Mikhail Losanov

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Mikhail Losanov
Personnel
birthday June 15, 1911
place of birth Zarnel,  Tsarist Bulgaria
date of death 3rd December 1994
Place of death PernikBulgaria
position Storm
Juniors
Years station
1920-1930 SC Krakra Pernik
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1930-1937 SK Levski Sofia 59 (39)
1935 SK Moravská Slavia Brno  
1937-1939 FC Bayern Munich 18 0(7)
1939-1941 SK Levski Sofia 20 0(4)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1931-1939 Bulgaria 38 (11)
1 Only league games are given.

Michail Losanow ( Bulgarian Михаил Лозанов ; born June 15, 1911 in Zarnel, † December 3, 1994 in Pernik ), also called "Tanka", was a Bulgarian football player .

Career

societies

Losanow began playing football at the age of nine at SC Krakra Pernik . At the age of 19, he was committed in 1930 by the first division club SK Levski Sofia , for whom he was active until 1937 (apart from the first half of the 1935/36 season , when he played for the Czechoslovak first division team SK Moravská Slavia Brno during his student days). In his first season in the senior division, he came for Levski Sofia in four point games in which he scored two goals. In the following season he was able to double both his bets and his goals. In the 1932/33 season he achieved a rate of 100%, as he scored 16 goals in 16 games. With his personal best of the season, he also contributed to his first title, the championship, which he repeated with the team at the end of the 1936/37 season, as well as the national cup success.

In 1937 he went to Germany to continue his civil engineering studies at the Technical University of Munich . From 1937 to 1939 he played alongside international greats such as Ludwig Goldbrunner , Wilhelm Simetsreiter and Jakob Streitle for FC Bayern Munich in the Gauliga Bayern , one of initially 16 and later increased to 23 Gauligen as the uniform highest division in the German Empire . In his first season he played four point games in which he scored three goals. He crowned his debut on January 30, 1938 (15th matchday) in a 4-0 victory over 1. FC Schweinfurt 05 with his first goal to make it 3-0. Furthermore, he was used in two games of the 1935 newly introduced cup competition for club teams for the Tschammer Cup . In the elimination rounds for the teams of the district and district classes, which preceded the final rounds, he made his debut on May 15, 1938 in a 4-1 victory at 1. FC Straubing and scored the goals for 2-0 and 4-0. He won his second with his team on June 16, 1938 in a 6-0 victory over FC Teutonia Munich . He also scored three goals in six friendly matches. His last of 14 league games in his last season, in which he scored four goals, he played on June 10, 1939 (18th matchday) in a 3-1 victory over BC Augsburg . With three cup games and twelve friendly matches, in which he scored eight goals, he ended his football career in Germany.

Returned to Bulgaria in 1939 , he played two seasons for his former club before ending his active football career in 1941.

National team

Lozanow played 38 international matches for the senior national team of Bulgaria , for which he scored eleven goals. He made his debut on April 19, 1931 in Belgrade in the 0-1 defeat against the national team of Yugoslavia in the competition for the first ever Balkan Cup . He scored his first international goal in his second game on May 10, 1931 in Bucharest in the 2: 5 defeat against the national team of Romania with the goal to 1: 2 in the 51st minute. He completed his last international match on October 22, 1939 in Sofia, losing 2-1 in the test international match against the national team of Germany . In his international career, he took part in the first seven competitions for the Balkan Cup, with the 2nd Balkan Cup in 1931 being an unofficial competition because it took place at the same time as the first event between October 8, 1929 and November 29, 1931. In the official competitions alone, he scored six times in 17 tournament games; He won this tournament twice with his team, twice he was second and fourth and once third.

successes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Walter Grüber: FC Bayern Munich. 6389 games. Production and publishing BoD - Books on Demand - ISBN 978-3-7412-0071-7 - pp. 133, 137
  2. ^ Walter Grüber: FC Bayern Munich. 6389 games. Production and publishing BoD - Books on Demand - ISBN 978-3-7412-0071-7 - p. 135
  3. ^ Walter Grüber: FC Bayern Munich. 6389 games. Production and publishing BoD - Books on Demand - ISBN 978-3-7412-0071-7 - p. 139