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Georges Demulder

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Belgian footballer(

Georges Demulder
Personal information
Full nameCecil Georges Demulder
Date of birth(1919-05-12)12 May 1919
Place of birthElisabethville,Belgian Congo
Date of death6 May 1983(1983-05-06) (aged 63)
Place of deathBrussels, Belgium
PositionForward
Youth career
1934–1936White Star
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1936–1939White Star
1940–1941Sporting CP14(8)
1941–1947White Star
International career
1937–1939Belgium2?(0)
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

Cecil Georges Demulder (12 May 1919 – 6 May 1983)[1] was a Belgianfootballer who played as aforward.[2][3] He made one appearance for theBelgium national team in 1939.[4] He was a winger forWhite Star A.C., today's Molenbeek, and forSporting CP.

Club career

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Georges Demulder played his first match for White Star AC in 1936. The club played in the first tier,Belgian Division of Honour. Demulder gradually became an important player in the team and his good performances earned him a selection for the Belgian national team in 1939.

With the Second World War approaching, the Demulder family moved to Portugal, where Georges's father could continue his work in the diamond industry. Georges Demulder joined the top clubSporting Clube de Portugal where he scored 14 goals, topping off with thePortuguese national championship of 1940–41.[5] he scored 8 goals that season, including one againstBenfica Lisbon.[5] After the father had died in 1941, officially through a car accident yet according to Georges's brother-in-lawArsène Vaillant by assassination, the Demulder family returned to Brussels.

With more war interruptions, Georges returned to play for White Star AC until it was relegated from the first tier in 1947.

International career

[edit]

Initially, Demulder joined the second squad of theBelgium national team, playing a match against theNetherlands in 1937.[5]

Demulder played at least one official international match on the first squad of the national team, on 14 May 1939.[6] The match ended in a 2–1 loss for the "Red Devils" againstSwitzerland. Demulder was only the second White Star player to play on the Belgium national team, afterJean Fievez.[7]

The international career of Demulder was disrupted by the Demulder family fleeing to Lisbon and the Second World War. Demulder's brother-in-law,Arsène Vaillant, playing for the same club, played later on the national team.

Death

[edit]

Demulder died on 6 May 1983, six days shy of his 64th birthday.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Georges Demulder".eu-football.info. Retrieved7 April 2023.
  2. ^"Georges Demulder".worldfootball.net. Retrieved3 September 2021.
  3. ^"Georges Demulder".National Football Teams. Retrieved3 September 2021.
  4. ^"Georges Demulder".Royal Belgian Football Association. Retrieved3 September 2021.
  5. ^abc"Georges Mulder" (in Portuguese). 12 August 2008.
  6. ^Jaquemyns, Pol (14 May 1939)."De vuurdoop van G. Demulder in Belgie-Zwitserland" [G. Demulder'sbaptism by fire in Belgium-Switzerland].Sportwereld (in Dutch).Brussels. pp. 1, 5.
  7. ^"Le White Star AC" (in French).RWD Molenbeek. Archived fromthe original on 5 March 2016.

External links

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Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Georges_Demulder&oldid=1260844546"
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