Helmut Jagielski

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Helmut Jagielski , called "Jaggel" (born March 13, 1934 in Wattenscheid -Leithe; † December 25, 2002 ) was a German football player who won the DFB Cup in 1961 and the German championship in 1965 with Werder Bremen .

Career

FC Schalke 04 (1950–1961)

Helmut Jagielski started playing soccer at RW Leithe at the age of 10, before moving to FC Schalke 04 in 1950 at the age of 16 . He was discovered by Otto Tibulski . At the age of 18 he joined the royal blues' upper league team straight from the youth. In the first season in the Oberliga West 1952/53, the half-forward and left wing runner played 17 games and scored four goals. He made his debut on October 12, 1952 in the 4-0 away defeat at the side of Günter Brocker , Hermann Eppenhoff and Berni Klodt . In the 4-1 away win on December 14, 1952 at Schwarz-Weiß Essen , he scored the first two goals.

The technically outstanding player was appointed by national coach Sepp Herberger on December 19, 1956 to the junior national team and on March 27, 1957 to the B-country team of the DFB . After 13 missions, the 1957/58 season was over for him. A knee operation in winter deprived him of the chance to take part in the 1958 World Cup in Sweden and in the final round of the 1958 German Championship. In the European Cup games in 1958/59 against KB Copenhagen, Wolverhampton Wanderers and Atlético Madrid he was back on the ball for Schalke. After the 1960/61 season, in which he had 18 games and five goals, he finished after the last Matchday, on May 13, 1961, with three goals in a 7-0 home win at the side of Willi Koslowski , Hans Nowak and Willi Schulz against Duisburger SV, his time at Schalke 04. From 1952 to 1961 he completed for the "Knappen “156 games in the Oberliga West and scored 28 goals.

SV Werder Bremen (1961-1967)

On September 13, 1961, he was able to celebrate winning the 1961 DFB Cup with his new club in Schalke's "Glückauf-Kampfbahn" . Werder defeated with a goal of "Jaggel" under coach Georg Knöpfle the 1. FC Kaiserslautern 2: 0 goals. 1962 and 1963 Werder were each runner-up in the Oberliga Nord . Jagielski gained further international experience through the games in the European Cup in 1961/62 against Aarhus GF and again Atlético Madrid. In the Oberliga Nord he played 53 times for Werder from 1961 to 1963 and scored three goals. From the 1963/64 season they played in the newly installed Bundesliga . In 1964/65, Werder Bremen surprisingly won the German championship under the leadership of coach Willi Multhaup . The Bremen “concrete defense”, they only conceded 29 goals, was the guarantee of this success. Jagielski, meanwhile retrained to be a cleaner by coach Multhaup, was the head of the Bremen defense. As a former striker and technician, he was not always able to suppress the filigree game and not only brutally pushed the balls out of the danger zone, he was also dubbed “Brother Leichtfuß”. He wasn't really a cleaner, he was rather the first playful libero in the Bundesliga. On the final day of the 1966/67 season, on June 3, 1967, he played for Werder in the 4-1 defeat at 1. FC Köln for the last time - 1963–1967 he played 64 games for Bremen - and in the Bundesliga.

Finale

The trained businessman, who was married to Ernst Kalwitzki's daughter, ran the Werder Bremen club restaurant for a few years after his career and worked as an amateur trainer at Delmenhorst, Blumenthaler SV and Werder Amateurs.

swell

  • Jürgen Bitter : Germany's football. The encyclopedia. Sportverlag, Berlin 2000, ISBN 3-328-00857-8 .
  • Matthias Kropp: Triumphs in the European Cup. All games of the German clubs since 1955 (= "AGON Sportverlag statistics." Volume 20). AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-75-4 .
  • Matthias Weinrich, Hardy Greens : Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 6: German Cup history since 1935. Pictures, statistics, stories, constellations. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2000, ISBN 3-89784-146-0 .
  • Matthias Weinrich: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 3: 35 years of the Bundesliga. Part 1. The founding years 1963–1975. Stories, pictures, constellations, tables. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1998, ISBN 3-89784-132-0 .
  • Jens Reimer Prüß (Ed.): Bung bottle with flat pass cork. The history of the Oberliga Nord 1947–1963. Klartext, Essen 1991, ISBN 3-88474-463-1 .
  • Hans Dieter Baroth : Boys, Heaven is yours! The history of the Oberliga West 1947–1963. Klartext, Essen 1988, ISBN 3-88474-332-5 .
  • Ulrich Merk, André Schulin: Bundesliga chronicle 1964/65. Volume 2: Werder's surprise coup. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2004, ISBN 3-89784-084-7 .

Individual evidence

  1. Westfälische Nachrichten : Black money in the coffin: Hertha is thrown out of the league - the oldest coach lets the most modern football play , Sport, Münster, Harald Pistorius, January 22, 2013.