Georges Aeby
Swiss footballer (1913-1999)
Aeby (1940) | |||
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | (1913-09-21)21 September 1913 | ||
Place of birth | Fribourg, Switzerland | ||
Date of death | 15 December 1999(1999-12-15) (aged 86) | ||
Position(s) | Forward | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1930–1933 | FC Biel-Bienne | ||
1933–1942 | Servette FC | ||
1942–1949 | FC Lausanne-Sport | ||
1949–1952 | Urania Genève Sport | ||
International career | |||
1939–1946 | Switzerland | 39 | (13) |
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Georges Aeby (21 September 1913 – 15 December 1999) was a Swiss footballer who played for Switzerland in the 1938 FIFA World Cup.[1] He also played for FC Biel-Bienne, Servette FC, FC Lausanne-Sport, and Urania Genève Sport. He was Paul Aeby's younger brother.
References
- ^ Seleção Suíça na Copa do Mundo FIFA de 1938 Archived March 23, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
External links
- FIFA profile
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Swiss Football Championship top scorers
(1933–1944)
(1944–2003)
- 1945: Friedländer
- 1946: Friedländer
- 1947: Amadò / Blaser
- 1948: Righetti
- 1949: Fatton
- 1950: Fatton
- 1951: Friedländer
- 1952: Hügi
- 1953: Hügi / Meier
- 1954: Hügi
- 1955: Mauron
- 1956: Vukosavljević
- 1957: Kauer
- 1958: Wechselberger
- 1959: Meier
- 1960: Schneider
- 1961: Robbiani
- 1962: Fatton
- 1963: Von Burg
- 1964: Desbiolles
- 1965: Blättler / Kerkhoffs
- 1966: Blättler
- 1967: Blättler
- 1968: Künzli
- 1969: Peters
- 1970: Künzli
- 1971: Müller
- 1972: Dimmeler / Dörfel
- 1973: Hitzfeld / Grahn
- 1974: Jeandupeux
- 1975: Katić
- 1976: Risi
- 1977: Cucinotta
- 1978: Künzli
- 1979: Risi
- 1980: Sulser
- 1981: Risi
- 1982: Sulser
- 1983: Brigger
- 1984: Bregy
- 1985: Cina
- 1986: Thychosen
- 1987: Eriksen
- 1988: Eriksen
- 1989: Rummenigge
- 1990: Zamorano
- 1991: Zuffi
- 1992: Molnar
- 1993: Anderson
- 1994: Élber
- 1995: Aleksandrov
- 1996: Aleksandrov / Moldovan
- 1997: Moldovan
- 1998: Nonda
- 1999: Rey
- 2000: Amoah
- 2001: Chapuisat / Giménez
- 2002: Giménez / Núñez
- 2003: Núñez
(2003–present)
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