Herbert Widmayer
Herbert Widmayer (17 November 1913 – 31 July 1998) was a German football player and manager. He is the first ever coach to be prematurely terminated in Bundesliga history. He was the younger brother of Werner Widmayer
Widmayer played Holstein Kiel, TSV 1860 Munich and Eintracht Braunschweig. After World War II he commenced a coaching career.
In 1960 he joined 1. FC Nürnberg, the most titled German club then, succeeding the Austrian player legend Franz Binder. He led Nürnberg, in Germany nicknamed "the Club", to the South German Championship in the same year. In the final of the tournament for the national title Nürnberg defeated Borussia Dortmund in front of 82,000 spectators in Hanover's Niedersachsenstadion with 3-0. In the following year the Club once more won the South German Championship, and once more reached the national final, this time in Berlin's Olympic Stadium ,and losing there 0-4 vs 1. FC Köln.[1][2]
Honours
References
External links
|
---|
|
- Kleim (1946–47)
- Paulus (1947–49)
- Höger (1949–50)
- Schröder (1950–52)
- Gellesch (1952–55)
- Koch (1955–56)
- Carl (1956–58)
- Kratz (1958–60)
- Hahn (1960–62)
- W. Müller (1962–64)
- Widmayer (1964–66)
- Hellwig (1966–68)
- Kurrat (1968–69)
- Baas (1969–71)
- Hellwig (1971)
- Loßmann (1971–72)
- Hellwig (1972–73)
- Baas (1973–74)
- Kuhnert (1974)
- Gebhardt (1974–76)
- W. Müller (1976)
- Toth (1976–79)
- Kröner (1979–82)
- Konietzka (1982–83)
- Berger (1983–86)
- Kröner (1986)
- Nehme (1986)
- E. Müller (1986–87)
- Biskup (1987)
- Brück (1987)
- Brungs (1987–89)
- Köstner (1989–90)
- Thomale (1990–92)
- K.-H. Wolf (1992–93)
- Brück (1993)
- Brungs (1993–95)
- Brück (1995–96)
- Gede (1996–97)
- Moors (1997)
- Schmidt (1997–98)
- J. Müller (1998–2001)
- Brück (2001)
- Scott (2001)
- Brück (2001–02)
- Roggensack (2002–03)
- Freudenstein (2003–04)
- Thomale (2004)
- Sturm (2004–05)
- Hamann (2005–08)
- Dickhaut (2008–11)
- Hock (2011)
- Brück (2011)
- U. Wolf (2011–13)
- Großkopf (2013–2014)
- Mink (2014–)
|
|