Otto Höss

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Otto Höss
Personnel
birthday June 4, 1897
place of birth ViennaAustria-Hungary
date of death March 27, 1971
Place of death ViennaAustria
position Storm
Juniors
Years station
Viennese sports club
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1919-1920 Viennese sports club
1920-1921 Vienna AF
1921-1923 DFC Prague
1923-1924 First Vienna FC
1925-1926 Viennese sports club
1927-1929 Bástya FC Szeged
1929 SK Slovan
1929-1930 SC de la Bastidienne ( player-coach )
1930-1931 FC Cantonal Neuchâtel (player-coach)
1931-1932 SK Tetschen (player trainer)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1923-1926 Austria 6 0(2)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1929-1930 SC de la Bastidienne
1930-1931 FC Cantonal Neuchâtel
1931-1932 SK Tetschen
1932-1936 ADO The Hague
1937 Servette Geneva
1938-1939 Gefle IF
1 Only league games are given.

Otto Höss (born June 4, 1897 in Vienna , Austria-Hungary ; † March 27, 1971 in Vienna, Austria ) was an Austrian football player and coach who was a national player from 1923 to 1926 .

Player career

societies

Otto Höss's career began at the Wiener Sport-Club , but was soon interrupted by the First World War. The player fell into Italian captivity and did not return to Vienna until September 1919. In 1920 he played a few championship games for the sports club, but could not fight for a regular place. In the same year he moved briefly to Wiener AF , but in 1921 accepted an offer from DFC Prague . In the Prague team he played in a series of attacks with Karel Feller and Ferenc Szedlacsek and was able to win the championship title of the German-Bohemian division in 1923.

Höss then returned to Austria and joined First Vienna FC , for whom he played together with Friedrich Gschweidl , Otto Fischer and Rudolf Seidl and at the end of the 1923/24 season was both runner-up and finished sixth in the scorers' list. At the beginning of 1925, the player, who was used both as a center forward and as a connector, returned to the sports club for which he stormed alongside Karl Kanhäuser and Johann Strnad .

At the beginning of 1926 , the year when professional football was introduced in Hungary , when teams outside the capital were also admitted to the top division, Höss moved to the first division club Bástya FC Szeged , who was seventh-placed as a newcomer and was able to hold the class in the following season . Furthermore, he and his team reached the semi-finals of the Magyar Kupa , the Hungarian club cup.

Returning to Vienna, he played further championship games for SK Slovan in 1929 before he became active as a player-coach for the French club SC de la Bastidienne, the Swiss club FC Cantonal Neuchâtel and the Czechoslovak club SK Tetschen.

Selection / national team

During his time in Prague he was selected several times for the DFVfB , then during his time in Vienna in the Viennese city selection - for the first time on September 27, 1925. He made his debut in the Austrian national team on September 23, 1923 in Budapest , when he was substituted on for Karl Kurz in the 2-0 defeat by the Hungarian national team from the 38th minute . He scored his first international goal on June 22, 1924 on the Hohe Warte in Vienna in a 3-1 victory over the national team of Egypt with the goal to make it 1-0 in the 24th minute. His last international match at the same place he crowned with the goal to the 2-1 lead in the 56th minute in the 2-3 defeat against Hungary national team.

Coaching career

Höss first moved to France , where he worked as a player- coach at SC de la Bastidienne in Bordeaux . In 1930 he took on the same position at FC Cantonal Neuchâtel in Switzerland and the following year at SK Tetschen-Bodenbach in northern Bohemia , before he was in charge of ADO Den Haag for four years from 1932 . In autumn 1937 he worked for Servette Geneva , after which he took over the coaching position for the Swedish second division club Gefle IF . After the Second World War, Höß was in charge of the ATSV Bischofshofen from 1946 , the Grazer AK in 1947 and the Salzburger AK in 1914 from 1948 , before he returned to Vienna in 1949, where he took over the training of the SK Alstern and opened a deadline acceptance point.

successes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. cities Game Vienna - Krakow on austriasoccer.at