William Lehman (soccer)

William Lehman (born December 20, 1901, died Jan. 1979)[1] was an American soccer half back who was on the U.S. roster at the 1934 FIFA World Cup. He played professionally in the St. Louis Soccer League.

William Lehman
Personal information
Full name William Lehman
Date of birth (1901-12-20)December 20, 1901
Place of birth St. Louis, Missouri, United States
Date of death Jan. 1979
Place of death St. Louis, Missouri, United States
Playing position(s) Half Back
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1928–1929 Wellstones
1929–1931 Hellrungs
1931–1935Stix, Baer and Fuller F.C.
1935–1936 → St. Louis Central Breweries F.C.
1936–1938 → St. Louis Shamrocks
National team
1934 United States 1 (0)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Professional career

Lehman played for Wellstones during the 1928-1929 St. Louis Soccer League season. In 1929, he moved to the newly established Hellrungs. In 1931, the team passed under new corporate sponsorship and became known as Stix, Baer and Fuller F.C. In 1934, Lehman and his team mates won their second consecutive National Challenge Cup title. That year, St. Louis Central Brewery became the team sponsor for a single season. Breweries went on to win the 1935 National Cup. Following the Cup win, the team became the St. Louis Shamrocks and left the SLSL. Lehman remained with the team until it folded in 1938.

National team

Following their 1934 National Cup victory, several of the SBF players, including Lehman, were selected for the U.S. national team at the World Cup. Lehman earned his one cap with the U.S. national team in its qualification victory over Mexico just prior to the cup.[2]

gollark: Now, *arguably* it might not have been entirely tactically optimal to publicly release it so early, but it was a cool idea so I had to share it early.
gollark: https://discord.com/channels/346530916832903169/802678225791746089/819994409528852490
gollark: You could submit my submission.
gollark: Fine, I'll ship a few trillion copies of that file I have which uses -3 bytes of disk space.
gollark: Actually, my code simply strings together certain regions of code in other system libraries which can be combined to decompress then beeize everything.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.