Rudolph Nickolsburger

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rudolph Nickolsburger
Personal information
Date of birth March 21, 1899(1899-03-21)
Place of birth    Hungary
Date of death    December 1969
Place of death    New York, NY, United States
Playing position Winger / Centre-forward
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
19xx-1922
1922-xxxx
1925-1926
1926-1927
1928-1929
1929-1932
Ferencvárosi TC
Makkabi Brno
Played in Italy
SC Hakoah Wien
New York Hakoah
Hakoah All-Stars





84 (30)   
National team
1920-1925 Flag of Hungary Hungary 02 0(0)

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

Rudolph Nickolsburger (born March 21, 1899, Hungary; died New York, December 1969), also referred to as Nikolsburger Rezső and Rudy Nichols, is a former Hungarian footballer who played for Ferencvárosi TC, SC Hakoah Wien and Hungary. He later emigrated to the United States where he played for New York Hakoah and Hakoah All-Stars.

Contents

[edit] Club career

Nickolsburger played for Ferencvárosi TC during the early 1920s before leaving Budapest in 1922 to join Makkabi Brno in Czechoslovakia. This club consisted almost exclusively of Hungarian Jews. In the mid-1920s, Nickolsburger played in Italy. A Béla Nikolsbuger played as a centre forward for Forli during the 1925-26 season. This may be the same player.[1]

In March 1927 Nickolsburger moved to Austria and joined the all-Jewish club SC Hakoah Wien. Then in April and May 1927 he joined the club on their second tour of the United States. He played in several games on the tour, scoring twice against the New York Giants. He then returned to Austria and started the 1927/28 season with SC Hakoah Wien. However by 1928 he was back in the United States playing for New York Hakoah of the Eastern Soccer League, a team made-up of former SC Hakoah Wien players, including Béla Guttmann. In 1929 he helped them win the U.S. Open Cup. After a merger with Brooklyn Hakoah, they became the Hakoah All-Stars and entered the American Soccer League in the fall of 1929. Between 1929 and 1931 Nickolsburger played 84 league games and scored 30 goals for the All-Stars in the American Soccer League.[2] His last confirmed game was on June 12, 1932 against the Bohemian Americans.

[edit] Hungarian international

While with Ferencvárosi TC, Nickolsburger also played once for Hungary. He made his international debut in 1920 against Austria. On May 17 1925 he also played for a Hungary XI in a 4-1 win against a visiting Bolton Wanderers.

[edit] Later Years

Nickolsburger spent his later years in and around The Bronx, New York. His wife, Mary Tóth Nichols died in 1992. A son Leslie (Laszlo), who was born in Budapest in 1927, died in February 2006. His surviving daughter, Norma Lee Nichols Mahdavi, resides in New York. Nickolsburger's grandchildren and great-grandchildren have settled in Florida, Vermont and Norway.

[edit] Honours

New York Hakoah

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Players at RSSSF
  2. ^ Jose, Colin (1998). American Soccer League, 1921-1931 (Hardback), The Scarecrow Press. (ISBN 0-8108-3429-4).