Alphonse Six

Footballer
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroFootballer
PlacesBelgium
wasAthlete Football player Association football player
Work fieldSports
Gender
Male
Birth1 January 1890, Bruges, Arrondissement of Bruges, West Flanders, Flemish Region
Death19 August 1914Boutersem, Flemish Brabant, Flemish Region, Belgium (aged 24 years)
The details

Biography

Alphonse Léopold Bauduin Six (1 January 1890 – 19 August 1914) was a Belgian football player.

Six was born in Bruges and is mainly remembered for his goal-scoring capacities. In his period with Cercle Brugge he scored 93 times in only 89 matches. His 1910-1911 season was especially remarkable, when scoring 38 goals in 20 matches, half of the goals Cercle Brugge scored that season. In 1910 Six received his first cap for Belgium, winning 3-2 against the Netherlands and scoring once. Six played nine times for Belgium, scoring eight goals.

Six still holds two Cercle Brugge team records:

  • An average of 1.045 goals per match.
  • Five goals in one match, against R.E. Sport's Club

In 1912, Six left Cercle for Union SG. Due to Union SG not keeping their promises about a job for him - professional footballers were unheard of at that time - he moved to Olympique Lillois, a predecessor of Lille OSC. That season he became the first Belgian football player to become a champion in a foreign country.

Death

In the beginning of August 1914, the Germans invaded Belgium and Six was called to arms. After the fall of the forts in Liège, King Albert I pulled his troops back to Antwerp. During this manoeuvre, the Belgian troops were surrounded by the Germans near Boutersem. Six and his companions were killed on 19 August, only two weeks after war broke out.

Palmares

Club

  • Belgian First Division (1): 1910–11
  • Belgian First Division (1): 1912–13
  • Belgian Cup (1): 1912–13
  • Trophée de France (1): 1914
  • Championnat USFSA (1): 1914
  • Championnat USFSA Nord (1): 1914
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.