There aren’t many footballers biographies where you can be over half-way through and 200 pages in before the player even begins to have a lifestyle closely approximating that of a professional footballer. But Bert Trautmann is no ordinary footballer as this book by Catrine Clay reveals.
Many people will know Trautmann as the German Manchester City goalkeeper who broke his neck in the 1955 FA Cup Final with sixteen minutes to play yet determined to continue, played on, making a number of important saves to ensure his side clinched the cup. Yet ten years previously he was fighting for Germany in the Second World War against many of the players and fans who would later applaud and cheer him on.
Born in Bremen, Trautmann was the right age to be fully indoctrinated by the plans of the Nazi Party and from a young age, Bert was a member of the Hitler Youth – an organisation that valued athleticism and brawn above thinking ability. Whilst Trautmann has some of the latter, he was a gifted handball and football player and was welcomed by the Hitler Youth and a model Aryan. Unsurprisingly, his academic studies took a back seat when he continually being lauded with praise and upheld as a good example to his peers.
The majority of Trautmann’s Journey focuses on Bert’s life from his school days to his time as a Paratrooper in the German Army during the war. Clay makes no excuses here for Trautmann, he was a fully signed up member, who may have been naive about what jobs he was undertaking, nonetheless, was fully committed to Nazi ideas and was determined to do his bit for the Fuhrer.
Clay vividly paints a picture of what life was like for German soldiers during the War: the futility of trying to beat the Russians and then re-treating to defend Germany’s interests on the Western Front. At the same time, Clay sets the context with description of life for everyday Germans juxtaposed with the internal battles that were occurring between Hitler and his Generals.
Once captured by the British, Trautmann is interned in the north west of England where he is far from repentant about the German actions in the war. However, over time he becomes more aware of the destruction caused by Hitler’s plans, coupled with the warm hospitality he receives from the majority of the Brits he meets, Trautmann decides to stay in England instead of returning to Bremen to be with his family.
The last few chapters of Trautmann’s journey feels rushed with only one devoted to his time at St Helens Town FC and only another with his entire career at Manchester City, where he did a great deal to enhance the reputation of Germans as well as heroically putting his team above danger to himself. Whilst a match by match analysis wouldn’t have been necessary, these chapters feel hurried. The epilogue which recounts Clay speaking to Trautmann is very interesting and definitely more depth would have enhanced the book as much of Bert’s personal life is glossed over in a number of sentences, where certain issues could have been probed more deeply.
There is unlikely to be a footballer who has led such a remarkable life as Bert Trautmann. His story is one that is worth retelling and in this day and age, remarkable that it hasn’t been made into a television series or film. From gifted youth in trouble to FA Cup hero, it’s a tale that’s straight out of Hollywood.
Buy Trautmann's Journey here.
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