Gusztáv Sebes

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Gusztáv Sebes
Personal information
Full name Gusztáv Sebes
Date of birth June 21 1906
Place of birth    Budapest, Hungary
Youth clubs
1919-20
1920-24
Müszaki Doldozók SE
Vasas SC
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1925-26
1926-27
1927-29
1929-40
1945
Sauvages Nomades
Club Olympique Billancourt
MTK Hungária FC
Hungária FC
MTK Hungária FC
   
National team
192x-xx Hungary 1 (0)
Teams managed
1940-42
1942-43
1943-44
1945-46
1949-57
Szentlõrinci AC
WMKASE
Weiss Manfred FC
Budafoki MTE
Hungary

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only.
* Appearances (Goals)

Gusztáv Sebes (born Budapest, June 21, 1906; died Budapest, January 30, 1986), also referred to as Sebes Gusztáv and Gusztáv Scharenpeck, is a former Hungarian footballer and coach. During the 1950s, with the title Deputy Minister of Sport, he coached the legendary Hungary team known as the Mighty Magyars. Among the players in the team were Ferenc Puskás, Zoltán Czibor, Sándor Kocsis, József Bozsik and Nándor Hidegkuti. Together with Béla Guttmann and Márton Bukovi, he formed a triumvirate of radical Hungarian coaches who pioneered the 4-2-4 formation.

Sebes advocated what he referred to as socialist football, an early version of Total Football, with every player pulling equal weight and able to play in all positions. Under Sebes, Hungary went unbeaten for 32 consecutive matches, a record that still stands today. During this run Hungary became Olympic Champions in 1952 and Central European Champions in 1953. They also twice defeated England, 6-3 in 1953 and 7-1 in 1954 and finished as runners-up in the 1954 FIFA World Cup. Defeat in the final marked the beginning of the end for Sebes. After this defeat Hungary embarked on an 18 game unbeaten run which came to an end on February 19 1956 when they lost 3-1 to Turkey. Despite this Sebes was sacked after a 5-4 defeat against Belgium on June 3 1956. He remained active in football throughout his life working as an administrator and holding coaching positions at Újpesti Dózsa SC, Budapest Honvéd SE and Diósgyőri VTK.

Contents

[edit] Early Years

Sebes, the son of a cobbler, initially played youth team football in Hungary with, among others, Vasas SC. He then worked as a trade union organiser in both Budapest and Paris, where he was employed as a fitter for four years with Renault at Billancourt. Sebes also played for the factory team, Club Olympique Billancourt. In 1953, on the way to London to play England, Sebes and the Mighty Magyars stopped in Paris and played a warm-up game against his former team, beating them 18-1 in front of 3,000 spectators. On returning to Hungary in the 1920s he played for MTK Hungária FC, where his team mates included Jenő Kálmár and Pál Titkos, both of whom later worked as assistants with Sebes. Other team mates included Iuliu Baratky, and Ferenc Sas. During his time at MTK he helped the club win the Hungarian League on three occasions and the Hungarian Cup once.

[edit] Honvéd and MTK

In 1948 Sebes, together with Béla Mandik and Gábor Kompóti-Kléber, was part of a three-man committee that took charge of the Hungary national football team. However by 1949, with the title of Deputy Minister of Sport, Sebes was in sole charge and was given complete control of planning for the national side. He was inspired by the Austrian Wunderteam and the Italy team that won two World Cups in the 1930s. Both teams were predominantly drawn from one or at most two clubs and Sebes wanted a similar system in Hungary. In January 1949 when Hungary became a communist state, the resulting nationalisation of football clubs gave Sebes the opportunity. The two biggest Hungarian clubs at the time were Ferencvárosi TC and MTK Hungária FC. However while the secret police, the ÁVH took over MTK, Ferencváros was considered unsuitable because of it’s right-wing and nationalist traditions. Sebes turned instead to Kispest AC and the club was taken over by the Hungarian Ministry of Defence. It became the Hungarian Army team and was subsequently renamed Budapest Honvéd SE.

The Kispest AC team already included Ferenc Puskás and József Bozsik but army conscription now enabled Honvéd to recruit Sándor Kocsis, Zoltán Czibor and László Budai from Ferencvárosi TC, Gyula Lóránt from Vasas SC and the goalkeeper Gyula Grosics. Sebes was effectively able to use Honvéd as a training camp for the national team. Meanwhile at MTK, coach Márton Bukovi began using the vital 4-2-4 formation, later adopted by Sebes. In particular, Bukovi together with, Péter Palotás and Nándor Hidegkuti, pioneered the crucial deep lying centre-forward position. Other MTK players Mihály Lantos and József Zakariás also provided the Mighty Magyars with a solid defence.

[edit] Olympic Champions

It was at the 1952 Helsinki Summer Olympics that Sebes and his Mighty Magyars first came to prominence. With a forward line including Ferenc Puskás, Sándor Kocsis, and super-sub Péter Palotás, Hungary easily progressed to the final. In five games they scored 20 goals and conceded only 2. In the semi-final they defeated defending Olympic Champions, Sweden 6-0 and in the final they beat Yugoslavia 2-0 with goals from Puskás and Zoltán Czibor. Among those who witnessed Hungary winning the Olympics was Stanley Rous, secretary general of the English FA and future FIFA president. He subsequently approached Sebes and invited Hungary to play England at Wembley.

[edit] Hungary V England

Sebes planned for the game against England meticulously. He borrowed the heavier type of balls used by the English FA so his team could practice with them and altered his training pitch so the dimensions matched those at Wembley. He also arranged practice matches against Hungarian club sides ordered to play in the English style and on November 15 1953, two weeks before the England game, Hungary played Sweden team coached by the Englishman George Raynor. He also took the decision was to use Nándor Hidegkuti instead of Péter Palotás in the deep lying centre-forward role. On September 19 1952 in a Central European International Cup game against Switerland, with Hungary 2-0 down after half an hour, he replaced Palotás with Hidegkuti. Inspired by Hidegkuti, Hungary were level at half time and eventually won 4-2. On May 17 1953 Hidegkuti then helped Hungary clinch the Central European title when he scored in a 3-0 win against Italy at the Stadio Olimpico.

On November 25 1953, Hungary took on an England team that included Stanley Matthews, Stan Mortensen, Billy Wright and Alf Ramsey and defeated them 6-3. In a stunning display of football, Hidegkuti scored a hat-trick and Ferenc Puskás scored twice. After the game a rematch was arranged as a warm-up for 1954 World Cup. The return took place at the Népstadion in Budapest and Hungary put in another impressive performance, winning 7-1.

[edit] The 1954 World Cup

Hungary entered the 1954 World Cup with both confidence and unbeaten record stretching back to 1950. They easily progressed threw the group stages with wins over South Korea and West Germany. Then in the quarter-finals Hungary won 4-2, surviving a bruising encounter with Brazil, infamously referred to as the Battle of Berne. The game finished in a brawl and Sebes ended up with four stitches after being struck by a broken bottle. In the semi-finals Hungary defeated reigning World champions Uruguay . The game was 2-2 in extra time until Sándor Kocsis scored twice to seal another 4-2 win. In the final they met West Germany once again. However the competition would end in disappointment for Hungary, losing 3-2 to the Germans.

[edit] Honours

Olympic medal record
Competitor for Flag of Hungary Hungary
Men's Football
Gold 1952 Helsinki Team competition

Manager

Hungary

Player

MTK Hungária FC/Hungária FC

  • Hungarian League
    • Winner : 1929, 1936, 1937: 3
    • Runner-up : 1928, 1931, 1933, 1940: 4

[edit] Sources

  • Behind The Curtain - Travels in Eastern European Football: Jonathan Wilson (2006) [1]

[edit] External links