Joseph 'Sepp' Herberger
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Name : Joseph 'Sepp' Herberger
Date of Birth: 28 March 1897
Date of Death: 20 April 1977
Birthplace: Mannheim, Germany
Herberger: ¡®Miracle¡¯ worker for a new Germany
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Aptly labelled the 'Miracle of Berne,¡¯ Germany's first FIFA World Cup triumph
in 1954 is inextricably linked with Joseph Herberger, a man whose achievements
transcended the conventional boundaries of football coaching. Indeed, he is
widely accepted as a founding father of the new Germany after the second World
War, a sportsman transformed by the seminal victory over prohibitive favourites
Hungary into a social and cultural icon for the fledgling Federal Republic.
¡®Sepp,¡¯ as he was affectionately known, was the youngest of six children in a
working-class family. When his father died, Herberger was sent out to work at
the age of 14, taking odd jobs on building sites before entering employment in a
metalworking factory.
But even as a young child, he was only really interested in football, and he
made his senior debut for home town club Waldhof Mannheim at the tender age of
17.
Battler and hard runner
Herberger was drafted into military service in 1916 and served two years in
the army before returning to play for Waldhof -- where he earned rave notices as
a gifted striker with battling instincts and hard-running stamina.
He received his first international call-up in 1921 and made his Germany
debut in a 3-3 draw against Finland, although he was to win a total of only
three caps. In his club career, Herberger moved across town to bitter rivals VfR
Mannheim but was accused of accepting an illegal payment and received a
year-long ban for contravening the game's amateur statutes.
With VfR, the 28 year-old scored the winner in the 1925 South German
championship final, appearing for the third and final time in a Germany shirt
against Holland that year.
He moved to Berlin in 1926 and embarked on a four-year stint with Tennis
Borussia. At the age of 30 he began studying for a coaching diploma at the
University of Physical Education in Berlin, graduating top of his class. His
thesis was entitled ¡°Towards peak performance in the sport of football.¡± He
subsequently spent four years with the Western Germany Sports Association in
Duisburg as a senior coach.
Rebuilding Germany
After Germany's poor showing at the 1936 Olympics, Herberger was named
Reichsfussballtrainer succeeding Otto Nerz. He fashioned a team widely expected
to do well at France ¡®38, but his work was undone by the ugly politics of the
age. The regime in Berlin forced him to field players from annexed Austria, and
Germany were knocked out ingloriously in the preliminary round.
International competition was suspended during the devastating war years, but
the determined Herberger made every attempt to maintain contact with his
players. At the cessation of hostilities he began the tough task of rebuilding
the national side and was officially named national coach again in 1950.
Germany were excluded from the FIFA World Cup that year, but in November a
national side again took the field after an eight-year absence. It was Germany's
first game since the war and ended in a 1-0 win over Switzerland in front of
115,000 spectators in Stuttgart, ushering in an inspiring era in German
football.
Herberger assiduously crafted a team around legendary captain Fritz Walter,
but his men were still considered rank outsiders at the 1954 FIFA World Cup in
neighbouring Switzerland. The all-conquering Hungarians were rated as nearly
invincible as an 8-3 first round victory over Herberger¡¯s men appeared to prove.
The boss was battered by a storm of criticism, but he later claimed that he had
chosen to field a weakened side and saw the defeat as part of a broader
strategic plan.
The football strategist par excellence
'Sepp' had calculated that he needed two first-round victories to progress.
His men defeated Turkey in their opening match but the coach knew even his
strongest side had little chance against Hungary. Thus he accepted there would
be a defeat, sent out his reserves and rested his best players for the decisive
match, once again versus the Turks.
Strength of character enabled him to ignore the barrage of hostility, but
further events proved him right as a full-strength side duly disposed of Turkey
a second time and progressed to the next round. His critics were silenced and
suddenly he was hailed as "an outstanding football strategist."
His fame spread, partly due to a trademark notebook with details of upcoming
opponents' strengths and weaknesses, but largely thanks to a gift for
unforgettable pearls of wisdom.
"The ball is round" and "A match lasts 90 minutes" have passed into the
standard German football vocabulary.
For Germans, the 4th of July 1954 is written in indelible ink in the history
books. Their national team, back on the world stage after a long, cold winter,
would have to face Hungary in what seemed a lopsided final. Instead the event
would be immortalised in the annals of German history as the 'Miracle of Berne.¡¯
The Chief hands Germany triumph
Always a fighter, Herberger knew how to motivate a team. He was an
authoritarian, but had a real feel for his players, highly aware of the effect
of his words and how to stoke up his men's ambitions. The dressing room, and
later an entire nation, respectfully addressed him simply as "Chief.¡±
The football world may still be looking for his equal in terms of getting the
best from individual players. His teams were superbly prepared, bristling with
stamina, strength, discipline and fighting spirit, the virtues generally classed
as typically German to this day.
Of all these attributes, interpersonal restraint was the most important, as
he believed a side must be primarily functional as a group of people. He lived
by his motto, "You have to be eleven friends." Captain Fritz Walter, Herberger's
only real confidante, executed the chief's instructions on the field, taking a
key role in both sporting and personal terms.
The rain poured down as Germany defeated Hungary 3-2 after trailing by two
early goals at the Wankdorf stadium in Bern. Herberger's tactics paid off: it
was Hungary's first defeat in four years.
But the triumph in Bern meant far more than the prestige associated with a
first FIFA World Cup success. It was a signal for renewal in devastated post-war
Germany, restoring national pride and confidence, and sparking a powerful
determination to rise from the ruins. It was the first sign of hope for a
battered and bruised people.
Founding father of a new generation
Likewise, Sepp Herberger's influence stretched far beyond the role of FIFA
World Cup-winning coach. He helped create the foundations for a new generation
of Germans. In Germany, the ¡®Miracle of Bern¡¯ had a psychological effect greater
than any other sporting success, and his achievement was recognised with the
National Order of Merit First Class in 1962.
Herberger remained in the job of national coach until 1964. In 1958, Germany
finished fourth at the FIFA World Cup in Sweden, before losing to Chile in the
1962 quarter-finals. His last match as German national coach was a victory over
Finland on 7 June 1964.
He handed over his position to Helmut Sch?n and retired. Herberger died after
a lung infection in 1977 in his hometown of Mannheim at the age of 80.
Tactics
Herberger was a shrewd tactician. After his team started the 1954 FIFA World
Cup with an emphatic 4-1 victory over Turkey, he made eight changes, resting his
best players for the second game against favourites Hungary. Only captain Fritz
Walter, Jupp Posipal and Werner Kohlmeyer remained in an otherwise second-string
eleven. Inevitably, Herberger¡¯s men were handed a merciless 8-3 defeat. However,
the manoeuvre would later be acknowledged as a stroke of genius as the fully
recuperated German team cruised to a 7-2 win in the deciding game against Turkey
to progress to the next round. ¡°I believe we would have lost today, even with
our strongest team,¡± claimed Herberger defending his actions, which caused wide
resentment in his homeland.
Did You Know?
In 1922, Herberger was embroiled in a corruption scandal when he was alleged
to have accepted an illegal transfer payment as a player. Herberger was banned
for one year after his conduct was adjudged to have contravened the rules of
amateur football.
Herberger kept a famous notebook, in which the charismatic coach stored all
of his information on opponents, players and systems.
As a player, Herberger managed just three international appearances. He made
his debut in September 1921 against Finland, while his swansong came three years
later. He scored two goals, both against Finland.
Herberger¡¯s nuggets of wisdom on football are legendary and oft-quoted: ¡°The
ball is round¡±, ¡°The next opponent is always the most difficult¡±, ¡°A game lasts
90 minutes¡± and ¡°After a game is before a game¡± are credited to him in Germany.
Management
Career
National team
1936 - 1964 Germany
International honours
1954 FIFA World Cup Switzerland? Champion
Club
1930 - 1932 Tennis Borussia Berlin
Playing Career
International honours:
3 International appearances, 2 goals
Clubs
1914 - 1921 Waldhof Mannheim
1921 - 1926 VFR Mannheim
1926 - 1930 Tennis Borussia Berlin