Károly Nemes
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Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Place of birth | Austro-Hungary | ||
Position(s) | Goalkeeper | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
19xx–1917 | MTK Budapest | ||
1917–1919 | Rapid Wien | 27 | (0) |
1919–192x | NAK Novi Sad | ||
1924–1925 | Jugoslavija Belgrade | 6 | (0) |
Managerial career | |||
1930 | Bulgaria | ||
1930–1931 | Luzern | ||
1933 | Vojvodina | ||
1934 | Jugoslavija Belgrade | ||
1934–1936 | NAK Novi Sad | ||
1940–1941 | Bata Borovo | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Károly Nemes also known as Dragan/Dragutin Nemeš, was an Hungarian football goalkeeper and later coach. He is best known for having been part of the championship winning teams of SK Rapid Wien and SK Jugoslavija, and he later had coaching career throughout Central and South-Eastern Europe.
Playing career
After playing with MTK Budapest[1] he became the first foreigner to play in SK Rapid Wien. He played two seasons with Rapid, between 1917 and 1919, and, after being vice-champion in 1917–18, a year later he won the double, the 1918–19 Austrian football championship and the 1919 Austrian Cup.[1] He has played a total of 27 league matches for Rapid.[1]
In 1919 he moved to Yugoslavia, known back then as the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, where he continued his career. Initially he joined NAK Novi Sad[2] and later he was brought to Belgrade where he will join SK Jugoslavija and win the Yugoslav Championship two times in a row, in 1924 and 1925. He made 6 appearances[3] in those two seasons in the Yugoslav championship and many more in the First League of the Belgrade Football Subassociation. While in Yugoslavia he became commonly known either as Karlo or Dragutin Nemeš.[2]
Coaching career
In 1927 he was brought by FK Vojvodina president Kosta Hadži to Novi Sad where he had his first spell as a coach in the club by replacing for a short period Otto Necas who was the main coach back then.[2] This was the beginning of a good relation he would have with the club, and he would later have a second spell as a coach with Vojvodina in 1932 when he stayed for almost two years.[2] He would return again in 1939. Between Summer 1930 and September 1931 he coached Swiss side FC Luzern.[4]
Károly Nemes coaching abilities were characterised as typical of the, back then, avangarde Central European football schooll, and he is reminded as specially strong in the psichical preparation of the team before the matches, beside a developed work in the physical condition of the players.[2]
He also coached his former team SK Jugoslavija in 1934[2] Then he coached NAK Novi Sad winning with them the Novi Sad Football Subassociation League and a third place in the 1935–36 Yugoslav Football Championship.[5] He also worked as a coach in Germany, Switzerland and Bulgaria.[2] He was the coach of the Bulgarian national team in 1930.[6] In the early 1940s he returned to Yugoslavia and coached SK Bata Borovo in the 1940–41 Serbian League.[6]
He later moved to Hungary and lived in Jánoshalma.[2]
Honours
As player:
As coach:
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Karoly Nemes at Rapidarchiv.at
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 "Pola veka" by Vladislav Beljanski, Jovan Dejanović, Luka Dotlić, Kosta Hadži and Jovan Vilovac (pags. 104, 105) (Serbian)
- ↑ Karoly Nemes at exyufudbal.in.rs
- ↑ List of coaches at FC Luzern official website
- ↑ fkvojvodina.com (see bottom image)
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 "Fudbal u Kraljevini Jugoslaviji" by Milorad Sijić, (pag. 172) (Serbian)
- Articles with Serbian-language external links
- No local image but image on Wikidata
- Pages using infobox football biography with unknown parameters
- Hungarian footballers
- Association football goalkeepers
- MTK Budapest FC players
- SK Rapid Wien players
- Expatriate footballers in Austria
- NAK Novi Sad players
- SK Jugoslavija players
- Yugoslav First League players
- Expatriate footballers in Yugoslavia
- Hungarian football managers
- FC Luzern managers
- FK Vojvodina managers
- SK Jugoslavija managers
- Bulgaria national football team managers
- Hungarian expatriates in Austria
- Hungarian expatriates in Yugoslavia
- Expatriate football managers in Yugoslavia
- Expatriate football managers in Switzerland