Josef Madlmayer

{{short description|Austrian footballer}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2021}}

{{Infobox football biography

|name = Josef Madlmayer

|image = Josef Madlmayer (2).jpg

|caption = Josef Madlmayer, 1928

|fullname =

|birth_date = {{birth date|1907|4|10|df=y}}

|birth_place = Vienna, Austria

|death_date = {{Death date and age|1945|3|20|1907|4|10|df=y}}

|death_place = Enkenbach, Germany

|height =

|position = Midfielder

|youthyears1 =

|youthclubs1 =

|years1 = 1925–1930

|clubs1 = Rapid

|caps1 = 90

|goals1 = 0

|years2 = 1930–1933

|clubs2 = SC Wacker Wien

|caps2 =

|goals2 =

|years3 = 1933–1934

|clubs3 = Cannes

|caps3 =

|goals3 =

|totalcaps =

|totalgoals =

|nationalyears1 = 1928

|nationalteam1 = Austria

|nationalcaps1 = 1

|nationalgoals1 = 0

|manageryears1 =

|managerclubs1 =

}}

Josef (Franz) Madlmayer (10 April 1907 – 20 March 1945) was an Austrian international footballer.{{cite web|title=National team stats |url=http://www.austriasoccer.at/data/datenbank/l_auf.php?snr=422&snm=Madlmayer%20Josef&rsp=1&rt=0&rgk=0&rrk=0|publisher=austriasoccer.at|accessdate=28 October 2012}}{{cite web|title=Profile |url=http://www.rapidarchiv.at/spieler/madlmayer_josef.html|publisher=rapidarchiv.at|accessdate=28 October 2012}}

After his playing years he became a football coach for the Swiss football club FC Frauenfeld in Frauenfeld. In 1939 after the beginning of World War II he returned to Austria. He fell in battle in Enkenbach near Dahn (Germany).{{citation needed|date=December 2020}}

References