Ferdinand Emberger

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Ferdinand Emberger
Personnel
birthday April 18, 1922
position Defense
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1943-1945 VfR Frankenthal
1945-1956 Kickers Offenbach
1 Only league games are given.

Ferdinand Emberger (born April 18, 1922 ) is a former German soccer player . The defensive player played a total of 286 league games at Kickers Offenbach from 1945 to 1956 in what was then the first-class South Football League . In 1949 and 1955 he celebrated the championship in the Oberliga Süd with his club and in 1950 he was in the final of the German soccer championship with Offenbach .

Career

Emberger emerged from VfR Frankenthal , for which he had played the 1943/44 season in the Gauliga Westmark , in one of initially 16, later increased to 23 Gauligen at the time of National Socialism as a uniform top division in the German Reich ; in the following season, which should be divided into two seasons due to the war, no regular game operations came about. During his time in Frankenthal, he was invited by Reich trainer Sepp Herberger to a screening course for talents from March 17 to 21, 1941 in Berlin. Further course participants were among others Rudolf Schönbeck , Eduard Schaffer , Karl-Heinz Metzner , Herbert Burdenski , Heinz Spundzeile , Herbert Wojtkowiak , Heinz Krückeberg , August Gottschalk and his later Offenbach teammate Anton Picard .

After the end of the Second World War , he was brought to Kickers Offenbach on Bieberer Berg by the former Frankenthal coach Paul Oßwald , where the defender played for the OFC from 1945 to 1956 in the Oberliga Süd . After the first three seasons were completed with twelfth, fifth and ninth place, he won the championship with his team in 1948/49 , as well as in 1954/55 . As a result, he also took part in the respective finals for the German championship . He made his debut on June 12, 1949 in Kaiserslautern in the quarter-finals match with Wormatia Worms , which ended 2-2 after extra time and had not produced a winner. He and his team won the replay that was played a week later in Karlsruhe 2-0 and reached the semi-finals. The encounter on June 26, 1949 in Gelsenkirchen was lost against the eventual German champions VfR Mannheim with 1: 2, as was the game for 3rd place on July 9 against 1. FC Kaiserslautern, but only after extra time.

In the final round of the German Championship 1949/50 he took third place in the season, which was possible at the time, and played all five final rounds including the replay of the semifinals against Prussia Dellbrück and the final. This took place on June 25th in the Berlin Olympic Stadium and was lost 1: 2 to VfB Stuttgart ; the only goal of his team was achieved by Horst Buhtz with the connection goal in the 47th minute.

The final round of the German Championship 1954/55 was held in two groups of four teams each, whose group winners contested the final. Emberger played all games in Group 2 and finished the group with his team in third place.

During his club membership, he was also used in games for the DFB Cup . In 1952/53 he played three games, making his debut on August 16, 1952 in the first round in a 3-0 victory over VfB Stuttgart. In the round of 16 , Prussia Dellbrück went into extra time , in which the game was decided 3-2 in favor of his team. The end overtook him and his team on February 1, 1953 in the semi-finals, which were lost at home 2-1 to Wormatia Worms. 1954/55 he was used in four games; After the successful preliminary round , as well as the last sixteen and quarter finals , he and his team were eliminated from the competition on April 7th in the Wuppertal Stadium at the Zoo with 1: 2 against FC Schalke 04 .

successes

literature

  • Lorenz Knieriem, Hardy Grüne : Player Lexicon 1890 - 1963 . In: Encyclopedia of German League Football . tape 8 . AGON, Kassel 2006, ISBN 3-89784-148-7 , p. 73 .
  • Werner Skrentny (Ed.): When Morlock still met the moonlight. The history of the Oberliga Süd 1945–1963. Klartext Verlag. Essen 1993. ISBN 3-88474-055-5 . Pp. 42-45.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Raphael Keppel: Germany's international soccer games. Documentation from 1908–1989. Sports and games publisher Edgar Hitzel. Hürth 1989. ISBN 3-9802172-4-8 . P. 155

Web links