Ludwig Leinberger
Ludwig Leinberger | ||
2nd from left before the international match against Italy in 1929
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Personnel | ||
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birthday | May 21, 1903 | |
place of birth | Nuremberg , German Empire | |
date of death | March 3, 1943 | |
Place of death | Bad Pyrmont , German Empire | |
position | midfield | |
Juniors | ||
Years | station | |
1912-1920 | TV 1846 Nuremberg | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
1920-1924 | FC Bayern 07 Nuremberg | |
1924 | BSV Solingen 98 | |
1925-1933 | SpVgg Fürth | |
1933-1936 | Cologne CfR | |
National team | ||
Years | selection | Games (goals) |
1928-1934 | Germany | 24 (0) |
1 Only league games are given. |
Ludwig Leinberger (born May 21, 1903 in Nuremberg ; † March 3, 1943 in Bad Pyrmont ), also called "Haberer", was a German football player.
Career
societies
Leinberger started playing soccer at TV 1846 Nuremberg at the age of nine and switched to FC Bayern 07 Nuremberg at the age of 17. After four seasons and a short guest appearance for BSV Solingen 98 , he came to SpVgg Fürth .
From February 1925 to the end of the 1932/33 season , he played point games for this in the championships organized by the South German Football Association in one of the regional highest divisions, the Bavarian regional league .
During his club membership he won the North Bavarian and once the South German championship twice. For SpVgg Fürth, he played a total of 15 final rounds of the German championship and won it twice in five seasons. If on June 13, 1926 he was not part of the final team, which won 4-1 against Hertha BSC in Frankfurt am Main , then on July 28, 1929 in Nuremberg in a 3-2 victory over the 1926 finalists.
He let his active football career come to an end at the Cologne CfR , for which he played point games from 1933 to 1936 in the Gauliga Mittelrhein , in one of initially 16, later increased to 23 Gauligen at the time of National Socialism as the uniform top division in the German Reich .
The iron-hard, tough and sometimes dogged Leinberger, who was able to shoot very good but hard flanks, died seven years after completing his football career from the consequences of a ruptured appendix
National team
Leinberger played 24 internationals - eleven times as team captain - for the senior national team , for which he made his debut on October 2, 1927 in Copenhagen in the 1: 3 defeat against the national team of Denmark . His last game as a national player he played on New Year's Day 1933 in Bologna in the 1: 3 defeat against the Italian national team .
He also took part in the Olympic football tournament held in Amsterdam from May 27 to June 13, 1928, winning the 4-0 round of 16 over the Swiss national team on May 28 and the 1: 4 quarter-finals on June 3 -Defeat against the Uruguayan national team.
successes
- German champion 1926 , 1929
- Gaumeister Mittelrhein 1936
- South German champion 1931
- North Bavarian Master 1930 , 1931
- South German Cup winner 1925, 1926, 1927
Others
During the competition for the Reichsbundpokal 1935/36 , he was in charge of the Saxony regional selection team , which he led to the finals and won the cup in the replay, which was clearly won 9-0 against the Southwest regional selection team.
Web links
- Ludwig Leinberger in the database of weltfussball.de
- Ludwig Leinberger on dfb .de
- Ludwig Leinberger on kleeblatt-chronik.de
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Leinberger, Ludwig |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German soccer player |
DATE OF BIRTH | May 21, 1903 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Nuremberg |
DATE OF DEATH | March 3, 1943 |
Place of death | Bad Pyrmont |