Karl Pekarna
Austrian footballer (1881–1946)
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | (1881-07-07)7 July 1881 | ||
Place of birth | Oberlaa [de] | ||
Date of death | 23 January 1946(1946-01-23) (aged 64) | ||
Position(s) | Goalkeeper | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1900–1904 | First Vienna FC | ||
1905 | Rangers | ||
1905–1908 | First Vienna FC | ||
1908–1910 | FC Wacker München | ||
1910–1914 | MTV München [de] | ||
1918–1919 | SK Slovan HAC | ||
International career | |||
1904–1908 | Austria | 2 | (0) |
Managerial career | |||
1920–1921 | SG GFC Düren 99 | ||
1921 | Alemannia Aachen | ||
1923–1924 | SK Slovan HAC | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Karl Pekarna (7 July 1881 – 23 January 1946) was an Austrian football player and a manager who played as a goalkeeper.[1] He made two appearances for the Austria national team from 1904 to 1908.[2]
Career
Pekarna had a brief stint as a professional footballer with Scottish club Rangers, becoming the first footballer from mainland Europe to play in the United Kingdom.[3][4]
References
- ^ "Karl Pekarna". worldfootball.net. Retrieved 27 November 2021.
- ^ "Karl Pekarna". EU Football. Retrieved 27 November 2021.
- ^ Germann, Carsten. "Vienna Calling". Rund (in German). Retrieved 2 May 2023.
- ^ "Jubiläum: 125 Jahre Emotionen in Blau-Gelb". diepresse.com (in German). 20 August 2019. Retrieved 2 May 2023.
External links
- Karl Pekarna at WorldFootball.net
- Karl Pekarna at EU-Football.info
- v
- t
- e
Alemannia Aachen – managers
- Emunds (1920–21)
- Pekarna (1921)
- Rottenberger (1921–22)
- Schmitz, J. Pelzer & Emunds (1922–23)
- Knappe (1924)
- Baumgartner (1925)
- Rumbold (1926–27)
- Emunds (1927–28)
- Berninger & Jennes (1928)
- Jennes (1928)
- Zolper (1929–30)
- Weisz (1930–31)
- Melcher (1931–33)
- Halpern (1933)
- Rumbold (1933–34)
- Münzenberg (1934–36)
- Frauenkron (1936–37)
- Wieder (1937–39)
- Flink (1939–40)
- Schrenk (1940–42)
- Emunds & van Heiß (1942–43)
- Hymnen (1943–44)
- Flink (1946–47)
- Havlicek (1947–48)
- Kratz (1948–49)
- Goffart, Gruber, Kölling & Münzenberg (1949)
- Pölsterl (1949–50)
- Kölling & Münzenberg (1950)
- Melcher (1950–51)
- Lindemann (1951–55)
- Knöpfle (1955–58)
- Schütt (1958)
- Sárosi (1958–59)
- Kronsbein (1959–62)
- Pfau (1962–65)
- Weth (1965–66)
- Hoffmann (1966–67)
- Pfeiffer (1967–69)
- Stollenwerk (1969)
- Weth (1969–70)
- Lindemann (1970)
- Kottmann & Schütt (1970–71)
- Baumann (1971–72)
- Schütt (1972)
- Thomas (1972–73)
- Pfeiffer (1973–74)
- Prokop (1974)
- Witzler (1974–76)
- Prokop (1976–78)
- Haag (1978)
- Ahmann (1978–81)
- Habig (1981)
- Martinelli (1981)
- Buhtz (1981–82)
- Čendić (1982–83)
- Ahmann (1983–84)
- Grünther (1984)
- Fuchs (1984–87)
- Ferner (1987)
- Neururer (1987–89)
- Grünther (1989)
- Denizli (1989–90)
- Krautzun (1990)
- Wagner (1990–91)
- Schleiden (1991)
- Hannes (1991–94)
- Graf (1994)
- vom Bruch (1994–96)
- Fuchs (1996–99)
- Winkhold (1999)
- Hach (1999–2001)
- Berger (2001–04)
- Hecking (2004–06)
- Bremser (2006)
- Frontzeck (2006–07)
- Buchwald (2007)
- Schmadtke (2007)
- Seeberger (2008–09)
- Kronhardt (2009)
- Krüger (2009–10)
- Hyballa (2010–11)
- Aussem (2011)
- Funkel (2011–12)
- Aussem (2012)
- Van Eck (2012–13)
- Schubert (2013–15)
- Benbennek (2015)
- Schaffrath & Demai (2015)
- Kılıç (2015–20)
- Vollmerhausen (2020–21)
- Andersen (2021)
- Helmes (2021)
- Kılıç (2021–22)
- Hohl (2022–23)
- Backhaus (2023–)
This biographical article relating to Austrian association football is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e