Géza Toldi

Géza Toldi Géza also Tunigold, ( born February 11, 1909 in Budapest, Austria - Hungary, † August 16, 1985 in Budapest, Hungary) was a Hungarian football player and football coach.

Club career

Toldi began his career in the Hungarian League in the 1927/28 season, when it was first used by István Tóth - trainer Potya in the first team of Ferencvárosi Torna Club. The Franzens townspeople had built up to that time, a strong young team with players like Vilmos Kohut and Márton Bukovi and could reach the third successive title and the Cup victory this season. Over the following two seasons succeeded Toldi, to establish himself in the team and to win a regular place which he held until 1939.

During this period, the FTC reached by a storm series in which Toldi and György Sárosi very well complemented each other, three more league titles and three cup victories. In the season 1933/34, Toldi was of Hungarian scorer with 27 goals. After 1935, the final was still lost in Mitropacup, succeeded in the competition in 1937 a major international success, as the SS Lazio was defeated in the final with a total score of 9:6. Toldi was in both finals, each with a gate to the success.

In 1939, he left his hometown club and moved on to league rivals gamma Budatok, where he played one season before he went to the Szegedi AK for two more years. In 1942 he returned once for a season to the FTC, where another Cup victory succeeded before he finished his career at Madisz Danubia after the war. In total he played 324 league games in which he scored 271 goals.

National team

His first try in the national team had the striker in April 1929 against Switzerland, where he immediately scored a goal in a 5-4 victory. In the following years he belonged to the tribe of the team and was also taken to the Football World Cup 1934, where he scored two goals against Egypt in the second round, before one lap later the off against Austria came.

In the ( broken ) European Cup Football Teams 1936-1938 Toldi finished with five goals behind his club colleagues Sárosi the second in the scoring charts. In the World Cup 1938 he was back in the squad and came to two stakes, with him against the Dutch East Indies scored a goal in the final, however, Jenő Vincze was used in its place. His last game for the national team played Toldi 1940 against Romania. Overall, he came up with 46 inserts and 25 matches for Hungary.

Coaching career

The first coach station of Hungary was the Vasa IFK in Finland, which he led to the championship title. In 1950 he moved to Denmark, where he initially led Odense Boldklub supervised before he accepted an offer from the 1954 Aarhus GF. He led the team to the first two championship titles in the club's history, as well as to a Cup victory. In 1957 he took over the coaching job with the Belgian national team, where he was, however, only seven months worked. He then supervised for two years the Belgian first division Berchem Sport, before he returned in 1960 to Aarhus and brought with the Danes another league titles and two cup victories. More coach stations in Denmark included the Boldklubben 1909 and the IK Skovbakken, before concluding his career in mid -1970s.

Achievements

  • Vice World Champion 1938
  • Mitropacupsieger 1937
  • 4 x Hungarian Champion: 1928, 1932, 1934, 1938
  • 4 x Hungarian Cup Winner: 1928, 1933, 1935, 1943
  • 3 x Danish champion: 1955, 1956, 1960 ( as coach )
  • 3 x Danish Cup Winner: 1955, 1960, 1961 (as Trainer)
  • 1 x Finnish Champion 1946 (as coach )
  • 1 x Hungarian scorer: 1934
  • 46 games and 25 goals for the Hungarian national football team

William Maxwell | Charles Bunyan | William Maxwell | Victor lions Feldt | Hector Goetinck | Jules Turnauer | Jack Butler | François Demol | Bill Gormlie | Dougall Livingstone | André Vandeweyer | Louis Nicolay | Géza Toldi | Constant Vanden Stock | Raymond Goethals | Guy Thys | Walter Meeuws | Guy Thys | Paul Van Himst | Wilfried Van Moer | Georges Leekens | Robert Waseige | Aimé Anthuenis | René Vandereycken | Franky Vercauteren | Dick Advocaat | Georges Leekens | Marc Wilmot

  • National football team (Hungary )
  • Hungarian
  • Football coach (Hungary )
  • Person (Budapest)
  • Born in 1909
  • Died in 1985
  • Man
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