Augenthaler was born in
Fürstenzell,
Bavaria, West Germany. He played generally in the position of
centre-back or, especially in the later part of his career, as a
sweeper. Augenthaler joined Bayern Munich in 1975 and made his
Bundesliga debut for the club in 1977, scoring in a 3-0 win over
Borussia Dortmund. He won the Bundesliga for the first time in
1980, and Bayern retained the title in
1981. Augenthaler played for Bayern in
1982 European Cup final against
Aston Villa and came close to scoring twice, but Bayern ultimately lost 1-0, becoming the first ever Bayern team to lose a final. In 1984 Augenthaler became Bayern captain, which he would remain until his retirement in 1991. Bayern won the league again in his first season as captain and Augenthaler, playing as a libero, was one of the league's best defensive players in a Bayern defence that conceded fewer than any other team. In November 1985 Augenthaler committed one of the most infamous fouls in Bundesliga history, injuring
Werder Bremen's star player
Rudi Völler with a tackle which badly injured Völler and forced him to miss almost the entire remainder of the season. Augenthaler received death threats from Bremen fans after the incident and was booed by fans of other clubs around the country. Bayern lost another
European Cup final in
1986–87, though Augenthaler was suspended for the final after being sent off for a slap on
Hugo Sánchez in the semi-final. In 1989, Augenthaler scored a shot from the halfway line against
Eintracht Frankfurt goalkeeper
Uli Stein; it was awarded
Sportschau's
goal of the year award, and was later named the goal of the century. During his final season with Bayern, Augenthaler scored a last-minute own goal in the
1990–91 European Cup semi-final against
Red Star Belgrade which knocked Bayern out. In his years with
Bayern Munich, Augenthaler won the Bundesliga title seven times and the
DFB-Pokal three times. He played 404 Bundesliga matches and made 89 appearances in European cup competitions for Bayern. == International career ==