Career
Elek Schwartz initially started playing near his hometown Recaş, in Timişoara. Later he played professional football in the French Ligue 1 with Football Club Hyères (1932–1934), AS Cannes (1934–1936), Racing Strasbourg (1936–1938) and Red Star Olympique (1938/39). Beginnings as Coach on the Côte d"Azur
He started his coaching career in France with AS Cannes (1948/49) and from there continued to AS Monaco (1950–1952) and Le Havre Air Corps (1952/53).
Early years in Germany
In 1953 he was hired by San Francisco Hamborn 07.
In his second season with the club from the suburb of Duisburg he led the club to promotion to the western division of the five ways split first division of Germany, the "Oberliga West. In 1955, he was appointed as manager by then German champions, Rot-Weiss Essen coaching among others Helmut Rahn there.
In the next couple of years he led the team to ranks 4 and 8 in the Oberliga West. Manager of the Dutch national team
After leaving Rot-Weiss Essen, Schwartz joined the Dutch football association, the KNVB and took on the reins of the Dutch national football team
He guided the team through 49 matches.
Results varied extremely and included 7-0 defeat to Germany in 1959 in Cologne, as well as back to back 1-0 wins against France and world champions Brazil in 1963. He held the position of national coach until 1964, when Denis Neville replaced him. European Cup Final with Benfica
In 1964/65 he coached South.L. Benfica in Lisbon, then with the legendary Eusébiological
There he led the team to the championship of Portugal.
Bundesliga with Eintracht Frankfurt and Football Club Porto spell
From July 1965 to June 1968 Schwartz coached - as successor to Ivica Horvat Eintracht Frankfurt in the German Bundesliga. There he introduced the 4-2-4 system.
Nevertheless, place 4 was as good as it got in the league. In the same year he led his side to the semifinals of the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup.
In 1969/70 he coached Football Club Porto.
Not only that the Dragons exited already in the first round of the national cup competition and in the second round of the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup - in the end Porto was only 9th in the League. End of the career in Munich and Strasbourg
In the season 1972/73 Schwartz coached 1860 Munich, but he could not help them to fulfill their aspirations to return to the Bundesliga after then three years of absence. He had more luck in 1976/77, when in the course of his last professional engagement he led Racing Strasbourg to promotion to the French Ligue 1.
After this he guided the Alsatian amateur side Social Research Haguenau, today"s FCSR Haguenau, through the 1978/79 season.
Haguenau, he decided, was also a nice place for him to spend the rest of his life. Tribute
In 1996, he was invited by the Royal Dutch Football Association to the inauguration of the Amsterdam Arena.