Alfons Beckenbauer (soccer player)

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Alfons Beckenbauer (* 1908 ; † 1974 ) was a German football player .

Career

Beckenbauer, the uncle of Franz Beckenbauer , emerged from the youth of FC Stern Munich , played in the 1920s and early 1930s as a half-striker for Sportfreunde 1912 Giesing in the league system at district and district level and later for FC Bayern Munich . He also played five international matches for the selected team of the Workers' Gymnastics and Sports Association .

He belonged to FC Bayern Munich from 1932 to 1934 and during this time he played a league game in the Bavarian District League, which was divided into two groups. So he had a share in winning the South Bavarian Championship. With this success, he and his team took part in the subsequent finals for the South German Championship and was used in two games in the East / West group. In the 4-1 win at home against FC Phönix Ludwigshafen , he scored his first goal with the goal in the 62nd minute. His second succeeded on April 16, 1933 in a 3-2 win at Saarmeister FK Pirmasens with the goal to lead 1-0 in the third minute. He was also used in three friendlies in which he scored a goal. In his last season , in which FC Bayern Munich played in the Gauliga Bayern , in one of initially 16, later increased to 23 Gauligen at the time of National Socialism as the uniform top division in the German Reich , he was not used in point games; however, he scored three goals in another friendly. At the end of the season he ended his career for health reasons.

successes

Individual evidence

  1. “Facts at a Glance” on fcstern.de
  2. “Stauerviz Seeler for Germany” on taz .de (by René Martens; from December 31, 2012)
  3. "The DFB needs competition" on time .com (René Martens; October 24, 2013)
  4. Henning Harlacher, Daniel Michel: Munich's true love - Why we love FC Bayern. 200 facts and legends , Munich 2018. According to other information, Alfons Beckenbauer had been active for Bayern since 1931.
  5. ^ Walter Grüber: FC Bayern Munich. 6389 games. Production and publishing BoD - Books on Demand - ISBN 978-3-7412-0071-7 - p. 112
  6. ^ Walter Grüber: FC Bayern Munich. 6389 games. (1900 season - 2015/16 season), production and publisher BoD - Books on Demand , Norderstedt - ISBN 978-3-7412-0071-7 - p. 115
  7. ^ Extract from the Sportblatt Badische Presse from April 18, 1933 on blb-karlsruhe.de
  8. ^ Walter Grüber: FC Bayern Munich. 6389 games. (1900 season - 2015/16 season) Manufactured and published by BoD - Books on Demand , Norderstedt - ISBN 978-3-7412-0071-7 - p. 117

Literature (selection)

  • Henning Harlacher, Daniel Michel: Munich's true love - Why we love FC Bayern. 200 facts and legends , Munich 2018.