Franz Krumm

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Franz Krumm
Personnel
birthday October 16, 1909
date of death March 9, 1943
Place of death OryolRussian SFSR , Soviet Union
position Storm
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
0000-1930 FC forward Munich
1930-1938 FC Bayern Munich
1938-1939 TSV 1860 Munich
1939-1941 FC Bayern Munich
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1932-1933 Germany 2 (1)
1 Only league games are given.

Franz Krumm (* 16th October 1909 ; † 9. March 1943 in Orel , Russian SFSR , Soviet Union ) was a German footballer who with Bayern Munich in 1932 , the German championship won and 1932-1933 two caps for the senior team completed.

Career

societies

Krumm played football in the early years of his career at the lower class FC Vorwärts Munich . For the 1930/31 season, the half-forward moved to FC Bayern Munich , which at the time was playing in the regional top division, the Bayern District League - Group South Bavaria . Group opponents of the Munich team were SV Munich 1860 , SSV Schwaben Augsburg , SB Jahn Regensburg , FC Wacker Munich , FC Teutonia Munich , VfB Ingolstadt-Ringsee and DSV Munich . The powerful and team-friendly “dribble artist” and his “speci” Josef Bergmaier formed a dreaded right wing at Bayern Munich. When center forward Oskar Rohr from Mannheim also joined coach Richard Kohn's team in 1931, a proven goalscorer , the club around President Kurt Landauer had matured into a top German club. Krumm won the South Bavarian championship three times in a row with his teammates from 1931 to 1933 . In the most successful season 1931/32 he won with the "Rothosen" all four games for the South Bavarian and the South German championship against the "Löwen" from SV 1860 Munich. The final of the southern German championship on May 1, 1932 in Stuttgart against north-west champion Eintracht Frankfurt was canceled in the 80th minute of the game when the score was 2-0 for Eintracht, because angry Bayern fans had stormed the field. Since both teams were qualified for the final round of the German soccer championship, FCB decided not to reschedule.

In the final of the championship on June 12, 1932 against Eintracht Frankfurt in the municipal stadium in Nuremberg - FCB had previously defeated Minerva 93 Berlin (4: 2 win; two goals each from Krumm and Rohr), PSV Chemnitz (3: 2 ) and prevailed in the semifinals against 1. FC Nürnberg with 2-0 goals - the decision was finally made in the 75th minute: On the right attacking side, Krumm prevailed against two Frankfurters, turned inward and shot the ball to the inside edge of the right goal post, from where the leather jumped into the net. With Bergmaier, Krumm, Rohr, Schmid and Welker, Bayern probably had the best storm in German football this season. The “kicker” explained the supposed secret of Bayern's victory with the following analysis: “No system with always the same resources, always the same positions. When Rohr and Schmid II or Bergmaier had the ball, then no opponent knew what was coming, and none of the comrades knew what would follow: but everyone positioned themselves so that they could pick up the ball in a promising position. And when someone had made his passport, he didn't stop, but immediately looked for a new place. With this style of play, Bayern forced an overwhelming superiority in the first 30 minutes of the second half. ”Coach Richard Kohn was credited with a significant part of the success. The focus of his practice units was ball control in a confined space and under opposing pressure. “Dombi”, as the coach was called: “Above all, it is important to adapt training with the ball to the game in competition. I only decapitate or stop in distress, as is the case during a serious game. There are players who have perfect ball control as long as they are not attacked. In competition they usually fail despite all their technical ability. ”This type of training was also suitable for the instinctive dribbler Franz“ Fasa ”Krumm. The playing style of the FCB at that time is characterized by the terms "fluid" and "supple", a style of play that was based on the characteristics of "Danube football" from the metropolises of Budapest, Vienna and Prague, where the Scottish flat pass was integrated, but also individualism had its place and a certain elegance and lightness belonged to the game. The always cautious and modest blond boy had played all four games with FCB in the 1932 finals and scored three goals.

The international encounters certainly also contributed to the fact that FC Bayern Munich was able to call up a remarkable performance before the first championship title and immediately afterwards, even beyond the borders of the DFB . Games against Racing Club de Paris (5: 2), Birmingham FC (1: 3), Vienna Wien (2: 3), Chelsea FC London (1: 2), Boldklubben Copenhagen (6: 1), Ferencvaros Budapest (3: 2) and Slavia Prague on August 26, 1934 (3: 3) with the reigning vice world champions Planicka, Svoboda, Sobotka and Puc were on the program from 1930 to 1934. The seizure of power by the Nazis meant a harder blow to the bourgeois FCB than to some of the former “red” workers' clubs - especially because the club was publicly known in Munich as the “Jews Club”.

Until the end of the 1937/38 season , Krumm was still active in the Gauliga Bayern at Bayern . The best placements were third places in 1934 , 1936 and 1937 . It was no longer enough to make it into the final round of the German championship. In September 1938, he and his friend Bergmaier moved to local rivals TSV 1860 Munich , where Bergmaier only played with the "Old Men". Krumm belonged to the "Löwen-Elf" in 1938/39 , which reached the runner-up championship one point behind champions FC Schweinfurt 05 (with the top performers Albin Kitzinger and Andreas Kupfer ). He was also in the two derbies against FCB in November 1938 (0-0) and February 1939 (2: 3) alongside other players such as Franz Schmeiser , Engelbert Schmidhuber , Ludwig Janda and Georg Pledl .

From the first war season 1939/40 he played again for Bayern . According to the Derby book, Krumm's stakes with FC Bayern Munich up to and including the 1940/41 season are recorded .

Selection / national team

Krumm debuted on September 25, 1932 in the senior team , in Nuremberg , the selection of Sweden 4: defeated third In the success of the DFB-Elf under national coach Otto Nerz , he scored his only international goal on half right next to “Spezi” Bergmaier on right wing; Bayern center forward "Ossi" Rohr distinguished himself as a two-time goal scorer. Krumm completed his second and last international match on January 1, 1933 in Bologna in a 1: 3 defeat against the Italian selection led by Giuseppe Meazza . He formed the right wing with Bayern teammate Bergmaier and center forward Rohr scored the consolation goal. From May 7 to 19, 1934 Krumm took part in the DFB's world championship course, but was not accepted into the World Cup squad.

He won the district selection competition for the Adolf Hitler Cup in 1933 with the district selection Bavaria on August 6, 1933 in Munich, 6: 1 in the replay against the district selection Berlin-Brandenburg (with players such as Hans Appel , Heinz Emmerich , Hans Brunke , Johannes Sobeck , Willi Kirsei ). He scored a goal although Bergmaier, Rohr, Ludwig Lachner and Georg Frank stormed.

Others

Krumm fell as a Wehrmacht soldier on the Eastern Front in World War II - like his club colleague and friend Josef Bergmaier of the same age .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Dietrich Schulze-Marmeling: The Bavarians. P. 64.
  2. ^ Dietrich Schulze-Marmeling: The Bavarians. P. 68.
  3. Dietrich Schulze-Marmeling: FC Bayern and its Jews. Publishing house Die Werkstatt. Göttingen 2011. ISBN 978-3-89533-781-9 . P. 115.
  4. Dietrich Schulze-Marmeling: FC Bayern and its Jews. Publishing house Die Werkstatt. Göttingen 2011. ISBN 978-3-89533-781-9 . P. 109.
  5. ^ Dietrich Schulze-Marmeling: The Bavarians. P. 77.
  6. Knieriem, Grüner: Spiellexikon 1890–1963. P. 215.
  7. ^ Klaus Querengässer: The German football championship. Part 1: 1903-1945 (= AGON Sportverlag statistics. Vol. 28). AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1997, ISBN 3-89609-106-9 , pp. 104-107.
  8. ^ Dietrich Schulze-Marmeling: The Bavarians. Pp. 78-80.
  9. ^ Dietrich Schulze-Marmeling: The Bavarians. P. 83.
  10. Anton Löffelmeier: The "lions" under the swastika. Publishing house Die Werkstatt. Göttingen 2009. ISBN 978-3-89533-645-4 . P. 103.
  11. Joachim Schweer: The Munich Derby. AGON publishing house. Kassel 1995. ISBN 3-928562-63-0 . Pp. 40/41.
  12. The Bavarians in the Nazi era on br .de.

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 .
  • Dietrich Schulze-Marmeling: The Bavarians. The history of the record champions. Publishing house Die Werkstatt. Göttingen 2007. ISBN 978-3-89533-534-1 .
  • 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).
  • Jürgen Bitter : Germany's national soccer player: the lexicon . SVB Sportverlag, Berlin 1997, ISBN 3-328-00749-0 .