The Berlin soccer championship of the VBB 1910/11 was the fourteenth and last Berlin soccer championship held under the Association of Berliner Ballspielvereine . This year's championship was played again in a group of nine participants. The BTuFC Viktoria 89 prevailed with one point ahead of the previous year's champions BFC Preussen and became the VBB Berlin soccer champions for the fifth time . Due to the success, Viktoria Berlin was qualified for the German soccer championship 1910/11 . After the quarter-final opponent SC Lituania Tilsit decided not to play against Viktoria Berlin due to high travel costs , the Berlin team reached the semi-finals without a fight. With a 4-0 victory in the semifinals, Berlin reached the final against VfB Leipzig , which was won 3-1. This was the second championship title for Viktoria Berlin , whereby the club caught up with the previous sole record champion VfB Leipzig .
This was the last season of the Association of Berliner Ballspielvereine. In order to bundle their strengths in Berlin and Brandenburg, the associations, the Association of Berlin Ball Game Clubs , the Association of Berlin Athletics Clubs and the Märkischer Fußball-Bund, decided to merge to form the Association of Brandenburg Ball Game Clubs . From then on there was a uniform Berlin soccer championship. All clubs of the VBB from the 1st class received a starting place in the first-class Berlin league for the next season. In addition, the two best teams from each of the four seasons of the 2nd class were qualified for a qualifying round, from which another six teams from the VBB were able to qualify for the new league.
After the merger of the three Berlin associations on April 29, 1911, the membership of the Stettin associations in the VBB ended. The attempt to found its own regional association and to appropriate areas of other associations failed. From 1911 to 1913, the Szczecin clubs were not part of any regional association and only held the local city championships. In 1913, the Association of Pomeranian Ball Game Clubs finally joined the Baltic Lawn and Winter Sports Association .
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