Alfred Berghausen

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Alfred Berghausen (born December 9, 1889 in Duisburg , † September 6, 1954 ) was a German football player . The defender of Prussia Duisburg played an international match in the German national football team on May 16, 1910 .

Career

societies

Berghausen belonged to SC Preußen Duisburg from 1906/07 to 1923 , which was always somewhat overshadowed by the local flagship Duisburger SpV . The defensive player played for SC Prussia in the West German game association consistently in the district leagues (1906/07, III. District 1st class) with changing names and most recently in 1922/23 in the Gauliga Niederrhein, where the Prussians as a newcomer in a 16er -Season ranked 5th. In the 1908/09 season, however, Prussia Duisburg won the championship in the Duisburg A-Class Ruhr in a play-off (2: 1) against DSV with equal points (both 18: 2 points) and was thus qualified for the final round of the West German championship . There Berghausen and colleagues prevailed against FV Kassel 95 (8: 5) and BV Dortmund 04 (4: 1) and stood in the final against FC Munich-Gladbach 94, which was lost 2: 3 after extra time. In the season when he came to his surprising national team assignment, 1909/10, the SC Preußen Duisburg played in the highest West German class, the Verbandsliga, and took 8th place in the season of 10; Champion was the Duisburg SpV.

National team

On May 16, 1910, he played his only international match , the first against a Belgian national team . Berghausen - like Lothar Budzinski-Kreth , Andreas Breynk (he was a teammate from Berghausen near Prussia Duisburg) and Christian Schilling , who wanted to watch the game - was called to the pitch at short notice because the team had only seven players had arrived. The game in front of 8,000 spectators in Duisburg was clearly lost 3-0. The inadequacies in the DFB at this time result from the scheduling alone. One day before the international match in Duisburg, on May 15, the final of the 1910 German soccer championship took place in Cologne between the Karlsruher FV and Holstein Kiel . Of course, none of the final teams played in the national team the next day. The outstanding Karlsruhe players around Max Breunig , Fritz Förderer , Gottfried Fuchs and Julius Hirsch alone would have significantly improved the quality of the DFB selection.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Alfred Berghausen. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on January 6, 2011 ; Retrieved February 18, 2011 .
  2. ^ Fritz Tauber: German national soccer players. Player statistics from A to Z. Agon Sportverlag. Kassel 2012. ISBN 978-3-89784-397-4 . P. 16
  3. Mark Fiesseler: 100 years of football in North Rhine-Westphalia. A chronicle in tables. Agon Sportverlag. Kassel 1997. ISBN 3-89784-128-2 . Pp. 37, 114
  4. Mark Fiesseler: 100 years of football in North Rhine-Westphalia. A chronicle in tables. Agon Sportverlag. Kassel 1997. ISBN 3-89784-128-2 . P. 47
  5. Mark Fiesseler: 100 years of football in North Rhine-Westphalia. A chronicle in tables. Agon Sportverlag. Kassel 1997. ISBN 3-89784-128-2 . P. 50-
  6. Mark Fiesseler: 100 years of football in North Rhine-Westphalia. A chronicle in tables. Agon Sportverlag. Kassel 1997. ISBN 3-89784-128-2 . P. 51
  7. When Belgium was a football power. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on September 6, 2010 ; Retrieved February 18, 2011 .
  8. Statistics on the game. Retrieved February 18, 2011 .
  9. ^ Klaus Querengässer: The German Football Championship, Part 1: 1903-1945. Agon Sportverlag. Kassel 1997. ISBN 3-89609-106-9 . P. 52