Edwin Dutton

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Edwin Dutton
Personnel
birthday April 8, 1890
place of birth MittelwaldeGerman Empire
date of death May 24, 1972
position Storm
Juniors
Years station
0000-1906 BTuFC Britannia 1892
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1906-1908 BTuFC Britannia 1892
1908-1910 BFC Prussia
1910-1912 Newcastle United 0 (0)
1913-1914 BTuFC Britannia 1892
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1909 Germany 1 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1924-1926 Stuttgart Kickers
1927-1932 Ipswich Town
1 Only league games are given.

Edwin Dutton (born April 8, 1890 in Mittelwalde , Habelschwerdt district , province of Silesia , † May 24, 1972 in Bucklow, Cheshire ) was a German football player of British descent.

Career

societies

Dutton began playing football in Berlin in the youth department of BTuFC Britannia in 1892 . His father was Tom Dutton, an English sports pioneer and major importer of English sporting goods, who had co-founded as a footballer and cricketer said association, as well as in Wroclaw the FC Breslau 1895 . The senior sent Edwin, born in the Prussian-Silesian Mittelwalde, to go to school in the German capital.

For the 1906/07 season he moved up to the first Britannia team. Until the end of the 1907/08 season he was used in the Berlin championships organized by the Association of Berlin Ball Game Clubs . Both times the team finished the season in second place. Then Dutton junior played for local rivals BFC Preussen , with whom he won the Berlin championship at the end of the 1909/10 season. Due to the success he was used in the final round of the German championship in the quarter-finals against Holstein Kiel , which was lost with 1: 4.

In October 1910, Dutton signed a contract with the first division club and reigning FA Cup winner Newcastle United , to which he belonged until the end of the 1911/12 season. In competitive games he remained without use for Newcastle.

Returning to Berlin in 1912, he was granted amateur status again in January 1913 by a resolution of the DFB Bundestag - an exception to the two-year waiting period that was actually planned. From then on he was again eligible to play for the BTuFC Britannia 1892 and in March of the same year took part in the 0: 1 lost city comparison in Paris. He completed the 1913/14 season in the Association of Brandenburg Ball Game Clubs and finished it with the team in fifth place.

Surprised by the outbreak of the First World War , he, who was still considered British, was arrested, like all other British civilians working in Germany - including numerous athletes - at the Ruhleben harness racing track , which served as an internment camp. Descriptions of everyday life in the camp, in which there were several thousand civilians, vary widely, but at times there was a lively sporting activity and camp teams played football competitions.

Despite his experience, Dutton returned to Germany again. He coached the Stuttgarter Kickers from 1924 to 1926 and, at the end of his first year as coach, led them to the Württemberg / Baden district championship and then to fourth place in the final round of the South German championship . Returned to England again, he trained from 1927 to 1932 Ipswich Town .

National team

Despite his British ancestry, he came to an international match for the senior national team of the DFB , which he had on April 4, 1909 in Budapest in a 3-3 draw against the national team of Hungary .

successes

Web links

Commons : Edwin Dutton  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. MyHeritage , Edwin Dutton, accessed January 4, 2019
  2. Best Exports , Les Rosbifs, 2 Aug 2010 (via archive.is)
  3. ^ Nottingham Evening Post, October 20, 1910, p. 3.
  4. ↑ Lawn Sport , XI. Volume, No. 5 from January 29, 1913, p. 79 f.
  5. ^ The Neue Hamburger Zeitung had already announced on August 9, 1912, page 14, that he would be involved in a friendly match between the Britannia teams from Hamburg and Berlin
  6. “Cup Final” in the Edwin Dutton prisoner camp: A footballer's fate from the First World War on noz .de
  7. Jens Reimer Prüß : Cup Final in the Prisoner Camp , in: Neue Osnabrücker Zeitung of December 6, 2018, page 15