Lajos Schönfeld

Lajos Schönfeld, commonly known as Tusko (born 7 September 1901 in Szeged[1] – died 25 June 1924 in Belgrade[2]) was a Hungarian football goalkeeper.

Tusko
Personal information
Full name Lajos Schönfeld
Date of birth (1901-09-07)7 September 1901
Place of birth Szeged, Austria-Hungary
Date of death 24 June 1925(1925-06-24) (aged 23)
Place of death Belgrade, Kingdom of Serbs,
Croats and Slovenes
Position(s) Goalkeeper
Youth career
Szegedi TC
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1916–1917 Szegedi TC
1917–1918 Ferencváros
1918–1920 NAK Novi Sad
1920–1921 Szegedi TC
1921–1922 Vojvodina
1922–1925 BSK Belgrade
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

He was one of the most influential players of BSK Belgrade in the early 1920s and is specially remembered for his die-hard attitude in the pitch.[3]

He began his career in Szeged where he played with Szegedi T.C. mostly in the youth team and occasionally as reserve in the first squad.[1][4] until 1917 when he joins Ferencvárosi TC where he plays until the end of the First World War.[5] In 1918 because of the hard conditions in his hometown, he leaves Szeged and moved to Novi Sad in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia and joins NAK Novi Sad.[1][4] It is during this period that he travells as a guest with BSK to a tournament in Dalmatia, however he returned to NAK, and shortly after, in 1921, he moved back to Szeged.[4] He rejoined his former club and became the main goalkeeper. His noticed performances made him a call for an exhibition match played in 1921 between the selections of Budapest against the Hungarian Province.[4] This match fielded what were considered the best players in Hungary by that time, divided in two teams, the ones based in the capital Budapest against the ones playing in the rest of the country, with Tusko playing for the second one, as he was based in Szeged. That year he returned to the Novi Sad and joined FK Vojvodina where he stayed during the rest of the 1921 season.[6] and the 1922.[7] That year, despite the interess of numerous clubs, he opted to move to Belgrade and signed with BSK, a team he already knew from the tournament he was a guest in few years earlier, and where he will become one of the main players of the Yugoslav Championship which started in 1923.[4]

After two seasons, he became an idol in Belgrade and during 1923 was often named as the best goalkeeper in the country.[8] However, in 1924 he suffered a heavy kidney injury in a clash with an opponent forward in a friendly match between the city selection of Belgrade, for whom he played, and the selection of Lower Austria region. After spending a couple of days in hospital and two surgeries he died. The main local sports newspaper Sport had extensive coverage of the event and concluded the report with the following sentence: "He died like a hero and was buried as a small sports King."[9]

As a result, the Belgrade Football Subassociation created a fund named after him in order to financially support the injured footballers.[10]

He was known in Yugoslav media in his Serbian language name version as Lajoš Šenfeld Tusko, or in Cyrillic as Лajoш Шeнфeлд Tуcкo.

References

  1. Sportista, n 9, Belgrade 30 June 1924, page 2 (in Serbian)
  2. Sportista, n 9, Belgrade 30 June 1924, page 1
  3. Vek romantike at OFK Beograd official website.
  4. BSK 1911–1931 Archived 12 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine pag. 23
  5. 50. godina BFS, page 123 (in Serbian)
  6. FK Vojvodina 1921 stats at FK Vojvodina unofficial website (Tusko marked as "Šenfeld")
  7. FK Vojvodina 1922 stats at FK Vojvodina unofficial website (Tusko marked as "Šenfeld").
  8. "Večiti rivali" Archived 12 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine by Ljubomir Vukadinović, pag. 23
  9. "Bsk - Jugoslavija Sećanja Na Prvi Beogradski Večiti Derbi" by Mr. Živko M. Bojanić.
  10. BSK 1911–1931 Archived 12 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine p. 46

External sources

  • pag. 32 from the book "Bsk - Jugoslavija Sećanja Na Prvi Beogradski Večiti Derbi" (English: "Bsk - Jugoslavija memories of Belgrade´s first Eternal derby") by Mr. Živko M. Bojanić.
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