Ferdinand Daučík

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Ferdinand Daučík
Personnel
birthday May 30, 1910
place of birth IpolyságAustria-Hungary
date of death November 14, 1986
Place of death Alcalá de HenaresSpain
size 179 cm
position Defender
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1927-1930 KFC Komárno
1930-1940 I.ČsŠK Bratislava
1934-1941 Slavia Prague
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1931-1938 Czechoslovakia 15 (0)
1942 Slovakia 1 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1942-1946 ŠK Slovan Bratislava
1942-1944 Slovakia
1948 Czechoslovakia
1948 ŠK Slovan Bratislava
1949-1950 Hungaria
1950-1954 FC Barcelona
1954-1957 Athletic Bilbao
1957-1959 Atlético Madrid
1959-1960 FC Porto
1960–1962 Betis Seville
1963-1964 Real Murcia
1964-1965 Sevilla FC
1966-1967 Real Zaragoza
1967-1968 FC Elche
1968 Toronto Falcons
1969-1970 UE Sant Andreu
1970-1971 Espanyol Barcelona
1971-1972 Cádiz FC
1973-1974 UE Sant Andreu
1976-1977 UE Sant Andreu
1 Only league games are given.

Ferdinand Daučík (born May 30, 1910 in Ipolské Šiahy , Austria-Hungary ; † November 14, 1986 in Alcalá de Henares , Spain ) was a Slovak football player and football coach who played for Czechoslovakia and once for Slovakia . He was particularly successful with the FC Barcelona team in the early 1950s. Daučík has played 488 games in the Spanish La Liga , with only Luis Aragonés (757 games) and Miguel Muñoz ahead of him .

Player career

Ferdinand Daučík played for Šahy in his youth. In 1927 the defender moved to KFC Komárno, in 1930 to I.ČsŠK Bratislava . From 1934 to 1941 Daučík played for Slavia Prague , with whom he became Czechoslovakian champion in 1935 and 1937 and won the Mitropa Cup in 1938 . In 1942 he returned to ŠK Bratislava , where he ended his career in 1945.

Daučík was only the third Slovak to play in the Czechoslovak national team. Between 1931 and 1938 he represented Czechoslovakia 15 times and also took part in the 1938 World Cup in France . When Czechoslovakia became runner-up in Italy in 1934 , Daučík was in the squad, but was not used.

successes

Coaching career

Daučík trained in 1945/46, 1946/47 and again in 1948 ŠK Bratislava. That year he also coached the Czechoslovak national team for two games . During this time he was briefly arrested. After his release from prison, he emigrated to Spain , where he trained a team called Hungaria , which was made up of political refugees from Eastern European communist countries. His son-in-law László Kubala , who married Daučík's daughter Anna Viola in 1947 , also played in this team .

Hungaria played a number of friendly matches in Spain, including against Real Madrid and Espanyol Barcelona . During these games, Kubala was discovered by Josep Samitier, the then chief scout of FC Barcelona . Kubala got a contract offer from FC Barcelona and Ferdinand Daučík became the team's coach. Daučík won eight titles in four years with FC Barcelona, ​​including the 1952 and 1953 double. After falling out with some players, he left the club in 1954.

Until 1957 he coached Athletic Bilbao , with whom he won the Spanish Cup in 1955 and the Double in 1956.

1957 to 1959 Daučík was coach at Atlético Madrid , with whom he was runner-up in 1959. In 1959/60 he coached FC Porto . Subsequently, Daučík returned to Spain and trained Betis Sevilla (1960 to 1963), Real Murcia (1963/64), FC Sevilla (1964/65), Real Saragossa (1965 to 1967), Elche CF (1967/68) and Espanyol Barcelona (1970/71). In 1968 he coached the Toronto Falcons in the US professional league NASL . Daučík's son Yanko Daučík , his son-in-law László Kubala and his son Branko Kubala also played for the Falcons that season .

successes

Web links