978 England U21 3 (0)
Teams managed
2016- Solihull Moors

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.


Keith Edwin Bertschin (born 25 August 1956) is a former professional footballer is currently the manager of Solihull Moors.

Bertschin, a striker, began his professional career with Ipswich Town (1973–1977), before playing for Birmingham City (1977–1981), Norwich City (1981–1982; 1982–1984), Stoke City (1984–1987), Sunderland (1987–1988), Walsall (1988–1990), Chester City (1990–1991) and Aldershot (1991–1992). He also played non-League football and had a short spell playing in the United States with the Jacksonville Tea Men in 1982.[1]

Playing career

Bertschin was born in Enfield and began his career with Barnet before joining Ipswich Town in 1973. He made a perfect start to professional football scoring on his debut scoring the winning goal in a 2–1 victory over Arsenal in April 1976. He scored again two days later against West Ham United. He became a full member of the squad in 1976–77 scoring six goals in 30 appearances as Ipswich finished in 3rd position. Bertschin joined Birmingham City in July 1977 for a fee of £135,000.[2] He spent four seasons at St Andrew's making 143 appearances scoring 41 goals and helped the club gain promotion in 1979–80. Bertschin joined Norwich City in August 1981 and helped the Canaries gain promotion to the First Division in 1981–82. He scored twice against his old club Birmingham in a 5–1 victory earning Norwich their first victory of the 1982–83 season.[3] He spent the summer of 1982 playing in the United States for Jacksonville Tea Men.

Bertschin left Carrow Road in November 1984 to join Stoke City.[1] Stoke were rock bottom of the table when Bertschin joined in 1984–85 and he could do little to prevent the side failing to an embarrassing relegation which saw Stoke go down with a then record low points tally. In 1985–86 had a fine season top-scoring with 23 goals, 19 coming in the league and he won the player of the year award.[1] Unfortunately for Stoke he was their only consistent goalscorer and the side finished in a mid-table position of 10th.[1] He scored eight goals in 27 appearance in 1986–87 before he was sold to Sunderland in March 1987.[1] He couldn't prevent Sunderland being relegated but played a major role in 1987–88 which saw the Black Cats win the Third Division title. Bertschin ended his professional career at Walsall, Chester City and Aldershot before dropping into non-league football.[1]

Bertschin played for Solihull Borough, Evesham United and was a member of the Barry Town team which won the Welsh Cup in 1994 with a 2–1 victory against Cardiff City.[4] He then went on to play for Worcester City, Hednesford Town, Tamworth and finally Stafford Rangers.[1]

Coaching career

After retiring from playing, he worked as an agent for a number of players before his appointment to the coaching staff at Birmingham City. In November 2007, when Birmingham manager Steve Bruce left to join Wigan Athletic, Bertschin and other members of Birmingham's backroom staff accompanied him.[5] In June 2009, when Bruce moved on to Sunderland, Bertschin again followed.[6] On 29 June 2012 it was announced that Bertschin had taken up the post of first team coach at Hull City.[7] On 2 August 2016, the club sacked Bertschin from his position of first team coach.[8]

Bertschin replaced Marcus Bignot as manager of Solihull Moors on 9 November 2016.[9]

Honours

Birmingham City
Norwich City
Stoke City
Sunderland

Career statistics

Club Season League FA Cup League Cup Other[A] Total
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Ipswich Town 1975–76 First Division 3200000032
1976–77 First Division 296001000306
Total 328001000338
Birmingham City 1977–78 First Division 42112310304814
1978–79 First Division 92101000112
1979–80 Second Division 37123320334518
1980–81 First Division 304324100377
Total 11829981016314341
Norwich City 1981–82 Second Division 36123010004012
1982–83 First Division 4085442004914
1983–84 First Division 3375162004410
1984–85 First Division 5200000052
Total 114291351140013838
Jacksonville Tea Men (loan) 1982 NASL 143143
Total 143143
Stoke City 1984–85 First Division 252200000272
1985–86 Second Division 42191032324923
1986–87 Second Division 218401010278
Total 882970424210333
Sunderland 1986–87 Second Division 112000021133
1987–88 Third Division 255102022307
Total 3671020434310
Walsall 1988–89 Second Division 200103011251
1989–90 Third Division 3593210534413
1990–91 Fourth Division 0000001010
Total 5594240747114
Chester City 1990–91 Third Division 190310000221
Total 190310000221
Career Total 47611437163272112566149
A. ^ The "Other" column constitutes appearances and goals in the Anglo-Scottish Cup, Football League play-offs, Football League Trophy and Full Members Cup.

References

General
Specific
  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Lowe, Simon (2000). Stoke City The Modern Era – A Complete Record. Desert Island Books. ISBN 1-874287-39-2.
  2. "Keith Bertschin". Pride of Anglia. Retrieved 11 April 2013.
  3. "Magic Moment: 1982 – Keith Bertschin scores twice as Norwich City record first victory on return to Division One". Norwich Evening News 24. Retrieved 11 April 2013.
  4. "Football: Barry demolish Cardiff's dream". The Independent. 16 May 1994. Retrieved 16 April 2010.
  5. "Nigel Spink set to follow Steve Bruce to Wigan". Birmingham Mail. Trinity Mirror. 24 December 2007. Retrieved 7 May 2008.
  6. "Bruce named as Sunderland manager". BBC Sport. BBC. 3 June 2009. Retrieved 16 April 2010.
  7. "New Staff Announcement". The Tigers Official Website. Hull City A.F.C. 29 June 2012. Archived from the original on 4 July 2012. Retrieved 11 June 2013.
  8. Mullan, Charlie (3 August 2016). "Hull City part company with first team coach Keith Bertschin". Hull Daily Mail. Retrieved 3 August 2016.
  9. http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/37931236
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