Jozef Adamec (26 February 1942 â 24 December 2018) was a Slovak football forward and manager.
Adamec won seven Czechoslovak First League titles in his club career, winning two with Dukla Prague during his military service, followed by five more while playing for Spartak Trnava. Other clubs he played for were Slovan Bratislava and lower-division Austrian club Slovan Wien, where he took on a player-manager role.
As a football manager, Adamec took charge of clubs in Czechoslovakia and later Slovakia. Between 1999 and 2001 he led the Slovakia national team.
In March 1959, the then 17-year-old Jozef Adamec would make his debut for Spartak Trnava, but two years later he would be enlisted and be playing for Dukla Prague. However, Adamec did not stay in Dukla permanently and would later return to Trnava. In 1964, he transferred to rivals Slovan Bratislava. He played in Bratislava for a total of 639 days, but 267 of them were suspended due to penalties.
In the Czechoslovak First League he played 383 matches and with 170 goals is 10th in the Czechoslovak All-Time Topscorers Table. He was capped 44 times for Czechoslovakia, scoring 14 goals. He was a participant at the 1962 FIFA World Cup and 1970 FIFA World Cup.
His most memorable performance was his hat-trick against Brazil in match Czechoslovakia - Brazil 3âÂÂ2 (1âÂÂ1) played on 23 June 1968 in Bratislava. He was often incorrectly referred to as the first player ever to score a hat-trick against Brazil (Pole Ernst Wilimowski had scored four goals in the 1938 World Cup match).
After retiring as player, Adamec began with football coaching as an assistant in Spartak Trnava. Later he coached Dukla Banská Bystrica, Tatran Preà ¡ov, Spartak Trnava and Slovan Bratislava. Between 1988 and 1991, he was the manager of Inter Bratislava, winning the Slovak Cup with the club in the 1989âÂÂ90 season. He was assistant to Czechoslovakia coach Václav Jeà ¾ek in 1993. From 1999 to 2001 Adamec coached the Slovakia national team.
Adamec died in 2018 at the age of 76.
Dukla Prague
Spartak Trnava
Czechoslovakia
Inter Bratislava