Horst pity

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Horst Schade (born July 10, 1922 in Döbeln , † February 28, 1968 in Bayreuth ) was a German football player . From 1947 to 1956, the center forward scored 156 goals in 208 league games in what was then the first-class soccer Oberliga Süd for the clubs SpVgg Fürth and 1. FC Nürnberg. From 1951 to 1953 he was in the German national soccer team under national coach Sepp Herberger three times and scored a goal.

career

societies

Horst Schade came via the Döbelner SC station , whom he had shot into the Gauliga Sachsen in May 1941 in a lightning action to the Dresdner SC , and already ran on May 25, 1941 in the final round of the German football championship for the champions from Saxony in the 2nd Decision game of the group winners against VR Gleiwitz. In the 3-0 away win, he immediately scored two goals. On June 8th, he was unable to prevent the 2-1 defeat against SK Rapid Wien in the semi-finals in Beuthen on the side of Helmut Schön . In the Gauligarunde 1941/42 he scored 18 goals in 18 missions, but as a soldier in the Air Force could no longer participate in other final round games. In October 1944, Schade appeared briefly as a guest player at Union Oberschöneweide . He was taken prisoner by the Soviets, from which he returned at the end of 1945. After a brief stint at SG Döbeln and activity at FC Maxhütte-Haidhof until December 1946, he joined SpVgg Fürth in the Oberliga Süd in January 1948 . There the striker developed into a goal guarantor. In the second half of the "Mammut Round" in 1947/48 with a total of 38 game days in a season of 20, with his 18 goals in 18 games, he could not prevent the traditional club from relegating the traditional club from Fürth, but the Ronhof-Elf had immediately with the Saxony has an outstanding goal scorer in their ranks. In the first year of the Bayernliga, 1948/49, he finished second with 50:10 points with the “clover elf” behind master SSV Jahn Regensburg. In 30 league games, the game association had scored 113 goals, center forward Schade alone 57 goals. In the subsequent six promotion games to the Oberliga Süd against Kassel 03, 1. FC Pforzheim and FV Zuffenhausen, he was successful again 15 times.

In 1950 he was the top scorer of the Oberliga Süd with 21 goals in front of his club mate Otto Brenzke (20 goals) and moved into the finals of the German championship as a South German champion with the Fürth team . There the game association with coach Helmut Schneider was only defeated in the semifinals against VfB Stuttgart . Also in the competition of the regional cup 1949/50 he was in the victorious team of Bavaria - final on March 19, 1950 in front of 89,000 spectators in Stuttgart against the Palatinate - the outstanding scorer. In four games he scored seven goals, including the two to win the 2-0 final. With 27 hits, he increased his hit rate in the 1950/51 season , but Max Morlock won not only the southern championship but also the top scorer in the south with 28 hits. In the league season 1952/53 he was again top scorer with 22 hits. Fürth missed the finals as third. In his five league years with SpVgg Fürth, Schade scored 104 goals in 129 games. In 1950 and 1951, he showed his class and goal danger in two finals for the German championship. Schade scored five goals for Fürth in a total of nine games. On May 20, 1951, he distinguished himself as a three-time goalscorer in a 4-1 win against FC St. Pauli. Walter Dzur was the center runner of the Millerntor team's defense chief.

In 1953, Schade moved to arch rivals 1. FC Nürnberg , which shocked the people in charge of Fürth so much that a clause was built into the transfer contract stating that no player transfers between the two clubs could take place in the following five years. From 1953 to 1956, the goalscorer scored 52 goals for the "Club" in 79 league games; in the 1953/54 season he was again top scorer with 22 goals in the Oberliga Süd. Schade is described as an extremely tricky, technically adept and, last but not least, impressively powerful center forward who literally aimed at the opponent's goal from all positions and was also considered a proven free-kick expert.

In 1956, Schade left Nuremberg to work as a player-coach at 1. FC Bayreuth . In the 1957/58 season he led the black and white to rise to the Bayern League. For the newly promoted he scored 28 goals in 1958/59 and was runner-up. He also worked as a trainer between 1959 and 1961 at his old place of work at SpVgg Fürth, in the football league south.

Selection games and national team

Schade first ran on October 2, 1949 in Munich in front of 40,000 spectators in a representative game between southern Germany and northern Germany in the Oberliga era. He played alongside Hans Pöschl , Brenzke, Ludwig Janda and Karl Barufka in the South German selection as a center forward and scored both goals in a 2-2 draw. From November 14th to 19th, 1949, he took part in the first post-war course at the sports school in Duisburg under Sepp Herberger . Strikers such as Alfred Preißler , Alfred Kelbassa , Fritz Walter , Ottmar Walter , Hans Schäfer , Max Morlock , Pöschl, Felix Gerritzen , Barufka, Rolf Blessing , Rudolf de la Vigne and Bernhard Klodt were put under the microscope by Herberger. On November 12, 1950 he was in the South German selection in the game against West Germany (5: 4). He was part of the squad for the first post-war international match on November 22nd in Stuttgart against Switzerland; He was not used, Ottmar Walter played in his position. On March 18, 1951, he won with the South in Duisburg against West Germany with 4-0 goals; He took part in a national team course in Duisburg from April 2 to 6, during which an unofficial international match against Saarland was played in Essen on April 4. The DFB selection attacked with Gerritzen, Josef Röhrig, Schade, Fritz Walter and Schäfer and won 7-1 goals. Schade scored two goals. On April 15, 1951, he came in the international match against Switzerland in Zurich in the 70th minute as a substitute for Klodt to his debut in the national team. Two months later, on June 17 in Berlin, he played for the second time in the German national soccer team as an active member of SpVgg Fürth in the game against Turkey . Although these were only the second and third international matches for the German national team after the Second World War , Schade couldn't get past Ottmar Walter in the following period. On October 11, 1953, he experienced his third and last international match. It was the World Cup qualifier in Stuttgart against Saarland . The German attack took place without the Walter brothers in the line-up with Helmut Rahn , Morlock, Schade, Karl-Heinz Metzner and Schäfer. In the 71st minute of the game, Schade scored the goal to make it 3-0.

At the beginning of May 1954 he was reported to FIFA by the DFB in the 40-man squad. Ottmar Walter, Ulrich Biesinger , Johann Zeitler and Oswald Traub were also part of the squad as center-forward rivals . Only Walter and Biesinger went to the soccer world championship in Switzerland ; Schade's failure to nominate was controversial.

Horst Schade died of a heart attack at the age of 45 .

literature

  • 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 .
  • Jürgen Bitter : Germany's national soccer player: the lexicon . SVB Sportverlag, Berlin 1997, ISBN 3-328-00749-0 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Tragmann, Harald / Voss, Harald: Das Hertha-Kompendium, Berlin 2002, p. 195, ISBN 3-935759-05-3
  2. Bavarian Football Association (Ed.): 50 Years of the Bavarian Football Association. Vindelica publishing house. Gersthofen 1996. p. 205.
  3. 11 Journal for International Football History and Statistics. Special edition about German football. No. AS 151–154.
  4. Lorenz Knieriem, Hardy Grüne : Spiellexikon 1890 - 1963 . In: Encyclopedia of German League Football . tape 8 . AGON, Kassel 2006, ISBN 3-89784-148-7 , p. 328 .

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