Bram Appel
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox football biography Abraham Leonardus Appel (30 November 1921 – 31 October 1997) was a Dutch footballer who played as a striker[1] and later a manager.
Playing career
Club
Born in Rotterdam but raised in The Hague,[2] Appel played for local clubs Archipel and Blauw Zwart in the Dutch amateur leagues in the 1930s. He was forced to work in a factory in Berlin, Germany in 1942. The factory where he worked was bombed a year later, and Appel narrowly survived.
During the war, Appel played for Hertha BSC and for an unofficial Dutch national team, made up of Dutch forced labourers.[3] His refusal to give the Hitler salute before matches made the German authorities furious.
The Royal Dutch Football Association suspended Appel after the liberation in 1945.[2] He was, however, a member of the Netherlands national football team at the 1948 Summer Olympics.[4] He left for France in 1949, and became an important player for Stade de Reims where he played alongside Raymond Kopa and Roger Marche. Domestically he won the Coupe de France in 1950 and the French national title in 1953. Thanks to the victory of the French championship, Stade de Reims were allowed to participate in the fifth edition of the Latin Cup, eventually resulting in the team's first ever major European trophy win, obtained after beating AC Milan 3–0 in the final, with Appel scoring the second goal. Appel scored 96 goals in 154 matches for Stade Reims.
Appel and Theo Timmermans took the initiative for a charity match for the victims of the North Sea flood of 1953, between France and Dutch footballers playing abroad.[5] The Dutch players won the match 2–1. The match was not an official international, because the Dutch players had been suspended from the Dutch national team. The Royal Dutch Football Association did not allow football players to be professionals. This match, however, paved the way for the acceptance of professional football in the Netherlands. Two years later, the ban on professionalism was lifted.
Appel returned to the Netherlands in 1954, having been signed by Fortuna '54 as one of the first professional football players in the Dutch league.[6]
International
Appel made his official debut for the Netherlands in a July 1948 Olympic Games match against Great Britain in which he immediately scored 2 goals.[7] He earned a total of 12 caps, scoring 10 goals.
His final international was an April 1957 friendly match against West Germany.[8]
Managerial career
Appel became a manager in 1960,[9] and won the 1962–63 Eredivisie title as manager of PSV Eindhoven.
References
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- ↑ a b Bram Appel 1921 - 1997 - Trouw Template:In lang
- ↑ Bram Appel: wonderspits van Hertha in oorlogstijd Template:Webarchive - Friesch Dagblad Template:In lang
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- ↑ BRAM APPEL (1921–1997); Kanonnier - NRC Template:In lang
- ↑ Voetbal Limburg vecht tegen de ondergang - NRC Template:In lang
- ↑ Template:PAGENAMEBASE – FIFA competition record (archived)Template:EditAtWikidataTemplate:WikidataCheck
- ↑ International career stats - Voetbalstats
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External links
Template:Eredivisie winning managers Template:Netherlands Squad 1948 Summer Olympics Script error: No such module "navboxes". Template:FC Lausanne-Sport managers Template:FC Volendam managers Script error: No such module "Football manager history".Script error: No such module "navboxes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
- Pages with script errors
- 1921 births
- 1997 deaths
- Footballers from Rotterdam
- Men's association football forwards
- Dutch men's footballers
- ADO Den Haag players
- Hertha BSC players
- Fortuna Sittard players
- Stade de Reims players
- FC Lausanne-Sport players
- Ligue 1 players
- Netherlands men's international footballers
- Footballers at the 1948 Summer Olympics
- Olympic footballers for the Netherlands
- Dutch expatriate men's footballers
- Dutch expatriate sportspeople in West Germany
- Dutch expatriate sportspeople in Switzerland
- Dutch expatriate sportspeople in France
- Expatriate men's footballers in West Germany
- Expatriate men's footballers in Switzerland
- Expatriate men's footballers in France
- Dutch football managers
- FC Lausanne-Sport managers
- Fortuna Sittard managers
- FC Volendam managers
- PSV Eindhoven managers
- Eredivisie managers
- K. Beringen F.C. managers
- Dutch expatriate football managers
- Expatriate football managers in Belgium
- Expatriate football managers in Switzerland
- Dutch real estate brokers
- Dutch World War II forced labourers
- 20th-century Dutch sportsmen