Jakob Streitle

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Jakob Streitle
Personnel
birthday December 11, 1916
place of birth UlmGerman Empire
date of death June 24, 1982
position Defense
Juniors
Years station
... –1933 FC Wacker Munich
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1935-1955 FC Bayern Munich
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1938-1952 Germany 15 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1954-1955 Bayer. Football Association (youth coach)
1955-1960 Bayer. Football Association (Association Coach)
1960-1961 TSV 1861 Straubing
1 Only league games are given.

Jakob Streitle (born December 11, 1916 in Ulm ; † June 24, 1982 ) was a German football player . From 1938 to 1952 he was used 15 times for the senior national team.

Player career

societies

Streitle, who comes from Oberhausen near Ulm , made his first footballing experience at FC Wacker in Munich. At the age of sixteen he moved to FC Bayern where he made his debut in the first team in 1935. At the side of the teammates Josef Bergmaier , Ludwig Goldbrunner , Konrad Heidkamp , Franz Krumm and Wilhelm Simetsreiter , he took third place with the “Reds” in the Gauliga Bayern in 1936 and 1937, respectively. With his club, he was unable to change the supremacy of the rivals from 1. FC Nuremberg , SpVgg Fürth , 1. FC Schweinfurt 05 and 1860 Munich in the following years . Only in the last round of the war - the Bayern League was now divided - he came back up in the table with FC Bayern. In the 1943/44 season - ex-national player Konrad Heidkamp held the position of player-coach - he won the championship with his club in southern Bavaria before KSG BC / Post Augsburg and 1860 Munich and was thus qualified for the final round of the German championship . On April 16, 1944, however, Munich lost the first game in the final with 1: 2 goals after extra time in the Electoral Palatinate against VfR Mannheim . During the Second World War , Streitle was a guest player in Düren for a while. He played at SC Borussia 1912 Freialdenhoven .

From the resumption of play after the end of the World War, the technically adept and extremely strong defensive player was again part of the Bayern Munich squad in the Oberliga Süd . He achieved the best placement together with his teammates Hans Hädelt and Herbert Moll in the 1948/49 round when he and FC Bayern were able to take third place behind Meister Kickers Offenbach and Vice VfR Mannheim. This meant that Munich was entitled to play a qualifying game to move into the finals for the German championship against FC St. Pauli . The first game against the representative of the northern league ended on June 5, 1949 in Hanover with 1: 1 goals after extra time. The next day, St. Pauli prevailed in the replay with a 2-0 win against FC Bayern. Streitle was on the defensive of the southern representative in both games. In the league he had completed all 30 league games and was thus also a member of the winning team on January 9, 1949, which with a 7-0 victory could inflict a significant defeat on the later South German runners-up and German champions VfR Mannheim in Munich.

To the DFB organized in the season 1949/50 countries Cup, the cup competition for representative teams of national associations - on the first and last times contract players were eligible to play - he won the selection Bavaria on March 19, 1950 before 89,000 spectators in Stuttgart against the selection Palatinate with 2-0.

Jakl Streitle ended his playing career at the end of the 1953/54 season in which he was only able to play four league games due to injury. On May 9, 1954, he was formally bid farewell with a farewell game against Manchester City with the German goalkeeper Bernd Trautmann as captain, which ended 3: 3 on Grünwalder Strasse in front of 33,000 spectators. The photo on which he exchanged pennants with Trautmann is probably the oldest in circulation with the almost current Bavarian coat of arms in action.

National team

The 21-year-old defender of FC Bayern Munich, "Jakl" Streitle was the first time for the international match on May 14, 1938 in Berlin against England in the squad of the German national football team. Coach Sepp Herberger played the international game with the final triangle Hans Jakob , Paul Janes and Reinhold Münzenberg . The day after, on May 15, Herberger tested the young man from Munich in a German selection match against the Aston Villa team . Since Streitle was able to make a lasting impression in the second test match three days later in Düsseldorf against the English professional team at the side of veteran Paul Janes, coach Herberger nominated the Munich defender without an international match for the 22 squad for the 1938 World Cup in France. In the replay on June 9th in Paris in the preliminary round of the World Cup against Switzerland , Streitle made his debut as a left defender in the senior national team instead of the Austrian Willibald Schmaus . By March 9, 1941 - the international match in Stuttgart against Switzerland - the Bayern player had played seven more international matches. In the ten international matches in the war year 1942 - with the game on November 22nd in Pressburg against Slovakia , the national team's activity ended for eight years - Streitle was no longer used due to the circumstances of the war.

Since he was one of the active players who could start playing football again in their clubs immediately after the end of the Second World War, "Jakl" Streitle was already a member of the regional selection of southern Germany in 1946, which played two games against one in March and June West selection carried out. In both encounters, he and Helmut Schneider formed the defenders of the south. Further representative games with southern Germany followed in 1948 and 1949, and after Sepp Herberger was again in office as national coach at the end of October 1949, Streitle also belonged to the first post-war course from November 14 to 19, 1949 in Duisburg to form a new national football team. Nine years after his last international match - March 9, 1941 in Stuttgart against Switzerland - he and Schalke Herbert Burdenski formed the German defenders in the first international match after World War II on November 22, 1950 in Stuttgart against Switzerland. Until the international match against Turkey in Istanbul on November 21, 1951 , the veteran was not missing in any of the first six internationals after the World War. In his 15th international cap on 4 May 1952 in Cologne against Ireland , he held the post of captain and served, assisted by the two side runners Josef Posipal and Erich Schanko , the 3: 0 victory as a center half . Since Streitle had to struggle with knee injuries from the 1952/53 season and could only play sporadically in the club, his 14-year international career was ended.

successes

Coaching career

Streitle, who passed the soccer teacher examination in 1952, was now the youth coach of the Bavarian Soccer Association .

For the time being, things went downhill with FC Bayern. The new coach Georg Knöpfle signed at the beginning of the season - later cup winner with SV Werder Bremen and first Bundesliga champion with 1. FC Köln - was dismissed after the 14th matchday just a few days before Christmas. Bayern made Bertl Moll the new coach and Streitle should, as far as his obligations at the BFV allowed him, support Bayern, who were four points behind the saving 14th place in 16th and last place before the first To preserve the descent of the club's history. By the end of January Bayern doubled their number of wins to six and tripled their draws to three by the end of the season, but things went bad and after the 32nd matchday Bayern were eleven points behind the 14th last.

Streitle himself played seven more times for Bayern. The first time was on Boxing Day 1954, when a 2-1 home win against VfB Stuttgart still conveyed hope, and also in the two other Bayern victories in January against Karlsruher SC and KSV Hessen Kassel . Furthermore, only defeats, like in the last official game of his career on February 20, 1955, when Munich got under the wheels with 1: 3 at Jahn Regensburg and had to give up all hope.

From 1945 to 1955 Jakl Streitle played 217 competitive games for Bayern Munich in the Oberliga Süd. He scored the only goal in these games on the 27th match day of the first post-war season, on May 26, 1946 when he housed a 5-1 win against BC Augsburg . The show was stolen from him by Hans Holzmüller , who met four times.

For Streitle himself, however, the year 1955 was not so bad: as the successor to Alv Riemke , who had suddenly resigned , he became the new association trainer of the BFV. With the amateur selection of the Free State he won on July 2, 1955 with a 5-2 victory over Westphalia in the Augsburger Rosenaustadion the amateur country cup of the DFB , which was the fourth title in a row for Bavaria. Streitle remained the association trainer until May 1st, 1960. His successor was Horst Falling , who was to hold the office for 25 years.

Jakl Streitle coached the second division TSV 1861 Straubing in 1960/61 , which at the end of the season was one point behind in 16th place and thus relegated to the Bavarian Amateur League after a decade in the II. Division South .

Others

Streitle first completed training as a precision mechanic, worked as a loading master and was then taken on as a youth coach - he had passed the soccer teacher examination in 1952 - in the service of the Bavarian Football Association.

After his death he was buried in the Perlacher Forst cemetery in Munich . His grave is in row 1 on field 72.

literature

  • Ludwig Hartung: acrobat in a football dress: the defender Jakob Streitle . Olympia-Verlag, Nuremberg, 1949.
  • Lorenz Knieriem, Hardy Grüne : Player Lexicon 1890 - 1963 . In: Encyclopedia of German League Football . tape 8 . AGON, Kassel 2006, ISBN 3-89784-148-7 .
  • Jürgen Bitter : Germany's national soccer player: the lexicon . SVB Sportverlag, Berlin 1997, ISBN 3-328-00749-0 .
  • Raphael Keppel : Germany's international football matches. Documentation from 1908–1989. Sport- und Spielverlag Hitzel, Hürth 1989, ISBN 3-9802172-4-8 .
  • Matthias Kropp: Germany's big soccer teams, part 4: Bayern Munich . AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1993, ISBN 3-928562-35-5 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Matthias Arnhold: Jakob Streitle - International Appearances . RSSSF.com . April 30, 2020. Accessed May 5, 2020.
  2. Homepage SC Borussia Freialdenhoven 1912 ( Memento from May 29, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
  3. ^ Dietrich Schulze-Marmeling: The Bavarians. The history of the record champions. Publishing house Die Werkstatt. Göttingen 2007. ISBN 978-3-89533-534-1 . P. 115.