Alois Machek

Alois Machek
Personal information
Date of birth Around 1895
Place of birth Hradec Králové, Austro-Hungary
Place of death SFR Yugoslavia
Playing position Midfielder
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
Češký lev 1 (0)
1913–1914 Velika Srbija
191x–191x Šumadija Kragujevac
191x–1918 Morava Ćuprija
1918–1926 Jugoslavija Beograd [1]7 (0)
1927–192x Soko Beograd
Teams managed
1913–1914 Velika Srbija (player/coach)
1914 Srpski mač
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.

Alois Machek[2] (known in Serbian as Alojz Mahek/Алојз Махек) was a Czech football player and coach, responsible for the popularization of football in Serbia and Yugoslavia during the first two decades of the 20th century.

Machek was born in Hradec Králové, Kingdom of Bohemia, back then part of Austro-Hungary, nowadays of Czech Republic, Machek started playing football in the local club. Then he became a metallurgic employee at the Škoda factory in Plzeň and played for a club named Češký lev.[3] He received a message from his friend and compatriot, Eduard Mifek, who was already playing football in Serbia; Mifek invited him to become a player of a newly founded club, SK Velika Srbija. Machek met an envoy from the club, Serbian footballer Josip Furjanović, in Vienna, who presented him the proposal, and Machek accepted.[4] He arrived in Belgrade, capital of Kingdom of Serbia, in 1913 at the age of 18.[3]

There is a doubt regarding this period. Alois Machek was Czech that played in Czechoslovakia but when Velika Srbija envoys went on to meet hm, they went to Vienna, Austria. In 1913, when the meeting took place, there was a player named Machek playing in the Austrian league for SC Rudolfshügel in the 1912–13 season.[5] The issue is pending confirmation to know whether it was Alois Mache who played one season in Austria before coming to Serbia or if that Machek that played that season in Austria is a different person.

Machek was among the first group of players that formed SK Velika Srbija. The first team was formed by young players Vlada Krstić, Mika Mitić, Mileta Jovanović, Jovan Ružić and Milorad Ilić, plus older and experienced Josip Furjanović, Milivoje Ivanović and Eduard Mifek. The club president Danilo Stojanović, who was also the goalkeeper, also recruited FK Šumadija 1903 players Petar Radojković, Mikan Pavlović, Dragoljub Veljković, Milorad Jovanović, Milanče Stefanović, as well as Venčel Petrovický from Bohemia.[6] Besides Machek, Mifek and Perovický were also Czechs. Machek immediately impressed the others with his excellent technique, dribbling and strong shot and, besides being a player, he was also pointed out as team coach.[6] He gained major popularity, and is considered by sports journalist Srbislav Todorović as the sole individual responsible for laying the foundation for modern football in Serbia. He was responsible for introducing the Czech school of football in Serbia, a school which was the most advanced at that time, alongside the Austrian and Hungarian models.[7]

In 1914, in addition to being a coach/player of Velika Srbija, he took charge as coach of another Belgrade club, SK Srpski mač, [8] which became the unofficial champions of Serbia that year.[9] That same year, he played with Velika Srbija for the Serbian Olympic Cup. The final was played between Velika Srbija and Šumadija, and Velika Srbija won 3-1, with Mahek scoring two of the three goals of his team.[10]

All Serbian clubs ceased their activities with the start of the First World War on 15 July 1914, and most players were conscripted to the Serbian Army.[11] Most of the elder players who were not conscripted, along with the foreign ones, left Belgrade and moved south to the interior of Serbia. Machek, along with his compatriots Mifek and Petrovický, were taken by Velika Srbija president Danilo Stojanović to play in Kragujevac with Šumadija, which was another club that Stojadinović had founded earlier. Machek and Petrovický later played at FK Morava Ćuprija, which had just been founded by other players from Belgrade that took refuge there during the war.[12]

At the end of the war in 1918, the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes was formed, renamed to Yugoslavia in 1929. The clubs were restored, and Ajojz Mahek rejoined Velika Srbija, now renamed to SK Jugoslavija. He would play with SK Jugoslavija until 1926.[13] Along with his compatriot Karel Blaha as SK Jugoslavija coach, he went on to be part of the Yugoslav First League championship winning squads in 1924[14] and 1925; the two national championships crowned his playing career.

He moved to SK Soko Beograd in 1927, [15] and lived in Yugoslavia for the rest of his life.[7]

Honors

SK Jugoslavija

References

  1. Machek at exyufudbal.in.rs (coountiing the stats of just the fiinal phases of the natiional champiiinshiiip tournaments that begin being played in 1923. Ecluded the Belgrade subassociation First League stats.
  2. Češi a Bĕlehrad 1918–1939 by Pavel Trojan, 2009 (in Czech), pag. 45
  3. 1 2 50. godina BFS, page 116 (in Serbian)
  4. Fudbal u Srbiji 1896.-1914., by Srbislav Todorović, Belgrade 1996, pag. 55
  5. Statistik Ö1 (1.Klasse) NÖ Fußballverband 1912/13 at austriasoccer.at
  6. 1 2 Fudbal u Srbiji 1896.-1914., by Srbislav Todorović, Belgrade 1996, pag. 53
  7. 1 2 Fudbal u Srbiji 1896.-1914., by Srbislav Todorović, Belgrade 1996, pag. 56
  8. Fudbal u Srbiji 1896.-1914., by Srbislav Todorović, Belgrade 1996, pag. 25
  9. Fudbal u Srbiji 1896.-1914., by Srbislav Todorović, Belgrade 1996, pag. 33
  10. Fudbal u Srbiji 1896.-1914., by Srbislav Todorović, Belgrade 1996, pag. 60
  11. Fudbal u Srbiji 1896.-1914., by Srbislav Todorović, Belgrade 1996, pag. 63
  12. Fudbal u Srbiji 1896.-1914., by Srbislav Todorović, Belgrade 1996, pag. 65
  13. BSK - Jugoslavija: prvi večiti derbi by Živko M. Bojanić
  14. Zbog sistema takmičenja bez prvaka države 1934. at Politika, 8-1-2012, retrieved 12-1-2014 (in Serbian)
  15. Beogradski sokolovi page 32

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