Hans Rüegsegger
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | 6 May 1916 | ||
Place of birth | Switzerland | ||
Managerial career | |||
Years | Team | ||
1951–1952 | Solothurn | ||
1954 | Switzerland (caretaker) | ||
1954–1957 | Biel-Bienne |
Hans Rüegsegger (born 6 May 1916, date of death unknown) was a Swiss football manager.
Managerial career
From 1951 to 1952, Rüegsegger managed Solothurn.[1] During the 1954 FIFA World Cup, Rüegsegger worked as a fitness coach for Switzerland under manager Karl Rappan. After Rappan's departure after the competition, Rüegsegger was named as caretaker manager, managing Switzerland twice, resulting in one draw and one loss.[2] After his stint managing Switzerland, Rüegsegger returned to club management, managing Biel-Bienne for three years.[1] On 6 January 1960, Rüegsegger was part of the Swiss coaching staff under Branislav Sekulić in a 3–0 loss against Italy.[2]
References
- ^ a b "Switzerland - Trainers of First and Second Division Clubs". RSSSF. Retrieved 11 August 2021.
- ^ a b "Rüegsegger, Hans". Fussball Schweiz (in German). Retrieved 11 August 2021.
- v
- t
- e
- Dégerine (1908–09)
- Referee's Commission (1910–24)
- Duckworth & Kürschner & Hogan (1924)
- Duckworth (1928)
- Müller (1934)
- Rappan (1937–38)
- Rappan (1942–49)
- Tschirren & Andreoli & Minelli (1949–50)
- Andreoli (1950)
- Baumgartner & Tschirren & Kielholz (1950–53)
- Rappan (1953–54)
- Rüegsegger (1954)
- Baumgartner & Kielholz (1954–55)
- Baumgartner & Kielholz & Spagnoli (1955–58)
- Sekulić & Rüegsegger & Vescori (1958–60)
- Hahn (1958–59)
- Rappan (1960–63)
- Sobotka & Quinche & Guhl (1964)
- Foni (1964–67)
- Ballabio (1967–69)
- Hussy (1970)
- Maurer (1970–71)
- Michaud (1972–73)
- Hussy (1973–76)
- Blažević (1976)
- Vonlanthen (1977–79)
- Walker (1979–80)
- Wolfisberg (1980–85)
- Jeandupeux (1986–89)
- Wolfisberg (1989)
- Stielike (1989–91)
- Hodgson (1992–95)
- Artur Jorge (1995–96)
- Fringer (1996–97)
- Gress (1998–99)
- Zaugg (2000)
- Trossero (2000–01)
- Kuhn (2001–08)
- Hitzfeld (2008–14)
- Petković (2014–21)
- Yakin (2021–)
This biographical article relating to Swiss football is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e