Ludwig Janda

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Ludwig Janda (born January 13, 1919 in Fürth ; † August 22, 1981 in Aschaffenburg ) was a German football player and coach . With TSV 1860 Munich he became German cup winner in 1942. In 1956 he was able to repeat this success as coach of Karlsruher SC and thus became the first to win the German Cup both as a player and as a coach. In 1949, when he switched to AC Florence, he became the first German "Italian professional".

Player career

Janda joined SpVgg Fürth in 1928 and made his debut in the first team in 1936 at the age of 17. Until 1938 he played for the Fürth in the Gauliga Bayern .

From 1938 he was with TSV 1860 Munich , although in the course of the war he was in the meantime for the Air Force Sports Club Hamburg and the Air Force Sports Club Kaufbeuren. With the Munich team he won the German Cup in 1942 in the competition for what was then known as the Tschammer Cup . with the Hamburg air force team he reached the cup final again in 1943 and the final of the German championship in 1944 . The LSV lost the encounters with 2: 3 after extra time against Vienna's First Vienna FC , or with 0: 4 against Dresdner SC .

After the end of the war , Janda scored 41 goals in 116 league games for TSV 1860 . With the lions he took ninth, fourth, two and four more places. His brothers Albert (three league games for 1860, 1945/46, a total of 59 with 22 goals) and Karl (39 games for 1860 between 1945 and 1947) played for TSV 1860 during this time. In the 1947/48 season, Janda qualified with the lion as runner-up in the Oberliga Süd for the final round of the German championship. But here it was in the quarter-finals after a 1: 5 against 1. FC Kaiserslautern in Worms. At that time, Janda, like the then Wuppertal player Alfred Beck , tried in the second half of the 1950s, albeit in vain, to found a union for contract players.

In November 1949, Ludwig Janda was the first German football player to move to Italy for a transfer of 30,000 or even 50,000 Deutsche Mark , where he signed a well-paid contract with the ACF Florence - according to reports, he was supposed to earn 80,000 lire a month at the time, plus a bonus got more money than he could have made in a whole month as a contract player in Germany (that was 320 DM). With Fiorentina twice he was fifth in the Serie A .

From 1951 to 1954 the striker played for AC Novara . With the club from the northern Italian region of Piedmont , he was eighth, 13th and 14th.

Despite his talent, he was never called up to the German national soccer team: At first the war prevented an international career , later he had no chance at Sepp Herberger due to the continuation of his career abroad .

Trainer

After completing his playing career, he returned to Germany, completed the football teacher training and trained until the early 1960s

With Karlsruher SC, he won the DFB Cup in 1956 with a 4-1 victory in the final over Hamburger SV and thus became the first to win the German cup competition both as a player and as a coach.

societies

  • SpVgg Fürth (1928 – March 1938)
  • TSV 1860 Munich (May 1938–1943 and 1945 – October 1949)
  • Luftwaffe SV Hamburg (September 1943 – September 1944)
  • Luftwaffen-SV Kaufbeuren (September 1944–1945)
  • AC Florence (November 1949–1951)
  • AC Novara (1951–1954)

literature

  • Hardy Greens : Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 1: From the Crown Prince to the Bundesliga. 1890 to 1963. German championship, Gauliga, Oberliga. Numbers, pictures, stories. AGON-Sportverlag, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-85-1 .
  • 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 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Football: New Colleagues , Der Spiegel , October 16, 1963