German football championship 1904/05
German football championship 1904/05 | |
master | Berlin TuFC Union 92 |
Teams | 11 |
Games | 8th |
Gates | 37 (ø 4.63 per game) |
Top scorer |
Paul Herzog Reinhard Richter (4 each)
|
← German championship 1903/04 |
The third German soccer championship took place from April 9th to June 11th, 1905. After the broken championship last year, Union 92 Berlin was the first time in two years that a new champion was chosen. The final against the Karlsruher FV in Cologne was won 2-0.
The financial difficulties from which the football clubs were suffering became visible this year. Two teams (Schlesien Breslau and surprisingly the reigning champions VfB Leipzig since 1903 ) waived their encounters due to high travel costs. The game committee of the German Football Association was not prepared for such a thing and reacted with new appointments, which made the process confusing and led to only three clubs in the semifinals instead of four. The costs of the final round, previously financed by the DFB, were transferred to the associations and ultimately had to be financed by the clubs or the pitch owners themselves.
Attendees
On May 21, 1905, only 262 clubs were members of the DFB. The round brought a new attendance record; ten regional associations registered their masters to participate. As in the previous two years, the champion of the local and regional associations affiliated to the DFB was eligible to participate. The defending champion was supposed to be the eleventh club, but he waived. This high number of participants and the large differences in performance prompted the DFB to hold a round of elimination for the supposedly weaker association representatives before the quarter-finals. This season, following the scandal last year, the venue's neutrality requirement was complied with for the first time.
society | Qualified as |
SC Silesia Wroclaw | Master of the Association of Wroclaw Ball Game Clubs |
SC Alemannia Cottbus | Master of the Niederlausitzer Ballspiel-Vereinigung |
Berlin TuFC Union 92 | Master of the Association of Berlin Ball Game Clubs |
Dresdner SC | Master of the Association of Central German Ball Game Clubs |
VfB Leipzig | Defending champion |
Magdeburg FC Viktoria 96 | Master of the Association of Magdeburg Ball Game Clubs |
FC Victoria Hamburg | Master of the Hamburg-Altona Football Association |
FuCC Eintracht Braunschweig | Master of the Football Association for the Duchy of Braunschweig |
Hannoverscher FC 1896 | Master of the Association of Hanover Ball Game Clubs |
Duisburg SpV | Master of the Rheinisch-Westfälischer Spielverband |
Karlsruhe FV | Master of the Association of South German Football Associations |
Elimination round
1 round
date | Result | Stadion | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
April 9, 1905 | SC Silesia Wroclaw | 5: 1 (0: 0) | SC Alemannia Cottbus | Dresden , DSC-Platz at the Nossener Bridge |
April 9, 1905 | FuCC Eintracht Braunschweig | 3: 2 n.V. (2: 2, 2: 0) | Hannoverscher FC 1896 | Magdeburg , Platz von Viktoria 96 |
After a sovereign victory against Alemannia Cottbus, in which the goals were not recorded, Schlesien Breslau waived a week later because of too high travel costs to participate in the game against Viktoria 96 in the second round.
Eintracht Braunschweig took the lead in the 15th minute through Rudolf Detmar in the first national championship game against future arch rivals Hannover 96 , and it was 2-0 thanks to Wilhelm Kämpfer until the break . But in the second half the Hanoverians came back with goals from Stanley Dobinson and Wilhelm Bühring and forced the extension. In this, Eintracht won with another goal from Detmar in the 110th minute.
2nd round
date | Result | Stadion | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
April 16, 1905 | Magdeburg FC Viktoria 96 | failed | SC Silesia Wroclaw | Leipzig , Leipzig sports field |
April 30, 1905 | FuCC Eintracht Braunschweig | 2: 1 a.d. (1: 1, 0: 0) | Magdeburg FC Viktoria 96 | Berlin-Tempelhof , Germania-Platz |
With the second round waiver by Schlesien Breslau, the teams from Magdeburg and Braunschweig would have already made it to the quarter-finals, but the game committee now had them compete against each other in a new qualification, so that Eintracht had to play an additional game three weeks later:
Hans Adam brought Magdeburg in the 61st minute against Eintracht from Braunschweig in the lead. But seven minutes later, a controversial penalty, transformed by Kurt Hagemann , equalized. Around the 80th minute, Geyer from Magdeburg was sent off. This was followed by an extension in which Wilhelm Kämpfer scored the winning goal for the quarter-finals in the 106th minute.
Quarter finals
date | Result | Stadion | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
May 7, 1905 | FuCC Eintracht Braunschweig | failed | VfB Leipzig | |
May 14, 1905 | Berlin TuFC Union 92 | 4: 1 (0: 1) | FuCC Eintracht Braunschweig | Magdeburg , Platz von Viktoria 96 |
May 28, 1905 | Karlsruhe FV | 1: 0 (1: 0) | Duisburg SpV | Hanau , Hanau parade ground |
May 28, 1905 | Dresdner SC | 5: 3 (2: 2) | FC Victoria Hamburg | Tempelhof near Berlin , Germania-Platz |
The reigning champions VfB Leipzig withdrew and waived their game for cost reasons. The Braunschweig team was then assigned by the DFB for the following week the Union 92 team, who had so far drawn a bye for the quarter-finals.
Eintracht was initially able to take the lead surprisingly through Wilhelm Kämpfer and hold it until half-time, but only two minutes after the restart, the Berliners equalized with Alfred Wagenseil. This was followed by two goals by Willi Pisara in the 56th and 66th minute. Finally, Reinhold Bock scored the 4: 1.
In a close game two weeks later, the favorite Karlsruher FV decided the second quarter-finals against Duisburg SpV for themselves. After two years it was the first championship win for the previously hapless Karlsruhe team, who then even got a bye for the final. Julius Zinser scored the winning goal in the first half.
In the last quarter-finals, Victoria Hamburg led against Dresdner SC after just four minutes thanks to Hermann Garrn . However, this turned the game around a quarter of an hour later with a double strike from Arno Neumann within five minutes. Shortly before the end of the first half, Hamburg equalized by Berthold Hagenah; but after the break, Reinhard Richter from Dresden scored two quick goals for his club again in the 48th and 50th minute. Ten minutes later, Max Fricke shortened to 3: 4 for Hamburg. In the final phase, however, the decision was made in favor of Dresden with Arno Große's 5-3.
Semifinals
date | Result | Stadion | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
June 4, 1905 | Dresdner SC | 2: 5 (0: 3) | Berlin TuFC Union 92 | Leipzig , Leipzig sports field |
Karlsruhe FV | bye |
The Dresdner SC was clearly inferior to the favorites of the Union. In the 20th minute, Paul Herzog put Berlin in the lead. After further goals from Herzog and Fröhde, it was 3-0 after the first half. Herzog also scored a goal in the second half, completing his three-pack. Reinhard Richter was able to score two consolation goals in this defeat , which made him the top scorer in the finals. In the meantime, Willi Pisara had also scored 4-1 with his third goal in the final.
final
pairing | Berlin TuFC Union 92 - Karlsruher FV |
Result | 2: 0 (1: 0) |
date | Sun, June 11, 1905 |
Stadion | Weidenpescher Park , Cologne |
spectator | 3,500 |
referee | Reginald Westendarp ( Hamburg ) |
Gates | 1: 0 Wagenseil (10th) 2: 0 Herzog (50th) |
Berlin TuFC Union 92 | Willy Krüger - Otto Kähne , Alexander Bock I - Felix Jurga , Kurt Heinrich , Emil Reinke - Reinhold Bock II, Alfred Wagenseil , O. Fröhde , Paul Herzog , Willi Pisara |
Karlsruhe FV | Willem Christiaan Schierbeek - Fritz Gutsch , Jacques Johannes Bouvy - Wilhelm Langer I, Ivo Schricker , Max Schwarze - Hans Ruzek , Louis Heck , Rudolf Wetzler , Julius Zinser , A. Holdermann |
Match report
The Karlsruher FV, whose ranks included two Dutchmen as well as the later Vice-President and General Secretary of FIFA Ivo Schricker , had no chance against the Berlin TuFC Union 92. The upcoming champions had already won the previous games with a difference of three goals. Although the regular goalkeeper Paul Eichelmann , who had drunk the night before, was voluntarily suspended for disciplinary reasons and Thiel was not given a vacation, a sovereign victory was achieved.
Alfred Wagenseil took the lead after just ten minutes. Shortly after the break, top scorer Paul Herzog scored the 2-0 with his fourth goal in the final. After a Berlin team had already reached the final a year earlier, the dominance of Berlin teams, which continued until the early 1920s, began, even if this was to remain the only title for the Union.
The master team of the Berlin TuFC Union 92
Below is the championship team with the players' stakes and goals.
Berlin TuFC Union 92 | |
|
List of goalscorers
A total of 6 goalscorers from Schlesien Breslau (5) and Alemannia Cottbus (1) are unknown.
player | society | Games | Gates | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Reinhard Richter | Dresdner SC | 2 | 4th |
2. | Paul Duke | Berlin TuFC Union 92 | 3 | 4th |
3. | Wilhelm fighter | FuCC Eintracht Braunschweig | 3 | 3 |
Willi Pisara | Berlin TuFC Union 92 | 3 | 3 | |
5. | Arno Neumann | Dresdner SC | 2 | 2 |
Alfred Wagenseil | Berlin TuFC Union 92 | 2 | 2 | |
7th | Rudolf Detmar | FuCC Eintracht Braunschweig | 3 | 2 |
8th. | Hans Adam | Magdeburg FC Victoria 96 | 1 | 1 |
Wilhelm Buhring | Hannoverscher FC 96 | 1 | 1 | |
Stanley Raine Dobinson | Hannoverscher FC 96 | 1 | 1 | |
Max Fricke | FC Victoria Hamburg | 1 | 1 | |
Hermann Garrn | FC Victoria Hamburg | 1 | 1 | |
Berthold Hagenah | FC Victoria Hamburg | 1 | 1 | |
14th | Arno Große | Dresdner SC | 2 | 1 |
Julius Zinser | Karlsruhe FV | 2 | 1 | |
16. | Reinhold Bock | Berlin TuFC Union 92 | 3 | 1 |
O. Merry | Berlin TuFC Union 92 | 3 | 1 | |
Kurt Hagemann | FuCC Eintracht Braunschweig | 3 | 1 |
literature
- History of German football. Volume III of the series of publications of the German Football Association. Carl Koppehel, Verlag Wilhelm Limpert, Frankfurt 1954, 4th expanded edition without a year.
- German Championship (1903-1923) , IFFHS magazine Libero No. 36. International Federation of Football History & Statistics , Wiesbaden, 2nd quarter 2002.
- The Golden Book of German Football. Hardy Grüne , Dietrich Schulze-Marmeling, Die Werkstatt publishing house, Göttingen 2015.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Karlsruher Fußballverein eV (Ed., 2016), A Piece of German Football History - 125 Years of the Karlsruher Fußballverein, Karlsruhe, 2016, p. 54.