Bert Trautmann
Posted in Events dear boy. Events, Football at 20:34 on 19 July 2013
Bert Trautmann, one of the icons of post Second World War British goalkeeping (ironic since he was a German,) has died.
His signing by Manchester City in 1949 upset quite a few people who so soon after the war felt insulted that a German should take up such a high profile position.
His war record is astonishing. Like most of his generation he was under the influence of Nazism, joining the Jungvolk. When the war came he joined the Luftwaffe as a radio operator before volunteering to become a paratrooper. He was posted to the Russian front and won an Iron Cross First Class. At one point he was captured but a German counter-attack freed him. In Russia his unit suffered 70% casualties. He was transferred to the West where he was captured twice more, with two more escapes, before jumping over a fence and landing at the feet of a British soldier who said, “Hello Fritz, fancy a cup of tea?” He spent time as a POW, refused repatriation when it was offered after the war, going back to Germany a year or so later but decided he preferred Britain.
His most famous accomplishment in football was finishing the 1956 FA Cup final after sustaining a broken neck. He knew he was injured but its serious extent did not become known till three days later after the X-rays.
It was several incidents like this in FA Cup finals around that time that eventually saw the goalkeeper afforded more protection in Britain.
Bernhard Carl Trautmann: 22/10/1923-19/07/2013. So it goes.
Tags: Bert Trautmann, FA Cup, German, Iron Cross, Luftwaffe, Nazism, Russian front, Second World War, WW2, WWII, X-rays
