Josef Schümmelfelder

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Josef Schümmelfelder (born October 31, 1891 in Bonn ; † February 12, 1966 ), also called "Phöbus", was a German football player and coach .

Career

societies

Schümmelfelder belonged exclusively to the Bonn FV from 1909 to 1925 , for which he was a midfielder in the championships organized by the West German Game Association , initially from the 1909/10 season in an association league consisting of ten teams, and from the 1913/14 season in the southern district of the Rhine and from the 1921/22 season played point games in the Rheingau . The best placement he achieved with his team in the regional championships was second place in 1913/14 and 1924/25 .

He and his teammates still acted in the so-called "offensive system", which lasted almost until 1930, with the "offensive middle runner ", as he did in Bonn, playing the decisive role as mediator between attack and defense.

The outstanding team-mate of the black and whites from the sports field on Richard-Wagner-Strasse was national player Theo Koenen ; he was a playmaker who brought the teammates into play with soulful passes and precise passes.

Selection / national team

Schümmelfelder was a player in the selection team of the West German Game Association in games for the Kronprinzenpokal , the first cup competition for selection teams of the regional associations. On June 8, 1913, he won the final held in Berlin with the selection team against the selection team of the Association of Brandenburg Ball Game Clubs 5: 3.

On January 25, 1920 he reached with the national team that in Cologne discharged semi-final to the Federal Cup as the trophy after the First World War has now been called to his team against the national team of the North German Football Association won. On June 20, his team won the final held in Hanover - but without him in the line-up - 1-0 a.d. against the team of the Association of Central German Ball Game Clubs . On March 20, 1921, however, he was part of the starting eleven, who lost the final against last year's finalists 4-0 in Leipzig ; this prevented the title defense of the selection team of West Germany.

For the senior national team he played five internationals , where he made his debut on October 21, 1913 in Hamburg in the 1: 4 defeat against the national team of Denmark and formed the runner row with Eugen Kipp and Max Breunig as a left wing runner . A month later, on November 23, the same row of runners was used again in Antwerp against the Belgian national team and lost again - this time with 2: 6. In his third assignment for the DFB, on April 5, 1914 in Amsterdam , a 4: 4 draw against the national team of the Netherlands succeeded . It was the 30th and last international match before the First World War that resulted in an international break until June 27, 1920. Seven years after his last international match, Schümmelfelder came back to play on May 5, 1921 in Dresden , in a 3-3 draw against the Austrian national team. His last game as a national player he completed on June 5, 1921 in Budapest in the 3-0 defeat against the national team of Hungary .

successes

Others

Schümmelfelder, a businessman by profession and one of the few national players who played before and after the First World War, worked as a coach after his football career, including at SV Beuel 06 .

Web links

literature