Ernst Wilimowski Football player

Ernst Willimowski (born Ernst Otto Prandella, nicknamed "Ezi", in 1938 WC spelled Ernest WILIMOWSKI) (23 June 1916 – 30 August 1997) was a football player who played for both the Polish and German national teams.Born in Kattowitz (Katowice), Prussian Silesia, German Empire, he was raised in a Silesian family, typical of the Upper Silesian Polish-German borderland. In 1922 eastern Upper Silesia became part of Poland and Ernst became a citizen of the Second Polish Republic.His father Ernst-Roman, a soldier of the German Empire, died on the Western Front in the First World War, and his mother Paulina re-married. Both were German. His mother sent him to a German kindergarten, a German primary school and, when he was nine years old, to the German football team 1. FC Kattowitz. At the age of 13 he was legally adopted by his stepfather who was Polish and took on the surname Willimowski. At home, he spoke German for the most part, while in public he often spoke a Silesian dialect of the Polish language. Officially a citizen of Poland, he referred to himself as a Silesian ("Górnoślązak" - Oberschlesier).He was one of the best goalscorers in the history of both the Polish national team and in Polish club soccer before he decided to re-take German citizenship and play for Germany. He is well remembered as the first player to score four goals in a single FIFA World Cup game. Allegedly, in the course of his career he has scored a total of 1,175 goals; this, however, is unconfirmed and will include friendly and unofficial matches. RSSSF credits Wilimowski with 554 official goals, making him eight most prolific goalscorers in history. Willimowski also occasionally played ice hockey for the team Pogoń Katowice.

Personal facts

Ernst Wilimowski
Alias (AKA)Pradell Ernst Otto
Birth dateJune 23, 1916
Birth place
German Empire , Katowice
Date of deathAugust 30, 1997
Place of death
Germany , Karlsruhe

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Football player

position
Forward (association football)
teams
Ruch Chorzów
Poland national football team
1. FC Kattowitz
FC Singen 04
Offenburger FV
Germany national football team
BC Augsburg
TSV 1860 München
Chemnitzer FC
SG Chemnitz-West
VfR Kaiserslautern

Ernst Wilimowski on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://miasta.gazeta.pl/katowice/1,35055,4177252.html
  2. http://miasta.gazeta.pl/katowice/1,35059,1736648.html
  3. http://www.alfa.com.pl/slask/200606/s1213.htm
  4. http://www.dfb.de/index.php?action=search&liga=Nationalmannschaft&id=500003&lang=D&no_cache=1&name=%3BWillimowski&gegner=