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Personal information | |||
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Date of birth | 30 August 1926 | ||
Place of birth | Koblenz, Weimar Germany | ||
Date of death | 13 September 2019 | (aged 93)||
Position(s) | Right winger | ||
Youth career | |||
1936–1939 | VfB Lützel | ||
1939–1944 | TuS Neuendorf | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1942–1951 | TuS Neuendorf | 93 | (46) |
1954–1955 | Blue Stars Zürich | ||
1955–1961 | Luzern | 27 | (6) |
Managerial career | |||
1955 | Blue Stars Zürich (player-manager) | ||
1955–1961 | Luzern (player-manager) | ||
1961 | US Monastir | ||
1963–1964 | MSV Duisburg | ||
1965–1966 | VfB Stuttgart | ||
1968 | St Louis Stars | ||
1968 | Bermuda | ||
1968–1970 | Schalke 04 | ||
1970–1971 | Kickers Offenbach | ||
1971 | Sporting Cristal | ||
1972–1973 | Chile | ||
1974 | Bolivia | ||
1974 | Venezuela | ||
1974 | 1860 Munich | ||
1975 | Real Valladolid | ||
1975–1976 | Fortuna Köln | ||
1976 | Trinidad & Tobago | ||
1976 | Grenada | ||
1976 | Antigua & Barbuda | ||
1976 | Botswana | ||
1976–1977 | Tennis Borussia Berlin[1] | ||
1977 | Hamburger SV | ||
1979–1981 | Australia | ||
1981 | New Caledonia | ||
1981 | Nepal | ||
1981 | Tonga | ||
1981 | Tanzania | ||
1983 | Fiji | ||
1984 | Hertha BSC | ||
1984 | São Tomé & Príncipe | ||
1984–1985 | Yomiuri SC | ||
1985–1986 | Ghana | ||
1986 | Nepal | ||
1987 | Fiji | ||
1988 | China | ||
1988 | Iran U-23 | ||
1991–1992 | China | ||
1993 | Mauritius | ||
1995–1996 | Zimbabwe | ||
1997 | Mauritius | ||
1999 | Rwanda | ||
2003 | Samoa | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Rudolf Gutendorf (30 August 1926 – 13 September 2019)[2] was a German football manager, renowned for managing the highest number of national teams – a total of 18 teams plus Iran's Olympic team in 1988 and the China Olympic team in 1992.[3][4][5]
Gutendorf holds a Guinness World Record for coaching 55 teams in 32 countries, across six continents.[6]