Viljo Halme Explained

Viljo Halme
Fullname:Karl Viljo Halme
Birth Date:24 January 1907
Birth Place:Helsinki, Grand Duchy of Finland
Death Place:Helsinki, Finland
Position:Goalkeeper
Years1:1923–1929
Clubs1:Jyry
Caps1:
Goals1:
Years2:1931–1935
Clubs2:HJK
Caps2:49
Goals2:0
Years3:1936–1941
Clubs3:HPS
Caps3:58
Goals3:0
Nationalyears1:1932–1939
Nationalteam1:Finland
Nationalcaps1:30
Nationalgoals1:0

Karl Viljo Halme (24 January 1907 – 21 October 1981) was a Finnish football goalkeeper. He earned 30 caps for the Finland national football team and was a member of the Finland squad at the 1936 Summer Olympics. Halme is considered one of the all-time best goalkeepers of Finland.[1]

Career

Halme started his career in the Helsinki working class side Jyry, playing in the Finnish Workers' Sports Federation (TUL) Championship series. Due to the 1918 Civil War, Finnish football was divided, TUL and the Finnish Football Association (SPL) had their own leagues and the national team was composed of SPL players only.[1]

Halme represented the TUL football team at the 1928 Summer Spartakiad in Moscow, although the Social Democratic TUL had forbid its athletes to participate in the games of the Communist Red Sports International. All athletes who competed at the Spartakiad were dismissed from TUL, and Halme was left without a team.[1]

In 1931, Halme switched to the ″bourgeoisie″ HJK Helsinki, which made him eligible for the national team.[1] Halme debuted for Finland against Sweden in October 1932.[2] In the Finland squad at the 1936 Summer Olympics,[3] Halme was one of the eight former TUL players who had defected to the Finnish Football Association's side.[1]

Club honours

1927

Notes and References

  1. Book: Syrjäläinen, Antti . 2008 . Miksi siksi loikkariksi? Huippu-urheilijoiden loikkaukset TUL:sta SVUL:oon 1919–1939 . Joensuu . University of Joensuu . 46, 64–65, 69–70, 157 . 978-952-21913-7-3 .
  2. Web site: Football PLAYER: Viljo Halme. European National Football Teams 1872–2017 Database. 10 June 2017.
  3. Web site: Viljo Halme . Olympedia . 27 September 2021.