Andreas Breynk

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Andreas Breynk (born July 4, 1890 in Duisburg , † July 12, 1957 ) was a German football player and Olympic participant in athletics .

Player career

societies

Breynck belonged to Prussia Duisburg , for which he had played point games from 1908 to 1911 in the district championships organized by the West German Game Association in the Ruhr district. After the club had withdrawn from the game operation for the 1907/08 season , he won the district championship with the team in the following season and subsequently took part in the final round of the West German championship . The final reached on April 3, 1909, however, was lost 3-2 against Munich-Gladbacher FC 94 .

He had played his last two seasons in the North Rhine District / Ruhr and in the West Group of the North Rhine District / Ruhr . In 1911 he ended his football career and emigrated to southern Russia.

National team

On May 16, 1910, he played his only international match , the first against a Belgian national team . Breynk - like Alfred Berghausen , Lothar Budzinski-Kreth and Christian Schilling , who wanted to watch the game - had been called to the field at short notice from the stands because the team had only come with seven players. The game in front of 8,000 spectators in Duisburg in which he was substituted for Peco Bauwens in the 55th minute was clearly lost under these circumstances with 0: 3.

successes

Athletics career

As a track and field athlete, Breynk took part in the 1908 Olympic Games in London , where he was eliminated in the White City Stadium over 800 and 1500 meters in each case. In 1906 and 1909 he was second in the German championships over 1500 meters , in 1909 he was also second over 400 meters . In 1908 he was the first German to stay under 2:40 minutes in the 1000-meter run when he improved the German record to 2: 37.0 minutes.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. When Belgium was a football power. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on September 6, 2010 ; Retrieved February 18, 2011 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.rp-online.de

literature

  • Klaus Amrhein: Biographical manual on the history of German athletics 1898–2005 . 2 volumes. Darmstadt 2005 published on German Athletics Promotion and Project Society