Leopold Vogl (soccer player)

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Leopold Vogl
Personnel
birthday September 16, 1910
place of birth AtzgersdorfAustria-Hungary
date of death January 1992
position Storm
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
0000-1930 Forward Atzgersdorf
1930-1932 SC Wacker Vienna
1932-1941 SK Admira Vienna
1941-1947 Vienna AC
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1935 Austria 2 (2)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
0000-1947 Vienna AC (player-coach)
1949-1956 FK Austria Wien (Youth)
1956-1957 FK Austria Vienna
1957– FK Austria Wien (Youth)
1958 FK Austria Vienna (interim)
1964 FK Austria Vienna (interim)
1 Only league games are given.

Leopold "Tscharry" Vogl , also called Vogl II , (born September 16, 1910 in Atzgersdorf , Austria-Hungary ; † January 1992 ) was an Austrian soccer player and soccer coach who won four championship titles with the SK Admira Vienna in the 1930s and in the National team was used.

Career

societies

Vogl began his career at Vorwärts Atzgersdorf and in 1930 moved to the first division club SC Wacker Vienna . In 1932 he was obliged by Admira, where he was first used as a supplementary player in the storm row and was called Vogl II to avoid confusion with the left winger Adolf Vogl . After Ignaz Sigl , the long-time right-winger of the Jedleseer, ended his career at the end of the season, the young striker took over this position after he was also able to prevail against Leopold Facco .

In his first season as a regular player, Admira not only managed to win the championship, but also to get the double with an 8-0 win over SK Rapid Wien in the final of the ÖFB Cup . The team was thus also eligible to start in the Mitropacup 1934 , where they reached the final through victories over AC Napoli , Sparta Prague and Juventus Turin and were defeated there by AGC Bologna after a 3: 2 in the first leg with 1: 5. In the following season, Vogl was Admira’s top scorer with 15 goals, where the assault row with Anton Schall , Karl Stoiber , Karl Durspekt , Wilhelm Hahnemann and Adolf Vogl was consistently occupied by national players. In the championship this was only enough for runner-up, but in the four following years the black and white were able to secure three more titles.

In 1941, Vogl and his club colleague Karl Stoiber moved to the second division club Wiener AC , where not only the title was won, but also the first class in the promotion round. In the Gauliga, the Prater team immediately came second behind Vienna , which was followed by third place next year. Vogl stayed with WAC even after the war ended, where he now worked as a player-coach and played in the championship until 1947.

National team

Due to the strong competition in the striker positions in the 1930s, there was hardly any place in the national team for Leopold Vogl, especially since Karl Zischek was almost placed on the right winger and other top-class players were available in Rudolf Geiter and Bobby Riegler . Vogl's first international match was actually a game between the B national team and the national team of Poland in May 1935, which the ÖFB later declared an official international match. Vogl had his only "real" use in October of the same year in a 4: 4 against Hungary . After the connection he was also used several times in the Ostmark selection and in the Vienna city team.

successes

  • 1 × Mitropacup finals: 1934
  • 4 × Austrian champion: 1934, 1936, 1937, 1939
  • 1 × ÖFB Cup: 1934
  • 1 × Austrian second division champion: 1942
  • 2 games and 2 goals for the Austrian national soccer team: 1935

Coaching career

After Vogl had already made his first coaching experience during his active time at the WAC and was also noticed through his youth work, he was hired by FK Austria Vienna in 1949 as a youth coach . In 1956 he succeeded Walter Nausch as coach of the combat team, but returned to the youth teams after just one season. Two more times he was to take over the first team on an interim basis, namely in 1958 after the departure of Karl Adamek and in autumn 1964 as the successor to Eduard Frühwirth . His main work, however, remained in the youth field, where he trained a number of later national players in the 1950s and 1960s, such as Franz Swoboda , Ernst Fiala and Horst Hirnschrodt .

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