Georg Bayerer

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Georg Bayerer
Personnel
birthday April 9, 1915
place of birth MunichGerman Empire
date of death June 6, 1998
position Defense
Juniors
Years station
0000-1931 FC Wacker Munich
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1931-1939 FC Wacker Munich
1939 1. FC Nuremberg 3 (0)
1939-1949 TSV 1860 Munich
1941 Fortuna Dusseldorf
1949-1950 FC Bayern Munich 19 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1952-1953 1. FSV Mainz 05
1953-1954 FC Bayern Munich
1954-1956 Stuttgart Kickers
1960-1961 SSV Jahn Regensburg
1964-1967 TSV Straubing
1 Only league games are given.

Georg Bayerer (born April 9, 1915 in Munich ; † June 6, 1998 ), also called "Buale", was a German football player and coach . The defender of the Munich clubs FC Wacker , TSV 1860 and FC Bayern played 117 points games from 1945 to 1950 in the first-class Oberliga Süd and scored two goals. With TSV 1860 Munich he won the Reichsbund Cup in 1940 and the Tschammer Cup in 1942 .

Player career

Beginning (1931–1939)

Bayerer joined FC Wacker Munich in his youth and moved up to the first team in 1931, at the age of 16, and came to it, in the first season in the district league , then, until June 1939, in the first uniform top division, the Gauliga , at the side of national player Sigmund Haringer , on duty.

Sports area class (1939–1945)

For the 1939/40 season , the ex-Wackeraner, mainly used as a middle runner in the World Cup system at that time, belonged to TSV 1860 Munich . Although he first switched to 1. FC Nürnberg in the summer of 1939 , he had to leave the "club" after three games because of alleged "professionalism" and had returned to Munich, but not to FC Wacker, but to the sixties . Due to the draft notices for several club players - Rockinger, Schmidhuber, Schiller, Burger, both Jandas, Ertl, Pledl - immediately after the start of the war, the weakened "blue-whites" from Giesing took seventh place in 1939/40. Personally, the newcomer celebrated a great success with the district selection Bavaria by winning the Reichsbund Cup in 1940 . On January 14, 1940, he was a member of the Bavarian team in the 2-1 victory in Frankfurt against the Southwest team (with Fritz Walter and Peter Momber ) as well as in the semi-finals on May 19 against the Ostmark team (with Karl Sesta , Willibald Schmaus , Josef Pekarek , Walter Probst, Karl Zischek , Wilhelm Hahnemann ) when he acted alongside Ludwig Goldbrunner in the 2-0 win in Munich . He won the final with the Bayern selection on June 30th in Augsburg against the selection of Saxony with a 3-1 win.

As for the war season 1940-41 with Heinz Krückeberg and Ernst Willimowski two new attackers were available, he won the 1860 Munich the championship in the sports class Bavaria . In October 1940 he was used in the Bayern selection in two games against the selection of Lower Saxony , where he had the two Schweinfurters Andreas Kupfer and Albin Kitzinger at his side as a middle runner . In the final round of the German championship , he came in all six group matches against the Stuttgarter Kickers (3: 3; 2: 1), VfL Neckarau (6: 2; 1: 2) and the group winners SK Rapid Wien (2: 1; 0: 2) used. The “Löwen” defense mostly competed with him, Franz Schmeißer, Franz Graf, Josef Wendl and Franz Hammerl in the group games . Under coach Max Schäfer , he and his teammates reached third place in the 1941/42 season .

In the competition for the Tschammer Cup in 1942 , he achieved great success with his teammates. After victories over SK Rapid Wien (5: 3), Stuttgarter Kickers (3: 1), SG SS Strasbourg (15: 1), FV Stadt Dudelange (7: 0) and TuS Lipine (6: 0) The team from Munich also surprisingly prevailed on November 15, 1942 in the Berlin Olympic Stadium in front of 80,000 spectators in the final against the German champions of 1942, FC Schalke 04 around Ernst Kuzorra and Fritz Szepan . Bayerer successfully asserted himself on the center stage in the duels against Schalke international striker Hermann Eppenhoff . The press generally praised the Sechzger as a well-deserved winner, with the defense around Schmeisser, Pledl and Bayerer being seen as a decisive advantage over the Schalke players. The players in the cup success each received 180 RM , a certificate, a silver signet ring and a watch as a prize. Bayerer came in his short guest appearance at Fortuna Düsseldorf in the 1941/42 season on November 9 and December 14, 1941 in the selection of the Lower Rhine in the Reichsbund Cup 1941/42 to missions against Baden (3: 1) and Kurhessen (6: 2) . The Niederrhein selection won the final on November 15, 1942 against the Nordmark selection 2-1; At that time Bayerer was already playing again with the “Löwen” and at the same time won the final of the Tschammer Cup against FC Schalke 04.

In the 1942/43 season in southern Bavaria, TSV 1860 Munich won the championship in the Bavarian sports division, which is divided into northern and southern areas, with 33: 3 points and 97:15 goals. In the final round of the German championship 1942/43 Bayerer was in the three games in May 1943 against VfB Stuttgart (3: 0), Kickers Offenbach (2: 0) and First Vienna Vienna (0: 2) as head of defense of the " Löwen “is active in the middle runner position.

Bayerer was a member of the national team at two international matches under Reich coach Sepp Herberger , but in the 7-3 win on October 20, 1940 in Munich against Bulgaria , and in the 1-1 draw on April 12, 1942 in Berlin against the Selection of Spain he was not used.

Oberliga Süd (1945–1950)

The best performance with the "Lions" in the Oberliga Süd experienced the defensive strategist in the 1947/48 season when he reached the runner-up championship. The defensive player had completed 31 league games under coach Max Schäfer at the side of teammates such as goal scorer Otto Thanner (24 goals), Franz Hammerl , Georg Pledl and Fritz Sommer . In the 2-1 win on March 14, 1948 in the home game against 1. FC Nürnberg, the municipal stadium on Grünwalder Strasse was visited by 58,200 spectators. The runner series with Fritz Sommer, Georg Bayerer and Franz Hammerl was put on the same level as the famous predecessors of the successful years 1927, 1931 and 1942. The final round of the German championship on July 18, 1948 was lost in Worms against 1. FC Kaiserslautern with 1: 5 goals. After 98 league games (2 goals) and ten final rounds of the German championship (1 goal), the veteran switched to city rivals FC Bayern Munich in the summer of 1949 . The Sechzger had finished fourth at the end of the 1948/49 season and Bayerer had scored two goals in 26 league games.

With the "Reds" he made his debut on September 11, 1949 (2nd matchday) in the 2: 4 defeat in the away game against Kickers Offenbach as a middle runner on the side of the teammates Jakob Streitle and Herbert Moll . On November 6th (8th matchday) he was active in the 1-0 success in the city ​​derby against the "Lions". He said goodbye to the Oberliga Süd a month before his 35th birthday, on March 12, 1950 (23rd matchday), in the 2-3 rematch in front of 25,000 spectators against his former sixties . After 19 appearances for FC Bayern Munich, Bayerer ended his playing career after a total of 117 league appearances in the summer of 1950.

Coaching career

In the 1952/53 season Georg Bayerer was the coach of 1. FSV Mainz 05 in the Oberliga Südwest . In the 1953/54 season he coached Bayern Munich in the Oberliga Süd and finished ninth with the team. In the 1954/55 round he was 12th in the Oberliga Süd with the Stuttgarter Kickers . The following season began with two defeats and Karl-Heinz Grindler sat in the coaching bench with the Stuttgart team from the third day of the game.

In early 1958 Bayerer replaced the former Hungarian national player Béla Sárosi as coach at the middle Bavarian second division SSV Jahn Regensburg and finished the season in seventh place. After the end of the 1959/60 season he rose to the Oberliga Süd with Jahn, second in the final table. The season started here with one draw, one loss and one win. This was followed by seven defeats in a row and he was replaced by Georg Mayer. A coach change from Mayer to the Austrian Karl Durspekt and back to Mayer did not help the Regensburgers, who were relegated as the last one.

From 1964-67 he coached in the third-class Bavarian amateur league the TSV Straubing , reaching among others, the two amateur internationals Rudolf Netzel and Josef Parzl there places in the top half.

In 1967 he acted as head of the licensed players department of TSV 1860 Munich , but left this post after a year, disaffected by the football business of the Bundesliga era.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Spoon Meier. P. 156.
  2. ^ Spoon Meier. P. 163.
  3. Michael Bolten, Marco Langer: Everything else is just football. The story of Fortuna Düsseldorf. Publishing house Die Werkstatt. Göttingen 2005. ISBN 978-3-89533-711-6 . P. 478.
  4. Greens, Melchior. P. 92.
  5. ^ Christian Karn: 1. FSV Mainz 05: From year to year 1925–2008. P. 38.
  6. ^ Dietrich Schulze-Marmeling: The Bavarians - The history of the record champion . Publishing house DIE WERKSTATT. 2009, ISBN 978-3-89533669-0 - p. 663.
  7. Werner Skrentny (ed.): When Morlock still met the moonlight. P. 214.
  8. Greens, Melchior. P. 305.

literature

  • Hardy Grüne , Claus Melchior: Legends in White and Blue. 100 years of football history for a traditional Munich club. Publishing house Die Werkstatt. Göttingen 1999. ISBN 3-89533-256-9 .
  • Hardy Grüne, Lorenz Knieriem: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 8: Player Lexicon 1890–1963. AGON-Sportverlag, Kassel 2006, ISBN 3-89784-148-7 .
  • Werner Skrentny (Ed.): When Morlock still met the moonlight. The history of the Oberliga Süd 1945–1963. Klartext, Essen 1993, ISBN 3-88474-055-5 .
  • Antonöffelmeier: The "lions" under the swastika. The TSV Munich from 1860 under National Socialism. Publishing house Die Werkstatt. Göttingen 2009. ISBN 978-3-89533-645-4 .