Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | 23 July 1941 | ||
Position(s) | forward | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1965–1966 | TSV 1860 Munich | ||
1966–1968 | Bayer 04 Leverkusen | ||
1968–1970 | Fortuna Düsseldorf | ||
Managerial career | |||
1976–1977 | SSV Jahn Regensburg | ||
1978–1979 | MTV Ingolstadt | ||
1980–1981 | Holstein Kiel | ||
1989–1990 | FC Vaduz | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Helmut Richert (born 23 July 1941) is a retired German football striker and later manager. [1]
Helmut Rahn, known as Der Boss, was a German footballer who played as a forward. He became a legend for having scored the winning goal in the final of the 1954 FIFA World Cup. Rahn, along with the German team, were decorated by the President of the Federal Republic of Germany in 1972.
Nate Richert is an American actor, musician and songwriter, best known as Harvey Dwight Kinkle in Sabrina the Teenage Witch (1996-2003).
Helmut Schön was a German football player and manager. He is best remembered for his exceptional career as manager of the West Germany national team in four consecutive World Cup tournaments, including winning the title in 1974, losing in the final in 1966, and coming in third in 1970. In addition, his teams won the European Championship in 1972 and lost in the final in 1976.
Helmut Senekowitsch was an Austrian football player and later a football manager.
John L. Kelley was an American mathematician at the University of California, Berkeley, who worked in general topology and functional analysis.
Larry Richert is an American journalist.
In 1961, filmmaker Gene Bernofsky and artist Clark Richert, art students from the University of Kansas, developed an art concept they called Drop Art or droppings. Informed by the "happenings" of Allan Kaprow and the impromptu performances a few years earlier of John Cage, Robert Rauschenberg and Buckminster Fuller at Black Mountain College, Drop Art began when Richert and Bernofsky started painting rocks and dropping them from a loft roof onto the sidewalk of Lawrence Kansas's main drag — watching the reactions of passersby. Early Drop Art included such pieces as Egg Drop and Pendulum (pictured).
Helmut Maier is a German mathematician and professor at the University of Ulm, Germany. He is known for his contributions in analytic number theory and mathematical analysis and particularly for the so-called Maier's matrix method as well as Maier's theorem for primes in short intervals. He has also done important work in exponential sums and trigonometric sums over special sets of integers and the Riemann zeta function.
Peter Gerard Richert is an American former professional baseball player. He played in Major League Baseball as a left-handed pitcher with the Los Angeles Dodgers, Washington Senators (1965–67), Baltimore Orioles (1967–71), St. Louis Cardinals (1974) and Philadelphia Phillies (1974).
Teddy Richert is a French goalkeeper coach, currently working for Montpellier, and former football goalkeeper.
Hans-Egon Richert was a German mathematician who worked primarily in analytic number theory. He is the author of a definitive book on sieve theory.
William Richert was an American film director, producer, screenwriter and actor. He is known for writing and directing the feature films Winter Kills, The American Success Company, and A Night in the Life of Jimmy Reardon.
Richert is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Douglas T. Richert is an American stock car racing crew chief, who last crew cheifed for Hattori Racing Enterprises in the NASCAR Xfinity Series.
Charlemagne, le prince à cheval is a 1993 television miniseries about the life of Charlemagne. A French-Portuguese-Italian-Luxembourgish coproduction, the series was directed by Clive Donner; it was his final project before his death in 2010.
William Richert served as acting Mayor of Detroit, from March 22 to April 5, 1897, following the resignation of Hazen S. Pingree.
The Merry Wives of Windsor is a 1950 East German musical comedy film directed by Georg Wildhagen. It was based on William Shakespeare's play by the same name.
The 1965–66 TSV 1860 Munich season was the third season since the foundation of the Bundesliga in 1963. This season, 1860 München won the Bundesliga title. The club was eliminated in the first round of the DFB-Pokal by SV Werder Bremen and in the quarterfinals of the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup by Chelsea F.C. The top goal scorer this season was Friedhelm Konietzka who scored 26 goals in the Bundesliga and 33 goals overall. Željko Perušić, Ludwig Bründl, Alfred Kohlhäufl, Helmut Richert and Konietzka joined the club this season. Stevan Bena, Engelbert Kraus and Alfred Pyka left the club this season.
Helmut Schneider was a German footballer and manager who played as a defender, midfielder or forward and made one appearance for the Germany national team.
Jan Eryk Richert was a Polish footballer who played as a defender. Richert spent his career playing football in Gdańsk with Gedania Danzig. After three years playing with Gedania the club were forced to cease operations after the Nazi occupation of Poland. In total 75 people associated with Gedania before the war were killed, with most of the players and coaching staff being sent to concentration camps, Richert being one of the few players associated with the club surviving the war. After the war Richert began playing for the phoenix club of Gedania Danzig, joining Gedania Gdańsk in 1945. After another three years with Gedania he joined city rivals Lechia Gdańsk. He made his Lechia and I liga debut on 16 October 1949 in the 4–1 defeat to Warta Poznań. He was a part of Lechia's first squad to play in Poland's top division and made 1 appearance for Lechia in the I liga that season. His final appearance for Lechia came in the 2–2 draw with Arkonia Szczecin. After his football career ended, Richert emigrated to Germany in 1972. He lived there until his death on 9 August 1992, at the age of 69.