Vinzenz Dittrich

Vincent " Gigerl " Dittrich (* February 23, 1893, † 25 January 1965) was an Austrian football player and football coach, who was from 1916 to 1919 stem back in the national team and with Rapid pick up six league titles.

Club career

Dittrich came in 1913 from second-rate SC Blue Star Vienna at that Austrian champions Rapid Vienna, where he was able to quickly secure a place in the first team. The small stocky defender played alongside Fritz Brandstätter and could already celebrate winning the championship in his first season. After a wartime interruption Dittrich belonged from 1916 back to the permanent staff of the Rapid team, where he played in the next nine years with a number of different defensive partners such as Willibald Stejskal, Leopold Nitsch and Emil Regnard and thereby bring five more championships and two wins in the OFB Cup could.

In 1925 he left the Green-Whites and reinforced the defensive of Erstligaaufsteigers ASV Hertha Vienna. However, the Favoritner could not hold in the league and immediately got off again. Dittrich remained in Division II at the club and could reach its chances of promotion. This time, the team was able to keep three years in the top division, before in 1930 was followed by the transition to the House and Dittrich then ended his active career.

National

In October 1913, Dittrich was the first time for the national team, as they lost 3:4 in Budapest against Hungary, where the defenders of a penalty contributed a goal. In the years 1916-1919 he belonged to the tribe formation and played mostly on the side of Alexander Popovich, due to the war almost all of these countries were fighting against Hungary. After that, he was ousted by the distinguished Richard Beer and Joseph Blum increasingly from the team and was rarely used, most recently in August 1923 against Finland. Overall, he came up with 16 appearances.

Coaching career

After the end of his playing days Dittrich hit 1930 coaching career, and initially worked for the Lithuanian Football Federation, where he won the Baltic Cup with the national team. After his return, he took over as coach at SC Hakoah Vienna. After the team had beaten on a tour of France Olympique Marseille in December 1932, the South of France initially recruited from the Hungarian striker Wiener József Eisenhoffer and then committed in the summer of 1933, Dittrich. This also brought the two Austrian National Player Leopold printer and Joseph Chloupek to Marseille and was initially able to reach the third place in the championship, only one point behind the winner FC Sète. The following season it was indeed in the championship less well, but could Dittrich farewell with a 3-0 win against Stade Rennais UC celebrate the victory in the French Cup.

After his time in Marseille, he oversaw from 1935, the DSV Saaz and the North Star FC Basel, before he returned to France in 1937 and became the successor of Franz Weselik as a coach at FC Mulhouse. In 1938 he took over the coaching job at Hamborn 07 In the autumn season, 1940, he oversaw the Viennese second division SC Helfort, before the coaching job at ŠK Bratislava took over the end of the year, where he won the Slovak Championship.

After the Second World War was Dittrich coach at second division 1 Schwechater SC, worked in Luxembourg and managed from 1947 to 1949 the first SC Wiener Neustadt. In the 1950s, he was head coach in Syria and Lebanon.

Achievements

  • 6x Austrian champion: 1913, 1917, 1919, 1920, 1921, 1923
  • 2x OFB Cup: 1919, 1920
  • 1x Austrian second division champions: 1927
  • 1x French Cup: 1935 (as coach )
  • 1x Baltic Cup: 1930 (as coach )
  • 1x Slovakian champion: 1941 (as coach )
  • 16 games and a goal for the Austrian national team: 1913-1923
  • National football team ( Austria )
  • Austrian
  • Austrian Champion ( football)
  • Born in 1893
  • Died in 1965
  • Man
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