- Max Breunig
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Max Breunig Personal information Date of birth November 12, 1888 Place of birth Karlsruhe, Germany Date of death July 4, 1961 (aged 72) Place of death Pforzheim, West Germany Playing position Defender/Midfielder Youth career 1901-1908 Karlsruher FV Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 1908-1912 Karlsruher FV 1912-1918 1. FC Pforzheim National team 1910-1913 Germany 9 (1) Teams managed 1921-1922 Karlsruher FV 1922-1923 FC Basel 1926-1928 TSV München 1860 1930-1934 TSV München 1860 * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).Max Breunig (November 12, 1888 near Karlsruhe – July 4, 1961 in Pforzheim) was a German amateur football player who competed in the 1912 Summer Olympics.
Breunig, a midfielder, started his career at Karlsruher FV in 1908, and on the final day of the 1909/10 German League season, he scored the winning goal (a penalty kick) in a 1-0 win against Holstein Kiel to win the championship. In 1913 he signed for 1. FC Pforzheim but his football career ended when the First World War began.
He captained the German national team in all nine games he played for them and was a member of the German 1912 Olympic squad and played one match in the main tournament. He scored one goal at international level.
After his playing days, he became a teacher and he also went on to manage Karlsruher from 1921 until 1922, FC Basel from 1922 to 1923[1] and TSV München 1860 from 1925 until 1928 and from 1930 until 1934.
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External links
FC Basel – managers Humphreys (1913–14) · Breunig (1922–23) · Kertész (1928–30) · Putzendople (1930–31) · Haftel (1931–32) · Kurz (1932–33) · Haist (1933–34) · Kohn (1934) · Riemke (1934–35) · Körner (1935–37) · Jaccard (1937–39) · Dietrich (1939) · Galler (1939–40) · Rupf (1940–43) · Wolf (1943–46) · Barras (1946) · Schall (1946–47) · Hufschmid (1947–52) · Bader (1952–55) · Dürr (1955) · Sárosi (1955–1957) · Strittich (1957–1958) · Bader (1958–59) · Vincze (1959–61) · Sobotka (1961–65) · Benthaus (1965–82) · Ohlhauser (1982–83) · Künnecke (1983–84) · Müller (1984–85) · Benthaus (1985–87) · Siegenthaler (1987–90) · Künnecke (1990–92) · Odermatt (1992) · Rahmen (1992) · Rausch (1992–93) · Andrey (1993–95) · Engel (1995–97) · Berger (1997) · Mathez (1997–99) · Gross (1999–09) · Fink (2009–11) · Vogel (2011–present)
TSV 1860 München – managers Spiksley (1913) · Braumüller (1919–25) · Breunig (1925–28) · Kohn (1928–30) · Breunig (1930–34) · Rechenmacher (1934–35) · Prokoph (1935–36) · Braumüller (1936–37) · Schäfer (1937–38) · Tillmann (1938–39) · Eckhardt (1939–40) · Schmeifler (1940–41) · Schäfer (1941–45) · Goldbrunner (1945–46) · Ertl (1946) · Schäfer (1946–51) · Molzer (1951–52) · Harthaus (1952–53) · Schäfer (1953–56) · Hipp (1956–61) · Merkel (1961–66) · Weber (1966–67) · G. Baumann (1967) · Sing (1967–68) · Pilz (1968–69) · Langner (1969) · Binder (1969–70) · Tilkowski (1970–72) · Schwartz (1972–73) · Gutendorf (1974) · Merkel (1974–75) · Lucas (1975–78) · Krautzun (1979) · A. Baumann (1979–80) · Rühl (1980–81) · Halama (1981–82) · Kremer (1982) · Schumm & Schwarzhuber (1982) · Beer (1983) · Patzke (1983–84) · Popescu (1984) · Beer (1984) · Halama (1984–86) · D. Kurz (1986) · Jusufi (1986–87) · Zander (1987) · Klimaschefski (1987–88) · Bierofka (1988–90) · Wettberg (1990–92) · Lorant (1992–2001) · Pacult (2001–03) · Götz (2003–04) · Vanenburg (2004) · Bommer (2004) · Maurer (2004–06) · Schachner (2006–07) · M. Kurz (2007–09) · Wolf (2009) · Lienen (2009–10) · Maurer (2010–)
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