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István NYERS | 1948-1952 | PES Stats Database (Golden Era Backup)

NYERS PES STATS | 1948-1952

Brezza István Nyers István NYERS | 1948-1952 Club: Inter Milan Number: Nationality: Hungarian Age: 24 Position:*WF, CF, Foot: R Side: L Height: 174 Weight: 72 Attack: 90 Defence: 44 Balance: 84 Stamina: 88 Top Speed: 89 Acceleration: 86 Response: 88 Agility: 88 Dribble Accuracy: 90 Dribble Speed: 83 Short Pass Accuracy: 76 Short Pass Speed: 78 Long Pass Accuracy: 86 Long Pass Speed: 87 Shot Accuracy: 88 Shot Power: 92 Shot Technique: 86 Free Kick Accuracy: 67 Curling: 67 Header: 86 Jump: 90 Technique: 85 Aggression: 90 Mentality: 85 Keeper Skills: 50 Team Work: 84 Injury Tolerance: A Condition/Fitness: 7 Weak Foot Accuracy: 7 Weak Foot frequency: 7 Consistency: 7 Special abilities: * DRIBBLING * REACTION * SCORING * MIDDLE-SHOOTING * LONG THROW Born in France of Hungarian parents, Nyers was one of the first globe-trotting superstars (he played in five different leagues), but he made his mark as a prolific centre-forward/Winger for Inter, scoring 133 goals in 184 appearances. Small in stature, but phenomenally athletic (his long, flat throw-ins made him a precursor to Rory Delap and he was a tremendous leaper as well) He developed as a player playing along Hungarian legends Lazar, dr. Sarosi, Puskas and Hidegkuti, played two internationals for Hungary (of course could have been many more, see below), then played for Internacionale of Milan from 1948 to 1954 where he partnered Italian idols Lorenzi and Nesti, scored one-hundred-and-thirty-three goals for the nerazurri. Laszlo Hoppe, the superb Hungarian soccer writer who was Nyers’ contemporary wrote that “he had all what we could ask of a winger; pace to haul along an entire attack formation, devilish faints, superb service and inimitable shooting; I vote for Him ! He is my all-time eleven’s left-wing”. He was born in 1924 in Merlebach, France where his father, a Hungarian miner, migrated in search of work. Within a few years the family returned to Hungary and the teenager Pisti Nyers was an avid youth player at various Budapest clubs. In the early forties, with Central Europe and the Balkans in political turmoil, an agent took him to Subotica (Szabadka for Hungarians), a town in the southern regions of historic Hungary that was deeded to Yugoslavia in the post World War I realignments but then reattached to Hungary. Nyers quickly established himself as a starter for the town’s first division team and had a couple of excellent seasons with them. He also took a Serb bride whose brother played for Crvena Zvezda Belgrade. With soccer’s interceding, he became a southern-region Hungarian, an adopted Szabadkan and “half” Serbian. World War II ended in Hungary in April of 1945 and by September the ’45-’46 season was on. Nyers joined Ujpest in the Hungarian capital, a top Hungarian and European club of the thirties and performed superbly at left wing. Two national team call ups soon followed but in 1947 he decided to try his luck in the West. Perhaps his birth in France, perhaps an agent’s tall tales or just raw craving for adventure made him decide to leave Hungary despite looming sanctions, lack of citizenship and forfeiting a national team career. Soon he was chasing the ball for Stade Francais where Helenio Herrera (the Magico) spotted him and he was on his way to Inter. Needless to say, Herrara was bombastic about Nyers yet certainly not without foundation. On September 18, 1948 he debuted against Sampdoria with a hat-trick in a 4:2 Inter victory. Goals, goals, goals: Nyers was Serie A capocannoniere (top scorer - 30 goals) in ‘49-‘50, repeated in ‘50-‘51 with 31 goals and followed with similar contributions from ‘52 through ‘54 when Inter took consecutive scudetti. The following chart renders Istvan Nyers in elevated company: when Milan’s Shevchenko reached the 100-goal mark in Serie A in his sixth season, it was remembered that only five foreign players have done it quicker: Gunnar Nordahl and Istvan Nyers (four seasons), Omar Sivori, Jose Altafini and John Hansen (five seasons). All in all, Nyers played two hundred and thirty six Serie A games and scored one-hundred-and–fifty-three times. But which one may have been the most memorable one ? Nyers himself said in an interview that it had to be a 6:5 ( ! ) victory over Milan in 1952 with he scoring Inter's sixth (he barely made it to the dressing room in only his briefs after that one) but he also fondly remembers an Inter-Bari match when, having scored five times in the first half, he seemed on track to tie or surpass Italian myth and marvel Silvio Piola’s seven-goal-single- game record. He did hit the woodwork close to half a dozen times in the second half, but Piola’s record stood and still stands. Hungarians still speculate, had Nyers played for Hungary in the 1954 World Cup what difference would it have made. The Golden Team did have world-class Zoltan Czibor at left-wing, yet, with a bit more goal getting ability and San Siro earned grittiness he might have made a difference for finalist Hungary. He himself said that the Hungarians were eager to have him back for the tournament (although unlikely to have been able to pull it off given the harsh East-West political climate of the fifties) and that Inter did not want to let him do it. Promises of Italian citizenship, the great affection and adulation for their “Stefano” (and the Iron Curtain) made the idea mute. So Istvan (also “Etienne”) Nyers was stateless, did not play on any national team again and would not be invited for any all-Europe or all-World assemblies (then a greater honor than today’s all too often “soccer celebrity” games) due to the same reason. _________________ Alan Hansen wrote: How come Liverpool games are on last at the moment? Gary Lineker wrote: Midtable clashes aren't as exciting Istvan NYERS | 1948-1952 | PES Stats Database (Golden Era Backup)

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This blog is dedicated to reviving posts from the "golden era" of PES Stats Database (2008-2010). This was possible thanks to Wayback Machine and my hard work.