Adolf Riebe
Adolf Riebe | ||
Personnel | ||
---|---|---|
birthday | February 9, 1889 | |
place of birth | Vienna , Austria-Hungary | |
date of death | May 3, 1966 | |
Place of death | Vienna, Austria | |
position | midfield | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
-1909 | TSV Jahn Munich from 1900 | |
1909-1911 | FC Bayern Munich | |
1911-1912 | FSV Frankfurt | |
1912-1915 | SpVgg Fürth | 33 (6) |
1915-1917 | Vienna AF | 23 (4) |
1917-1919 | SC Germania Schwechat | |
1919 | Vienna AF | 6 (0) |
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
1919-1920 | Vienna AF | |
1921-1922 | VfvB Ruhrort | |
1922 | FBC Parma | |
1922 | First Vienna FC | |
1922-1923 | FBC Parma | |
1923-1924 | SG Andrea Doria | |
1925 | SpVgg Fürth | |
1925-1926 | Viennese sports club | |
1926-1927 | Hamburger SV | |
1928– | Brigittenauer AC | |
1930-1932 | Racing Strasbourg | |
1934–193? | AMEF Arad | |
1935-1937 | Warta poses | |
1 Only league games are given. |
Adolf Riebe (born February 9, 1889 in Vienna , Austria-Hungary ; † May 3, 1966 there , Austria ) was an Austrian football player and coach .
Player career
Born in Vienna, Riebe began playing football there too, before he came to Germany - initially for the football department of TSV Jahn Munich from 1900 , then for “FA Bayern im Münchner SC” and for FSV Frankfurt .
In 1912 he moved to SpVgg Fürth , where he played the game-determining role of the middle runner in the 2-3-5 system at the time and was described as a high-class playmaker and excellent technician. For the club he played 33 point games in which he scored six goals and won the Bavarian championship in 1913 and 1914 during his club membership, which entitled to participation in the South German championship . He won this with the team in 1914 in the third attempt and thus took part in the finals of the German championship for the first time under coach William Townley . After victories against SpVgg 1899 Leipzig and Berlin BC , he and the team reached the final, which took place on May 31, 1914 on Viktoria-Platz in Magdeburg in front of 6,000 spectators with 3-2 n.V. against the reigning German champions VfB Leipzig was won. It was also the first German championship of the SpVgg Fürth.
In the summer of 1915 he left Fürth and returned to his hometown, where, after a game break of several months, he played for the first division club Wiener Associationfootball-Club in December . With the Hütteldorfern he reached places three and four in the two following seasons , before he moved to the strong provincial club SC Germania Schwechat for the 1917/18 season and stayed there until February 1919. In March he returned to the Vienna Association Football Club, where he ended his active career after three months.
Coaching career
In the summer of 1919 Riebe moved to the coaching bench of the WAF , with which he could only just keep the league . At the beginning of 1921 he then took on his first coaching position abroad, namely with Duisburg district league club VfvB Ruhrort from the district of the same name . In April 1922 he became a coach at the Italian club FBC Parma . During a home leave in the summer of 1922, he temporarily took over the coaching position at First Vienna FC , but returned to Parma a few months later. In the autumn of 1923 he moved to Genoa for SG Andrea Doria , where he reached a midfield position in Group B of the Northern Division.
In January 1925 he returned to his former club SpVgg Fürth as a coach, for which he worked until autumn of that year. In doing so, he laid an essential foundation stone for the team that won the second German championship for the club against Hertha BSC at the end of the season under the direction of Riebe's former teacher William Townley . At this time, however, Riebe had long since returned to Vienna, where he finished the season in eighth place in the table with the Wiener Sport-Club . From summer 1926 to October 1927 he coached Hamburger SV , with whom he was second in the North German Championship and North German Cup winner in 1927 . He also reached the quarter-finals of the finals for the German championship . After his work in Hamburg, Riebe took over the coaching position at the Vienna first division club Brigittenauer AC .
From 1930 to 1932 he coached the French amateur club Racing Strasbourg , with which he only finished midfield in the Alsatian league. After a coaching activity in Romania, he took over the Polish first division side Warta Posen in 1935 , which he looked after until the end of 1937 and led the team to two third places in the league.
In the post-war period, Riebe worked as a coach for the Styrian regional league club SV Leibnitz from 1946 .
In addition to his work as a club trainer, Riebe also had the opportunity to look after selection teams several times, for example the Vienna city team and the selections of the southern and northern German football associations.
successes
As a player
As a trainer
Web links
- Adolf Riebe in the database of weltfussball.de
- Adolf Riebe on kleeblatt-chronik.de
- Adolf Riebe on hsv1887.de
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Riebe, Adolf |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Austrian soccer player and coach |
DATE OF BIRTH | February 9, 1889 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Vienna , Austria-Hungary |
DATE OF DEATH | May 3, 1966 |
Place of death | Vienna , Austria |