Fritz Wilde

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Fritz Wilde ( July 4, 1920 - August 25, 1976 ) was a German football player who worked for the clubs SpVgg Fürth (1945/46), 1.FC Bamberg (1946/47) and Tennis Borussia Berlin (1950 to 1957) has completed 141 rounds with 38 goals in the soccer Oberliga Süd and Stadtliga Berlin . The offensive player on the left wing had already won the championship in the Gauliga Berlin-Brandenburg with his home club Tennis Borussia in the 1940/41 war season and took part in the final round of the German championship .

career

Gauliga, 1937 to 1945

The filigree technician was convincing at a young age with his wit and his ability to combine and was first used in the city ​​selection Berlin in 1937 as a 17-year-old . From BFC Rapide 93 Niederschönhausen he switched to the youth department of Tennis Borussia in 1932 as a student. In the Gauliga Berlin-Brandenburg he gained his first experience in the senior sector and quickly developed into a top performer of the "Veilchen". In the middle of World War II, Tennis Borussia became champions in 1940/41 and therefore took part in the final round of the German championship in 1941. The first final game confronted Wilde on the side of players like Wilhelm Sold and Hans Berndt on April 14, 1921 in front of 50,000 spectators in the Berlin Olympic Stadium with the art of playing the Dresdner SC . Its ranks included experts such as Willibald Kreß , Karl Miller , Heinz Hempel , Herbert Pohl , Walter Dzur , Helmut Schubert , Heinrich Schaffer , Fritz Machate , Helmut Schön and Gustav Carstens . Dresden prevailed 1-0 with a beautiful goal in the 82nd minute.

Due to the circumstances of the war, he was also a "guest player" at Grün-Weiß Viersen (1939/40), SC Erfurt (9/1943) and from November 1943 at 1. FC Bamberg. He came to the FCB, the purple-whites from the cathedral city , by being transferred to the tank regiment there. In the 1943/44 season Bamberg finished second behind 1. FC Nürnberg in the Gauliga Nordbayern .

After World War II, until 1957

Oberliga Süd, Stadtliga Hamburg, Amateur League Northern Bavaria, until 1950

When the first-class Oberliga Süd started in southern Germany on November 4, 1945 , the Berliner belonged to the old master of SpVgg Fürth from November 1945 to March 1946. In 16 league games he scored three goals for the “clover leaf team”. Then Wilde went back to Bamberg, where the violet "Domreiter" won the championship in 1945/46 in the second-class Bavarian regional league with 27: 5 points and thus achieved promotion to the league. In the league season 1946/47 he continued his "willingness to change": He ran for Bamberg until October 1946, belonged to FC St. Pauli in the Hamburg city league for two months in November and December before he returned to his kick boots for January Bamberg laced. In a season of 20, FCB finished 18th at the end of the round and was relegated to the amateur camp. Wilde had scored four goals in 22 league appearances.

But now he stayed in Upper Franconia and played for the eleven from the cathedral city another three rounds in the Landesliga Nordbayern. He was able to celebrate the championship twice with Bamberg in 1948 and 1950 and gained coaching experience as a player coach for the first time in 1948/49. When Bamberg started in Division II in 1950/51, Wilde had returned to his hometown in Berlin, he had joined his old club Tennis Borussia Berlin for the 1950/51 season.

Tennis Borussia, 1950 to 1957

With the team from the Charlottenburg district , Wilde won the West Berlin championship in 1950/51 in the first year under contract player conditions in a season of 14 with five points ahead of SC Union 06 Berlin . In 26 league games, TeBe only lost the opening game with 0-2 goals at Viktoria 89 and clearly scored the most goals with 84 goals. The Berlin top scorer was won by Paul Salisch with 29 goals from vice-champions Union 06, ahead of the two tennis players Hans Berndt (27) and Horst Schmutzler with 26 goals. In the final round, the only win in the first round match against Preußen Münster was 3-2 when, in the last five minutes, Schmutzler and Berndt turned the 2-1 lead of the home team into an away win. When the 2: 8 home defeat on the last game day, June 10, 1951, through which Münster reached the final against 1. FC Nürnberg with equal points, Wilde was not on the pitch.

In his second round he successfully defended his title in 1951/52, again before SC Union 06. The championship-winning game on April 6, 1952 between TeBe and Union 06 was attended by 75,000 fans; the "Veilchen" won 4-2. Wilde had scored 13 goals in 25 league games for the championship team. Tennis Borussia started the final round with a 4-2 away win against West Champion Rot-Weiss Essen. In the 2-1 home win against VfL Osnabrück on May 18, Wilde took TeBe 1-0 ahead on half-left. 90,000 spectators followed the 1-1 draw against eventual German champions VfB Stuttgart in the Olympic Stadium on May 25, 1952.

A championship success did not succeed in the next round for Wilde with the "Veilchen"; he had to be satisfied with the runner-up in 1955 and 1957. After 103 league games with 31 goals from 1950 to 1957 at Tennis Borussia, the senior ended his two decades of active playing career in senior senior football at the age of almost 37 in the summer of 1957.

Trainer

After his playing career, Fritz Wilde also worked as a coach for many years at various Berlin clubs. Starting from the 1955/56 round at Hertha Zehlendorf until 1962/63 at Tennis Borussia, he worked in the Berlin City League and continued his work in the then second-rate Berlin Regional League at TeBe in the debut year 1963/64. Regional league positions at Hertha Zehlendorf , SC Staaken and TuS Wannsee followed before he finished his coaching career in the Berlin amateur area.

Wilde ran a tobacco and liquor store and died in August 1976.

successes

  • Champion in the Gauliga Berlin-Brandenburg: 1940/41
  • Champion in the Berlin City League: 1951, 1952

literature

  • Hardy Grüne , Lorenz Knieriem: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 8: Player Lexicon 1890–1963. Agon-Sportverlag, Kassel 2006, ISBN 3-89784-148-7 .
  • Wolfgang Hartwig, Günter Weise, Helmut Tietze: 100 years of football in Berlin . Sports publishing house Berlin. 1997. ISBN 3-328-00734-2 .
  • Klaus Querengässer: The German football championship. Part 2: 1948–1963 (= Agon-Sportverlag statistics. Vol. 29). Agon-Sportverlag, Kassel 1997, ISBN 3-89609-107-7 .