ASK Salzburg

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ASK Salzburg
logo
Basic data
Surname Workers Sports Club Salzburg
Seat Salzburg
founding 1922
Colours blue White
president vacant / Walter Fuchsbauer (section head)
Website geomix.at/verein/ask-salzburg-polizei
First soccer team
Head coach see SG ASK / PSV
Venue PSV square
Places about 500
league 1. Salzburg State League
home
Away

The Arbeiter Sportklub Salzburg is a sports club from the Maxglan district of the state capital Salzburg in Austria and runs the football , tennis , judo , ski , table tennis and fitness sections . In the 2009/2010 season, a syndicate was entered into with PSV Salzburg . The two clubs appear under the name SG ASK-PSV .

Club history

ASK Salzburg was founded in 1922 through the merger of the youth soccer teams Germania Maxglan and Vorwärts Maxglan . The new club was officially registered under the name Sportklub Vorwärts Maxglan and adopted the club colors blue and white , which are still valid today .

Men's soccer

history

Foundation as SK Vorwärts Maxglan

In the following years the Maxglaner played in the Salzburg 2nd class and, after achieving the championship title in the 1925/26 season, rose to 1st class. Until it was incorporated into the city of Salzburg in 1935 , Maxglan was the most populous municipality in the state after the state capital, and was mainly characterized by the working class. So it was not surprising that in 1926 the SK Vorwärts joined the Association of Workers' Football in Austria (VAFÖ), which had just been established , and thus renounced promotion to 1st class in Salzburg.

In 1934 the SK Vorwärts Maxglan merged with the gymnastics club ATSV Maxglan, which was founded in 1923 . The time they were together was short-lived, however, as the organized workers were banned in the same year and their associations were ordered to be dissolved throughout Germany. Forward Maxglan joined after the dissolution of the Workers' Sports Association in the spring of 1934 as the Maxglan section of the still young SV Austria Salzburg , and took part in the B-team championship as its reserve team.

This connection was also short-lived, but the SK Vorwärts Maxglan succeeded, partly under a false name, partly after reaching its former independence for a short time, to continue lively club life and active sports activities. In the 1937/38 season the club played as TSV Maxglan for the first time in Salzburg's 1st class. After the connection of Austria to the German Reich in 1938 , however, came the final blow for the club. The SK Vorwärts Maxglan was again banned and officially dissolved. All of the association's property was confiscated, and volunteer functionaries either called up for military service or, if they were politically active, imprisoned and subsequently deported to one of the concentration camps.

Re-establishment as ATSV Maxglan

After the war , the gymnastics club ATSV Maxglan was re-established in 1945 . Efforts to bring the SK Vorwärts back to life were dropped. Instead, it was decided within the Workers' Gymnastics and Sports Club to found a football section, the predecessor of which was the Forward Sports Club .

In 1947 the ski section was founded and a separate sports and soccer field was built on the corner of Innsbrucker Bundesstrasse and Karolingerstrasse. In 1950 the ATSV Maxglan was expanded to include the judo and table tennis sections and has been a true all-round sports club ever since. The other sections were added in 1968 ( fitness ) and 1976 ( tennis ).

The footballers of the ATSV entered the so-called promotion class in the 1945/46 season, and with second place they were promoted to the national class, at that time the top division in Salzburg football. In the two following years of play, ATSV Maxglan came in last and in 1949 had to compete again in 1st class (2nd level Salzburg). Relegation followed immediately from this class too, and so the Maxglans played in the fourth-class 2nd class A throughout Austria until 1951.

Renaming to ASK Salzburg

After the municipality of Maxglan was incorporated into Salzburg with effect from July 1, 1935 , the officials of the ATSV Maxglan decided in 1951 to finally take this into account by changing the name to the Salzburg Workers' Sports Club .

In terms of sport, ASK Salzburg went steadily upwards in the years that followed. In 1954, Salzburg celebrated the championship title in the 2nd class A and rose to the 1st national class (later regional class North). With the championship title of the regional class North in 1958, the club was able to achieve promotion to the second highest division in Austria for the first time. After two years in the Tauern League North , and one in the Regionalliga West introduced in 1961, Salzburg returned to the third division.

In the 1970s , the renewed promotion to the 2nd division of the Bundesliga, which has now been established, was only narrowly missed several times, as they only finished second behind strong clubs such as the Salzburg AK 1914 or the 1. Halleiner SK . In 1977 ASK Salzburg qualified as champions of the Salzburg League for the promotion games against Lustenau . After a 0: 1 and a 1: 0 he was just reached the promotion after a 3: 2 on penalties. The players in the ASK had to consider the strength of their competitors in the 2nd Bundesliga , and so the club had to immediately relegate to the regional league (then called the Alpine league). In 1981 the regional league was won just before SC Schwaz and WSG Wattens , and ASK Salzburg celebrated its last promotion to the second division to date. There the Maxglaner club only finished 13th, 12th and 13th, but caused tension in Salzburg football in the derbies against Salzburg AK 1914 and FC Zell am See . In the 1984/85 season , Salzburg missed the rebound just one point behind IG Bregenz / Dornbirn . In the years that followed, the workers' sports club had to accept the decline into insignificance. In the season (2005/06) the Maxglaner played in the fourth highest division in Austria, the 1st regional league.

Syndicate with PSV Salzburg

In the 2009/2010 season, a syndicate with PSV Salzburg was entered into in the football section . The two clubs appear under the name SG ASK-PSV .

Bankruptcy and dispute over the sports facility

In the course of the construction of the new West Sports Facility, payment liabilities had accumulated over the years that could no longer be paid. The association has been officially bankrupt since May 2006. The ASKÖ umbrella association had taken over the facility before bankruptcy was opened . When the ASK wanted to challenge the ASKÖ's acquisition of the system in court a year later, it was excluded from the umbrella organization and expelled from the system. As a new member of the ASVÖ umbrella association , they initially played temporarily on the ASVÖ SK Liefering facility on the Salzachseen sports facility and, since the winter break, on the PSV Salzburg facility in Salzburg Süd.

Divisions

  • until 1926: Salzburg 2nd class (R2) as SK Vorwärts Maxglan
  • 1938: 1st Salzburg class (R1) as TSV Maxglan
  • 1939–1945: no game operation
  • 1946: Promotion class (R2)
  • 1947–1948: National class (R1)
  • 1949: 1st class (R2)
  • 1950–1951: 2nd class A (4)
  • 1952: 2nd class A (4)
  • 1953–1955: (1st) national class (3)
  • 1956–1958: National class North (3)
  • 1959–1960: Tauern League North (2)
  • 1961: Regionalliga West (2)
  • 1962–1969: Salzburg State League (3)
  • 1970: 1st class north (4)
  • 1971–1974: Salzburg State League (3)
  • 1975–1977: Salzburg League (3)
  • 1978: Bundesliga - 2nd division
  • 1979: Alpine League (Regional League) (3)
  • 1981: Regionalliga West (3)
  • 1982–1984: Bundesliga - 2nd division
  • 1985–1989: Regionalliga West (3)
  • 1990–1992: Salzburg 1st regional league (4)
  • 1993: Salzburg 1st regional league (5)
  • 1994: Salzburg League (4)
  • 1996: Salzburg 1st regional league (5)
  • 1997–1998: Salzburg 1st regional league (4)
  • 1999-2001: Salzburg 2nd National League North (5)
  • 2002–2010: Salzburg 1st regional league (4)
  • 2011–2012: Salzburg League (4)
  • 2013-2015: Salzburg 1st regional league (5)
  • 2016-2017: Salzburg 2nd National League North (6)
  • since 2018: Salzburg 1st class north (7)

The number in brackets indicates the division.

titles and achievements

  • 7 participations 2nd level:
1978, 1982, 1983, 1984 (Bundesliga - 2nd division),
1959, 1960 (Tauern League North),
1961 (Regionalliga West)
  • Salzburg national champions: 1977, 1981, 1985
  • Champion national class north (3): 1958
  • Champion Salzburg League (3): 1977
  • Champion Regionalliga West (3): 1981
  • Master 2nd class A (4): 1952
  • Champion 1st class north (4): 1970
  • Champion 1st national league (5): 1993
  • Champion 2. Landesliga Nord (5): 2001

Women's soccer

history

Until 2005, ASK Salzburg also ran a women's football section, which was founded in the summer of 2000 when the PSV Schwarz-Weiß Salzburg women's team transferred . In the 2000/01 game year she rose for the first time in the championship of the 2nd division middle of the women's Bundesliga , and then mostly occupied a place in midfield. The Salzburg women celebrated their greatest success in this division in the 2003/04 season when they reached second place, only because of the worse goal difference than the champions SV Garsten .

After ASK Salzburg got into severe financial turmoil due to the construction of a sports facility, and bankruptcy and the dissolution of the club were expected by the end of 2006, the entire youth and women's department was spun off from the parent club in 2005, and in the for it The newly founded branch association ASK Maxglan was integrated (whereby the "ASK" stands for "Amateur Sports Club"). After 2005, the women's team therefore entered the championship under the name ASK Maxglan . At the end of the 2007/08 season , the women's team moved to Heeres SV Wals .

titles and achievements

Sports facilities

  • until 1999: old ASK place
  • 1999–2007: West sports complex
  • 2007–2008: Salzachseen sports complex
  • since 2009: PSV Platz

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ASK Maxglan's website (offline) ( Memento from August 9, 2009 in the Internet Archive )