Andrei Prean Nagy
Andrei Prean Nagy | ||
Personnel | ||
---|---|---|
birthday | September 8, 1923 | |
place of birth | Vulcan , Kingdom of Romania | |
date of death | September 5, 1997 | |
Place of death | Tunis , Tunisia | |
size | 164 cm | |
position | Storm | |
Juniors | ||
Years | station | |
-1938 | Minerul Vulcan | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
1938-1939 | Ferencváros Budapest II | |
1939-1944 | Ferencváros Budapest | 89 | (3)
1945 | FC Bayern Munich | 0 | (0)
1946-1947 | AS Cannes-Grasse | 0 | (0)
1947-1950 | Olympique Marseille | 68 (22) |
1950-1952 | RC Strasbourg | 36 | (8)
1952-1955 | UD Las Palmas | 53 (11) |
1955-1956 | Servette FC Genève | |
National team | ||
Years | selection | Games (goals) |
1943 | Hungary | 3 | (0)
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
1957-1959 | FC Lengnau | |
1961 | US Forbach | |
1963-1967 | Sfax Railways Sports | |
1968 | Washington Whips | |
1968 | Detroit Cougars | |
1969-1971 | Club Africain Tunis | |
1974-1975 | Tunisia | |
1976 | JS Kabylie | |
1977-1981 | Club Africain Tunis | |
1984-1985 | Club Africain Tunis | |
1986-1987 | Club Sportif de Hammam-Lif | |
1 Only league games are given. |
Andrej Prean Nagy (born September 8, 1923 in Vulcan , Romania , † September 5, 1997 in Tunis , Tunisia ), also András Nagy and André Nagy , was a Hungarian football player and coach of Romanian origin, who in the course of his career on three continents operated in eight countries.
Player career
societies
Nagy began playing soccer at Minerul Vulcan , the soccer club based in his birthplace in Hunedoara County . In 1938 he was obliged by the Hungarian capital club Ferencváros Budapest and initially used in their reserve team. For the 1939/40 season he moved up to the first team and made his debut on November 1, 1939 in an 8-1 win against Kassai AC in the Nemzeti Bajnokság , the highest Hungarian division. This was followed by more sporadic missions in the first team, with which he won the championship in both 1940 and 1941. From 1941 he was able to establish himself as a regular player and then failed to win the championship again, but he won the national club cup with his teammates from 1942 to 1944; At the end of 1944 he left Budapest .
After leaving Budapest, he went abroad when he left Hungary for good in January 1945. In the second half of 1945 he played for the German first division club FC Bayern Munich , which was reopened in the official game operations in the same year when it was accepted into the Oberliga Süd after the Second World War .
The Hungarian remained loyal to Munich only for a short time and moved on to France , where he was included in the squad of the first division club AS Cannes-Grasse in 1946 . For this, however, he did not play a single competitive game until he found a new employer in the summer of 1947 in the league rivals Olympique Marseille . On September 1, 1947, he made his debut in the top French division, which was already professional at the time, in the 4-0 defeat against FC Nancy . He established himself as an integral part of the first team and was part of a team that became French champions in 1948. After his two championships in Hungary, he was able to win the national title in two different countries. In the following season he achieved his best haul in front of goal with twelve goals, but finished with the team in third place. In 1950 he left Marseille and moved to league rivals Racing Strasbourg , in which he quickly fitted in as a regular player and advanced with this in the 1951 cup final. In the final against the US Valenciennes he was used and scored in the 87th minute the goal to the 3-0 final score; so he was also a cup winner outside of Hungary.
On January 18, 1952, Nagy moved again to another country and joined the Spanish first division UD Las Palmas based on the Canary Islands on the west coast of Africa .
At Las Palmas he was usually part of the first team and in 1952 had to witness the team's relegation to the second division . 1954 followed the re-emergence and Nagy remained loyal to the club, but was no longer used after the successful leap into excellence. He then ended his professional career in 1955 at the age of 31 after 89 first division games and three goals in Hungary, 84 first division games and 24 goals in France and eight first division games without a goal and 45 second division games and eleven goals in Spain.
National team
Nagy was 19 years old when he played an international match for the senior national team for the first time on September 12, 1943 in Stockholm in a 3-2 win against Sweden . His third and last he completed on November 7th of the same year in the 7-2 defeat in Budapest , in which the opponent was again Sweden. Since he left Hungary permanently in 1944, he was no longer considered for the selection of the country.
Success as a player
- Hungarian champion 1940 , 1941
- Hungarian cup winner 1942, 1943, 1944
- French champion 1948
- French cup winner 1951
Coaching career
The former professional took over responsibility as a coach at the Swiss amateur club FC Lengnau in 1957 and held the position until 1959. From 1960 he coached a Tunisian team before he was employed by the French second division US Forbach in the summer of 1961 . At Forbach he was dismissed in December of the same year due to the lack of sporting success, as the team had previously only won two point games. From 1963 to 1967 he coached the Tunisian first division club Sfax Railways Sports . He then moved to the United States, where he first coached the Washington Whips and then the Detroit Cougars in 1968 . His time in the United States was limited to this season, so he returned to Tunisia, where he was appointed coach at Club Africain Tunis from 1969 to 1971 .
In 1974 the Hungarian was given the post of Tunisian national coach, which he carried out until 1975, before Abdelmajid Chetali succeeded him. He devoted himself to club teams again and was employed in 1976 by the Algerian JS Kabylie . In 1977 he moved back to Tunisia, where he took over Club Africain a second time. With this he stayed in office until 1981 and was brought back to the club for a year in 1984. His last station was from 1986 to 1987 at the Tunisian Club Sportif de Hammam-Lif .
Success as a trainer
- Tunisian cup winner 1970
Web links
- Andrej Prean Nagy in the database of weltfussball.de
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c according to some sources he was born in 1920
- ↑ a b Nagy II. András on tempofradi.hu
- ↑ Andrej Prean NAGY on om1899.com
- ^ Andrej Prean Nagy on national-football-teams.com
- ^ Andrej Nagy - Fiche de stats du joueur de football on pari-et-gagne.com
- ↑ Nagy András: mérkőzések on magyarfutball.hu
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Nagy, Andrej Prean |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Nagy, András |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Romanian-Hungarian football player and coach |
DATE OF BIRTH | September 8, 1923 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Vulcan (Hunedoara) , Romania |
DATE OF DEATH | September 5, 1997 |
Place of death | Tunis , Tunisia |