Helmut Dudek

{{short description|Polish-German footballer}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}}

{{Infobox football biography

| name = Helmut Dudek

| image =

| fullname =

| birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1957|12|14}}

| birth_place = Bytom, Poland

| death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|1994|5|22|1957|12|14}}

| death_place = Leverkusen, Germany

| height = {{height|ft=5|in=11}}

| position = Defender

| youthyears1 =

| youthclubs1 =

| years1 = 1978–1980

| clubs1 = Borussia Mönchengladbach

| caps1 = 6

| goals1 = 0

| years2 = 1980-1981

| clubs2 = Wichita Wings (indoor)

| caps2 = 38

| goals2 = 22

| years3 = 1981–1984

| clubs3 = Memphis Americans (indoor)

| caps3 = 133

| goals3 = 120

| years4 = 1984–1985

| clubs4 = Las Vegas Americans (indoor)

| caps4 = 47

| goals4 = 25

| years5 = 1985–1986

| clubs5 = Pittsburgh Spirit (indoor)

| caps5 = 45

| goals5 = 18

| years6 = 1986–1987

| clubs6 = Minnesota Strikers (indoor)

| caps6 = 34

| goals6 = 11

| years7 = 1987–1988

| clubs7 = Baltimore Blast (indoor)

| caps7 = 33

| goals7 = 8

| totalcaps = 336

| totalgoals = 204

}}

Helmut Dudek (14 December 1957 – 22 May 1994) was a Polish-German football defender who won the 1978–79 UEFA Cup with Borussia Mönchengladbach. He also played eight seasons in the Major Indoor Soccer League.

In 1978, Dudek, native of Poland who later became a West German citizen, signed with Borussia Mönchengladbach and was a member of the team as it won the 1978–79 UEFA Cup. He played a total of six games for Borussia before moving to the United States in 1980.{{cite web | url = http://www.fussballdaten.de/spieler/dudekhelmut/ | title = Helmut Dudek | language = German | publisher = fussballdaten.de | accessdate = 21 June 2012}} That summer, he signed with the Wichita Wings of the Major Indoor Soccer League. The next year, he joined the Memphis Americans and played three seasons with the team in Memphis and another after the team moved west to Las Vegas, Nevada, where they became the Las Vegas Americans. In 1982, he was a First Team All Star.{{cite web | url = http://homepages.sover.net/~spectrum/year/1982.html#MISL | title = The Year in American Soccer – 1982 | publisher = homepages.sover.net | accessdate = 21 June 2012 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20151128063727/http://homepages.sover.net/~spectrum/year/1982.html#MISL | archive-date = 28 November 2015 | url-status = dead }} The Americans folded at the end of the 1984–85 season and the Pittsburgh Spirit hired Don Popovic, the American head coach. Popovic brought Dudek, and several other players, to the Spirit as free agents.{{cite news | title = Did MISL commissioner learn a lesson? | newspaper = Evening Tribune | location= San Diego, CA | date = 1 October 1985}} Dudek spent he 1985–86 season in Pittsburgh. The team folded at the end of the season and Dudek signed with the Minnesota Strikers on 18 September 1986.{{cite news | title = STRIKERS SIGN ALL-STAR | newspaper =Miami Herald| location= Florida | date = 19 September 1986}} After one season, the Strikers sent Dudek to the Baltimore Blast for future considerations.{{cite web | url = https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-11-06-sp-12786-story.html | title = In League's 10th Season, a First: Teams That Finished Are Back | work = latimes.com | date = 6 November 1987 | first = Marc | last = Appleman | access-date = 2 June 2012}} He spent one season in Baltimore, then left the league to return to Germany. He died on 22 May 1994 of cancer.{{cite news | title = No shortage of nicknames in New Orleans| newspaper = The Commercial Appeal | date = 26 May 1994}}

Honors

  • MISL All-Star Team: 1982

References

{{Reflist}}