Georg Wellhöfer

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Georg Wellhöfer
Personnel
birthday March 16, 1893
place of birth FürthGerman Empire
date of death December 13, 1968
position Defense
Juniors
Years station
1906-1908 Union Fuerth
1908-1909 FC Pfeil Nürnberg
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1911-1920 SpVgg Fürth
1920 FC Phoenix Ludwigshafen
1920-1923 SpVgg Fürth
1923-1924 1. Bielefeld football club Arminia
1924 SpVgg Fürth
1924-1925 1. Bielefeld football club Arminia
1925-1928 FC Phoenix Ludwigshafen
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1922 Germany 1 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1924-1925 1. Bielefeld football club Arminia
1925-1928 FC Phoenix Ludwigshafen
1933-1936 FV Saarbrücken
1936-1937 Forward lawn sport Gleiwitz
0000-1952 SV Kirchheimbolanden AH
1 Only league games are given.

Georg Wellhöfer (born March 16, 1893 in Fürth ; † December 13, 1968 ), also called Schorsch , was a German football player who was German champion with SpVgg Fürth in 1914 and runner-up in 1920, and who had played an international match for the senior national team .

Player career

societies

Wellhöfer, born in Fürth, started playing football at the local Union Fürth at the age of 13 and continued it in Nuremberg in 1908 at the local FC Pfeil Nürnberg until 1909.

From 1911 to 1920 he was a member of SpVgg Fürth and played in the Bavarian A-class in the eastern district until 1914, in the second-class district class Middle Franconia from 1915 to 1919, from 1919 to 1923 in the first-class district league Northern Bavaria and finally in the district league Bavaria.

In the first three years of membership, he and the team won the Eastern District Championship and, in the last, the South German Championship, which also entitles them to participate in the final round of the 1914 German Championship . He played in the quarter-finals, semi-finals and the final, which was won on May 31, 1914 in Magdeburg 3-2 after extra time against VfB Leipzig .

Weeks later he was called up for military service, served at the front in World War I from 1915 to 1917 (during this period he played as a guest player for FC Phönix Ludwigshafen ) and returned unscathed to his homeland. For SpVgg Fürth, he played 36 point games in the second-rate district league Middle Franconia and scored one goal.

With the resurgence of regular game operations, the final round of the German championship was revived; this time SpVgg Fürth took part in this as defending champion - from six years ago. As six years ago, Wellhöfer played all three matches, but the final on June 13, 1920 in Frankfurt am Main was lost 2-0 to their Franconian rivals 1. FC Nürnberg.

From September to November 1920 he supported the FC Phönix Ludwigshafen in the Kreisliga Pfalz . There was to be a reunion from 1925 to 1928 in the district league Rhine or in the district league Rhine / Saar , in which he acted as a player- coach.

Up to this point he continued to play for the Fürth team - interrupted by two periods in which he also acted as a player- coach for the 1st Bielefeld football club Arminia in East Westphalia .

In 1923 he achieved the greatest number of successes with SpVgg Fürth; He was able to combine three regional championships and winning the South German Cup; from July to October 1924 he played for the Fürth team for the last time.

National team

Wellhöfer played his only international match for the senior national team on March 26, 1922 . The game in Frankfurt am Main ended 2-2 in a draw against the Swiss national team - after a 2-0 lead.

Coaching career

As a trained sports teacher, he acquired his coaching license during his active football career. He not only coached the 1. Bielefelder football club Arminia and FC Phönix Ludwigshafen, but also 1. FC Bayreuth , VfR Fürth , Sportfreunde 05 Saarbrücken , SV Saar 05 Saarbrücken , FV Saarbrücken , Vorwärts-Rasensport Gleiwitz and the Karlsruher FC Phönix . In the meantime he was active as a sports teacher in the Saarpfalz district . Most recently, he coached the old men team of SV Kirchheimbolanden in the town of the same name in southeast Rhineland-Palatinate until 1952 .

successes

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