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Joe Vlasits

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hungarian footballer and manager (1921–1985)

Joe Vlasits
Personal information
Full nameJózsef Vlasits
Date of birth1921
Place of birthBudapest, Hungary
Date of death (aged 64)
Place of deathSydney, Australia
Position(s)Winger
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1939–1940Nemzeti2(1)
Managerial career
1958–1960Canterbury-Marrickville
1961Sydney Prague
1962St George Budapest
1963–1964Pan-Hellenic
1965Bankstown
1966SSC Yugal
1967–1968Melita Eagles-Newtown
1967–1970Australia
1972Pan-Hellenic
1974Northern Districts
1978St George Budapest
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

József "Uncle Joe" Vlasits (1921 – 23 April 1985) was a Hungarian football player and manager who coached the Australian national side from 1967 to 1970.

Early life and playing career

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Vlasits was born in 1921 inBudapest, Hungary. 1939–40 he played for Budapest First Division clubNemzeti but his career was cut short by injury and he moved to Australia in the late 1940s.[1]

Managerial career

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In Australia, Vlasits moved into management, and coached New South Wales Division One sideCanterbury-Marrickville from 1958 to 1960, winning titles in 1958 and 1960 and winning theAmpol Cup in '58. He then coachedSydney Prague andBudapest in 1961 and '62 respectively, winning the Division One title with both clubs. He then took over at fellow Division One sidePan-Hellenic for 1963 and '64, but could only manage fourth- and sixth-place finishes. He then dropped down a league to Division Two sideBankstown, which placed sixth in his only year of management, 1965. He returned to Division One in 1966 with strugglersSSC Yugal, which came third-last that season. A two-year stint atMelita Eagles-Newtown saw the club finish third-last in both the 1967 and '68 Division One seasons.

He coached the Australian national side from 1967 to 1970, and coached the team to victory in the1967 Quoc Khanh Cup, winning all five matches they played. It was Australia's first international footballing honour. He coached Australia for a total of 23 games — 13 wins, seven draws, and three losses.[2] In 1970 he took an Australian side to the Friendship Cup in Saigon, Vietnam. Later that yearRale Rasic was appointed his successor. Vlasits is credited having elevatedJonny Warren to Australian captain.

He returned to Pan-Hellenic for the 1972 season, and the team came seventh in Division One. He then managed Northern Districts to the Division Three title in 1974.

Joe Vlasits became in 1999 one of the original inductees to theFootball Australia Hall of Fame.

Death

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Vlasits died at the age of 64 on 23 April 1985.[3]

Managerial statistics

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TeamFromToRecord
GWDLWin %
Australia19671970231373056.52


Honours

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As a manager

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Canterbury-Marrickville

Sydney Prague

Budapest

Australia

Northern Districts

References

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  1. ^Tamás Dénes, Mihály–B. Sándor, Éva Bába: "A magyar labdarúgás története Vol. II: Proikorszak vb-ezüsttel (1926–1944)", Campus Kiadó (Debrecen), p. 381. ISBN 978-963-9822-11-2
  2. ^"Teams of the Decade | Men's 1963-1970".Australia national football team. 18 December 2013. Retrieved13 July 2017.
  3. ^"'Uncle Joe' Vlasits dies at 64 after long illness".The Sydney Morning Herald. 24 April 1985. p. 42. Retrieved3 April 2023.

External links

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