Gyula Feldmann

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Gyula Feldmann
Personnel
birthday November 16, 1890
place of birth SzegedAustria-Hungary
date of death October 31, 1955
position Defense
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1906-1915 Nemzeti SC
1915-1917 Ferencváros Budapest
1917-1920 MTK Budapest
1920 First Hungarian professional team
1921-1922 MTK Budapest
1922-1924 Makkabi Brno
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1910-1920 Hungary 10 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1924 Union 03 Altona
1924-1926 Bremen SV
1926-1927 Eintracht Braunschweig
1927-1928 Hungária FC
1928 Juventus Bucharest
1928-1931 AC Florence
1931-1934 US Palermo
1934-1936 Ambrosiana-Inter
1936-1938 AC Turin
1938-1939 SK Jugoslavija Belgrade
1939-1940 Hungária FC
1 Only league games are given.

Gyula Feldmann (born November 16, 1890 in Szeged , Austria-Hungary , † October 31, 1955 ) was a Hungarian football player and coach .

Career

Gyula Feldmann began his career with the Budapest club Nemzeti SC and was called up for the first time in 1910 in the national team , where he made his debut against Austria . On the occasion of the 1912 Summer Olympics , he was registered in the Hungarian 33-man squad, but ultimately not taken to Stockholm . In the mid-1910s, the defender moved to the Ferencvárosi Torna Club , where he stayed until 1917 before joining rival MTK Budapest . The blue-whites dominated the league at this time and Feldmann became Hungarian champions three times in a row with the MTK (from 1918 to 1920) . In May 1920 he made his last appearance in the national team - again against Austria, against whom he played nine of his ten international matches.

In the summer of 1920, a German businessman put together a Hungarian professional team that would compete against a German professional team and go on a year-long tour of Germany and Europe. Feldmann joined this company, along with some other national players such as Ferenc Plattkó , Mihály Pataki , József Ging , Sándor Nemes and József Viola . The tour had to be canceled after a few weeks for lack of success, the players sued for their outstanding salaries and returned to Hungary and Austria, where they had to answer before the respective associations. Feldmann was only allowed to play again in May 1921 and played again for the MTK.

In 1922 he moved to the Jewish association Makkabi Brno in Czechoslovakia . The Maccabi recruited its team mainly from Hungarian players and was therefore highly controversial as a "mercenary troop". Feldmann also took over the training of the team and led them to a number of victories against top European clubs. In the spring of 1924, the Maccabi came under considerable pressure because it also required non-Jewish players, which should ultimately lead to exclusion from the Jewish association. The team went on tour through northern Germany at this time, and Feldmann apparently used this to make contacts, because a little later he briefly took over the coaching position at Union 03 Altona , before he formed the Bremer SV into a strong and successful team that twice won the district championship. In the 1926/27 season, Feldmann was Eintracht Braunschweig's first professional trainer .

In 1927 he finally returned to Hungary and took over training at Hungária FC Budapest , the split-off professional football division of the MTK. In the Mitropapokal 1927 he reached the semifinals with Hungária, where the Hungarians were disqualified because of the unauthorized use of Kálmán Konrád .

After he briefly as coach at Juventus Bucharest was active in Romania, he accepted an offer from Italy to, together with his compatriot Károly Csapkay the Fiorentina to care. With the Florentines, the coaching duo took the last place in their group in the first year and thus clearly missed the qualification for the uniform Serie A, which was held for the first time in 1929/30 . The immediate resurgence in the following season did not succeed, but in 1931 the Fiorentina was able to return to the top division. However, the now sole responsible Feldmann was replaced by Hermann Felsner . Feldmann took over the second-rate US Palermo , where he in turn replaced an Austrian coach with Anton Cargnelli , and led the club straight away into Serie A. In the following two seasons, the Sicilians were relegated.

1934 Feldmann succeeded his compatriot Árpád Weisz on the coaching chair of Inter Milan (then AS Ambrosiana ) and runner-up, two points behind Juventus Turin . In his second season he was replaced in the spring. His last stop in Italy was AC Turin , where he again replaced Anton Cargnelli and looked after the team for two seasons, the best result being a third place. In the 1938/39 season he was still in charge of SK Jugoslavija Belgrade before returning to Hungária, which he trained until March 1940 when he suffered a stroke.

Web links

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