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Iuliu Baratky

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gyula Barátky / Iuliu Baratky
Barátky in the 1930s
Personal information
Date of birth (1910-05-14)14 May 1910
Place of birth Nagyvárad, Austria-Hungary (today Oradea, Romania)
Date of death 14 April 1962(1962-04-14) (aged 51)
Place of death Bucharest, Romania
Height 1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)
Position(s) Striker
Youth career
1922–1927 Stăruința Oradea
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1927–1928 Stăruința Oradea
1928–1930 CA Oradea
1930–1933 Hungária 82 (51)
1933–1936 Crișana Oradea 51 (30)
1936–1944[1] Rapid București1 86 (61)
1944 Carmen București1 0 (0)
1944–1945 Rapid București1 0 (0)
1946–1947 Libertatea Oradea 16 (9)
1947–1948 RATA Târgu Mureș 2 (0)
Total 237 (151)
International career
1930–1933 Hungary 9 (0)
1933–1940[2] Romania 20 (13)
Managerial career
1941–1945 Rapid București (player-coach)
1946–1947 Libertatea Oradea (player-coach)
1947–1949 RATA Târgu Mureș (player-coach)
1948 Romania
1949–1951 Universitatea Cluj
1952–1953 Dinamo București
1954 Progresul Oradea
1957–1959 Dinamo București
1959–1962 Dinamo București (youth coach)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Gyula Barátky (Romanian: Iuliu Baratky; 14 May 1910 – 14 April 1962) was footballer who represented both Hungary and Romania internationally. His preferred position was the half right.

He played a total of 155 games in the national Romanian championships (scoring 100 goals), starting on 10 September 1933 (Venus București – Crișana Oradea 0–1). He won four Romanian Cups in 1937, 1939, 1940, 1941, all with Rapid București.

He debuted in the Hungary national team in 1930, and played nine games with no goals scored. In 1933, he started to play for the Romania national team, for which he played 20 games and scored 13 goals. He appeared in the 1938 World Cup, scoring a goal against Cuba.

After his last game (Oțelul Reșița – RATA Târgu Mureș 5–3), he coached RATA Târgu Mureș for a while and, for a very short term, the Romania national team.

Stories about his skills are still a source of pride for Rapid București supporters. Hundreds of thousands[citation needed] read Finala se joacă azi ("The final is played today") or Glasul roților de tren ("Voice of the train wheels"), written by Ioan Chirilă, an important Romanian sports writer, in which Barátky plays a central role.

Honours

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Player

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Hungária

Rapid București

Coach

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Rapid București

Dinamo București

References

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  1. ^ ^1 The Divizia A 1940–41 was the last season before World War II and the Divizia A 1946–47 was the first one after, so the appearances and goals scored during this period for Rapid București and Carmen București are not official.
  2. ^ "Iuliu Baratky – Goals in International Matches". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation.
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