József Nagy (football player, 1892)

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József Nagy
József Nagy.jpg
József Nagy in the 1930s
Personnel
birthday October 15, 1892
place of birth BudapestAustria-Hungary
date of death January 22, 1963
position midfield
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
Bocskay SC
1918-1921 MTK 50 (18)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1922-1924 IK Sleipner
1924 SVgg Police (Hamburg)
1924-1925 IFK Malmö
1924-1927 Sweden
1925-1927 IFK Uddevalla
1929-1932 US Pro Vercelli
1932-1933 AGC Bologna
1933-1934 CFC genoa
1934 Sweden
Lazio (youth)
1935-1942 IK Brage
1938 Sweden
1942-1943 Reymersholms IK
1943-1948 IFK Gothenburg
1948-1952 Åtvidabergs FF
1952-1954 IK Oddevold
1957-1959 Karlstad BK
1 Only league games are given.

József Nagy (born October 15, 1892 in Budapest , † January 22, 1963 there ) was a Hungarian football player and coach .

Nagy worked temporarily in Italy before moving to Sweden in the mid-1930s . As one of four Hungarian coaches alongside Lajos Czeizler , Istvan Wampetits and Kálmán Konrád , he was significantly involved in the modernization of local football.

Athletic career

After Nagy had succeeded as a player at MTK Budapest and had won four championship titles in Hungary by 1922, he started his coaching career in Sweden in the early 1920s. After initially looking after the then top club IK Sleipner , he took over the care of the Swedish national team put together by a selection committee at the 1924 Summer Olympics and won the bronze medal with the selection team. From summer 1924 he trained at IFK Malmö , then from 1925 IFK Uddevalla . In the meantime he also worked briefly in Germany .

In 1928 Nagy went to Italy and took over the coaching position with the seven-time champions US Pro Vercelli . With the club he qualified in 1929 with the introduction of Serie A , but there the team ranked only in the middle of the table. In 1932 he moved within the league to runner-up AGC Bologna , but the club replaced him with the Brazilian Achille Gama during the season . For the new season, the then record champions CFC Genoa signed him , with whom he was relegated from Serie A at the end of the season.

As a coach working in Italy, Svenska Fotbollförbundet brought him back to the national team in the summer of 1934, and at the World Cup finals in 1934 , he looked after the team again. He then returned to Sweden as a club coach and took over the coaching position at IK Brage , which he led to Allsvenskan in 1937 . At the World Cup finals in 1938 , he again looked after the Swedish team, while he was relegated with the club in 1941. In 1942 he went to Gothenburg, where he first trained Reymersholms IK and then IFK Göteborg . In 1948 he moved to the second division Åtvidabergs FF , with whom he rose to the Allsvenskan, but resigned after the direct relegation. This was followed by engagements in the lower-class Swedish league area at IK Oddevold and Karlstad BK .

References

Web links

Commons : József Nagy  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Dizionario illustrato dei giocatori genoani , p. 270
  2. ^ "During his vacation, the Hamburg Police Sports Association procured its services", in: Die Bühne (Vienna), issue 23/1925, page 55 (apparently referring to the year before).