Name:
Henryk Józef MaculewiczNickname:
"Beton" (Concrete),
"Koń" (Horse)
Country:
PolandClub:
Wisła Kraków S.A.Position: *
CB,
SBSide:
RF/BSAge:
26-28 years (24/04/1950)Height:
180 cm Weight:
78 kg Attack:
69Defence:
82Balance:
87Stamina:
82Top Speed:
77Acceleration:
76Response:
79Agility:
74Dribble Accuracy:
73Dribble Speed:
71Short Pass Accuracy:
75Short Pass Speed:
76Long Pass Accuracy:
76Long Pass Speed:
78Shot Accuracy:
68Shot Power:
94Shot Technique:
69Free Kick Accuracy:
77Curling:
67Header:
86Jump:
81Technique:
75Aggression:
68Mentality:
84Goalkeeper Skills:
50Team Work:
75Injury Tolerance:
BCondition/Fitness:
7Weak Foot Accuracy:
5Weak Foot Frequency:
5Consistency:
6Growth type:
Standard/LastingCARDS:P11 - Long Ranger
S06 - Outside Curve
SPECIAL ABILITIES: Middle Shooting - Outside
Attack/Defence Awareness Card: Defence-Minded
INFO:A footballer valued not only for his intelligence on the pitch, but also for his education. The player whose shots the ball almost burst the net. "Concrete" and "Horse" - these nicknames say a lot about what a player he was. Hard as a rock, with an incredibly strong shot, including a free kick. His goals in matches against Śląsk Wrocław (1976) and Arka Gdynia (1977) from almost half of the pitch have become legendary. Central defender, he could play both full back positions. Seemed at times like a typical CB, just tackling, marking, short passes in the back. But he also liked from time to time to play a long pass, especially when on RB. The only drawback of Henryk Maculewicz's game was slightly weaker motor skills
Defending the colors of Wisła, he scored more goals (17) than he earned (10). Not once did he see a red cardboard box. He was also able to be well under the rivals' penalty area and score important goals with head shots, most of his 14 goals for Wisła were those scored after free kicks.
"Beton" played for Kazimierz Górski twice - right after the World Championships in 1974 and two years later. When Jacek Gmoch became the manager, so from mid-1976, Maculewicz played almost every match of the national team from cover to cover. Interestingly, in a T-shirt with an eagle on his chest, Wiślak was most often a right-defender, although in Wisła he presented his skills as a stopper on a daily basis. The only thing that he missed in his international career was a goal and a medal for the championship. The "engineer", as coach Gmoch called Maculewicz, was in charge of the defense, which in four out of six matches played to zero from the back. The problem is that in the most important matches - against Argentina and Brazil, the Poles did not match their opponents.