Ludwig Lachner

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Ludwig Lachner (born July 27, 1910 - † May 19, 2003 ) was a German football player and coach .

Player career

societies

Lachner initially played for the FT Gern in the Arbeiter-Turn- und Sportbund , the sports association of the workers' movement . For the 1929/30 season he was obliged by SV 1860 Munich , for which he initially played until the end of the 1932/33 season in the championships organized by the South German Football Association in the Bavarian regional league . As a runner-up in the Südbayern group in 1930/31 , he took part with the team in the Southeast group as one of two groups in the final round of the South German Championship and emerged as the winner. After the playoff for third participants for the final round of the German Cup against FC Phönix Ludwigshafen final replay with 2: was obtained 1 - the first encounter took place at 3: 3 n. V. no winner - he was a finalist qualifies . After the successful games in the eighth, quarter and semi-finals, in which he participated, he also played in the final , which was lost to Hertha BSC on June 14, 1931 in Cologne 2: 3 , although he scored his team had taken the lead 2-1 at halftime.

After he and his team had finished the South Bavaria group again in second place behind FC Bayern Munich in the 1932/33 season , he again won the group East / West as one of two groups in the final round of the South German Championship, but lost the final 0: 1 against FSV Frankfurt , the winner of the group north / south.

His last season for the "Löwen" he played in 1933/34 in the Gauliga Bayern in one of 16, later increased to 23 Gauligen at the time of National Socialism as the uniform top division in the German Reich .

Relocated to Braunschweig for professional reasons (the new club had proven him a job), Lachner and three other newcomers initially received no approval for the local SV Eintracht in the Lower Saxony Gauliga due to "game training" . After an acquittal by the responsible sports court, "Pipin" ran for Eintracht from November 1934 to 1942 , as well as from 1942 to 1944 in the southern Hanover-Braunschweig district . He remained loyal to the club, for which he also played seven games for the Tschammerpokal from 1935 to 1941 , until the 1948/49 season and played in the Oberliga Nord , which was newly founded in 1947/48 , which is one of five leagues as the top division Germany was. After that he worked for a while as a player coach at MTV Braunschweig .

Selection / national team

Lachner played eight international matches for the senior national team from 1930 to 1934 and scored four goals. He crowned his debut on September 28 in Dresden in a 5-3 victory over the Hungarian national team with his first goal, the goal to make it 4-3 in the 78th minute. In his last international match on January 14, 1934, the opponent was Hungary and in this he also scored a goal and thus contributed to the 3-1 victory.

Although he was part of the 38-player expanded squad for the 1934 World Cup , he was not considered by Reich trainer Otto Nerz for the final squad.

In addition, during his time at SV 1860 Munich he was a six-time player in the selection team of the South German Football Association, and during his time at SV Eintracht Braunschweig a one-time player in the selection team of the former North German Football Association , which was dissolved at the time . He was used 35 times in the Lower Saxony selection team.

successes

Coaching career

Lachner, by profession a bank clerk, coached by 1959 bis 1963 the VfV Hildesheim in the first class and 1963 bis 1966 to VfL Wolfsburg in the now second-class Regionalliga Nord . After the contract expired, he returned to Munich.

Others

  • Because of his small size, he was nicknamed "Pipin" by Max Breunig , coach of SV 1860 Munich .
  • Jürgen Lachner, his son, played under him during his time as a coach at VfL Wolfsburg in the Regionalliga Nord.

Web links

Single references

  1. ↑ Association news Eintracht Braunschweig, born 1934