Emil Kutterer

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Emil Kutterer
Personnel
birthday November 11, 1898
place of birth KarlsruheGerman Empire
date of death July 13, 1974
position Defense
Juniors
Years station
1908-1916 FV Daxlanden
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1916-1920 Beiertheimer FV 1898
1920-1922 Karlsruhe FV
1922-1931 FC Bayern Munich
1931-1933 SV Wiesbaden
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1925-1928 Germany 8 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1936-1938 TuRa Leipzig
1939-1941 SV Fortuna Leipzig
1. FSV Schierstein 08
1947-1949 SG Mainz-Gonsenheim
1950-1953 FV Engers 07
1953-1954 FC Singen 04
1 Only league games are given.

Emil Kutterer (born November 11, 1898 in Karlsruhe ; † July 13, 1974 ), also called "Mile", was a German football player who had eight international matches for the senior national team between 1925 and 1926 .

Player career

societies

Born in Karlsruhe , Kutterer grew up in Daxlanden near his hometown and joined the local football club at the age of nine . Since his talent did not find the necessary, encouraging challenge in the long run, he moved first to the Beiertheimer football club in 1898 and after four seasons to the Karlsruher FV . In the following season he won the Southwest District Championship with the team under coach Max Breunig . In the games for the Württemberg / Baden district championship , the Stuttgart gymnastics and sports fans prevailed and thus qualified for the final round of the South German championship .

For the 1922/23 season Kutterer moved to FC Bayern Munich and was used on June 17, 1923 in the 3: 4 defeat against SpVgg Fürth in the final of the South German Cup .

In the 1925/26 season he won the first South German championship with FC Bayern Munich combined with participation in the final round of the German championship . As a national player from June 21, 1925, Kutterer was an outstanding defender and a cornerstone of success. The athletic defender celebrated his second title win in southern Germany in 1928 . In the final round , FC Bayern Munich reached the semi-finals against Hamburger SV via Wacker Halle and SpVgg Sülz 07 (forerunner of 1. FC Köln ) . At the same time, local rival FC Wacker Munich was able to achieve the same success. Both Munich clubs failed because of rivals Hamburger SV and Hertha BSC . Kutterer's third participation in the finals was in 1929 . He ended his career at Bayern Munich before they won the German championship in 1932 . His active football career ended with SV Wiesbaden after two seasons in 1933.

Selection / national team

From 1923 to 1931 he played eight games as a defender for the national team of the South German Football Association .

He made his debut in the national team on November 11, 1923 on his 25th birthday in the semi-final game of the national cup competition against the national team of the Association of Central German Ball Game Clubs . Despite a good performance in the 3-0 success, he was not nominated for the final held on February 17, 1924 in Frankfurt am Main ; Anton Kugler from 1. FC Nürnberg played in the 4-2 win against the national team of Northern Germany .

After the quarter-final match on March 28, 1926 against the selection team of the Association of Central German Ball Game Clubs and the semi-final game held on July 3, 1926 in Essen with 4: 2 against the selection team of the North German Football Association , he found himself in the final the fighting game cup in the context of the fighting games held in Cologne from July 4 to 11, 1926 , however. On July 4, 1926 he won with the club players Franz Dietl , Ludwig Hofmann and Josef Pöttinger the final with 7: 2 against the national team of the West German Game Association .

Not insignificantly due to the absence of the national players from Fürth and Nuremberg, Emil Kutterer made his debut in the senior national team on the Scandinavian trip in June 1925 . In the two games against the national team of Sweden and Finland , however, he was so convincing that he was allowed to complete seven international appearances in a row from June 21, 1925 to December 12, 1926. In his fourth international match on April 18, 1926 in Düsseldorf , in a 4-2 win against the Netherlands , his teammates Hofmann, Nagelschmitz and Pöttinger made their debut in the DFB team. He played his eighth and last international match on April 15, 1928 in Bern in a 3-2 victory over Switzerland . During the Olympic soccer tournament in Amsterdam in 1928 , he was part of the squad of Reich trainer Otto Nerz , but Albert Beier from Hamburger SV and the debutant Heinrich Weber from SV Kurhessen Kassel were deployed in defense .

Coaching career

After finishing his active football career, Kutterer switched to the office of coach.

Stations were TuRa Leipzig (1936–1938), SV Fortuna Leipzig (1939–1941), 1. FSV Schierstein 08 , SG Mainz-Gonsenheim (1947–1949), FV Engers 07 in the Oberliga Südwest (1950–1953) and FC Singen 04 in the 2nd Oberliga Süd (1953-1954).

Others

On the occasion of the 25th anniversary of his youth club, FV Daxlanden in 1937 joined FC Bayern Munich as an anniversary guest in Karlsruhe. At Daxlanden, the 39-year-old defended "Mile" in an impressive manner and the talented striker August Klingler drew attention to himself with great dribbling and hard shots. The Bayern won the game 4: 2 goals. After the Second World War , the talents Heinz Beck (top scorer in the Oberliga Süd) and Max Schwall (amateur national player) for the Karlsruher SC were able to develop in the club of Kutterer and Klingler, the FV Daxlanden .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Fritz Tauber: German national soccer players. Player statistics from A to Z. Updated and advanced Edition. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2010, ISBN 978-3-89784-366-0 , p. 109.
  2. Association history ( Memento of the original from December 11, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) 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. at sv-karlsruhe-beiertheim.de @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.sv-karlsruhe-beiertheim.de
  3. Match pairing on kleeblatt-chronik.de
  4. Group photo of the final teams on successfans.com
  5. Team photo from the FC Bayern Munich 1925 festschrift on successfans.com

literature

  • Jürgen Bitter : Germany's national soccer player: the lexicon . SVB Sportverlag, Berlin 1997, ISBN 3-328-00749-0 .
  • Matthias Kropp (Ed .: Bayern Munich 1900–1993 (German big football teams; Vol. 4). AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1993, ISBN 3-928562-35-5 .
  • Raphael Keppel : Germany's international football matches. Documentation from 1908–1989. Sport- und Spielverlag Hitzel, Hürth 1989, ISBN 3-9802172-4-8 .
  • Hardy Greens : From the Crown Prince to the Bundesliga . In: Encyclopedia of German League Football . tape 1 . AGON, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-85-1 .
  • LIBERO , No. D9, 1994, IFFHS.
  • LIBERO, No. D6 / D7, 1993, IFFHS.
  • Fritz Tauber: German national football team: Player statistics from A to Z . 3. Edition. AGNON, Kassel 2012, ISBN 978-3-89784-397-4 (176 pages).