Otto Bökle

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Otto Bökle
Personnel
birthday February 17, 1912
place of birth StuttgartGerman Empire
date of death August 16, 1988
position Half-striker
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
0000-1932 FV Zuffenhausen
1932-1949 VfB Stuttgart at least 204 (93)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1935 Germany 1 0(0)
1 Only league games are given.

Otto Bökle (born February 17, 1912 in Stuttgart , † August 16, 1988 ) was a German football player .

Career

societies

The half-forward Otto Bökle, who moved from FV Zuffenhausen to VfB Stuttgart in 1932 , was one of the great pillars of Cannstatt for many years . With VfB he won the South German Cup in 1933 and the championship in the Gauliga Württemberg in 1935 . In the final round of the German championship , the Swabians relegated SpVgg Fürth , 1. Hanau Football Club 1893 and 1. SV Jena to their places. He contributed two goals to the 4-2 semi-final victory over VfL Benrath . The final played on June 23, 1935 in Cologne , however, was lost 4-6 against defending champions FC Schalke 04 , in which he also scored two goals.

In 1938 and 1943, further Gaume Championships followed in Württemberg and participation in the final round of the German Championship. Series wins were not possible for VfB. This prevented the athletic class of the local rival Stuttgarter Kickers , who had the national players Edmund Conen and Albert Sing in his ranks.

After the Second World War , Bökle was a member of the championship team for the 1945/46 season in the Oberliga Süd . On the last day of the match, VfB Stuttgart won 1-0 against 1. FC Nürnberg and was thus one point ahead of Max Morlock's team. The winning goal scorer was not the top scorer Robert Schlienz with 42 goals, but the 34-year-old Otto Bökle. In 1948 he was able to celebrate winning the Württemberg Cup before ending his career in the Oberliga Süd after completing the 1948/49 season. On May 22, 1949, the last game day of the season, he played his last competitive game for VfB Stuttgart in the 4-2 defeat in the away game against BC Augsburg , for which he played 77 league games from 1945 to 1949 and scored 27 goals. He also played eleven final rounds of the German Championship, in which he scored eight goals, and eight DFB Cup games in which he scored one goal. In the statistics of VfB Stuttgart, it is listed including all friendlies with over 800 appearances.

National team

He played his only international match for the senior national team under Reich coach Otto Nerz on October 13, 1935 in Koenigsberg in a 3-0 victory over the national team of Latvia . In the role of connector on the half-left, he stormed together with August Lenz from Dortmund .

successes

Web links

literature

  • Hardy Greens : From the Crown Prince to the Bundesliga . In: Encyclopedia of German League Football . tape 1 . AGON, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-85-1 .
  • Jürgen Bitter : Germany's national soccer player: the lexicon . SVB Sportverlag, Berlin 1997, ISBN 3-328-00749-0 .
  • Germany's international soccer games, sports and games publisher Hitzel, Hürth, 1989, ISBN 3-9802172-4-8 .
  • Klaus Querengässer: The German football championship. Part 2: 1948–1963 (= AGON Sportverlag statistics. Vol. 29). AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1997, ISBN 3-89609-107-7 .