German Football Association for Bohemia

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German
Football Association
for Bohemia
(DFVfB)
founding June 25, 1911
resolution 1938
Seat Prague , Czech Republic

The German Football Association for Bohemia (DFVfB), Czech Německá fotbalová asociace pro Čechy (NFAC) was a sports association that was founded on June 25, 1911 in Prague. He was an autonomous member of the Austrian Football Association (ÖFV) and organized the Bohemian football championship and national championship games. He joined the Czechoslovak Football Association, Czech Československá associace footballová (ČSAF).

history

The German Football Association for Bohemia (DFVfB) was founded on June 25, 1911 in Prague and it was only for German clubs, Czech clubs were not accepted. The Czech clubs had their own association, which was founded on October 19, 1901 by the Czech Football Association as Český svaz fotbalový (ČSF). Despite the discussions with the ÖFV, they did not join the national association. In 1910 there was still the Union , an association to which Sparta Prague belonged and was part of the ÖFV. Further information about this association and how things went on with it cannot be proven, probably the members of the union had joined the ČSF.

The UIAFA congress in Prague, which had already been announced in 1912, then no longer took place because the English unification of the amateur federation began negotiations with FIFA, which led to their merger at the end of 1914. The French association as well as the amateur associations from Belgium, Switzerland and Spain withdrew from the UIAFA. The only thing left was the Czech Football Association ČSF.

In 1914 an ÖFV congress for the clubs of the DFVfB took place and the FIFA one-federation rule, about remaining in the UIAFA and the ban on playing with Czech clubs, was discussed. It is pointed out as an advantage that the national character of the Austrian Football Association brings together many representatives from different nations and is nevertheless intended to hinder the development of German-speaking clubs. Some clubs did not agree, like DFC Prague, and stayed in UIAFA. In the same year the DFVfB worked together with soccer clubs of the ČSF. The three organizations DFVfB, ČSF and FBiNÖ tried to found their own association, the Football Union of Austrian Nations (FUAN), alongside the ÖFV for German-speaking clubs, which was dissolved shortly after the outbreak of the First World War.

Shortly after the start of hostilities, the ÖFV lifted the official ban on playing with Czech clubs in October 1914 at the request of the state authorities. On June 30, 1916, the association was forced to dissolve, but was founded again in 1917 under the same name. In 1917 there were talks between the ÖFV and the clubs from Bohemia and Moravia. A joint Czech championship with Czech and German clubs was decided and carried out, which the DFC Prague won. Soon afterwards, the DVFfB joined the Czechoslovakian football association Československá associace footballová (ČSAF), which was founded on March 26, 1923. ČSAF was a sub-association of the Czech Football Association Fotbalová asociace České republiky, ČSSF.

President of the DFVfB

No information is available about the presidents.

Members

No information is available about the members.

National team

The Bohemian national football team was the national team of Bohemia . She played a total of six international matches between 1906 and 1908 .

Competitions

season master
championship
1911/12 -
1912/13 DFC Prague
1913/14 DFC Prague
1914/15 discontinued during the First World War
1915/16
Mistrovství krajského svazu pre Království České OeFV 1917
1917 DFC Prague

The first championship in Bohemia was organized in 1912/13, which the DFC Prague won. In the following season, the championship title was defended by the Prague. In the years 1914 to 1918, no championship was held due to the war. The club from the capital won the championship after the war.

Incorporation into the ČSAF

After the establishment of Czechoslovakia , the association was renamed Fotbalová asociace České republiky (ČSSF) on April 10, 1921. On March 26, 1923, the Czechoslovak Football Association Československá associace footballová (ČSAF) was founded, which functioned as the umbrella organization of the national minority associations in Czechoslovakia. In addition to the Czechoslovak Football Association, it included the German Football Association for Bohemia (DFVfB), the Hungarian Football Association (MLSz), the Jewish Football Association (KMKRJ) and the Polish Football Association (PZPN).

Competitions under the ČSAF

season master
championship
1918 -
1919 Mittegau: DFC Prague
Westgau: Karlsbader FK
Erz- and Mitteerzgebirgsgau: Teplitzer FK 03
Nordostgau: Reichenberger SK
Elbgau: DFK Aussig
Gau Komotau; DFK Komotau
Moravia and Silesia: DSV Troppau
1920 West group: DFC Prague
East group: DSV Troppau
1921 West group: Teplitzer FK 1903
East group: DSV Troppau
1922 Teplitzer FK 1903
1923 DFC Prague
1924 DFC Prague
1925/26 DFC Prague
1927 DFC Prague
1927/28 DFC Prague
1928/29 DFC Prague
1929/30 Karlovy Vary FK
1930/31 DFC Prague
1931/32 DFC Prague
1932/33 DFC Prague
1933/34 DSV Saaz
1934/35 DSV Saaz
1935/36 DSK Mährisch Schönberg
1936/37 DFC Prague
1937/38 Teplitzer 03 FK
Gauliga Sudetenland

After the First World War, the ČSSF divided the competition into Mittegau, Westgau, Erz- and Mitteerzgebirgsgau, Nordostgau, Elbgau, Gau Komotau, Moravia and Silesia, in which the champions were played. A year later, the championship was held in an eastern group and a western group. From 1922 the two groups played in a final for the championship title of the ČSSF. Two years later the 20 clubs were divided into Gaue : Westgau, Nordwestgau, Nordgau and Mittegau. The winners of the groups played in a final tournament for the championship title. In the years that followed there were repeated changes in the mode. In the 1929/30 season, the qualifying round was played again in a group mode with a total of 45 clubs in seven groups: Nordgau, Nordwestgau, Westgau, Südostgau, Mittegau, Nordostgau Group I and Nordostgau Group II. The final tournament was played in two preliminary round games for four To determine the semi-finalists who played for the ČSSF championship title in the final. This mode was retained until 1932/33, in which 51 clubs in seven groups followed by a qualifying round for the semi-finalists who met in the final. In 1933/34, many clubs were able to take part in another championship and only seven teams in two groups, northern group and southern group, played for the championship title. A year later the two groups were called Bohemia and Moravia-Silesia with a total of twelve clubs, in 1937/38 21 teams played in these two groups. During this time the DFC Prague dominated the championships and only DSV Troppau in the east, Teplitzer 03 FK in the west, DSV Saaz , Karlsbader FK or DSK Mährisch Schönberg were able to interrupt the winning streak of the Prague occasionally. After 1938, the clubs in the Gauliga Sudetenland continued to play. Between 1938 and 1945, the German soccer clubs in the Czech Republic dissolved or they were housed in a Czech gymnastics club.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. CZAS! No. 529 of November 19, 1910. (jpg) In: wikipasy.pl. November 19, 1910. Retrieved November 17, 2017 (Polish).
  2. Ilustrowany Kuryer Codzienny No. 27 of February 1, 1914: ÖFV excluded DFVfB. In: wikipasy.pl. February 1, 1914, Retrieved November 17, 2017 (Polish).
  3. Ilustrowany Tygodnik Sportowy No. 1 of April 4, 1914: Polityka w sporcie (German: Politics in Sport) from Illustrierte Sportwoche (Polish).
  4. Král Lubomír: History německé kopané v Čechách (dt .: history of German football in Bohemia), Prague 2006, Ed. 1, page 49 (Polish).
  5. CZAS! No. 304 of July 4, 1917. (jpg) In: wikipasy.pl. June 4, 1917, Retrieved November 17, 2017 (Polish).
  6. Král Lubomír: History německé kopané v Čechách (dt .: history of German football in Bohemia), Prague 2006, Ed. 1, page 50 (Polish).
  7. Magyarország - Csehszlovákia. April 5, 1903, archived from the original on July 2, 2015 ; Retrieved on November 17, 2017 (Hungarian, The Hungarian association Magyar Labdarúgó Szövetség also counts the game at Magyarország - Csehszlovákia on April 5, 1903 against Czechoslovakia - which did not exist at the time - and that of FIFA and the Czech association is counted.).
  8. Part of Austro-Hungarian Empire until 1918. In: webalice.it. Retrieved February 1, 2018 .
  9. Part of Austro-Hungarian Empire until 1918, Republic of Czechoslovakia 1918-1920. In: webalice.it. Retrieved February 1, 2018 .
  10. ^ Czechoslovak Republic 1920-1938. (No longer available online.) In: webalice.it. Archived from the original on December 2, 2013 ; accessed on February 1, 2018 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.webalice.it