Horst Buhtz

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Horst Buhtz
Personnel
birthday September 21, 1923
place of birth MagdeburgGerman Empire
date of death March 22, 2015
Place of death Langenfeld (Rhineland)Germany
position midfield player
Juniors
Years station
1937-1939 Fortuna Magdeburg
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1937-1942 Fortuna Magdeburg
1946-1947 SG Magdeburg-Alte Neustadt
1947-1950 Kickers Offenbach 80 (36)
1950-1952 VfB Mühlburg 63 (33)
1952-1957 AC Turin 127 (34)
1957-1959 Young Fellows Zurich 40 (26)
1959-1962 AC Bellinzona
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1951 Germany B 1 0(0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1962-1963 Sportfreunde 05 Saarbrücken
1963-1966 Borussia Neunkirchen
1966-1968 Hannover 96
1968-1974 Wuppertal SV
1974-1976 Beşiktaş Istanbul
1976 Borussia Dortmund
1976-1988 1. FC Nuremberg
1978-1981 Bayer 05 Uerdingen
1981-1982 Alemannia Aachen
1983-1985 Stuttgart Kickers
1987 SC Fortuna Cologne
1 Only league games are given.

Horst Buhtz (born September 21, 1923 in Magdeburg ; † March 22, 2015 in Langenfeld (Rhineland) ) was a German football player and coach .

Player career

societies

The technically well-trained offensive player was initially active at Fortuna Magdeburg , for whom he was already used as a 16-year-old in the men's team with a special permit from the DFB . After fleeing the Soviet occupation zone in 1947, he joined Kickers Offenbach , with whom he became South German champions in 1949 and lost 2-1 in the final of the German soccer championship in 1950 against VfB Stuttgart . He scored the consolation goal for the Kickers in the 47th minute. From 1950 to 1952 he played for VfB Mühlburg , next to Phönix Karlsruhe one of the predecessor clubs of Karlsruher SC, in the league, the former top division. In five years in the Oberliga Süd , Horst Buhtz scored 69 goals in 143 games.

In 1952, the Essen players' agent Raymond Schwab organized him an engagement at AC Turin in Serie A, which made it the second German Italian legionnaire after Ludwig Janda from TSV 1860 Munich . Il Tedesco , "the German," as the Tifosi called him there, earned around 150,000 DM per season. German upper league contract players, for example, were officially only allowed to receive a maximum of 400 marks net per month plus up to 100 marks of proven loss of earnings in 1963 and had to do so have a job.

Buhtz was one of the stars of the new Turin team, which was rebuilt after the Superga plane crash in 1949 , in which almost all of the players were killed. He only left Turin in 1957. He then joined the Young Fellows Zurich and AC Bellinzona in Switzerland and then returned to Germany.

National team

Since Buhtz resembled Fritz Walter in terms of the play system and the DFB had reservations about professional players for years - especially when they were working abroad - the goal-threatening game designer only managed to play an international match . He was involved in the first international B match; it was lost on April 14, 1951 in Karlsruhe with 0-2 against the selection of Switzerland.

Coaching career

Horst Buhtz first worked as a coach in 1962 for the Südwest Oberligisten Sportfreunde 05 Saarbrücken and was sixth with the club from the Burbach district . The other stations were Borussia Neunkirchen (1963–1966), Hannover 96 (1966–1968), Wuppertaler SV (1968–1974), Beşiktaş Istanbul (1974–1976), Borussia Dortmund (1976), 1. FC Nürnberg (1976–1978) ), Bayer 05 Uerdingen (1978–1981), Alemannia Aachen (1981–1982) and the Stuttgarter Kickers (1983–1985). In the 1986/87 season he helped out in eight games at Fortuna Cologne .

Horst Buhtz led Neunkirchen, Wuppertal, Nuremberg and Uerdingen from the second division into the Bundesliga. In 1972 he won all eight games of the promotion round with the Wuppertal, which was held between 1964 and 1974, which remained unique. In the following Bundesliga season he finished fourth with the WSV and thus qualified for the UEFA Cup , the predecessor of the Europa League .

Horst Buhtz last lived in Langenfeld (Rhineland) .

literature

  • Paul Fürhoff: Global Players. German football all over the world. German Sport & Olympia Museum, Cologne 2006 ISBN 3-89784-993-3 . P. 118 f.
  • Hardy Greens : Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 1: From the Crown Prince to the Bundesliga. 1890 to 1963. German championship, Gauliga, Oberliga. Numbers, pictures, stories. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-85-1 .
  • Ulrich Homann (Ed.): Farmer's heads, miners and a pascha. The history of the Regionalliga West 1963–1974. Volume 1, Klartext, Essen 1991, ISBN 3-88474-345-7 .
  • Kicker-Almanach 2004, Copress, Munich 2003 ISBN 3-7679-0803-4 .
  • Kicker Special: 30 years of the Bundesliga and 35 years of the Bundesliga .
  • 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 .
  • Werner Skrentny (Ed.): The fear of the devil in front of the pea mountain. The history of the Oberliga Südwest 1946–1963. Klartext, Essen 1996 ISBN 3-88474-394-5 .

Web links

Individual evidence