Floridsdorfer AC
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Floridsdorfer AC
The Floridsdorfer Athletics Sports Club or simply Floridsdorfer AC is a professional football club based in Floridsdorf, the 21st district of Vienna. The club was founded in August 1904. Floridsdorfer AC won the Austrian football championship in 1918 and are currently playing in the Austrian Football Second League. The club colours are blue and white. Current squad Out on loan Honours * Austrian Championship (1): 1917–18 List of managers ''From 1930 onwards'' * Richard Ziegler / Karl Schrott (1930–1931) * Karl Jiszda (1931–1934) * Ferdinand Humenberger (1935) * Rudolf Seidl (1935–1940) * Eduard Frühwirth (1939–1947) * Anton Artes (1947–1948) * Karl Durspekt (1948) * Anton Artes (1949–19??) * ''Unknown'' (1949–1982) * Rudolf Sabetzer (1982–1983) * Leopold Grausam (1984–1985) * ''Unknown'' (1985–1992) * Gustav Thaler (1992–1995) * Walter Dannhauser (1995) * Friedrich Täubler (1995) * Helmut Senekowit ...
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Mitja Mörec
Mitja Mörec (born 21 February 1983) is a retired Slovenian football centre back and current manager of Floridsdorfer AC. Career In March 2011, Mörec signed a contract with Lyngby BK for the remainder of the 2010–11 season. Following the expiration of his Lyngby contract, Mörec signed for ADO Den Haag in August 2011 on a one-year contract. However, his contract was terminated in January 2012. In July 2013, Mörec signed for Kazakhstan First Division side Kaisar on a 30-month contract. But after only six-months Mörec moved to Ravan Baku of the Azerbaijan Premier League in January 2014 on an 18-month contract. Coaching and later career From the summer 2017 to the summer 2018, Mörec was coaching at a A.C. Milan soccer school in Dubai. On 1 November 2018, Mörec was appointed U-15 manager at Favoritner AC. He also began playing for the clubs first team in the Wiener Stadtliga from 1 January 2019. On 7 May 2020, Mörec left Favoritner AC to join SV Wienerberg as an assistan ...
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Thomas Fink
Thomas Fink (born 1972) is an Anglo-American physicist, author and entrepreneur. He has published papers in statistical physics and its applications, written two books and designed an iPhone app. He set up the London Institute for Mathematical Sciences and is a manager of research at the French National Centre for Scientific Research (French: Centre national de la recherche scientifique). Education and positions Fink did his BS at Caltech, where he won the annual Fisher Prize for top physicist and Green prize for best research. He then moved to England for his PhD at St John's College, Cambridge, where he was supervised by Robin Ball in the TCM group of the Cavendish Laboratory. He was a Research Fellow at Caius College, Cambridge and did a postdoc at École Normale Supérieure with Bernard Derrida. He now occupies his current positions at the London Institute and the CNRS. Research Fink is a researcher in theoretical physics. He published his first paper in the journal '' ...
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Helmut Senekowitsch
Helmut Senekowitsch (; 22 October 1933 – 9 September 2007) was an Austrian football player and later a football manager. Playing career Club career He played for several clubs, including SK Sturm Graz, Real Betis and FC Wacker Innsbruck. International career He played for the Austria national football team and was a participant at the 1958 FIFA World Cup. He earned 18 caps, scoring 5 goals. Coaching career He later worked as a coach, one of his major achievements was helping Austria qualify for the 1978 FIFA World Cup, the first time Austria had qualified for the World Cup in twenty years. The Austrian team advanced to the second round in whose first match they fell 1–5 against Netherlands being coached by former international teammate Ernst Happel. Later he led them during the game dubbed ''The miracle of Córdoba'', against arch-rivals West Germany West Germany is the colloquial term used to indicate the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG; german: Bundesrepublik D ...
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Leopold Grausam
Leopold Grausam (29 June 1943 – 8 September 2023) was an Austrian footballer who played as a forward Forward is a relative direction, the opposite of backward. Forward may also refer to: People * Forward (surname) Sports * Forward (association football) * Forward (basketball), including: ** Point forward ** Power forward (basketball) ** Sm .... Grausam died on 8 September 2023, at the age of 80. References External links * *Rapid Archiv*Sturm Archiv 1943 births 2023 deaths Sportspeople from Sankt Pölten Austrian men's footballers Austria men's international footballers Men's association football forwards SK Rapid Wien players FC Wacker Innsbruck players LASK players FC Grenchen players Austrian football managers Floridsdorfer AC managers Austrian expatriate men's footballers Austrian expatriate sportspeople in Switzerland Expatriate men's footballers in Switzerland {{austria-footy-forward-stub ...
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Rudolf Sabetzer
Rudolf Sabetzer (28 July 1934 – 25 July 1983) was an Austrian football midfielder who played for Austria. He also played for SC Schwechat, FK Austria Wien Fußballklub Austria Wien AG (; known in English as Austria Vienna, and usually shortened to Austria (German: Österreich) in German-speaking countries, is an Austrian association football club from the capital city of Vienna. It has won the mo ..., Linzer ASK and SC Wacker Wien. External links * * 1934 births 1983 deaths Austrian men's footballers Austria men's international footballers Men's association football midfielders FK Austria Wien players LASK players FC Admira Wacker Mödling players Austrian football managers Floridsdorfer AC managers {{austria-footy-midfielder-stub ...
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Karl Durspekt
Karl Franz Durspekt (23 November 1913 in Vienna, Austria – 14 February 1978 in Vienna, Austria) was an Austrian football player and manager. As the son of an engine driver, Durspekt worked as a type setter at first. Later he became a professional football player. When he was a young man, he lived about five years in Rouen (France). He spoke fluently in a French and in a Swedish manner. Further, Sweden became his second home. At the beginning of his career, he played for Admira Wien. During this time he won repeatedly the Austrian championship and the Austrian cup. Durspekt participated in the Mitropa Cup 1934, losing the final to Bologna FC (3:2, 1:5). After the Anschluss that united Germany and Austria in 1938 Admira played for several seasons in the Gauliga Ostmark, one of the top flight regional leagues created through the reorganization of German football under the Third Reich. Durspekt contested with his club Germany's national final in 1939, losing 0:9 to Schalke 04. Aft ...
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Eduard Frühwirth
Eduard "Edi" Frühwirth (17 November 1908 – 27 February 1973) was an Austrian football Football is a family of team sports that involve, to varying degrees, kicking a ball to score a goal. Unqualified, the word ''football'' normally means the form of football that is the most popular where the word is used. Sports commonly c ... player and manager. External linksProfile
1908 births 1973 deaths Footballers from Vienna Austrian men's footballers
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Rudolf Seidl
Rudolf Seidl (28 November 1897 – 1940) was an Austrian footballer. He played in eight matches for the Austria national football team The Austria national football team (german: Österreichische Fußballnationalmannschaft) represents Austria in men's international football competition and it is controlled by the Austrian Football Association (German: Österreichischer Fußba ... from 1920 to 1928. References External links * 1897 births 1940 deaths Austrian men's footballers Austria men's international footballers Place of birth missing Men's association football players not categorized by position Austrian football managers Floridsdorfer AC managers {{Austria-footy-bio-stub ...
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Ferdinand Humenberger
Ferdinand Humenberger (13 February 1897 – 13 May 1956) was an Austrian professional football player and manager. Playing career Humenberger played club football for Austrian side Floridsdorfer AC. He also played at international level for Austria, earning two caps in 1918. Coaching career He coached Italian club Treviso between 1923 and 1924. Hummenberger is mentioned as a coach of Danish club KB around 1929 or 1930. Humenberger was manager of Swedish side AIK between 1930 and 1932, winning the championship in 1932. Personal life His brother Karl Karl may refer to: People * Karl (given name), including a list of people and characters with the name * Karl der Große, commonly known in English as Charlemagne * Karl Marx, German philosopher and political writer * Karl of Austria, last Austria ... was also a professional football player and manager. References 1897 births 1956 deaths Austrian footballers Austria international footballers Floridsdorfer AC players A ...
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Karl Jiszda
Karl Jiszda (21 July 1899 – 30 November 1963) was an Austrian football (soccer) player and manager. He played for Floridsdorfer AC, First Vienna FC and Brooklyn Wanderers. 31 July 1921 Karl Jiszda debuted for the Austria national football team against Finland (2-3). He coached Garbarnia Kraków, Floridsdorfer AC, FC Zürich and FC Oerlikon. In 1937 he worked as head coach of the Lithuania national football team The Lithuania national football team ( lt, Lietuvos nacionalinė futbolo rinktinė) represents Lithuania in international football and is controlled by the Lithuanian Football Federation, the governing body for football in Lithuania. They playe .... References and notes External links * * * 1899 births 1963 deaths Men's association football forwards Austrian men's footballers Austria men's international footballers First Vienna FC players Austrian football managers Floridsdorfer AC managers Lithuania national football team managers FC Zürich ...
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List Of Austrian Football Champions
The Austrian football champions are the winners of the highest league of football in Austria. The championship has been contested through the Austrian Football Bundesliga since the 1974–75 season. Rapid Wien and Austria Wien are the most successful clubs. They have won 32 and 24 titles, respectively, as of 2022. History From 1911 until 1923 the Austrian football championship was organized by the football association of Niederösterreich (Lower Austria) which was made up only of clubs from the nation's capital of Vienna. The championship was then taken over by the newly formed football association of Vienna (WFV, ''Wiener Fußball-Verband''), which organized the first professional league in continental Europe in 1924–25. In 1938 Austria was united with Germany in the Anschluss and the country's football competition became part of the German league structure as the Gauliga Ostmark. For the first time clubs from outside of Vienna were included in top-flight Austrian competitio ...
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