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The genesis of the team was in a challenge made by an elite [[Romania]]n army side to Graf, who managed the German military side in the country. Graf trained with Germany's national side before the war and he decided to contact his former coach, Sepp Herberger, who – to the surprise of the Romanians – brought along several members of the side to take part in the match, which the Germans won 3:2 in front of 40,000 in [[Bucharest]].
The genesis of the team was in a challenge made by an elite [[Romania]]n army side to Graf, who managed the German military side in the country. Graf trained with Germany's national side before the war and he decided to contact his former coach, Sepp Herberger, who – to the surprise of the Romanians – brought along several members of the side to take part in the match, which the Germans won 3:2 in front of 40,000 in [[Bucharest]].


By 1943, Graf had decided to act to save as many of the national team's players as he could from frontline service, attaching them to his unit – the Luftlandebrigade 26 (en: 26th Airborne) – as "technical experts". Among those who played for the ''Jäger'' was [[Fritz Walter]] who would go onto to fame with ''[[1. FC Kaiserslautern]]'' and earn 61 caps with Germany. He wrote the book ''11 Rote Jäger'' about his experiences.
By 1943, Graf had decided to act to save as many of the national team's players as he could from frontline service, attaching them to his unit – the Luftlandebrigade 26 (en: 26th Airborne Brigade) – as "technical experts". Among those who played for the ''Jäger'' was [[Fritz Walter]] who would go onto to fame with ''[[1. FC Kaiserslautern]]'' and earn 61 caps with Germany. He wrote the book ''11 Rote Jäger'' about his experiences.


German military clubs were disbanded in September [[1944]] as Allied armies began their advance into the country. Still, the ''Rote Jäger'' managed to play two more games in [[Kraków|Krakau]] in November 1944, the last of these in front of 20,000 German soldiers.
German military clubs were disbanded in September [[1944]] as Allied armies began their advance into the country. Still, the ''Rote Jäger'' managed to play two more games in [[Kraków|Krakau]] in November 1944, the last of these in front of 20,000 German soldiers.

Revision as of 20:48, 19 December 2007

The footballers adopted a variant of the brigade emblem of the Luftlandebrigade 26.

The Rote Jäger (Red Hunters) were a short-lived German military football club active during World War II. The team was assembled by Hermann Graf, a fighter ace and commander of German fighter pilots. It developed into a refuge from frontline service for some German national team players.

History

Unlike some other military teams such as Luftwaffen-SV Hamburg, HSV Gross Born, or MSV Mölders Krakau, the side did not participate in the regular German league play or take part in national championship play, but instead staged a series of exhibition matches in Germany, as well as a few in Hungary, Alsace (France), and Poland.

The genesis of the team was in a challenge made by an elite Romanian army side to Graf, who managed the German military side in the country. Graf trained with Germany's national side before the war and he decided to contact his former coach, Sepp Herberger, who – to the surprise of the Romanians – brought along several members of the side to take part in the match, which the Germans won 3:2 in front of 40,000 in Bucharest.

By 1943, Graf had decided to act to save as many of the national team's players as he could from frontline service, attaching them to his unit – the Luftlandebrigade 26 (en: 26th Airborne Brigade) – as "technical experts". Among those who played for the Jäger was Fritz Walter who would go onto to fame with 1. FC Kaiserslautern and earn 61 caps with Germany. He wrote the book 11 Rote Jäger about his experiences.

German military clubs were disbanded in September 1944 as Allied armies began their advance into the country. Still, the Rote Jäger managed to play two more games in Krakau in November 1944, the last of these in front of 20,000 German soldiers.

Postwar re-establishment

A successor side was established 21 May 1965 by the Luftlandebrigade 26 (en:26th Airborne Brigade) of the German Army with the support of former players of the original side. The new Rote Jäger, based in Zweibruecken, debuted in a friendly match versus then Bundesliga side 1. FC Kaiserslautern (0:2). The club played as a demonstration side and in armed forces competition, drawing its players from recruits doing military service. Recognizable names who donned the club's jersey during their service terms before going on to professional careers include Felix Magath, Wolfgang Seel, Heinz Simmet, and Andreas Brehme. The club was disbanded in October 1991.

The squad (1943-45)

References