Ludwig Goldbrunner

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Ludwig Goldbrunner
Personnel
birthday March 5, 1908
place of birth MunichGerman Empire
date of death September 26, 1981
Place of death Munich,  Germany
position Defense
Juniors
Years station
1917-1927 FC Bayern Munich
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1927-1945 FC Bayern Munich
1945-1946 TSV 1860 Munich 7 (0)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1933-1940 Germany 39 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1938-1943 FC Bayern Munich
1945-1949 TSV 1860 Munich
1949-1950 ASV Dachau
1 Only league games are given.

Ludwig Goldbrunner (born March 5, 1908 in Munich ; † September 26, 1981 ), also called "Lutte", was a German football player who had played 39 international matches for the senior national team from 1933 to 1940 .

Career

societies

Goldbrunner joined FC Bayern Munich at the age of nine and was active in the youth team for ten years before moving up to the first team in 1927 and subsequently developing into a Munich soccer idol. Already in his first season in the senior sector he won a. a. with Ludwig Hofmann , Emil Kutterer and Josef Pöttinger the South German Championship before Eintracht Frankfurt and the Spielvereinigung Fürth , after having previously become South Bavarian champion in the Bavarian district class.

As participants in the final round of the German Cup in 1928 he was with the team first against Wacker Hall and SpVgg Sülz 07 in the eighth or quarter-finals with 3: 2 successfully, but in 0 or 5 semifinals ended the Hamburger SV with Albert Beier , Otto Harder , Hans Lang and Walter Risse with a clear 8: 2 success, although it was still 1: 1 at halftime, the title dreams of coach Konrad Weisz's team .

In the 1931/32 season, now Richard Dombi exercised the coaching office at Bayern and Sigmund Haringer , Konrad Heidkamp and Oskar Rohr were among the top performers alongside Goldbrunner, winning the first German championship of FC Bayern Munich. After a semi-final victory with 2-0 goals against 1. FC Nürnberg , Munich also prevailed in the final on June 12, 1932 with the same result against the South German champions Eintracht Frankfurt . The outstanding defensive conductor with an excellent header game - Goldbrunner was perfect for the World Cup system - was unable to repeat this success in his many years of activity at FC Bayern Munich.

From 1937 to 1941 he was team captain and 1938 to 1943 he practiced at Bayern Munich the post of player-coach from. After the end of the Second World War, he worked in the same position at TSV 1860 Munich from 1945 to 1949 and played seven point games in the Oberliga Süd in the 1945/46 season for the "Lions". From 1949/50 he coached ASV Dachau , later returned to FC Bayern Munich and worked there on the game committee.

Selection / national team

With the regional selection of Bavaria , however, he won the regional selection competition for the Adolf Hitler Cup in 1933 and the Reichsbund Cup in 1940 . The final in 1939 , in which he also took part, was lost with 1: 2 goals against the district selection of Silesia. From 1933 to 1943 Goldbrunner played 16 games in the Gau competitions for Bavaria.

The tall, athletic and combative stopper made his debut on 19 November 1933, Zurich in the senior team , with 2: 0 against the selection of Switzerland won, and became the successor of Fürthers Ludwig Leinberger on. As another debutant, Ernst Lehner from Augsburg convinced on the right wing .

Goldbrunner came on January 14, 1934 in the 3-1 victory against Hungary and also took part in the World Cup course from May 7 to 19, 1934, but he was not nominated for the 1934 World Cup in Italy . Goldbrunner's third appearance in the national team wasn't until January 27, 1935 in Stuttgart, again against the Swiss team, when he was able to represent Reinhold Munzenberg from Aachen in the 4-0 success as a middle runner .

The first tournament participation with the DFB team was the Olympic soccer tournament in Berlin in 1936 for the Munich player . The immediate preparation was two test games against FC Everton in May 1936 and a three-week training course in July under the direction of Reich trainer Otto Nerz . The German team won the first game of the games on August 4 with 9-0 goals against the overwhelmed Luxembourg team . Three days later he was eliminated with the team with a surprising 2-0 defeat in the second round against the selection of Norway - Goldbrunner played his 15th international match - from the tournament. After the Olympic disappointment, the national team rehabilitated with a 2-2 draw on November 15, 1936 in front of 100,000 spectators in the Berlin Olympic Stadium against world and Olympic champions Italy . Goldbrunner was dealing with Silvio Piola , one of the best center forwards of this era. In his 22nd international match on April 25, 1937 in Hanover against the selection of Belgium , he formed the runner row of the national team for the first time with the two Schweinfurt outer runners Albin Kitzinger and Andreas Kupfer . With the 8-0 success on May 16, 1937 in Breslau against Denmark's undefeated selection for over a year , the myth of the " Breslau-Elf " was founded.

One month later, on June 20, 1937, Goldbrunner was appointed to the selection of Western Europe. Otto Nerz looked after the selection in Amsterdam for the game against Central Europe. With Jakob, Goldbrunner, Kitzinger and Lehner, he used four players from the "Breslau-Elf" in the continent selection. On November 21, 1937, Germany won the World Cup qualifier against Sweden's selection in Hamburg with 5-0 goals and Helmut Schön added two goals to the "Breslau-Elf".

Goldbrunner took part on April 3, 1938 in Vienna in the " follow-up game " against the national team from Austria (now " Ostmark "); his team of the " Altreich " lost the encounter with 0-2 goals. Reich coach Sepp Herberger then had to form a joint team for the World Cup in France in June ; Ludwig Goldbrunner was among the players. In the replay on June 9th against the selection of Switzerland - it was the 32nd international match of the Munich player - Goldbrunner represented the German colors as middle runner and fought many duels with Alfred Bickel , the young attacking leader of the Confederates. The team of Karl Rappan could play with 4: 2 win gates and Goldbrunner retire from his second tournament from an early stage.

With the encounter on October 20, 1940 in Munich against the selection of Bulgaria , the captain said goodbye with a 7-3 success and his 39th international match from the national team. He was followed by Hans Rohde from Eimsbütteler TV on the center stage.

Others

After his active football career, he worked as a supervisory officer, then as a cold storage foreman of the Munich slaughterhouse and cattle yard.

Web links

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Reconciliation game in the Vienna History Wiki of the City of Vienna