Wunderteam - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wunderteam (German pronunciation: [ˈvʊndɐˌtiːm]; Wonder Team) was the name given to the Austria national football team of the early 1930s.[1] Team manager was Hugo Meisl. The team to which the name referred played 15 matches between May 1931 and February 1933. They won 12, 2 draws and lost 1.
Matches of the „Österreichischen Wunderteams“ 1931 - 1933
[change | change source]Date | Place | Match | Result | Scorer |
---|---|---|---|---|
16 May 1931 | Vienna | Austria– Scotland | 5:0 | Anton Schall, Karl Zischek (2), Adolf Vogl, Matthias Sindelar |
24 May 1931 | Berlin | Germany– Austria | 0:6 | Anton Schall (3), Adolf Vogl, Karl Zischek, Friedrich Gschweidl |
16 June 1931 | Vienna | Austria– Switzerland | 2:0 | Friedrich Gschweidl, Anton Schall |
13 September 1931 | Vienna | Austria– Germany | 5:0 | Matthias Sindelar (3), Friedrich Gschweidl, Anton Schall |
4 October 1931 | Budapest | Hungary– Austria | 2:2 | Karl Zischek (2) |
29 November 1931 | Basel | Switzerland– Austria | 1:8 | Anton Schall (3), Friedrich Gschweidl (2), Matthias Sindelar, Adolf Vogl, Karl Zischek |
20 March 1932 | Vienna | Austria– Italy | 2:1 | Matthias Sindelar (2) |
24 April 1932 | Vienna | Austria– Hungary | 8:2 | Matthias Sindelar (3), Anton Schall (4), Friedrich Gschweidl |
22 May 1932 | Prague | Czechoslovakia – Austria | 1:1 | Matthias Sindelar |
17 July 1932 | Stockholm | Sweden– Austria | 3:4 | Adolf Vogl, Matthias Sindelar, Georg Waitz, Josef Molzer |
2 October 1932 | Budapest | Hungary– Austria | 2:3 | Borsanyi (Eigentor), Heinrich Müller, Georg Braun |
23 October 1932 | Vienna | Austria – Switzerland | 3:1 | Heinrich Müller, Anton Schall (2) |
7 December 1932 | London | England – Austria | 4:3 | Karl Zischek (2), Matthias Sindelar |
11 December 1932 | Brüssel | Belgium – Austria | 1:6 | Karl Zischek, Franz Weselik, Anton Schall (4) |
12 February 1933 | Paris | France – Austria | 0:4 | Matthias Sindelar, Franz Weselik, Adolf Vogl, Karl Zischek |
The end
[change | change source]The match against France in Paris, which Austria was able to win 4-0, is generally seen as the last game played by the miracle team. Hiden got an offer from Racing Club de Paris President Jean-Bernard Lévy. He made an offer to the Austrian goalie, which Hiden immediately accepted. He ended his career in the Austrian national team with this game and moved from Wiener AC to Paris in 1933 for a transfer fee of 80,000 francs. Several national players followed Hiden's example and went abroad, which caused significant losses in the technical game of the Austrians, although there was only one defeat against Czechoslovakia (1:2) in the following 13 games.
References
[change | change source]- ↑ Kraba, Milile (10 September 2010). The Story Has Been Told - Milile Kraba - Google Books. ISBN 9781453566107. Retrieved 2016-07-05.
Other websites
[change | change source]- Rough Guide Archived 2007-03-24 at the Wayback Machine