Charly Pohl

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Charly Pohl (life dates unknown) was a German football player and coach .

Player career

societies

Pohl belonged as a goalkeeper to SuS Bergedorf and later to Victoria Hamburg , for which he played in the championships of the North German Football Association (NFV) point games until 1923 .

Allegedly he played in the Hamburg-Altona district as early as 1912/13 , but the time of his change of club is unknown. His membership in Victoria is documented at the earliest in the autumn series of 1914. In one of seven, sometimes eight or nine district leagues, Victoria had won the district championship five times and accordingly also took part in the finals of the North German championship. She was twice champion, but both on April 12, 1908, and on May 25, 1913, the team was defeated without Pohl each Eintracht Braunschweig with 1: 3 and 2: 3 in the final.

Victoria finished eighth in the Northern German League, which was run once and at the request of Holstein Kiel with the ten strongest clubs from the Northern German Football Association in the league system .

In the 1915/16 and 1917/18 seasons only championships were played at the district level; in between and then until the end of the 1919/20 season , the North German championship was held again under the district champions in the knockout system . During this time, Pohl won both the district championship and, for the first time, the North German championship in 1919 with KV Victoria / 88 Hamburg and again the regional championship in 1920 with SC Victoria Hamburg.

The regional "North German League", which is divided into a north and south district, ended Pohl and his club in sixth place out of ten participating clubs in the north district. The two district champions Hamburger SV and Hannover 96 contested the two-legged final on April 10 and 24, 1921 , which Hamburger SV won 3-1 and 8-0.

The goalkeeper played his last two seasons with Victoria in the Greater Hamburg league, which is divided into the Alster and Elbe districts. As second and third place in the Alsterkreis, he and his team failed to take part in the final round of the North German Championship, which was won by Hamburger SV. Pohl later guarded the gate of a Schwerin club and that of Union 03 Altona .

Selection team

As a player in the selection team of the North German Football Association, he took part in the competition for the Federal Cup, a competition of the selection teams of the regional associations of the German Football Association. With this he reached the finals scheduled for June 8, 1919 in the German Stadium in Berlin . Against the selection team of the South German Football Association , he won with his selection in front of 10,000 spectators 5: 4. Overall, Pohl was in goal in 32 NFV games.

Coaching career

“Charly” Pohl, a dentist by profession, experienced a long career as a coach in at least four different countries in later decades. His stations included SV Uhlenhorst Herta (Hamburg, 1930), Wilhelmsburg 26 and SC Eilbek (1933/34), Freja Randers (Denmark, 1934), Fortuna Leipzig (1938), Odense BK (1939), again Uhlenhorst Herta , TuRa Bremen , GIF Sundsvall (1954/55) and Lyn Oslo (1958). In the 1940/41 season he trained the Stettiner SC in the Gauliga Pommern , one of the Gauligen at the time of National Socialism as a uniform top division in the German Empire . In the Gauliga, which is divided into two sections, he led his team in the west section to fourth place.

In the 1960s Pohl lived in Kandern and worked there as a physical education teacher.

successes

Web links

Single references

  1. Hamburger Abendblatt, October 6, 1956
  2. Berliner Volkszeitung of November 13, 1914, page 4, preview of a city game against Berlin
  3. Pohl's participation in these championship games is not documented. Obviously he wasn't with Victoria before WWI. Their goalkeeper at the time was called Therkelsen, who also played in the 1913 final, see Hamburger Anzeiger of May 28, 1913, page 5.
  4. Berliner Volkszeitung of September 21, 1926
  5. ^ Jankowski / Pistorius / Prüß : Football in the North. 100 years of the North German Football Association , Barsinghausen and Bremen 2005, page 217
  6. ^ Wiener Sport-Tagblatt of March 18, 1930, page 3
  7. peter-staecker.de , accessed on April 6, 2020
  8. Football Week (Edition A) of January 3, 1938, page 4
  9. Davidsen, Martin / Stanbury, Sebastian: Drǿmmeland. Sejren og sommeren de forandrede Danmark , 2012
  10. www.dsfs.de , accessed on April 3, 2020
  11. Hamburger Abendblatt of October 29, 1957