Max Schwarze (soccer player)

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Max Schwarze (born May 19, 1885 in Karlsruhe , † April 5, 1951 in Goch ) was a German football player.

Career

Max Richard Paul Black was one of the Karlsruher FV on, for which he as 19-year-old midfielder in the South German association football clubs discharged Championships first in Gau Mittelbaden , from season 1908/09 in power dense and not in districts divided Südkreis until end of season In 1913/14 , apart from his two-month stint for Frankfurter FV , played point games.

At the end of his first season in the senior division, he won the championship in Gau Mittelbaden, which was to be followed by two more in the two following seasons, the southern district championship and the southern German championship. With this success he was qualified with the team for the final round of the German championship. After serving as part of the team the discharged in Hanau on May 28, 1905 quarter-final against Duisburg SpV with 1: won 0, he reached via walkover in the semifinals, the scheduled in Cologne on June 11, 1905 final - that against the BTuFC Union Was lost 2-0 in 1892 .

Five years later he was able to expand his collection of titles with the team: he won the South District Championship and the South German Championship three times in a row. His greatest success, however, winning the German championship in 1910. When it was South German master he was qualified for the final round and played in all three games, including the May 15, 1910 in Cologne against Holstein Kiel with 1: 0 aet. Gained Finale. In the seasons 1911/12 and 1912/13 he was not used in the finals.

successes

Others

Working as a graduate engineer in Frankfurt am Main, he played from March to May 1913 for the Frankfurt FV in the north district. Since the Frankfurter FV won the North District Championship at the end of the season, a share of it can be attributed to him.

With his wife Emilie (née Egetmeyer), whom he married in 1916, he later moved to Grevenbroich , in the triangle between Düsseldorf - Cologne - Mönchengladbach . On April 5, 1951 - six months after the death of his wife - he succumbed to a cerebral hemorrhage in the Wilhelm-Anton-Hospital Goch near Kleve in the Lower Rhine region after a serious car accident . He found his final resting place in Grevenbroich.

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