Jenő Vincze

Jenő " Guriga " Vincze ( born November 20, 1908 in Versec, Austria - Hungary, † 1988) was a Hungarian football player and football coach, the 1938 runner-up and later a long time in Switzerland and Germany as a supervisor worked.

Club career

Vinczes first club was the Debreceni MTE, from where he moved to the larger city rivals Debreceni Vasutas SC 1925. With the Railway Sports Association succeeded in 1926 winning the district championship in the final round at the Hungarian Champion title would retire but in the quarter- finals. In the same year of professional football was introduced and with the Bocskai SC Debrecen established a professional team in Debrecen, which was ranked in the second division and immediately promotion to the first division in Hungary. The right connector Vincze moved to the climber who was able to create just the league in the first season. Even then, the team experienced a significant rise and could be in the years to compete in the top half of the table. Best finish was a third place in the season 33/34, which meant the hitherto best end result of a provincial association. Already in 1930 the club had won the Hungarian Cuptitel when it was beaten in the final Bástya Szeged 5-1. In the 1930/31 season Vincze was of Hungarian scorer with 20 goals.

In 1934, the change to Újpest FC, ​​where Vincze should spend the rest of his active career until 1944 followed. Even in the first season was brought to a team where László Sternberg, Stefan Auer and György Szűcs stood, the championship title. 1939 followed under coach Béla Guttmann another championship, this time Vincze rushed to the side of Gyula Zsengellér. Thus, the Violet were qualified for the Mitropacup where you reached the final with wins over Ambrosiana Inter Milan and the Beogradski SK against city rivals FC Ferencvárosi and remained successful with a total score of 6:3.

National

His first try at the national team had Vincze in June 1930, when it ran aground as a right connector with a 2-1 win over Austria in Budapest. Until his next assignment, it should, however, take more than three years, until 1934, he came to regular operations in the national team. Vincze was part of the squad for the World Cup 1934, where he came in second-round match against Egypt for use in a 4-2 win and also scored his first goal for Hungary.

In the following years he was an integral root of the selection and was also part of the team that ended the 1936 and 1938 Nations Cup prematurely terminated at the top. In 1938 he took part in his second World Cup and was first used in the quarterfinals against Switzerland. After he had not come in the semifinals to the train, he was called up for the final instead of Géza Toldi. The game was lost against Italy with 2:4. Then Vincze was only one more time in the national team for use, namely, in a 2-0 against Yugoslavia in November 1939. Overall, he played 25 games and scored eight goals.

Coaching career

After the end of his active career was Vincze football coach in Hungary and supervised, among other things his old club Újpest in the 1947/48 season. When Hungary was occupied by Soviet troops in 1956, he found himself as a supervisor of a youth team to travel abroad and did not return to his homeland.

Rather, he continued his coaching career in the West and in 1957 took over the supervisor post at Servette FC Genève, where he replaced Karl Rappan. In 1959, he became a coach at FC Basel, where he worked until 1961. He then took over SpVgg Fürth in the Oberliga Süd, where he led the team for three seasons. His next stop was the 1st FC Nuremberg, where he first coached the amateur team, in November 1966, however, succeeded his compatriot Jenő Csaknády as coach of Bundesliga Club was. In the four games that remained until the winter break, but did not succeed in the team's only victory and could not get out of the relegation zone. Vincze was replaced with the year of Max Merkel.

The Hungarian returned to the Regionalliga Süd and was coach at the 1 FC Schweinfurt 05, where he spent four years, always kept the team in the top third of the table, but never had to do with the rise of decision. In 1971 he moved to league rivals SpVgg Bayreuth, which he oversaw three and a half more years. Then he oversaw still 1 FC Herzogenaurach ( half a year ) and the ASV Herzogenaurach (one year).

Achievements

  • Vice World Champion: 1938
  • World Cup quarter- finals: 1934
  • 1x Mitropacup: 1939
  • 2x Hungarian Champion: 1935, 1939
  • 1x Hungarian Cup: 1930
  • 1x Hungarian scorer: 1931
  • 25 games and scored eight goals for the Hungarian national football team: 1930-1939
  • National football team (Hungary )
  • Hungarian
  • Football coach (Hungary )
  • Born in 1908
  • Died in 1988
  • Man
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