Monday 07 August 2017, 15:47

Behind the World Cup record: Helmut Schon

  • Helmut Schon holds record for most World Cup matches as coach (25)

  • He took part in four World Cups with Germany

  • In 1974, Schon became a world champion with Germany on home soil

Helmut Schon is the most successful national coach in German football history, and one of the most successful ever to grace the beautiful game. He won both the FIFA World Cup™ and European Championships and still holds a World Cup record to this day.

He was recognised for his achievements in 1974 with the Silver Laurel Leaf, presented by the German president, and the Federal Cross of Merit. Schon was subsequently named an honorary member of the German Football Association (DFB) in 1980 and received the FIFA Order of Merit in 1984, while Deutsche Post marked what would have been his 100th birthday with a commemorative stamp on 1 September 2015.

The coach "I’m certain that there is one thing the overwhelming majority of loyal fans would like to see more than anything else: good, authentic, exciting and athletic football – with no frills."

This was Schon’s motto – and one that brought the former Germany coach a great deal of success. The late Austrian vocalist Udo Jurgens described him as the “general with a heart”, while for Franz Beckenbauer, the man around whom the playing style of Schon’s teams was based and his on-pitch representative, he was “a coach of great stature and humanity”.

Born in Dresden, Schon made as great an impact on German football as fellow world champions Sepp Herberger (1954), Franz Beckenbauer (1990) and Joachim Low (2014). The man whose 1.90m stature led his players to affectionately refer to him as Der Lange or ‘The Lanky One’, whilst always respectfully addressing him as ‘Mr Schon’, was considered to be a blessing to German football. Between 1964 and 1978, the national side played a successful yet highly attractive game, prompting one reporter for Milan’s Corriere della Sera to declare that “Helmut Schon’s team heralds a new footballing era”.

Schon’s track record is unique. At his first World Cup as head coach, he stepped immediately out of Herberger’s long shadow as Germany finished runners-up to England in 1966. Die Mannschaft secured third place four years later after suffering a semi-final defeat by Italy in what was dubbed the ‘Match of the Century’. The golden era in which Germany won the 1972 European Championship and the 1974 World Cup followed and the broad smile Schon wore beneath his hat was beamed around the world. ‘The Man in the Cap’ became the most successful coach in Germany’s 116-year history.

There are only three other national team bosses in the history of the game who can hold a candle to Schon: Italy’s Vittorio Pozzo, who won back-to-back World Cups in 1934 and 1938; Spaniard Vicente del Bosque, who became a world champion in 2010 and a European champion in 2012; and Joachim Low, who led his team to a third-place finish in 2010 before lifting the Trophy in 2014. However, none of them can boast any additional podium finishes.

The record On 21 June 1978, Germany faced Austria in Cordoba at the FIFA World Cup in Argentina. It was Schon’s 25th World Cup match at his fourth World Cup – a record that no other coach has yet equalled.

His record at these tournaments was remarkable, with 16 wins, five draws and four defeats in four World Cups . Schon’s 1966 campaign only ended in defeat to the hosts after a legendary match with an even more legendary goal at Wembley Stadium.

At Mexico 1970, Germany again suffered just one defeat in another thrilling match that went down in World Cup history as the ‘Match of the Century’, with Schon and his players ultimately finishing the tournament in third place. Although they followed this up with victory on home soil in 1974, they still suffered a memorable defeat that year – at the hands of none other than East Germany.

Four years later, Hans Krankl scored a goal in the 88th minute to hand Austria an unassailable 3-2 lead and bring Schon’s unique World Cup coaching career to an inglorious end. Having announced his retirement ahead of the 1978 World Cup, that lacklustre campaign in Argentina marked the end of Germany’s most successful era to date.

The memories "Helmut Schon didn’t deserve a farewell like that." Berti Vogts, Helmut Schon’s captain at the 1978 World Cup, immediately after Germany’s 3-2 humiliation by Austria in Cordoba

"What made Helmut Schon remarkable was his ability to lead a team of exceptional individuals while letting each player express his individuality." Vogts today on his former national team coach’s strengths

"When the team lost, he took it personally – and didn’t speak a word to us the next day. The fact that he expressed his deep disappointment like that instead of giving us a telling-off or handing out punishments made a real impression on all of us. That was his particular way of doing things. Helmut Schon didn’t motivate his players by giving us a loud lecture but by showing us how affronted he was. It felt as if we’d disappointed our own fathers." Bernd Holzenbein on Schon’s strategy after the 1974 defeat to East Germany

"His life’s work has become legendary." Former DFB President Egidius Braun after the death of Helmut Schon at the age of 80 in February 1996