Kurt Haseneder

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kurt Haseneder , called "Hasi" or "Muckl" (born April 22, 1942 in Nuremberg ) is a former German football player who won the German football championship with 1. FC Nuremberg in 1961 .

Career

1. FC Nuremberg, 1954–1963

Kurt Haseneder began his career at 1. FC Nürnberg in 1954 in the C-Jugend. With the later Bundesliga professionals Horst Leupold and Stefan Reisch, he also went through the B and A youth at the “Club”. In April 1960 he represented the colors of the DFB in the UEFA youth tournament in Austria. In 1960 he was used five times in the DFB-A-Jugend. In the Olympic summer of 1960 he was taken over into the contract team of the Oberliga Süd . The new coach Herbert Widmayer gave the talent, who could be used in all positions in the storm, on September 4, 1960, the first chance in the Oberliga Süd. Haseneder's debut ended with an 8-0 home win against FC Bayern Hof . He scored his first goal on October 30 at Bayern Munich to make it 3-0 for Nuremberg. In 1961, the "Club" won the title in the south with a seven point lead over Eintracht Frankfurt . Haseneder was involved with nine games and three goals. In the group matches of the final round of the German soccer championship, he played twice against Hertha BSC . Coach Widmayer nominated the attacking talent for the final on June 24, 1961 in Hanover against Borussia Dortmund as left winger. The 19-year-old had to deal with the 29-year-old right defender Wilhelm Burgsmüller from Dortmund. Already in the 6th minute of the game he brought the "club" with a spectacular diving header 1-0. In his first season with the seniors, he celebrated winning the title in the Oberliga Süd and the German championship. In 1962 the title was defended in the south. Haseneder came to 11 games and five goals in the 1961/62 season. He was not used in the 1962 finals, nor in the final against 1. FC Köln . In the third year, however, he made his final breakthrough. In 23 games he scored 24 goals and was together with Rudi Brunnenmeier from the TSV 1860 Munich championship top scorer in the Oberliga Süd. Due to the soccer World Cup in Chile in 1962 , the DFB Cup final did not take place in Hanover until August 29, 1962. The first two game days of the 1962/63 season had already taken place in the Oberliga Süd. Haseneder scored in both matches and therefore also played in the final against Fortuna Düsseldorf . He managed the 1-1 equalizer in the 71st minute of the game. In extra time, the "Club" beat the Rhinelander 2-1. As early as October and November 1962 he gained international experience in the European Cup winners' cup at the games against AS Saint-Étienne . He scored the 2-0 lead in a 3-0 home win. With the runner-up in 1963 behind 1860 Munich, the "club" moved back into the finals. On June 15, 1963, the striker contributed two hits to the 5-0 home win against Hertha BSC. However, 1. FC Köln prevented their return to the final. Due to his sensational move to Schwaben Augsburg shortly before the start of the new Bundesliga , where he simply disappeared from training camp, the match against Hertha BSC in the 1963 finals was his last game for 1. FC Nürnberg. From then on he played in the Regionalliga Süd . From 1960 to 1963 he played 43 league games and scored 33 goals. He was twice South German champion, once German champion, DFB Cup winner and top scorer in the south. At the age of 21, he said goodbye to second-class sport.

Swabia Augsburg, 1963–1969

On August 4, 1963, Haseneder made his debut in the dress of Schwaben Augsburg in the Regionalliga Süd in the 0-0 draw against the Stuttgarter Kickers in the Rosenau Stadium at home. In the Stuttgart team, Pál Csernai acted as the left runner , who would later come to championship honors as coach of FC Bayern Munich. From 1963 to 1969, Kurt Haseneder played 175 games with 99 goals in the Regionalliga Süd. He was most accurate in the 1966/67 round with 28 goals. In the 1965/66 season he stormed for KSV Hessen Kassel . After the relegation of Swabian Augsburg in the 1968/69 season, Haseneder's career in national football was over. Highlights of his time in Swabia were the game on December 27, 1964 for the South German Cup in Augsburg against Bayern Munich. As a center forward, he scored four times in Sepp Maier's goal in the 7-3 win against Munich with Franz Beckenbauer as center runner in the World Cup system that was still being played at the time . Also the “World Cup Willi” of the 1966 World Cup, Willi Schulz , got to know the gifted instinct scorer Kurt Haseneder from his best side. In the first round of the cup on January 16, 1965, "Hasi" scored four goals against the hard-core Schalke defensive specialists in the 5-7 defeat after Schwaben Augsburg was overtaken by FC Schalke 04 .

Finale

From 1969 on, Haseneder put on the jersey of the new FC Augsburg in the Bayern League, which had just emerged from the merger between TSV Schwaben and BC Augsburg. The striker played his last of a total of 30 league games (21 goals) for FCA on September 27, 1970 in the 0-1 home defeat against the amateurs of 1. FC Nürnberg. Haseneder then ran up to 1982 in the amateur camp for TSV Neusäß in the A-class. Most recently he was a municipal employee. He no longer owned the lottery lottery acceptance point that had prompted him to leave Nuremberg in 1963.

swell

  • Werner Skrentny (Ed.): Extension - the other football magazine. No. 3, AGON / Klartext, 1996. ISSN  0948-4590 .
  • Christoph Bausenwein: The legend of the club. Verlag Die Werkstatt, Göttingen 1996. ISBN 3-89533-163-5 .
  • 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 .
  • Matthias Weinrich, Hardy Greens : Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 6: German Cup history since 1935. Pictures, statistics, stories, constellations. AGON-Sportverlag, Kassel 2000, ISBN 3-89784-146-0 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Matthias Weinrich, Hardy Greens: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 6: German Cup history since 1935. Pictures, statistics, stories, constellations. P. 208.