Walter Risse
Walter Risse | ||
Personnel | ||
---|---|---|
birthday | December 2, 1893 | |
place of birth | Düsseldorf , German Empire | |
date of death | June 16, 1969 | |
position | Defense | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
1912-1923 | Düsseldorf SC 99 | |
1924-1933 | Hamburger SV | |
National team | ||
Years | selection | Games (goals) |
1923-1928 | Germany | 8 (0) |
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
1932-1934 | Oldesloer SV | |
1933-1935 | SV Police Lübeck | |
1937 | SVgg. Police (hamburg) | |
1937-1949 | Eimsbüttel TV | |
1947 | TuS Hamburg | |
1948 | → Eckernförder SV (ascent road) | |
1949-1950 | Harburg TB | |
1950-1952 | FC St. Pauli | |
1952-1953 | Concordia Hamburg | |
1953-1955 | Eimsbüttel TV | |
1955-1957 | SV Arminia Hanover | |
1957-1958 | VfL Wolfsburg | |
1 Only league games are given. |
Walter Risse (born December 2, 1893 in Düsseldorf , † June 16, 1969 ) was a German football player and coach .
Career as a player
societies
Risse belonged to the Düsseldorfer SC 99 from 1912 to 1923 , for which he was active except for the seasons 1914/15 to 1918/19, which were canceled due to the war, and most recently in the Berg-Mark district . With the national team of West Germany he won on June 20, 1920, Federal Cup , which in Hannover with 1: 0 after extra time against the national team of Central Germany was won.
At the beginning of 1924 he moved to Hamburger SV for which he was active until 1928 in the two-track league of the Greater Hamburg district, 1928/29 in the "Round of Ten" and from 1929 to 1933 in the Oberliga Groß-Hamburg. During this time he was North German champion six times and played 21 games for the German championship, where he reached the final , which was lost 2-0 to 1. FC Nürnberg in Berlin on June 9, 1924, in his premiere season with the Hamburg team. A year later, on May 3, 1925, he and the team lost the last sixteen, which they lost 2-1 after extra time in Hanover, against the eventual finalists FSV Frankfurt . On June 6, 1926, he and the team lost the semi-final against Hertha BSC, which they lost 2: 4 in Berlin . On May 22, 1927, he and the team reached the quarter-finals , which were lost in Hamburg with 1: 2 against 1. FC Nürnberg, the eventual champions. On July 29, 1928, he and the team reached the final again, which in Altona in front of 42,000 spectators 5-2 against Hertha BSC - whose players obviously did not have the best day - and thus won the second championship after 1923. The safe defense around him, Albert Beier and goalkeeper Wilhelm Blunk contributed decisively to this. Before that, FC Schalke 04 were clearly defeated 4: 2, VfB Königsberg 4: 0 and FC Bayern Munich 8: 2. For the uncompromising cracks with a strong header, however, it remained the only German championship he was able to win; He played until the end of season 1933 for Hamburger SV and should be no longer taken into account for reasons of age, after which he left the club in the dispute Just a few days before his 50th birthday he played helping out, but "with remarkable freshness" in the Gauklasse Hamburg for the Eimsbütteler TV , whose trainer he was meanwhile.
National team
From 1923 to 1928 Risse played eight international matches for the national team, the last three as a player for Hamburger SV. He made his debut in the national jersey on May 10, 1923 in Hamburg in a goalless draw against the Netherlands . The last four international matches in 1923 (2: 1 against Switzerland, 1: 2 against Sweden, 1: 2 against Finland and 1: 0 against Norway) he also played as a player for Düsseldorfer SC 99 September 1928 in Oslo in a 2-0 victory over Norway , after he played on June 15, 1924 against Norway (2-0 in Christiania ) and on August 31, 1924 against Sweden (1: 4 in Berlin) was.
successes
Career as a coach
Walter Risse gained his first coaching experience in 1932/33, still as a HSV player, at Oldesloer SV , for whom he later played at least once. In 1934 he won the championship in the district class with his team, but it lost all games in the subsequent promotion round to the Gauliga . In the meantime he had also been hired by the SV Police in Lübeck , whose team he looked after from autumn 1933 to the end of 1935. In 1936/37 Risse rose with Hamburger SVgg. Police in the Gauliga and then also took over the Eimsbütteler, who had just been dethroned as Gaumeister.
Even when he was almost 50, Risse was occasionally active at Eimsbüttel, whose coach he was also during the war years ( Gaume championship in 1940 and 1942 ) and until 1949. As a player, his son, who was also called Walter, was on the team for the same club. For a short time Risse (sen.) Trained TuS Hamburg (1947), Eckernförder SV (1948), later Harburger TB (1949/50), FC St. Pauli (April 1950 to 52), Concordia Hamburg (1952/53) , again the ETV (1953–1955), the SV Arminia Hannover (1955–1957) and the VfL Wolfsburg (1957/58).
Web links
- Walter Risse in the database of weltfussball.de
Individual evidence
- ↑ Skrentny / Prüß : With the diamond in the heart , Göttingen 2008, p. 87.
- ↑ Stormarnsche Zeitung of December 2, 1943, quoted by Peter Staecker: Excerpts from the Oldesloer sports history (online)
- ↑ cf. Peter Stäcker: oldesloe.peter-staecker.de Oldesloer sports history , accessed on August 3, 2017.
- ↑ cf. Peter Stäcker: oldesloe.peter-staecker.de ibid, accessed on July 3, 2017.
- ↑ ibid, parts 3 and 4, accessed on January 8, 2018
- ^ Christian Jessen: VfB Lübeck. A century of football history in the Hanseatic city , Göttingen 2020, pages 25 and 27
- ↑ Hamburger Anzeiger, August 12, 1937.
- ↑ So on November 28, 1943 in the 0: 6 against LSV Hamburg , see Der Kicker / Fußball from the 30th of the same month, pp. 2 and 4.
- ↑ Hermann Moritz was a trainer at ETV until 1937, see Jankowski / Pistorius / Prüß: Fußball im Norden, Barsinghausen and Bremen 2005, p. 168. He was followed by Risse.
- ↑ In the fall of 1947 lt. Newsletter of TuS Hamburg released from there
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Cracks, Walter |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German soccer player and coach |
DATE OF BIRTH | December 2, 1893 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Düsseldorf , German Empire |
DATE OF DEATH | June 16, 1969 |