Karl Humenberger

Karl Humenberger (* October 25, 1906, † December 28, 1989 in Vienna, Austria ) was an Austrian football player and football coach.

Playing career

Like his older brother, the Austrian national team Humenberger Ferdinand, Karl his footballing career began at Floridsdorfer AC. He debuted in the fall of 1926 in the first team, where he took over the role of the middle runner after the departure of Leopold printer, a position which he was to remain faithful in the course of his career. The team was able to hold in the following years regularly in the secure mid-table and 1928 reach the semifinals in the OFB Cup.

In April 1928 Humenberger was first used in the national team, where he stood by his club colleague Josef Chloupek in the rotor row, when the Austrians against Czechoslovakia in Vienna subject to 0:1. However, this was also his last A- International Match, subsequently he came, however, a few more times in the Vienna City and selection in the B team to use.

After he was changed in the course of the season 1930/31 for local rivals SK Admira Vienna, Austria, he left the end of 1931 and joined together with Chloupek to FC Zurich in Switzerland. But after one season he returned to the Admiralty, with which he was to experience its most successful period. Two championship and a Cup victory could be brought in the coming years, international Jedleseer reached the 1934 final of the Mitropacups, which was lost after a 3-2 home win against FC Bologna nor by a 1:5 in Italy.

1936 Humenberger decided again to move abroad and accepted an offer from Racing Strasbourg, where the Austrian Josef Blum worked as a coach. In the following two years, respectively sites could be reached in the top third of the table Division 1, 1937 were Alsatians even in the French Cup final, where the team, which also Humenbergers compatriot Johann Hoffmann and Oskar tube and Oscar Heisserer were called, the FC Sochaux -Montbéliard was defeated 1-2. 1938 moved Humenberger newly promoted AS Saint- Étienne, where he met with Ignaz Tax back on a fellow countryman and in his last season in France yet reached an excellent fourth place in the table.

Coaching career

In the postwar years Humenberger worked as a trainer in Austria, where he was from 1946 to SV Rapid Lienz supervised, then held, among other coaching job at SV Hitiag Neuda, police SV Innsbruck, SC Columbia Floridsdorf and Newag Eisenstadt and with the SC Ortmann, 1952, in the Lower Austrian division rose. After a stint at the Belgian club Olympique Charleroi in 1954 he took an offer from Dutch club Ajax Amsterdam and tradition involved in coaching the next five years, and in 1957 winning the Dutch championship succeeded.

Then Humenberger returned to Austria, where he had a season long the SV Austria Salzburg trained before he again went abroad and in the 1960/61 season with FC Dordrecht and 1961-1964 the Royal Antwerp FC in charge.

Karl Humenberger, a real Floridsdorfer child was related to old age with football. His latest such work was commissioned by the Football Association and the Ministry of Education monitoring and observation of the football action on the eight squares, which were built on the floodplain of the Danube ( sports fields of the open door). On 28 December 1989 Karl Humenberger died after a brief stay in a Vienna hospital of heart failure.

In 2007 in Vienna Floridsdorf ( 21st district ), the Karl- Humenberger alley named after him.

Achievements

  • National football team ( Austria )
  • Football players ( Floridsdorfer AC)
  • Football players ( Switzerland )
  • Football players (France)
  • Football coach (Netherlands)
  • Football coach ( FC Red Bull Salzburg)
  • Football coach (Belgium )
  • Austrian
  • Born in 1906
  • Died in 1989
  • Man
465967
de