Austrian first division clubs in women's football

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The first division clubs in Austrian women's football are clubs that have been represented at least once in the top tier of the women's championship since 1972. The first league was organized by the Vienna Football Association until 1982 and was called the Ladies League East - 1st level . Despite being organized by a regional association, participation in the championship was in principle open to clubs from all over Austria . In 1982 the Austrian Football Association took charge of the league and ran it as the women's division . In 2006 it was renamed the ÖFB Women's League and in 2013 the ÖFB Women's Bundesliga . (Status: until the 2019/20 season )

First division clubs by federal state

Burgenland

SC Ladies Dörfl
At the sports club from the municipality of Steinberg-Dörfl , which has existed since 1963, a women's football section was founded in 1992 and won the championship title of the Burgenland Women's League in 1999, the Burgenland State Cup in 2000 and the championship of the 2nd Division East in 2001. The team played in the Bundesliga from 2001 to 2004. After the 2003/04 season, the team got out of the league and the women's section broke up. Today the club promotes boys' football and has some youth teams.
2 × as SC Damen Dörfl : 2001/02, 2002/03, 2003/04 (3 × Bundesliga)
SG Halbturn / Breitenbrunn / Halbturn, USC Halbturn
The syndicate from Halbturn and Breitenbrunn was allowed to play in the East Women's League for the first time in the 1973/74 season. After two years in the league, USC Halbturn took over the women's team and Breitenbrunn left the syndicate. After six years of women's league, the women's section of the USC Halbturn rose voluntarily in 1979 to the 2nd level; a year later, in 1980, he was relegated from the 2nd level. A year later, a club from Halbturn, Tyrolia Halbturn , probably also USC Halbturn, qualified for the 2nd performance level. He immediately qualified for the Bundesliga. After two years in the Bundesliga, 1984, Tyrolia Halbturn dissolved its women's section. Whether at USV Halbturn, he didn't mention a women's team in this chronicle and the youth work in men's football. forced, is not known.
2 × as SG USC Halbturn / SC Breitenbrunn : 1973/74, 1974/75 (2 × women's league east)
4 × as USC half-turn: 1975 / 76–1978 / 79 (4 × women's league east)
2 × as Tyrolia Halbturn : 1982/83, 1983/84 (2 × Bundesliga)
ESV Parndorf; SC-ESV Parndorf 1919, ASK Soccer Women Bruck
The railway sports club from Parndorf , of which the founding of the club is unknown, had a women's team in the 1970s that played in the Bundesliga. The ESV Parndorf merged with the SC Parndorf and entered after the merger with the SC Parndorf in 1988 as SC-ESV Parndorf 1919 . The sports club took over a women's team from FC Winden in 2009 and played in the 2nd East / South league until 2013. From this team and other women's teams from the area, a separate club was founded in 2013, the ASK Women Soccer Bruck , which withdrew from the game in 2015. The association still exists in 2019.
3 × as ESV Parndorf : 1976 / 77–1978 / 79 (3 × women's league east)
SC Pinkafeld, FC Südburgenland
At the sports club from Pinkafeld , founded in 1912, a women's team was created at the beginning of the 2000s that was qualified for the 2nd Division East for the 2001/02 season. A year later, the women's team split from SC Pinkafeld and founded FC Südburgenland with the club colors blue and white and qualified for the Bundesliga in the 2003/04 season. Since then, the club has been commuting between the Bundesliga and the 2nd division East / South.
17 × as FC Südburgenland : 2003/04, 2004/05 (2 × Bundesliga), 2005 / 06–2019 / 20 (15 × ÖFB Women's Bundesliga)

Carinthia

ASV St. Margarethen
The entire association from the Wolfsberg district of St. Margarethen in Lavanttal was founded in 1994. The women's football section was added in 1998 and made it into the cup final in the 2001/02 season, which was lost to USC Landhaus Wien, and was promoted to the Styrian regional league, one of the second level of performance at the time, to qualify for the 2001/2002 season . The club stayed there for two seasons until the club's management decided to move up to the Bundesliga. The sports club played there for three years until 2006 when they lost two games against the LASK Ladies in relegation. After two years in the second division, the Margarethner competed against Kleinmünchner from Linz and won the relegation with an overall score of 3: 7 and qualified for the first-class ÖFB women's league of the 2008/09 season. However, the women's team was relegated to the 2nd division East / South in the next season and the women's team was dissolved.
3 × as ASV St. Margarethen : 2003/04, 2004/05 (2 × Bundesliga), 2005/06, 2008/09 (2 × ÖFB women's league)
SK Austria Kärnten, FC St. Veit, Carinthians Soccer Women
The women's team was created at the Klagenfurt club SK Austria Kärnten, was taken over by FC St. Veit , reintegrated into SK Austria Kärnten in 2009 under the name SK Kärnten, in order to be taken over again to FC St. Veit in 2011 and was thus in Klagenfurt or based in St. Veit . Overall, the team was able to qualify for the first Austrian league six times. In July 2013, a separate club was created for this women's team, which in turn played twice in the ÖFB women's league. In the summer of 2016, the women's team of SV Spittal / Drau joined the club, which had played in the women's Carinthia league the previous season and got a new home with Spittal / Drau . In the 2019/20 season, the team played under the name Carinthians Spittal in the women's second division.
2 × as FC St. Veit : 2007/08, 2008/09 (2 × ÖFB women's league)
2 × as SK Carinthia : 2009/10, 2010/11 (2 × ÖFB women's league)
2 × as FC St. Veit Kärnten women : 2011/12 (1 × ÖFB women's league), 2012/13 (1 × ÖFB women's Bundesliga)
2 × as Carinthians Soccer Women : 2013/14, 2015/16 (2 × ÖFB women's league)

Lower Austria

DFC Alland / Brunn, DSC Austria Brunn, SC Brunn am Gebirge, 1st SVg Guntramsdorf
The DSC Alland-Brunn was a game community between the two cities of Alland and Brunn am Gebirge in the industrial district , therefore also known as the DSC Alland-Brunn game community . From the 1985/86 season onwards , Allander and Brunner broke up the syndicate, the club moved all the way to Brunn am Gebirge and played under the name DSC Austria Brunn . Over the next three years, the club integrated itself into the SC Brunn am Gebirge club and was called DSC Brunn am Gebirge. In 2002 the women's football section was dissolved again. The team switched to 1. SVg Guntramsdorf to establish the women's section there and by handing over the license they were able to compete in the 1. Bundesliga in the following season. In the 2015/16 season, the team played in the women's regional league Industrieviertel, in the next the team was dissolved and the players switched to Gumpoldskirchen 1.SVg, ASV 13, Sportclub SC Schwanenstadt 08 or Mödling SC.
4 × as DSC Alland-Brunn : 1981/82 (1 × women's league east), 1982 / 83–1984 / 85 (3 × Bundesliga)
1 × as DSC Austria Brunn : 1985/86 (1 × Bundesliga)
11 × as SC Brunn am Gebirge : 1986 / 87–1994 / 95, 1999 / 2000–2001 / 02 (11 × Bundesliga)
1 × as 1. SVg Guntramsdorf : 2002/03 (1 × Bundesliga)
SKV Altenmarkt
The club, which comes from Altenmarkt an der Triesting on the edge of the Vienna Woods , was founded in 1979 as a men's soccer club, and in 2004 as the women's section. While the women played in the Bundesliga in 2016, the men's section of the club was dissolved. In the 2016/17 season, SKV Altenmarkt took sixth place in the ÖFB Women's Bundesliga. In the 2018/19 season, the club reached 9th place in the 2nd league east / south.
7 × as SKV Altenmarkt : 2012 / 13–2019 / 20 (7 × ÖFB Women's Bundesliga)
SG Ardagger / Neustadtl
The women's team of SG Ardagger / Neustadtl, a syndicate of Ardagger and Neustadtl in the Mostviertel , played as a hobby until 1996 and entered the Lower Austrian women's league in autumn 1996. The pure women's football club played in the Bundesliga until 2002, stayed there until 2012, relegating voluntarily to the Mostviertel regional league, in which the team still played under the name FSG Ardagger 2018/19.
10 × as SG Ardagger / Neustadtl : 2002 / 03–2004 / 05 (3 × Bundesliga), 2005 / 06–2011 / 12 (7 × ÖFB women's league)
SC Drasenhofen
The club from Drasenhofen in the Weinviertel played one season in the women's league. It is not known whether it is a women's division of the men's soccer club USC Drasenhofen, founded in 1973.
1 × as SC Drasenhofen : 1976/77 (1 × women's league east)
SV Enzesfeld-Hirtenberg
The women's soccer section of the BSV Enzesfeld-Hirtenberg comes from the municipality of Enzesfeld-Lindabrunn on the edge of the Vienna basin and played in the women's league east for three years in the 1970s.
3 × as SV Enzesfeld-Hirtenberg : 1973 / 74–1975 / 76 (3 × women's league east)
SV Gloggnitz, SC Wiener Neustadt
The women's section of the Gloggnitz- based sports club played in the ÖFB women's league in 2006 and 2007. In the summer of 2012, the Gloggnitzer founded a syndicate with SC Wiener Neustadt, which lasted until 2015. In the 2015/16 season took over the license for the 2nd league east / south and the team. The SV Gloggnitz promotes the youth work of boys' teams. SC Wiener Neustadt dissolved the women's division in the 2016/17 season.
2 × as SV Gloggnitz : 2005/06, 2006/07 (2 × ÖFB women's league)
SC Hainfeld
The women's section of the Hainfeldner Sportclub played in the women's league east in the 1970s. In summer 2001 the Hainfeldner founded a syndicate with Rohrbach and played in the 2nd Division East until 2004. Since then, the sports club has been concentrating on youth work in men's football.
1 × as SC Hainfeld : 1974/75 (1 × women's league east)
DFC Heidenreichstein
The women's department of the Heidenreichsteiner was founded in 1981 as a section of the SC Heidenreichstein, which has existed since 1925. The Heidenreichsteiners gained experience in the Bundesliga between 1987 and 1998. In the 2016/17 season, the Waldviertel players play in the Lower Austria Women's State League .
10 × as DFC Heidenreichstein : 1987 / 88–1989 / 90, 1991 / 92–1997 / 98 (10 × Bundesliga)
SV Horn
The Horner women's team was founded in 1994 and already played in the 2nd league east / south in the 1994/95 season, briefly relegated to the regional league and rose again to the 2nd league east / south in 2016/19. In the 2018/19 season, the Waldviertel women won the championship title and qualified for the ÖFB Women's Bundesliga for the first time with a 3-1 overall score against RW Rankweil .
1 × as SV Horn : 2019/20 (1 × ÖFB Women's Bundesliga)
SV Neulengbach
The SV Altlengbach women's team was founded in 1992 . In the summer of 1996, the team moved to Neulengbach , thus establishing the women's football section of the local sports club. Since the 1997/98 season Neulengbach has been one of the top teams in Austrian women's football and is 12 times champion and 10 times cup winner.
24 × as SV Neulengbach : 1996 / 97–2004 / 05 (9 × Bundesliga), 2005 / 06–2019 / 20 (15 × ÖFB Women's Bundesliga)
SC Neunkirchen
The women's section of the 1922 Industrieviertler sports club was a Bundesliga club from 1989 to 1996. In the 2016/17 season the team played in the women's group south. In the next season the team was dissolved and the players switched to Willendorf SV and Eggendorf ASK or Weikersdorf.
6 × as SC Neunkirchen : 1989 / 90–1992 / 93, 1994 / 95–1995 / 96 (6 × Bundesliga)
SKN St. Pölten
In Stattersdorf , a cadastral community of the city of Sankt Pölten , SC Stattersdorf founded a women's team in 1996 and the team played its way up to the highest Austrian league. In the summer of 2001, the Stattersdorfer founded a game community with the ASV Spratzern from another cadastral municipality of St. Pöltens, Spratzern . In 2006 the syndicate was dissolved and the team moved to ASV Spratzern. In 2006 the name was changed to FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern . For marketing policy reasons, a cooperation was agreed with the SKN St. Pölten in 2016 and the FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern was incorporated into the SKN St. Pölten, whereby it was agreed that the FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern would be the women's department of the SKN St. Pölten is.
1 × as SC Stattersdorf : 2000/01 (1 × Bundesliga)
1 × as SG ASV Spratzern / SC Stattersdorf : 2001/02 (1 × Bundesliga)
2 × as ASV Spratzern : 2011/12, 2012/13 (2 × ÖFB Women's Bundesliga)
3 × as FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern : 2013 / 14–2015 / 16 (3 × ÖFB Women's Bundesliga)
4 × as SKN St. Pölten Women : 2016 / 17–2019 / 20 (4 × ÖFB Women's Bundesliga)
SV Stetteldorf
The women's section of the Weinviertel club from the municipality of Stetteldorf am Wagram , which has existed since 1932, founded a women's team in 1969, which competed in 1973 for the championship in what was then the first Austrian division, the East Women's League. Between 1986 and 1989 the women played in the second Austrian division. Since 2011, the club has had a women's team again, which played in the Lower Austria Women's State League in the 2018/19 season.
1 × as SV Stetteldorf : 1973/74 (1 × women's league east)
ASV Vösendorf, ASV Austria Vösendorf
The workers' sports club, founded in Vösendorf in 1920, had a women's team in the early 1980s that played in the Bundesliga. After the last Bundesliga year, the department dissolved.
10 ×  ASV Vösendorf : 1988 / 89–1989 / 90, 1991 / 92–1998 / 99 (10 × ÖFB Bundesliga)
1 ×  ASV Austria Vösendorf : 1990/91 (1 × ÖFB Bundesliga)

Upper Austria

LASK ladies
The LASK Ladies were founded in 2002 as the Ladies Soccer Club in Linz and in 2004 became a separate section of the traditional men's club LASK Linz . In 2006 the first promotion to the ÖFB women's league was achieved. In the next year, the club had to relegate to the 2nd division middle. After five years in the 2nd division and the last place in the 2011/12 season, the ladies relegated to the national league. In the 2018/19 season the LSC Linz played in the women's class Upper Austria North / East.
1 × as LASK Ladies : 2006/07 (ÖFB Women's League)
Union Kleinmünchen
Founded in 1980 as a pure women's football club in the Kleinmünchen district of Linz and played primarily in the first level. With eight championship and eight runner-up titles, the Linz club is the third most successful women's football club in Austria after USC Landhaus Wien and SV Neulengbach. In the 2018/19 season it was enough for the Kleinmünchner only the last place and relegated to the newly founded 2nd division.
39 × as Union Kleinmünchen : 1980/81, 1981/82 (2 × women's league east), 1982 / 83–2004 / 05 (23 × Bundesliga), 2005 / 06–2018 / 19 (14 × ÖFB women's Bundesliga)

Salzburg

USK Hof, FC Bergheim
The women's section of the since 1956 Hofer existing Füßballvereins USK Hof was founded 1999th From the season onwards, the Flachgau football club entered into a syndicate with the Bergheimers , which only concerned women's football. From the 2015/16 season onwards, the syndicate was dissolved and FC Bergheim, which was founded in 1965 and re-established in 2004, took over the ÖFB women's league team. The USK Hof women continue to play in the Salzburg women's league, in which they were in the 2016/17 season.
3 × as USK Hof : 2008 / 09-2010 / 11 (3 × ÖFB women's league)
2 × as SG FC Bergheim / USK Hof : 2011/12, 2012/13 (2 × ÖFB women's league)
4 × as FC Bergheim women : 2016 / 17–2019 / 20 (4 × ÖFB Women's Bundesliga)

Styria

LUV Graz women, DFC LUV Graz
At the Graz apprentice support association, abbreviated LUV, founded in 1959, a women's team was founded in the 1970s, which made it to the top level for the first time in 1978. The highlights were the runner-up title in 1986 and the cup victory in 1978. In 1990 the women's football section was shut down and only successfully rebuilt in 1999. From 2014 to 2017 played under the name DFC LUV Graz in a syndicate with the 1st DFC Leoben. In the 2018/19 season the club played in the 2nd league east / south.
30 × as LUV Graz : 1978/79, 1979/80, 1981/82 (3 × women's league east), 1982 / 83–1989 / 90, 2001 / 02–2004 / 05 (12 × Bundesliga), 2005 / 06–2014 / 15, 2017/18 (15 × ÖFB Women's Bundesliga)
2 × as DFC LUV Graz : 2014/15, 2015/16 (2 × ÖFB Women's Bundesliga)
1. DFC Leoben
Founded in 1976 as its own women's football club in Leoben , the club has participated in the highest league since 1978. The highlights so far have been the championship titles in 1986 and 1987. After the dissolution of the syndicate with the LUV Graz, the club began in the Styrian women's regional league and played in the Styrian women's upper league north in 2018/19.
27 × as 1st DFC Leoben : 1978 / 79–1981 / 82 (4 × women's league east), 1982 / 83–2002 / 03, 2004/05 (22 × Bundesliga), 2006/07 (1 × ÖFB women's league)
DFC St. Peter am Ottersbach
In the southeast Styrian market town of St. Peter am Ottersbach , women's football was offered in the Bundesliga for two years as early as the 1980s. Today, the successor club, TUS St. Peter am Ottersbach, focuses on youth work in men's football.
2 × as DFC St. Peter am Ottersbach : 1987/88, 1988/89 (2 × Bundesliga)
SK Sturm Graz
FC Stattegg, a club from Stattegg near Graz , took over the 2nd women's team of the LUV Graz Damen and the license for the 2nd women's league south in 2008 and qualified for the Bundesliga in 2009. In the summer of 2011, a syndicate between SK Sturm Graz and FC Stattegg was decided. Three years later the syndicate was dissolved and SK Sturm Graz took over the team. The club has played in the ÖFB Women's Bundesliga since 2012/13.
2 × as FC Stattegg : 2009/10, 2010.11 (2 × ÖFB women's league)
1 × as SPG SK Sturm Graz Women / FC Stattegg 2012/13 (1 × ÖFB Women’s Bundesliga)
7 × as SK Sturm Graz : 2013 / 14–2019 / 20 (7 × ÖFB Women's Bundesliga)

Tyrol

Innsbrucker AC, FFC Tirol, FC Wacker Innsbruck
The women's team from Innsbruck was founded at Innsbrucker AC , IAC for short, in 1991 and played in the first Bundesliga from 1997 to 2006. The highlights were the championship title in 2002 and the cup win in 1994. In the first two years in the Bundesliga, playing in a syndicate with FC Tirol Innsbruck , the group dissolved again in 1999. From the 2001/02 season onwards, the club's name was Innsbrucker AC / FC Tiroler Loden with the addition of the sponsor. In 2006, the women's soccer section of Innsbruck AC was dissolved and the team was transferred to FC Wacker Innsbruck . The new employer already had a women's team in the 1970s and 1980s, which is considered one of the first women's teams by a Bundesliga club. Under the new patronage, the women's team played in the first Austrian division for ten years. In the 2017/18 season the team played in the women's 2nd division middle / west and was promoted to the ÖFB women's Bundesliga in the 2018/19 season
2 × as SG FFC Tirol / IAC : 1997/98, 1998/99 (2 × Bundesliga);
7 × as Innsbrucker AC : 1999 / 2000–2004 / 05 (6 × Bundesliga), 2005/06 (1 × ÖFB women's league)
12 × as FC Wacker Innsbruck : 2006 / 07–2012 / 13 (6 × ÖFB Women's League), 2013 / 14–2016 / 17, 2018/19, 2019/20 (6 × ÖFB Women's Bundesliga)

Vorarlberg

Black and white Bregenz
The Bregenz team made it into the Regionalliga West in 1997 and were promoted to the Bundesliga in 2000. In the second year of the Bundesliga, Vorarlberg had to relegate back to the Regionalliga West. They stayed there until 2007, the year the football club went bankrupt. The women's team was taken over by the successor club SC Bregenz , who competed in the championship in the Regionalliga West in the 2007/08 season with the same name as the previous club. In the following season the team played in the women's Vorarlberg league. In the 2018/19 season they finished sixth in the women's national league .
2 × as black and white Bregenz : 2000/01, 2001/02 (2 × Bundesliga)
FFC Vorderland
The only pure football club in Vorarlberg has its roots in the women's team of FC Sulz in the Vorderland . In 2012 the team separated from the club and founded their own women's football club. Since the 2017/18 season, the Vorderland women have played in the highest ÖFB women's Bundesliga after they had prevailed against ASK Erlaa in two relegation games, 2: 2 and 3: 2.
3 × as FFC Vorderland : 2017 / 18–2019 / 20 (3 × ÖFB Women's Bundesliga)

Vienna

KSV Ankerbrot Vienna
The breadmaker's association was founded in 1922, and a women's team won the championship title in 1975, which was the favorite's greatest success . The women's football section was dissolved after this championship season. Today the men's team plays under the name KSV Ankerbrot Montelaa. In the 2015/16 season, the club tried to build a team that will be released a year later.
1 × as KSV Ankerbrot Vienna : 1974/75 (1 × women's league east)
SV Antonshof
Probably it is the Schwechater SV Antonshof from Rannersdorf. SV Antonshof played in the first edition of the women's soccer championship, which was held in 1972/73, and left voluntarily at the end of the season.
1 × as SV Antonshof : 1972/73 (1 × women's league east)
SV Kagran, SV Aspern, ESV Stadlau / Kaisermühlen
All three clubs were or are based in the Danube city.
The sports club Kagran was founded in 1947, the women's section of SV Kagran played in the first edition of the women's football championship, which was held in 1972/73, and was able to achieve third place. In the 1975/76 season, the section reached the cup final. In the summer of 1977 the women's section was dissolved. There is no evidence of whether the women's section was integrated directly into the Asperner SV. After several mergers and a general assembly in 1999, the entire association is called SV Hirschstetten.
The SV Aspern was founded in 1919, a women's team was set up in 1973, which played from the 1977/78 season instead of SV Kagran in the women's league East. From 1972 to 1983, SV Aspern was called SV Aspern Herzer after the Commercial Councilor Otto Herzer was won as a sponsor . In the 1983/84 season, the women's section became champions and was dissolved. The women's soccer section of SV Aspern was relocated to ESV Stadlau / Kaisermühlen after the championship season. Until the 2015/16 season there were no efforts to reactivate the women's section.
The iron sports club Stadlauer and Kaisermühlner Sportverein (ESV-KSC) never played in the top leagues of Austria for the men. The women's team from SV Aspern was taken over in 1984 and voluntarily withdrew from the championship seven years later during the 1991 season. The football field of the ESV Stadlau had to make room because of an underground station. Today the entire club operates as KSC Donaustadt.
5 × as SV Kagran : 1972 / 73–1976 / 77 (5 × women's league east)
8 × as SV Aspern : 1977 / 78–1982 / 83 (6 × women's league east), 1982/83, 1983/84 (2 × Bundesliga)
7 × as ESV Stadlau / Kaisermühlen : 1984 / 85–1990 / 91 (7 × Bundesliga)
ASV 13
The workers' sports club from Hietzing was founded in 1946 as SV Hörndlwald. The club's women's division only played one season in the Bundesliga, finished last and disbanded. In the 2008/09 season, a women's team entered the Wiener Landesliga and became champions, in which they still played in the 2018/19 season.
1 × as ASV 13 : 1982/83 (1 × Bundesliga)
SV Elektra Vienna
The sports association Elektra was founded as FC Simmeringer sports association in 1909, the name change to the football section Elektra took place in 1948 and relocated to Wehlistraße in Leopoldstadt . The women's department of Elektra Vienna entered the Bundesliga in the 1975/76 season and was three times champion and once runner-up. The women's football section of FS Elektra was dissolved again in 1981. The men's section plays as ASK Elektra Wien .
6 × as SV Elektra Vienna : 1975 / 76–1980 / 81 (6 × women's league east)
ASK Erlaa
The amateur sports club from Liesing has existed since 1923, the women's team was founded in 1997. The club's colors are purple and white. The highlights so far have been two national championships in Vienna and the repeated promotion to the Bundesliga. In the 2017/18 season, the women's team played in the 2nd league east / south. and was dissolved in the next season and the players switched to RSV Wienerfeld, 1. SV Wr.Neudorf, SV Neulengbach and ASK Bad Vöslau.
4 × as ASK Erlaa : 2004/05 (1 × Bundesliga), 2005/06, 2006/07 (2 × ÖFB Women's League), 2014/15 (1 × ÖFB Women's Bundesliga)
Favoritner AC
The athletics club from Favoriten was founded in 1910, the women's section of the Favoritner AC played in the first edition of the women's football championship, which was held in 1972/73, and became champions. The club's women's soccer team was disbanded after the championship season.
1 × as favorites AC : 1972/73 (1 × women's league east)
Gersthofer SV
The sports association from Währing was founded as Gersthofer Spielvereinigung (SpVg) in 1912 and merged with the German Football Club (DFC) Vienna in 1922. The women's section of Gersthofer SV played in the first edition of the women's football championship, which was held in 1972/73, was last and dissolved at the end of the season.
1 × as Gersthofer SpVg : 1972/73 (1 × women's league east)
USC Landhaus, FK Austria Vienna
The USC Landhaus from Floridsdorf was founded in 1968 as a pure women's football club, played in the first edition of the women's football championship, which was held in 1972/73, and has not even been relegated in its entire history. It is therefore one of the most successful Austrian women's football clubs, having been champions twelve times and runner-up twelve times. A cooperation with FK Austria Wien has existed since 2005 . In the 2018/19 season the club plays under the name USC Landhaus / FK Austria Wien in the ÖFB Women's Bundesliga.
46 × as USC Landhaus : 1972 / 73–1981 / 82 (10 × women's league east), 1982 / 83–2004 / 05 (23 × Bundesliga), 2005 / 06–2017 / 18 (13 × ÖFB women's Bundesliga)
1 × as SG USC Landhaus / FK Austria Wien : 2018/19 (1 × ÖFB Women's Bundesliga)
1 × as SG FK Austria Wien / USC Landhaus : 2019/20 (1 × ÖFB Women's Bundesliga)
DFC Ostbahn XI, ESV Süd-Ost
The independent Simmeringer women's soccer club DFC Ostbahn XI played in the first edition of the women's soccer championship, which was held in 1972/73. The highlights were the championship title in 1985, eight runner-up titles and five cup wins. Only in the 1989/90 season did the women's soccer club play under the name of ESV Ostbahn XI , the railway sports club Ostbahn XI, which was founded in 1921. In 1995 the women's soccer section stopped playing. The team switched to ESV Süd-Ost, which received the first division license of Ostbahn IX.
ESV Süd-Ost took over the license and the team from DFC Ostbahn XI in 1995/96 and was never promoted to the first Austrian league. In the 2008/09 season the women's team was relegated to the Vienna Women's Regional League. The club disbanded after the championship title in the Vienna women's regional league in the 2011/12 season, as the players moved to different clubs.
17 × as DFC Ostbahn XI : 1972 / 73–1981 / 82 (10 × women's league east), 1982 / 83–1988 / 89 (7 × Bundesliga);
1 × as ESV Ostbahn XI : 1989/90 (1 × Bundesliga);
5 × as DFC Ostbahn XI : 1990 / 91–1994 / 95 (5 × Bundesliga);
6 × as ESV Süd-Ost : 1995 / 96–2000 / 01 (6 × Bundesliga)
SV Pauker Vienna
The SV Pauker Wien is the Simmeringer Sportklub of the Simmering-Graz Pauker Werke, which played on the sports field in Leberstraße. In the 1974/75 season, the club's women's team played in the East Women's League, finished last and disbanded.
1 × as SV Pauker Vienna : 1974/75 (1 × women's league east)
First Vienna FC 1894, FC Hellas Kagran
The First Vienna Football Club was founded in Döbling in 1894 and in 1989 was one of the first Bundesliga clubs to set up a women's team. and could go straight to the top division. In the summer of 1997, the women's football section was dissolved. The players switched to FC Hellas Kagran to found the women's team there.
The Floridsdorfer FC Hellas Kagran was founded in 1926 and merged in 1968 with the SC Montagebau for Hellas Montagebau. In 1997, when the women's team from First Vienna FC was taken over in 1894, a women's team was founded. In 2004 the women's team disbanded.
At Vienna, 7 years later, since autumn 2011, a women's team has been established that will play in the second division from the 2018/19 season.
5 × as First Vienna FC 1894 : 1989 / 90–1992 / 93, 1995/96 (5 × Bundesliga)
5 × as FC Hellas Kagran : 1999 / 2000–2003 / 04 (5 × Bundesliga)
KSV of the Viennese vocational schools
A women's team from the Prater- based cultural and sports association of the Viennese vocational schools takes place in the 1979/80 season, when the team was playing in the second level. In 1982 the women of the KGV were promoted to the Bundesliga, in 1989 the women's division of the KSV was dissolved. In the seasons 1985/86 and 1986/87 KSV appeared as Viennese vocational schools CA on.
7 × as KSV of the Viennese vocational schools : 1982 / 83–1988 / 89 (7 × Bundesliga)
SV Wienerfeld, DFV Jewels Janecka, DFC Jewels Janecka
Both clubs are historically closely linked. DFV Juwelen Janecka was founded in Favoritner Neulaa in 1986 and had its venue in Franz-Koci-Straße. SV Wienerfeld, that club of the Franz-Hölbl-Anlage, founded a women's division in the 1980s and played in the second women's league East in 1987/88. In the 1991/92 to 1993/94 seasons, DFV Jewels Janecka played in a syndicate with SV Wienerfeld. A year later, the syndicate was dissolved and DFV Juwelen Janecka played in the Bundesliga. The women's team played in the Vienna Women's State League until 2012, in summer 2012 it was reintegrated into SV Wienerfeld and had to be relegated to the women's first class A.
2 × as SV Wienerfeld : 1989/90, 1990/91 (2 × Bundesliga)
1 × as SV Janecka Wienerfeld : 1991/92 (1 × Bundesliga)
1 × as DFV Juwelen Janecka : 1992/93 (1 × Bundesliga)

See also

Individual evidence

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Web links