Karl Schlösser (soccer player)

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Karl Schlösser (born January 29, 1912 - January 1, 1982 ) was a German soccer player .

Career

societies

Schlösser belonged to the Dresdner SC from 1929 to 1939 , for which he was initially active in the Association of Central German Ball Game Clubs until the end of the 1932/33 season in the regional Gauliga East Saxony. As the winner of this Gauliga in 1930 , he and his team also took part in the championship finals, which ended with the final of the Central German Championship . Against VfB Leipzig , winners of the Gau Nordwestsachsen , it was won 2-1 on May 4, 1930.

The Gauliga Ostsachsen was then won three times in a row and reached the final three times. On March 29, 1931 , SV Preußen Langensalza (Winner Gau Wartburg ) was beaten 6-0, on April 17, 1932 they were defeated by Chemnitz PSV (Winner Gau Central Saxony ), which was, however, to the day, a year later with 3 : 1 defeated.

In the Gauliga Sachsen , as one of 16 Gauligen at the time of National Socialism as the highest German league in the German Reich , he won it with the Dresdner SC at the end of the first season in 1934 and in his last season for the Dresdeners in 1939 . Later he was still active for the Planitzer SC .

Due to the successes, he also took part in the final round of the German championship in the respective years. After he and his team initially reached the semi- finals, he and his team fell out in the quarter-finals and the last sixteen , as well as after the group stage . In the Tschammer Cup he was only used on December 5, 1937 in the 2: 5 defeat in the semifinals against Fortuna Düsseldorf and on October 9, 1938 in the 0: 3 defeat in the second round against TSV 1860 Munich .

National team

His only international match for the senior national team , he played on April 26, 1931 in Amsterdam against the national team of the Netherlands ; with the score of 1: 1, it was he who made the draw with his goal in the 49th minute.

successes

Others

After the end of the Second World War , he coached the Union Ohligs and, from 1952 to 1954, the Lower Saxony amateur top division club VfB Oldenburg .

Web links

literature

  • Hardy Grüne , Lorenz Knieriem: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 8: Player Lexicon 1890–1963. Agon-Sportverlag, Kassel 2006, ISBN 3-89784-148-7 .