Karol Borhy
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | (1912-06-23)23 June 1912 | ||
Place of birth | Budapest, Austria-Hungary | ||
Date of death | 9 January 1997(1997-01-09) (aged 84) | ||
Place of death | Lučenec, Slovakia | ||
Managerial career | |||
Years | Team | ||
1953–1954 | Czechoslovakia | ||
1957–1961 | ČH Bratislava | ||
1961–1962 | Slovan Bratislava | ||
1962–1965 | Jednota Trenčín | ||
1969–1970 | Jednota Trenčín |
Karol Borhy (Hungarian: Károly Borhy, 23 June 1912 in Budapest – 9 January 1997 in Lučenec) was a Czechoslovak football coach. He coached FK Inter Bratislava, ŠK Slovan Bratislava and briefly Czechoslovakia national football team. Borhy was a member of the Hungarian minority in Slovakia.[1]
Borhy also coached Jednota Trenčín for many years in the 1960s and 1970s.[2] He also worked for six years in Kuwait.[3]
References
- ^ Mészáros, Károly J. (30 September 2020). "Borhy Károly és az Aranycsapat árnyéka". SzloMaSport.sk (in Hungarian). Retrieved 26 April 2021.
- ^ Český a československý fotbal - lexikon osobností a klubů, p. 23, at Google Books
- ^ Alexander Cibula: Jubilejný desiaty ročník Memoriálu Karola Borhyho at SME.sk, 9 February 2009.
- v
- t
- e
Czechoslovakia national football team – managers
- Fanta (1920)
- Žabokrtský & Kalina (1922)
- Fanta (1922–23)
- Bezecný (1924)
- Pelikán (1924)
- Henčl (1925)
- Katz (1926)
- Kraus (1926–27)
- Henčl (1927–29)
- Kraus (1929)
- Henčl (1929)
- Pelikán & Valoušek (1930)
- Přecechtěl (1930)
- Fanta (1930–31)
- Pelikán & Petrů (1931)
- Fanta (1931–32)
- Petrů (1932)
- Fanta (1932)
- Pelikán (1933)
- Petrů (1933)
- Bezecný (1933)
- Petrů (1933–34)
- Pelikán (1935)
- Bezecný (1935–37)
- Tesař (1937)
- Meissner (1938)
- Blažej (1939)
- Myška (1946)
- Pichler (1946–47)
- Valoušek & Gürtler (1947)
- Pichler (1947)
- Vodička (1948)
- Knobloch (1948)
- Bokšay (1948)
- Vodička (1948)
- Daučík (1948)
- Čambal (1949)
- Bokšay (1949)
- Ženíšek (1950–51)
- Musil (1951–52)
- Lanhaus (1952–1953)
- Luka (1953)
- Luka & Borhy (1953)
- Borhy (1953)
- Luka & Borhy (1953)
- Borhy (1953–54)
- Rýgr (1954–55)
- Bokšay (1955)
- Rýgr (1955)
- Rýgr & Kolský (1956)
- Rýgr (1956–57)
- Rýgr & Bejbl (1957)
- Bejbl (1957)
- Rýgr & Bejbl (1957)
- Rýgr (1957)
- Kolský (1958)
- Kolský & Vytlačil (1958)
- Vytlačil (1959–63)
- Jíra (1963–64)
- Vytlačil (1964)
- Jíra (1964–65)
- Marko (1965–70)
- Rýgr (1970)
- Novák & Kačáni (1971–72)
- Ježek (1972–78)
- Vengloš (1978–82)
- Havránek (1982–83)
- Hadamczik (1984)
- Havránek (1984)
- Masopust (1984–87)
- Vengloš (1988–90)
- Máčala (1990–93)
- Ježek (1993)
This biographical article relating to Slovak football is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e