Franz Dietl (soccer player)

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Franz Dietl
Personnel
date of death December 24, 1949
position Storm
Juniors
Years station
0000-1920 FC Bayern Munich
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1920-1928 FC Bayern Munich
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1947-1948 FC Bayern Munich
1 Only league games are given.

Franz Dietl was a German soccer player who was active for FC Bayern Munich from 1920 to 1928 .

Career

societies

Playing for the youth team of FC Bayern Munich, Dietl (with Josef Pöttinger and Ernst Nagelschmitz ) moved up to the first team on July 27, 1920, after having only played one friendly game for them the previous season. He was in the South Bavarian District League , the highest regional league at the time, and won the South Bavarian Championship with the team in 1923 .

In the final of the South German Cup he was defeated with Bayern on June 17, 1923 at the MTV-Platz on Marbachstrasse, but SpVgg Fürth 3: 4, despite two goals from him.

His last season for Bayern was also his most successful with three other titles. First he won the Bavarian championship with Bayern , then, for the first time, the South German championship with three points ahead of SpVgg Fürth. As a result, he also participated in the final round of the German championship in part, however, came only in the second round , in which he with Bayern on 16 May 1926 of the 0: 2 defeat in Leipzig at the resident Fortuna , from the competition divorced, to use.

Selection team

On July 4, 1926 , he won the final of the Fighting Game Cup held in Cologne , in which he beat the West German national team in the 7-2 success of the South German Football Association (with teammates Emil Kutterer , Josef Pöttinger and Ludwig Hofmann ) Spiel-Verband contributed two goals to 1-0 in the 24th and 7-1 in the 67th minute.

Others

In the 1947/48 season he coached FC Bayern Munich before Alwin Riemke succeeded him.

Dietl died on Christmas Eve 1949. In his honor, FC Bayern competed on December 26, 1949 in a league game against FC Augsburg (4-1) with a black ribbon. In the 10th minute of the game, a minute of silence was inserted for him.

successes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Excerpt from the commemorative publication 25 years of FC Bayern Munich on successfans.com
  2. Match pairing on kleeblatt-chronik.de
  3. Group photo of the final teams on successfans.com
  4. Team photo from the FC Bayern Munich 1925 festschrift on successfans.com
  5. ^ Dietrich Schulze-Marmeling: The Bavarians - The history of the record champion . Publishing house DIE WERKSTATT. 2009, ISBN 978-3-89533-669-0 - p. 663