Erwin Nyc Explained

Erwin Nyc
Fullname:Erwin Peter Nytz
Birth Date:24 May 1914
Birth Place:Kattowitz (Katowice), German Empire
(now Poland)
Death Place:Piekary Śląskie, Poland
Height:1.80 m
Position:Midfielder
Years1:1929–1935
Clubs1:Pogoń Katowice
Years2:1935–1939
Clubs2:Polonia Warsaw
Years3:1939
Clubs3:1. FC Katowice
Years4:1940–1941
Clubs4:LSV Markersdorf
Years5:1942–1943
Clubs5:LSV Furstenwalde
Years6:1945–1947
Clubs6:Pogoń Katowice
Nationalyears1:1937–1939
Nationalteam1:Poland
Nationalcaps1:11
Nationalgoals1:0
Managerclubs1:Raków Częstochowa
Managerclubs2:CKS Częstochowa
Managerclubs3:Siemianowiczanka Siemianowice
Managerclubs4:Polonia Piekary Śląskie
Managerclubs5:Górnik Wojkowice
Managerclubs6:GKS Świętochłowice
Managerclubs7:AKS Chorzów

Erwin Peter Nytz or Edward Piotr Nyc (24 May 1914 – 1 May 1988) was a Polish footballer who played as a midfielder.[1]

Nytz was born 24 May 1914 in Kattowitz (Katowice), German Empire (now Poland). In the late 1930s, Nyc played for Polonia Warsaw, and also represented the Poland national football team. He participated in one of the highest scoring matches in the FIFA World Cup history, a 5–6 loss to Brazil on 5 June 1938 in Strasbourg during the 1938 FIFA World Cup. During the Second World War, Nyc returned to Upper Silesia, where for a while he played for a German minority team 1. FC Katowice. Called up to the German Army, he continued his career in the military teams of the Luftwaffe and the garrison of Berlin.

After the war, Nyc, unlike many of his fellow Silesian-German soccer players, remained in his homeland under Communist Poland. Initially, he had many problems with the Communist government, which regarded him as a traitor. However, a group of players from Kraków and Warsaw claimed that he had never betrayed Poland and had actively supported Polish underground organizations.

Name

Born Erwin Nytz, after the restoration of Poland's sovereignty he changed his last name back to its Polish version. During the Second World War his last name was again germanized. After the war, this change was annulled.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Erwin Nyc . worldfootball.net . 3 October 2021.