Helmut Fottner

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Helmut Fottner
Personnel
birthday December 24, 1927
place of birth MunichGerman Empire
date of death September 1, 2009
position Storm
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1945-1946 FC Bayern Munich 2 0(0)
1947-1952 TSV 1860 Munich 101 (41)
1952-1954 SV Saar 05 Saarbrücken 49 (17)
1954-1956 FC Zurich 49 (19)
1956-1957 Red and white food 7 0(1)
1957-1958 Sports club Enschede 10 0(1)
1958-1959 Groninger VAV
1959-1960 FC Bern
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1953-1954 Saarland 2 0(0)
1 Only league games are given.

Helmut Fottner (born December 24, 1927 in Munich ; † September 1, 2009 ) was a German football player who played football from 1945 to 1960 in Germany , Saarland , Switzerland and the Netherlands and made two international matches for the Saarland national team denied.

Career

societies

Fottner belonged in the season 1945/46 the FC Bayern Munich and came for him in the Oberliga Süd , one of first three, later extended to five top leagues , but uniform top German division, are used. He made his competitive debut for Bayern on January 27, 1946 (13th matchday) in the 0-2 defeat in the away game against the Stuttgarter Kickers . His second and last appearance was on March 10, 1946 (17th matchday) in the 3-0 defeat in the away game against the soccer department of TSV Schwaben Augsburg .

For the 1947/48 season he moved to league competitor TSV 1860 Munich , for whom he completed five seasons under coaches Max Schäfer (until 1951) and Josef Molzer (1951/52) and scored 41 goals in 101 games. At the end of its first season, the one with the lions took second place in the South German championship, which entitles them to participate in the final round of the German championship . The only final game he played was the defeat in the quarterfinals he suffered on July 18, 1948 in Worms 5-1 against 1. FC Kaiserslautern . When the "Lions" reached sixth place in the 1950/51 season, the attack with the players Ludwig Zausinger , Kurt Mondschein , Otto Thanner , Max Link , Fottner and Kurt Lauxmann scored the most hits in the Oberliga Süd with 97 goals. Fottner was the internal top scorer with 18 goals.

From 1952 to 1954 he was active in the Oberliga Südwest for SV Saar 05 Saarbrücken . The tricky, fast and agile half-left only missed one league game in two rounds at Saar 05. Overall, he is led with 59 league games and 17 goals. In the second year he finished fourth in the Oberliga Südwest together with teammates like goalkeeper Horst Borcherding and two striker colleagues Fritz Altmeyer and Horst Lebefromm . For the 1954/55 season he moved to Switzerland to the first division club FC Zurich and to leave this again at the end of the 1955/56 season . After Germany returned, he denied the season 1956/57 for Rot-Weiss Essen in the Oberliga West . In the team from the stadium on Hafenstrasse, he was only used in seven league games (1 goal) under coach Elek Schwartz . The red and whites took eighth place.

From 1957 to 1959 he was active in the Netherlands , initially playing for the first division sports club Enschede , with whom he narrowly missed the championship in the championship playoff against the tied DOS Utrecht due to the 0-1 defeat. He then played one season for second division club Groninger VAV and one season (again moved to Switzerland) for second division club FC Bern .

National team

Fottner played two internationals for the Saarland national team . He made his debut on November 8, 1953 in Saarbrücken in a goalless draw in the qualifier for the 1954 World Cup against the selection of Norway . His second international match - substitute for Gerhard Siedl - he also played in Saarbrücken, which was lost on June 5, 1954 in the test match against the Uruguayan selection 1: 7, synonymous with the highest defeat of the Saarland national team.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Martin Neu: The 44 national players of the SFB from A for Altmeyer to Z for Zegel. In: saar-nostalgie.de (December 31, 2016), accessed on January 1, 2017.
  2. ^ Walter Grüber: FC Bayern Munich. 6389 games. Production and publishing BoD - Books on Demand - ISBN 978-3-7412-0071-7 - pp. 167, 169