Max Gablonsky

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Max Gablonsky
FC Bayern Munich East District Champion 1910.jpg
Max Gablonsky (3rd from left)
with the FC Bayern Munich team
for the 1909/10 season
Personnel
birthday January 1, 1890
place of birth The German Imperium
date of death July 16, 1969
Place of death Germany
position Storm
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1909-1922 FC Bayern Munich
1922-1924 Duisburg SpV
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1910-1911 Germany 4 (1)
1 Only league games are given.

Max Gablonsky (born January 1, 1890 - † July 16, 1969 ), also known as "Gaberl", was a German football player and athlete .

Career

societies

At the age of 19 Gablonsky joined FC Bayern Munich and took the position of right winger ; his speed made him an outstanding striker . At the end of his first season he won both the Bavarian and the South Bavarian championship with the team in 1910 and took second place behind the Karlsruher FV in the final round of the South German championship . In his second season he repeated both successes from the previous year with the team . In addition, he belonged to the association selection of southern Germany , which on November 13, 1910 defeated the association selection of Berlin 3-1 in the semifinals of the Crown Prince's Cup. However , Karl Wegele from Karlsruhe , in which he had a major competitor, played in the final , which was lost 2: 4 by n. V. against the association selection of Northern Germany .

After his active time at FC Bayern Munich, for which he was active as a right-winger over 500 times until 1922, he settled in Duisburg as a senior building officer and ended his active football career after two seasons for Duisburg SpV in 1924.

National team

On May 16, 1910, the senior national team lost 3-0 in Duisburg against Belgium . With his debut in this comparison, Gablonsky became the first national player of FC Bayern Munich and, along with center forward Fritz Fürst and goalkeeper Ludwig Hofmeister, one of three of the club before the First World War .

The organizational deficiencies in the run-up to the international match - the day before the final of the German championship between Karlsruhe FV and Holstein Kiel had taken place in Cologne - such as lack of time to prepare, lack of DFB officials, missing players from the final teams and the arrival of only seven Players in Duisburg one hour before the start of the game - meant that the Belgian players won the match against the “national team filled with spectators” ( Alfred Berghausen , Andreas Breynk , Lothar Budzinski-Kreth and Christian Schilling ) with 3-0 goals. For the first three, it was the only international match they played.

On March 26, 1911, Gablonsky played his second international match in Stuttgart . In the 6-2 victory over Switzerland , he scored his only international goal as right winger alongside Fritz Förderer , Gottfried Fuchs and Eugen Kipp with the goal in the 90th minute, which was erroneously included in the DFB statistics until 2011 Gottfried Fuchs was attributed. It was only on the initiative of his son Hans Georg († January 25, 2018) and that of FC Bayern Munich that the German Football Association changed in September 2011 - after 100 years! - the statistics. He is not only the first FC Bayern Munich player to receive international honors, but also the first to score an international goal.

On October 9, 1911, in the 1: 2 defeat by Austria in Dresden , and on October 29, 1911, in the 1: 3 defeat by Sweden in Hamburg , he played his last two international matches for the DFB .

Others

As an outstanding athlete, he was part of the squad of the German 4 x 100 meter relay , which was intended for the competition at the Olympic Games in Stockholm in 1912 ; but his studies at the technical university forced him to give up the participation.

On the occasion of the 25th anniversary of FC Bayern Munich, Gablonsky was honored with the silver jubilee badge.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Raphael Keppel, Germany's international football games, p. 16.
  2. Gablonsky's only international goal on dfb.de.
  3. Mourning for Hans Georg Gablonsky on fcbayern.com
  4. 100 years until justice on world .com of 14 October 2011th
  5. Gablonsky's tribute on successfans.com.

literature