Max Gablonsky

Max " Gaberl " Gablonsky (* January 1, 1890; † July 16, 1969 ) was a German football player and athlete.

Career

Gablonsky played mostly at right winger for Bayern Munich and was by its speed an outstanding striker. With his club he took in the round 1909/10 behind the master Karlsruher FV the runner-up in southern Germany and was nominated by the DFB for the international match on May 16, 1910 in Duisburg against Belgium. The organizational deficiencies in advance of the international game - the day before had in Cologne, the final of the German soccer championship between Karlsruher FV and Holstein Kiel taken place - such as lack of time to prepare, lack of DFB Official, missing players in the playoff teams and the arrival in Duisburg of only seven players one hour before kick-off - brought it about that the Belgian players encounter against " from the spectators environment filled national " ( Alfred Berg Stockhausen, Andreas Breynk, Lothar Budzinski - Kreth and Christian Schilling ) won with 3-0. For the first three Mentioned it remained the only international match, which they completed.

With this first of four international matches ( until 1911 ) he was the first national player and next center forward and goalkeeper Fritz Prince Ludwig Hofmeister one of three national players of FC Bayern Munich before the First World War.

In the 1910/11 season it was enough with Bayern Munich again for vice-championship in southern Germany and on March 26, 1911 came " Gaberl " Gablonsky in Stuttgart in a 6-2 win over the choice of Switzerland for his second international appearance. He stormed on outside right on the side of conveyor Fritz, Gottfried Fuchs and Eugene Kipp and scored his only international match gate, which was attributed to the DFB statistics until 2011 erroneously Gottfried Fuchs. It was only at the initiative of the Son and of FC Bayern München DFB changed in September 2011, after 100 years the statistics. He is not only the first player of FC Bayern Munich who came to international match honors, but at the same time also the first who succeeded one international goal.

On November 13, 1910, he had also mitgestürmt in competition at the Crown Prince Cup semi-final match in the south of Germany to Berlin in a 3-1 success. But here he was struggling in the form of Karlsruhers Karl Wegele with great competition. In October 1911, the Munich came again to two other internationals: On 9 in Dresden in the 1-2 defeat against the selection of Austria and 29 in Hamburg in the 1-3 defeat against the selection of Sweden.

An outstanding athlete two years later he was a member of the German 4 x 100 - meter relay for the Olympic Games in Stockholm. But his studies at the Technical University then forced him to renounce participation.

After his playing days at Bayern Munich, for whom he played until 1922 about 500 times as right winger, he settled as a town planner in Duisburg. He finished his career with the Duisburg SpV.

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