Miroslav "Mirko" Votava (born 25 April 1956) is a German retired footballer and manager.[1]
Adefensive midfielderofstamina and tactical awareness, he played 546 matches[2] in the Bundesliga (fourth in the all-time list at the time of his retirement),[3] retiring at the age of 41. Most of his professional career was spent in with Werder Bremen, with which he won a total of five titles – he also played eight years with Borussia Dortmund and spent three seasons outside German football with Atlético Madrid.
Scoring three goals in 22 games in his firstBundesliga season, Votava was an undisputed starter onwards, only missing three matches from 1977to1982, although he failed to win any silverware.
He subsequently moved to Atlético Madrid for 58 million pesetas,[4] being an instrumental figure for the Colchoneros which always finished in the top four in La Liga during his three-year spell and also lifting the Copa del Reyin1985.
Votava returned to West Germany aged 29, signing with SV Werder Bremen where he would play a further 11 campaigns and rarely missing a game. He helped the club to the 1991–92 edition of the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup[5] and two league titles (to which he contributed with a total of 65 matches and five goals). On 24 August 1996, aged 40 years and 121 days, he became the league's oldest goalscorer at the time, scoring in a 2–1 loss at VfB Stuttgart;[6] the record lasted until 16 February 2019, when Claudio Pizarro (aged 40 years and 136 days) scored against Hertha BSC.[7]
Votava then moved into coaching, starting with last club Oldenburg then moving to SV Meppen, both in the regional leagues. From late 2002 to early 2004, he took the reins of 1. FC Union Berlin in division two, following which he returned to Werder as a youth coach (he had previously worked with the club as a scout).[8]
Votava chose to represent West Germany internationally, and made his debut on 21 November 1979, playing 15 minutes in a 3–1 friendly away win over the Soviet Union. He appeared in a further four internationals, including UEFA Euro 1980's group stage match against Greece (0–0) as the national side emerged victorious in the tournament.[9][10]