Reinhard Heinrich (soccer player)

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Reinhard Heinrich (born January 6, 1913 ; † 20th / 21st century) was a German football player .

Career

Heinrich belonged to Blau-Weiß 90 Berlin , for the club he was a striker from 1938 to 1940 in the Gauliga Berlin-Brandenburg , in one of initially 16, later increased to 23 Gauligen at the time of National Socialism as the uniform highest division in the German Reich , point games denied. At the end of his premier season he won the Gaume Championship with the team. As a result, he also took part in the final round of the German Championship . This was played in four groups of three or four teams each, of which the respective group winners contested the semi-finals. He played all six games in Group 1 and only finished fourth with Blau-Weiß 90 Berlin. He made his debut on April 2, 1939 in the first group game in a 3-3 draw against Hamburger SV . In the following season he and his team emerged as the winner of season A , but lost the final, played in the two legs , against SC Union Oberschöneweide , the winner of season B, with 1: 4 overall. He also played three in 1938 , two in 1939 and one game in 1940 in the competition for the national club cup. On his debut on August 28, 1938, he scored his first goal in a 5-1 win in the first round match against TSV Swinemünde with the hit to 3-1 with a penalty in the 61st minute.

From 1940 to 1942 he played for Werder Bremen in the Lower Saxony Gauliga , each in the group north, from which he emerged as the winner with his team in 1942, as well as from the final round , which was completed after ten games with ten wins. Due to the success he took with his team in the final round of the German Championship and was used in four games in which he scored two goals. He made his debut on May 10, 1942 in the qualifying game at Hamborn 07 , which despite overtime with a 1-1 draw did not produce a winner. He scored his first goal in the Weserstadion in a 5-1 win in the replay a week later with the goal to make it 3-0 in the 42nd minute. He scored his second goal on May 24, 1942 in a 4-1 round of 16 victory over Eimsbütteler SV , before he and his team were eliminated from the competition in the quarter-finals after their 4-3 defeat by Kickers Offenbach . He was also used for Werder Bremen in two games in 1941 and in four games in 1942 in the competition for the Tschammerpokal in which he scored a total of two goals.

In June 1942 he played again for Blau-Weiß 90 Berlin for a short time before he returned to the Weser and played the 1942/43 season in the Gauliga Weser-Ems due to the war-related division of the Gauliga Lower Saxony.

He then joined the Luftwaffe Sports Club Hamburg , founded on December 8, 1942 , which was accepted into the Gauliga Hamburg without qualification for the 1943/44 season . After 18 completed point games in the division consisting of ten teams, his team emerged unbeaten as Gaumeister. The military team, which consisted of so-called “anti-aircraft fighters”, was able to play through the two years of its existence in an almost unchanged formation, which is why it was unpopular with the old clubs. In the first participation in the final round of the German championship, in which the team advanced to the finals and lost to Dresdner SC with 0: 4, he was not used. For this he reached the final of the Tschammerpokal on October 31, 1943 in Stuttgart with the team, having previously played four games and scored one goal. This was lost with 2: 3 after extra time against First Vienna FC , despite a goal from him, the goal to 2: 2 in the 70th minute.

After the end of World War II , he completed two seasons for Werder Bremen in the Oberliga Nord , one of five seasons as the highest German division. Eighth place in the 1948/49 season , he ended his active football career.

successes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Andreas Meyer, Volker Stahl, Uwe Wetzner: Football Lexicon Hamburg . Die Werkstatt , Göttingen 2007, ISBN 978-3-89533-477-1 , p. 210-211 (396 pages).