Eryk Tatuś

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Eryk Tatuś
Eryk Tatuś 1935.jpg
Eryk Tatuś (1935)
Personnel
birthday July 22, 1914
place of birth Königshütte OSGerman Empire
date of death April 13, 1985
Place of death WuppertalGermany
size 167 cm
position goalkeeper
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
000? –1939 Ruch Wielkie Hajduki at least 72 (0)
1939-1941 Bismarckhütter SV
1945–? ŁKS Łagiewniki at least 100 (0)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1936 Poland 1 (0)
1 Only league games are given.

Eryk Tatus (dt. Erich Tatus ; later as Aleksander Tatus known) (* 22. July 1914 in Chorzow OS , Upper Silesia , German Empire , now Poland ; † 13. April 1985 in Wuppertal , Germany ) was a Polish and German soccer goalkeeper from Upper Silesia.

career

After graduating from high school, Tatuś worked as a laborer and laboratory technician. Tatuś began his football career in 1923 with Ruch Wielkie Hajduki . Despite his small height of 167 cm, he decided to play as a goalkeeper. He made his debut for the club at the age of 16, and played for at least six years and was able to win the Polish championship in 1934, 1935, 1936 and 1938.

On September 6, 1936 he made his debut in the Polish national team in Riga in the Jaunekju Kristīgā Savienība Stadium against Latvia . The game ended in a 3-3 draw. This should be the only use in the Polish national jersey.

After the German occupation of the former German territories in Poland during the Second World War , Tatuś signed the German people's list in 1939 , as did his teammates von Ruch, Teodor Peterek , Ernst Willimowski and Gerard Wodarz , who were also Polish national players. After that he was known as Erich Tatus. (probably also his birth name) In November 1939 all four competed for their club, which had got its old name Bismarckhütter SV 99 as well as a German club management.

After the end of the Second World War in 1945 he joined ŁKS Łagiewniki Bytom, an association from the former Hohenlinde near Beuthen .

In 1965 he emigrated to Germany, where he died on April 13, 1985 in Wuppertal.

Web links

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Football MATCH: September 6, 1936 Latvia v Poland eu-football.info.