Géza Kertész

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Géza Kertész
Personal information
Date of birth 18 November 1894[1]
Place of birth Budapest, Hungary
Date of death 6 February 1945 (aged 50)
Place of death Budapest, Hungary
Position(s) Midfielder
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1924–1925 Ferencváros
1925–1926 Spezia (player-manager)
1926 Carrarese
National team
1914 Hungary 1 (0)
Teams managed
1927–1928 Carrarese
1928–1929 Viareggio
1929–1931 Salernitana
1931–1932 Catanzaro
1935–1936 Catania
1936–1938
1938–1939
Taranto
1939–1940
1941–1942
Atalanta
1942–1943 Lazio
1943–1944 Salernitana
Roma
Újpest
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Géza Kertész (18 November 1894 – 6 February 1945), also known as Kertész IV, was a Hungarian footballer and manager from Budapest. He is most noted for his career as a football manager in Italy at clubs such as Lazio, Roma and Atalanta.

Death[]

During World War II, Kertesz returned from Italy to Hungary in 1943, when he was recalled to serve as lieutenant-colonel in the Hungarian Army[2] in training role. In liaison with the American secret service he set up a clandestine resistance network with former teammate Istvan Toth which rescued many Hungarian partisans and Jews from deportation to Nazi concentration camps during German occupation and Arrow Cross Party rule, sometimes disguising himself as a German Wehrmacht officer for cover. He was denounced to the Gestapo by an informer for sheltering Jews and was executed at Budapest alongside Toth on 6 February 1945, a few days before the city was liberated by the Soviet forces.[3][4]

His body and that of Toth were reburied together with honour at Kerepesi Cemetery, Budapest, in April 1946.[4]

References[]

  1. ^ RSSSF.com
  2. ^ Buemi, Antonio; Fontanelli, Carlo; Quartarone, Roberto; Russo, Alessandro; Solarino, Filippo (2010). Tutto il Catania minuto per minuto (in Italian). GEO Edizioni, Empoli. p. 110.
  3. ^ "AS Roma official website Remembering Geza Kertesz, Roma coach and war hero". Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  4. ^ a b [1] news archive in Hungarian, from Four Four Two, Toth-Potya, Brull, Kertesz - Soccer victims of the Holocaust, accessed 17 May 2021.


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