FC Wacker Innsbruck (1915)

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FC Wacker Innsbruck
Founding coat of arms
Full name Wacker Innsbruck football club
place Innsbruck , Tyrol
Founded February 4, 1915
Dissolved May 20, 1999
Club colors Black green
Stadion Tivoli
Top league Bundesliga
1st level
successes 1 × quarter-finals European championship,
2 × Mitropa cup winners
5 × Austrian champion
4 × Austrian runner-up
6 × Austrian cup winner
3 × Austrian cup finalist
1 × Supercup finalist
home
Template: Infobox historical football club / maintenance / NurHeim
Template: Infobox historical football club / maintenance / incomplete home

The football club Wacker Innsbruck was an Austrian football club from the Tyrolean capital Innsbruck . It was founded in 1915, but soon disbanded as FC Sturm Innsbruck due to disagreements between its officials and players . The football club Wacker Innsbruck , which was newly founded in 1923 - again under its traditional name - finally had its heyday in the 1970s, when five Austrian championship titles could be won, at that time they played temporarily in a syndicate with WSG Swarovski Wattens . After economic difficulties, he crashed into amateur football in 1986. The newly founded FC Swarovski Tirol represented Tyrolean football in the Bundesliga from now on. After this was dissolved in 1992, FC Wacker Innsbruck was able to return to professional football for one season, but after the founding of FC Tirol Innsbruck played again with its own amateur team in the fourth-class Tyrolean regional league. After the club had reached the last Tyrolean level, however, the general meeting on May 20, 1999 decided to dissolve the club.

history

1914–1923: Foundation and temporary end as FC Sturm

1919-1923
season Place (particip.) Sp S. U N Gates Pt.
Qualification for Tyrolean A-League 1920/21
1919/20 Promotion of FC Wacker
Tyrolean A class
1920/21 02. (5) 08th 05 02 01 28: 7 12
1921/22 04. (4) 03 00 00 03 0: 7 00
1922/23 1 03. (4) 06th 02 02 02 6:13 06th
Legend
Ascent
1 1922/23: FC Wacker merged with FC Rapid Innsbruck and played under the name FC Sturm Innsbruck

The history of Tyrolean football begins in 1905 with Innsbruck football and is relatively widespread than ten years later by Messrs Jakob Hanspeter, Benedikt Hosp, Josef Leitner, Josef Albrecht and other football idealists no longer known by name - the Wacker football club as the third Innsbruck football club to be launched: The club was founded in 1914 and should have happened in or shortly before July, because the first known game so far took place on July 19, 1914 against Rapid Innsbruck and ended with a 4-1 victory of FC Wacker. The submission of the statute was initiated at the end of 1914, but it was not approved until the beginning of 1915, on February 4th . The, thus official, foundation was recorded by several daily newspapers and sports magazines:

"Sports. (New club.) A new club, the football club "Wacker" Innsbruck, has been founded in Innsbruck. The statutes have already been approved by the Lieutenancy in Innsbruck. Applications for membership are accepted at the secretary of the association Kiebachgasse No. 15, 3rd floor on the right. » ( Innsbrucker Nachrichten, year 1915, number 63, February 5, 1915, page 8.)

"Innsbruck. A football club has been formed there, which is called "Wacker". The statutes have already been approved by the Imperial and Royal Lieutenancy and the club also wants to join the Austrian Football Association. " ( Illustrated Österreichisches Sportblatt, Volume IX, Number 3, February 5, 1915, Page 7.)

These simple words are the first official testimony to what would later become the most successful Tyrolean football club. Wacker's club colors were set to black and green, followed by the founding meeting with the option of enrolling for members. After only a small number of friendly matches against other Innsbruck and Merano clubs, the game had to be stopped after a few months due to the First World War . Due to the aftermath of the war, no Tyrolean club could initially think of a regular championship operation. The first post-war assembly took place on February 20, 1919, at which FC Wacker resumed its activities. At this meeting, it was also considered joining the Munich Football Association, as there was no support from the Vienna Association. In addition to chairman Benedikt Hosp and deputy Otto Gadner, the board of directors was formed by Messrs Ferrari (secretary), Legner (deputy secretary) and the assessors Feuerstein and Sauerwein. FC Wacker also paid tribute to the First World War, the players Pucher, Schiestl, Irenek, Pallua and Strobl are no longer returning. The first game after the reactivation of the game operation started a 0: 9 debacle against SV Innsbruck.

On September 18, 1920, the founding member of the Tyrolean Football Association finally played its first Tyrolean A championship game, it ended 1: 1 against FC Rapid Innsbruck . After things didn't go right for the Black-Greens, however, the club found themselves bottom of the table in 1922. In order to prevent relegation, Wacker merged with Rapid Innsbruck and added the new name FC Sturm Innsbruck . Due to disagreement between the officials and players, however, in 1923, despite a third place in the table, the club was dissolved.

Chairman

  • February 1915 – March 1923: Bendikt Hosp

player

goal defense midfield attack

1919/20: Fritz

1914/15: Fritz Oberhöller
1914–1929: Karl Grün
1914–1929: Hans Hussel
1919/20: Demetz
1919–1921: Max Mair

1914–1922: Oskar Ortler senior
1914–1922: Leopold Schöpf
1919/20: Weber
1920–1922: Fritz Oberhöller

1914–1922: Josef Lauter
1914–1932: Karl Buenberger
1915–1922: Karl Habtmann
1919–1921: Otto Gadner
1919–1922: Leopold Wolchowe
1921/22: Willi Ortler

1923–1945: New beginning, state cup winner and World War II

1923-1945
season Place (particip.) Sp S. U N Gates Pt.
1923/24 Not eligible to play.
Tyrolean B-Class
1924/25 03. (4) 06th 02 00 04th 20:12 04th
1925/26 01. (4) 06th 06th 00 00 24: 5 12
Tyrolean A class
1926/27 02. (4) 06th 02 01 03 15:15 05
1927/28 04. (6) 10 05 00 05 32:36 10
1928/29 03. (5) 08th 05 00 03 27:25 10
1929/30 03. (4) 01 01 04th 03 06:17 03
1930/31 03. (7) 12 06th 01 04th 33:31 13
1931/32 03. (4) 06th 03 01 02 20:15 07th
1932/33 04. (7) 12 05 00 07th 12:24 10
1933/34 05. (7) 12 03 04th 05 23:30 10
1934/35 04. (7) 12 05 02 05 28:26 12
1935/36 07. (7) 12 01 03 08th 17:38 05
Tyrolean B-Class
1936/37 01. (6) 10 09 00 01 41:12 18th
Tyrolean A class
1937/38 01. (4) 12 08th 01 03 39:24 17th
Tyrolean district league
1938/39 K1 K2 04. (6) 05 02 01 02 10:16 05
1939/40 K2 Cancellation of the championship
1940/41 K2 01. (6) 08th 07th 01 00 41:16 15th
1941/42 K2 05. (5) 06th 00 01 05 12:27 01
1942/43 K2 04. (4) 03 00 00 00 6:22 00
1944 not participated
1945 not carried out
Legend
Tyrolean master or advancement
descent
K1 Change of championship mode and renaming of the league.
K2 Championship was canceled.
Club coat of arms of the 1920s

But in the same year 1923, the club was re-launched under the traditional name of the Wacker Innsbruck football club and the club colors black and green. In the 1924/25 season , the newly founded football club was admitted to the Tyrolean B-League - this season was also played for the first time at Tivoliplatz . In 1926 , the Black-Greens were finally able to gain promotion to the A-Class. In the highest Tyrolean league, Wacker was not able to occupy a decisive place for the time being, but celebrated a great success with the shared victory in the Tyrolean State Cup with the Innsbruck AC . The finals each ended 1: 1, so that both teams were declared winners. After relegating to the B-Class in 1936, the green-blacks returned to the Tyrolean upper house in 1938. In the meantime, the Football Department in the National Socialist Reichsbund had taken over the Tyrolean Football Association for physical exercises and introduced the regional league as the highest level of the state. Wacker was a member of this district league until he was relegated in 1943 and was awarded the title in 1941 as the leader of the table when the championship was canceled. However, the district league is not recognized as a Tyrolean championship today, which is why the state championship title from this time no longer appears in any official statistics.

Chairman

  • March 1923 – March 1934: August Flöckinger
  • March 1934–1945: Hans Hautz

player

goal defense midfield attack

1926–1928: Eduard Neubarth
1928–30s: Josef Platzer

1914–1929: Karl Grün
1914–1929: Hans Hussel
1923–1937: Walter Pervulesko
1924–30s: Hermann Margreiter
1925–1927: Max Mair

1924–1930: Erwin Haidacher
1924–1930: Hans Müller
1924–30s: Ferdinand Buscarello
1924–30s: Fritz Oberhöller

1914–1932: Karl Buenberger
1923–1926: Willi Ortler
1924–30s: Karl Habtmann
1924–30s: Oskar Ortler sen.
1926: Leopold Wolchowe
1926–1935: Anton Mölk
1926–30s: Sterzinger

1945–1964: The first post-war successes and promotion to the state league

1945–1964
season Place (particip.) Sp S. U N Gates Pt.
Innsbruck class
1946 K1 not participated
B-Class Upper Inn Valley
1946/47 K1 01. (8) 14th 09 03 02 46:19 21st
A-class Tyrol
1947/48 10. (10) 18th 04th 03 11 29:56 11
B-Class - Innsbruck city
1948/49 K2 01. (9) 14th 12 01 01 64:20 25th
1st class Tyrol
1949/50 03. (8) 14th 08th 02 04th 43:24 18th
1st class Innsbruck
1950/51 K1 03. (7) 12 05 03 04th 39:33 13
1951/52 02. (6) 10 07th 00 03 32:15 14th
1st class Innsbruck or
Tyrolean regional league qualification
1952/53 01. (9) 16 12 01 03 53:21 25th
02. (3) 04th 02 01 01 10: 4 5
Tyrolean regional league
1953/54 02. (8) 14th 10 01 03 51:18 21st
1954/55 06. (9) 16 07th 01 08th 39:40 15th
1955/56 03. (10) 18th 09 01 08th 44:42 19th
1956/57 07. (10) 18th 05 04th 09 27:36 14th
1957/58 01. (10) 18th 14th 03 01 65:21 31
Arlbergliga
1958/59 07. (12) 22nd 10 01 11 34:43 21st
1959/60 03. (12) 22nd 15th 01 06th 60:31 31
Regionalliga West
1960/61 K1 02. (12) 22nd 16 03 03 65:31 35
1961/62 03. (12) 22nd 14th 04th 04th 56:28 32
1962/63 03. (12) 22nd 11 05 06th 44:22 27
1963/64 01. (12) 22nd 16 6th 00 73:20 38
Legend
Ascent
descent
K1 Change of championship mode and renaming of the league.
K2 The remaining games were no longer played after the championship was decided.
Club coat of arms approx. 1958 to 1964

After the resurrection of Austria, a shortened Tyrolean championship was introduced in 1946, but Wacker Innsbruck could not participate because the club still had too few players available. In the 1946/47 season, FC Wacker entered the championship events in the B-Class Oberinntal and immediately won the championship title and, associated with it, promotion to the A-Class Tyrol. The club finished the season in 10th and last place and was relegated to the B-Class Innsbruck city. In the 1948/49 season that followed, Wacker took first place and was promoted to 1st class in Innsbruck. The club stayed there until the 1952/53 championship season. After promotion to the Tyrolean regional league, FC Wacker Innsbruck won the championship title in 1958 and thus qualified for the second-class Arlberg league, which was newly established in 1950 . With third place in the 1959/60 season, Wacker Innsbruck won the title of Tyrolean national champion for the first time in the club's history . The Innsbruck team succeeded in doing this in the following years 1960/61 and 1961/62. Wacker celebrated the last national championship title with the title win in the Regionalliga West 1963/64 which also meant the first promotion to the highest Austrian league, the state league A.

provisional manager, chairman or president

  • 1945: Wilhelm Didl
  • 1947 - 1948: Rudolf Ottlyk
  • 1948 - 1953: Herbert Steiner
  • 1953 - 1957: Rudolf Ottlyk
  • 1957: Fritz Schwab senior
  • until 1964: Hugo Linser

Trainer

player

goal defense midfield attack

1946–1958: Jara
1958–1971: Leo Tschenett
1964/65: Herbert Gartner
1965/66: Gernot Fraydl
1966/67: Gordan Irovic

1930–1947: Josef Bortolotti
1937–40s: Walter Pervulesko
1946–1948: Hans Walser
1946–1948: Albert Abfalter
1946–1948: Oskar Ortler
1957–1962: Roman Schramseis

1957–1966: Fritz Spielmann
1957–1958: Leopold Santifaller
1957–1962: Zankl
1958–1962: Meth
1963–1971: Roland Eschelmüller
1952–1962: Kirchebner
1957–1964: Ernst Jäger

1957–1962: Karl Gretschnig
1958–1963: Puffer
1958–1962: Kurt Lehr
1962/63: Theodor 'Turl' Wagner
1963–1967: Helmut Wartusch

1964–1971: The first championship title

1964-1971
season Place (particip.) Sp S. U N Gates Pt.
State League
1964/65 08. (14) 26th 08th 10 08th 29:23 26th
National league
1965/66 K1 08. (14) 26th 08th 09 09 32:31 25th
1966/67 02. (14) 26th 18th 05 03 58:24 41
1967/68 02. (14) 26th 15th 07th 04th 45:27 37
1968/69 K2 07. (15) 28 12 05 11 46:43 29
1969/70 K3 05. (16) 30th 14th 05 11 52:38 33
1970/71 01. (16) 30th 20th 04th 06th 68:30 44
Legend
master
K1 1965/66: The State League was renamed from League A to National League.
K2 1968/69: The national league was increased by one club to 15 clubs.
K3 1969/70: The national league was increased by one club to 16 clubs.
Club coat of arms approx. 1964 to 1971

Wacker placed in the top Austrian division straight away in the good midfield of the table and celebrated his first runner-up title in the 1966/67 season, tied behind SK Rapid Wien . At that time, the system with the goal difference was used for the last time, with the Rapidler being 7 hundredths better. (Decisive in the last round on June 24th 1967 were the goal received at home 5: 1 against Schwarz-Weiß Bregenz from a surprise shot by Heinz Pienz to the 3-1 intermediate result, but also a missed penalty and two exclusions. Opponent Rapid won - after only 1: 1 break - at Admira / Wacker , then called "Admira / Energie", with 3: 1.) In 1968 the Innsbruck team took second place behind Rapid, but this time they were seven points behind. In 1968/69 Wacker reached the quarter-finals in the ÖFB Cup for the first time, but clearly failed away 3-0 again to the Hütteldorfern. In 1970, from a black and green perspective, the time had come: FC Wacker Innsbruck celebrated their first Austrian title by winning the ÖFB Cup after a 1-0 victory in the final against ASK from Linz . Buffy Ettmayer scored the goal .

Innsbruck delivered a surprise, but ultimately not a sensation, in the 1970 European Cup winners' cup . After Partizani Tirana was defeated twice in the first round , the five-time European Cup winner Real Madrid was waiting for FC Wacker: The white ballet was sensational on October 21, 1970 at the Estadio Santiago Bernabéu ( Madrid ), thanks to a goal by Leopold Grausam defeated 1-0. In the Tivoli Stadium, which was filled to the brim with 17,500 spectators, Innsbruck was able to keep the second leg against the "Royal" on November 4, 1970 open until just before the end, before the Spaniards threw FC Wacker out of the competition.

The 1970/71 season brought a varied duel for the title of Austrian champion between Innsbruck and SV Austria Salzburg . After Salzburg topped the table after the autumn round, FC Wacker under coach Otto Barić made it to the top of the table in the spring. With a 4-2 away win in the game against SC Wacker Wien, the Tyroleans fixed their first Austrian championship title on June 19, 1971 . When the players arrived in Innsbruck, several thousand fans were already waiting to prepare the Innsbruckers a victory celebration that lasted until the early hours of the morning.

president

Trainer

player

goal defense midfield attack

1967–1971: Herbert Rettensteiner

1964–1967: Josef Sikic
1964–1968: Peter Pumm
1965–1968: Johann Eigenstiller
1967–1971: Heinz Binder
1968–1971: Werner Kriess
1970–1971: Johann Eigenstiller

1963–1971: Roland Eschelmüller
1966–1971: Johann Ettmayer

1963–1967: Helmut Wartusch
1964–1969: Helmut Siber
1965–1971: Franz Wolny
1966–1968: Helmut Redl
1968–1971: Kurt Jara

1971–1986: The time of the syndicate with Wattens

1971–1986 (SSW Innsbruck)
season Place (particip.) Sp S. U N Gates Pt.
National league
1971/72 K1 01. (15) 28 15th 09 04th 49:20 39
1972/73 K2 01. (16) 30th 18th 07th 05 57:25 43
1973/74 K3 02. (17) 32 19th 08th 05 57:21 46
Bundesliga
1974/75 K4 01. (10) 36 24 03 09 76:36 51
1st division
1975/76 K5 02. (10) 36 18th 09 09 68:38 45
1976/77 01. (10) 36 21st 11 04th 51:22 53
1977/78 03. (10) 36 15th 09 12 49:54 39
1978/79 10. (10) 36 08th 08th 20th 41:55 24
2nd division
1979/80 02. (16) 30th 16 09 05 60:26 41
1980/81 01. (16) 30th 22nd 06th 02 69:18 50
1st division
1981/82 05. (10) 36 14th 07th 15th 60:52 35
1982/83 K6 03. (16) 30th 13 12 05 55:36 38
1983/84 04. (16) 30th 13 11 06th 54:31 37
1984/85 04. (16) 30th 12 08th 10 51:44 32
1st division / champions playoff
1985/86 K7 08. (12) 22nd 07th 06th 09 43:43 20th
03. (8) 36 14th 11 11 69:57 39
Legend
Master or ascent
descent
K1 1971/72: The National League was reduced by one club to 15 clubs because FC Wacker Innsbruck and SV Wattens merged.
K2 1972/73: The national league was increased by one club to 16 clubs.
K31973/74: The National League was increased by one club to 17 clubs. FK Austria Wien and WAC founded a syndicate and the champions of the three regional leagues rose.
K41974/75: The National League was renamed the Bundesliga and reduced by 7 clubs to 10 clubs. Clubs from Burgenland (1), Carinthia (1), Lower Austria (1), Upper Austria (2), Salzburg (1), Styria (1), Tyrol (1) and Vienna (2) qualified
K5 1975/76: The Bundesliga was renamed the 1st division.
K6 1982/83: The 1st division was increased by 6 clubs to 16 clubs.
K71985/86: The 1st division was reduced by 4 clubs to 12 clubs. In autumn, a round-trip round was held with 12 clubs. In the spring, the first 8 clubs played for the championship title in a round trip.
Club coat of arms of the syndicate 1971–1975
Club coat of arms of the syndicate 1975–1979

On July 20, 1971, those in charge of FC Wacker Innsbruck and WSG Wattens, which was also first class, decided to concentrate football in Tyrol and formed a syndicate called SpG Swarovski Wattens-Wacker Innsbruck. The agreement only applied to the combat teams , the actual soccer sections of both clubs remained independent in order to each run their own youth development. With the involvement of the sponsors, the club was often shortened to SSW Innsbruck (Spielgemeinschaft Swarovski Wacker Innsbruck). The game community became a figurehead in Austrian football in the 1970s. In 1972, 1973, 1975 and 1977 the Tyroleans won the Austrian championship and were also four times Austrian cup winners (1973, 1975, 1978 and 1979). The Mitropapokal victories of the Innsbruckers also fall during this successful period . In the 1975 final, SSW defeated the Hungarian club Budapesti Honvéd 3-1 at home and 2-1 away. In the following year 1976 Velež Mostar waited for the syndicate in the final . SSW celebrated the second Mitropa Cup victory with two 3-1 successes over the Yugoslavs. From the 1975/76 season, the encounter with Borussia Mönchengladbach in the European Cup of the champions is worth mentioning: on September 17, 1975 the Innsbruck team scored 1-1 at Bökelberg , but then at home (without the suspended goalkeeper Friedl Koncilia ) a clear 1 : 6 defeat on October 1st followed. In the 1977/78 season, notable successes came again in the European Cup of national champions. After victories against FC Basel and Celtic Glasgow , Innsbruck only failed in the quarterfinals due to the away goals rule against Borussia Mönchengladbach, when the 3-1 defeat on March 1, 1978 at Tivoli was followed by a 2-0 defeat two weeks later (which was the free kick from Jupp Heynckes to the 3-1 final score was decisive).

Club crest of the syndicate from 1979 to 1986

After the 1978 World Cup , Innsbruck had to accept some painful departures, including Pezzey, Stering and Welzl. Coach Eigenstiller was soon counted, there were several replacement discussions, and a new coach, Lajos Baróti , was brought in over the winter . The severely weakened team, which also lost the brothers Friedl and Peter Koncilia on May 10, 1979 (according to President Rudolf Sams because of "unrest foundation"), could no longer stay in the 1st division and rose for the first time since the promotion to the 2nd division Division off. This relegation also resulted in upheavals in the team and in the entire club. Already in the late autumn of 1978 there were new appointments or changes to the position of the officials, but also financial problems, because sponsor Nordmende canceled a 700,000 Schilling contract. In 1981 they were promoted to the 1st division of the Bundesliga, where the Tyroleans were able to establish themselves in the first third of the table, but without having a chance of winning the championship. In 1982 and 1983 SSW Innsbruck reached the cup final, but lost the finals significantly against the Viennese clubs Rapid and Austria . The economic situation became more and more difficult, however, professional football was about to end in Innsbruck.

President (SSW Innsbruck)

  • 1968–1979: Erwin Steinlechner
  • 1979–1986: Colonel Rudolf Sams

Trainer (SSW Innsbruck)

Player (SSW Innsbruck)

goal defense midfield attack

1971/72: Herbert Rettensteiner
1971–1979: Friedl Koncilia
1981–1984: Fuad Đulić
1985/86: Tomislav Ivković

1971–1973: Roland Eschelmüller
1971–1975: Engelbert Kordesch
1971–1977: Johann Eigenstiller
1971–1979: Werner Kriess
1973–1977: Rudolf Horvath
1974–1978: Bruno Pezzey
1976–1986: Robert Auer
1983–1985: Hugo Hovenkamp
1983– 1986: Michael Streiter
1985/86: Ivica Kalinić

1971: Günther Rinker
1971–1973: Walter Skocik
1971–1974: Roland Hattenberger
1971–1978: Manfred Gombasch
1971–1979: Peter Koncilia
1972–1975: Hans Rebele
1972–1978: Günther Rinker
1974–1983: Werner Schwarz
1976–1978: Josef Stering
1978–1980: Josef Hickersberger
1979–1983: Arnold Koreimann
1980–1986: Manfred Linzmaier
1981–1984: Roland Hattenberger
1984–1986: Arnold Koreimann
1984–1986: Andreas Spielmann
1985/86: Hans Müller

1971: Hans Küppers
1971–1973: Kurt Jara
1971–1973: Franz Wolny
1971–1974: Peter Kastner
1971–1975: Ove Flindt-Bjerg
1972–1974: Wolfgang Breuer
1972/73: Helmut Siber
1975: Peter Kastner
1974–1978: Franz Oberacher
1974–1978: Kurt Welzl
1977–1982: Manfred Braschler
1982–1986: Alfred Roscher
1983–1986: Christoph Westerthaler
1985/86: Kurt Welzl

1971–1986 (FC Wacker Innsbruck)
season Place (particip.) Sp S. U N Gates Pt.
2nd class west
1971/72 no record
1972/73 no record
1973/74 01. (8) 14th 10 03 01 53:13 23
1st class west
1974/75 07. (10) 18th 06th 02 10 30:29 09
1975/76 01. (18) 18th 15th 01 02 54:18 31
Regional League West
1976/77 01. (12) 22nd 12 04th 06th 48:33 28
Amateur league
1977/78 12. (12) 22nd 04th 04th 14th 27:58 12
Regional League East
1978/79 07. (12) 22nd 08th 04th 10 31:40 20th
1979/80 05. (12) 22nd 07th 08th 07th 42:39 22nd
1980/81 12. (12) 02 02 18th 25:69 06th
1st class middle
1981/82 11. (11) 20th 01 01 18th 11:61 03
1982/83 no record
1983/84 no record
1984/85 no record
1985/86 no record
Legend
Master or ascent
descent

While the syndicate between FC Wacker Innsbruck and Wattens hastened from success to success, a club called FC Wacker Innsbruck also remained, which started playing with an amateur team in 2nd class West from 1973/74.

President (FC Wacker Innsbruck)

  • 1968–1979: Erwin Steinlechner
  • 1980–1982: Hubert Klingan
  • 1982–1986: Winfried Sponring

1986–1992: The new beginning in the football basement

1986-1992
season Place (particip.) Sp S. U N Gates Pt.
Placements of FC Swarovski Tirol
2nd class middle
1986/87 01. (13) 24 19th 04th 01 102: 23 42
1st class east
1987/88 01. (12) 22nd 20th 00 02 64:22 40
Regional League West
1988/89 01. (12) 22nd 20th 02 00 74:17 42
Regional League West
1989/90 02. (12) 22nd 14th 02 06th 64:21 30th
1990/91 01. (12) 22nd 18th 03 01 77:16 39
Tyrolean League
1991/92 02. (14) 26th 20th 01 05 110: 26 41
Legend
Ascent
Club coat of arms of FC Wacker 1986 to 1999

In June 1986, WSG Wattens and FC Wacker Innsbruck decided to go their separate ways and dissolved the syndicate. Gernot Langes-Swarovski founded FC Swarovski Tirol at the same time . FC Swarovski took over the Bundesliga license for the syndicate and, in broad terms, its team. FC Wacker Innsbruck started with a new team in the basement, in the 2nd class middle with the amateurs. Despite intensive efforts, no division into a higher class could be achieved and so the aim was to immediately move up to the next highest class. In the long term, the goal was even to get promoted to the Bundesliga. Last year's successful junior team, an SPG between FC Wacker and Union MK, formed the base. This team has been strengthened in part with currently unoccupied players and some targeted reinforcements of higher-class clubs. The Innsbruckers' successes looked accordingly. Competitors were mostly well defeated, against Igls there was even a 19-0 win and they only lost one game due to negligence. The squad was selectively strengthened every year, followed by a march from one class to the next and in 1989/90 the Black-Greens played in the Landesliga West. Innsbruck only had to stay in this class for a year until promotion to the Tyrolean League (4th level) was achieved in the 1990/91 season. Wacker continued to strengthen and was traded as a title contender together with the second promoted SV Wörgl . In the course of the spring of 1992 it was finally announced that FC Wacker would take over its Bundesliga license again due to the dissolution of FC Swarovski Tirol. The previous combat team continued to play as an amateur team in the Landesliga Tirol.

president

Trainer

player

Goal / Defense / Midfield / Attack

Herbert Lener, Günther Glieber, Herbert Siller, Günther Villgratner, Thomas Blasinger, Michael Peer, Mario Höller, Hans Eigenstiller, Robert Auer , Helmut Radl, Mario Saml, Ewald Kofler, Armin Wunderer, Peter Blaas, Roland Kobald, Kurt Eigenstiller, Erich Jarolin , Andreas Kittiger

1992/93: The last season in professional football

1992/93
season Place (particip.) Sp S. U N Gates Pt.
1st division / champions playoff
1992/93 02. (12) 22nd 10 08th 04th 45:22 28 (14)
05. (8) 36 14th 12 10 63:43 26th

Wacker Innsbruck took over the professional team of FC Swarovski Tirol and returned to professional football as the successor club of FC Swarovski after six years in the amateur camp. Wacker President Fritz Schwab jun. brought Branko Elsner back to Innsbruck as coach and at the same time signed Walter Skocik and Fuad Đulić as new assistant coaches. The Daniel Swarovski Corporation continued to act as sponsor . The club name was accordingly FC Wacker Swarovski Innsbruck . In the championship only fifth place could be achieved, but the Tyroleans brought the cup victory to Innsbruck with a 3-1 victory over Rapid Vienna. The game for the Supercup was lost after a 1-1 draw with 1: 3 on penalties against FK Austria Wien. After only one season in the Bundesliga, the professional division of FC Wacker was split off as FC Tirol Innsbruck under political pressure from the state of Tyrol . FC Wacker played again with an amateur team in the Landesliga Tirol.

president

  • 1987–1999: Fritz Schwab jun.

Trainer

player

goal defense midfield attack

1992/93: Milan Oraze

1992/93: Michael Baur
1992/93: Andrzej Lesiak
1992/93: Kurt Russ
1992/93: Harald Schneider
1992/93: Harald Schroll
1992/93: Michael Streiter
1992/93: Robert Wazinger

1992/93: Mario Been
1992/93: Alfred Hörtnagl
1992/93: Roland Kirchler
1992/93: Richard Kitzbichler
1992/93: Manfred Linzmaier
1992/93: Helmut Lorenz
1992/93: Heinz Peischl
1992/93: Philipp Schwarz
1992 / 93: Andreas Spielmann

1992/93: Václav Daněk
1992/93: Klaus Tiefenbrunner
1992/93: Christoph Westerthaler

1993–1999: The second new beginning until the end

1993-1999
season Place (particip.) Sp S. U N Gates Pt.
Placements of FC Tirol Innsbruck
Regionalliga Tirol
1993/94 02. (7) 12 03 03 06th 50:62 27
1994/95 04. (7) 30th 10 07th 13 59:55 27
Regionalliga Tirol
Regionalliga West
1995/96 K1 03. (10) 18th 13 01 04th 52:26 40
08. (8) 14th 01 03 10 14:38 06th
Regionalliga West
1996/97 16. (16) 30th 01 02 27 16: 160 05
Tyrolean League
1997/98 14. (16) 30th 07th 08th 15th 44:61 29
2nd class middle
1998/99 02. (10) 18th 13 03 02 70:35 42
Legend
Ascent
descent
K11995/96: Introduction of the three-point rule .

In 1993/94, second place was won in the Regionalliga Tirol. The transition from professional to amateur camp was difficult for the club. In the ÖFB Cup, FC Wacker Innsbruck competed as defending champion, but had no chance with a purely amateur team. In the second round of the cup, the club was eliminated 8-0 against FC Kufstein . In 1995/96 the qualification for the master play-off in the Landesliga Tirol was given as a goal in order to be able to play in the single-track Regionalliga West in autumn. The qualification was made, but in the Regionalliga West , FC Wacker only finished eighth and last. In 1996/97 the Tyroleans were last in the Regionalliga (16th place) and were relegated back to the Tyrolean League. Due to the persistent sporting failure and the poor infrastructural training conditions of the club, the president of FC Wacker, Fritz Schwab jun., Gave up any aspirations for promotion to the 2nd division. The tribe of the team then moved to other clubs. The only goal of the club was to stay up. After 14th place in the Tyrolean League in 1997/98 and despite the relegation, the Wacker president decided to replace the entire squad and voluntarily relegated FC Wacker to 2nd class middle, the last Tyrolean division. With this descent, FC Wacker Innsbruck faced a final end, both athletically and financially. For this reason it was decided to successfully negotiate with FC Tirol Innsbruck regarding the integration of FC Wacker into the amateur division of FC Tirol. On May 20, 1999, the general meeting of FC Wacker Innsbruck decided to dissolve the club. The Wacker Innsbruck football club was history as an independent club.

president

  • 1987–1999: Fritz Schwab jun.

Trainer

player

Goal / Defense / Midfield / Attack

from 1993/94 Jochen Zöschg, Wolfgang Froidl, Robert Wolny, Stefan Rapp, Ronald Fuchs, Georg Lutz, Patrick Pöll, Markus Scheder, Hermann Bacher, Friedrich Bacher

titles and achievements

Note: All titles and successes achieved between 1972 and 1986 fall into the era of the syndicate with WSG Wattens .

Top scorer

Women's soccer

1979-1989
season Place (particip.) Sp S. U N Gates Pt.
no league part name
1979/80 W1 no information
1980/81 no information
1981/82 no information
1982/83 W2 no information
District League Upper Bavaria
1983/84 03. (9) 16 10 02 04th 54:18 022nd
1984/85 01. (9) 16 13 03 00 53: 9 029
1985/86 01. (10) 18th 15th 01 02 58:18 031
Bavaria A-Class
1986/87 W3 01. (10) 16 14th 01 01 72:10 029
District League Upper Bavaria
1987/88 06. (10) 18th 09 02 07th 31:35 020th
1988/89 W4 Team withdrawn during the competition
Legend
Master or ascent
W1 The club was founded as FC Möbel-Reiter Innsbruck.
W2 The club was renamed FC Wacker Innsbruck.
W3 The club was renamed FC Wacker Innsbruck-Mittenwald.
W4 There is no information about the table status.

In the 1980s there was also a women's soccer section at FC Wacker. For geographical and financial reasons, it played out of competition in the Bavarian district league and was able to win the competition twice. The Wacker women were still allowed to take part in the ÖFB Cup and surprisingly moved into the cup final in the 1984/85 season , which was just as sensational with 2-0 (2-0), goals: Kaltenbrunner (4th), Depaoli (28th). ), against the first division club LUV Graz . On May 22, 1986 a new club called FC Wacker Innsbruck-Mittenwald was founded in Mittenwald (Germany) in order to use the sports facilities in Mittenwald free of charge and to officially take part in the championship. With this "re-establishment", the team was ranked one class lower in the A-class. She was able to win the title in 1987 and rise again to the district class.

literature

Special

  • Karl Langisch: Wacker Innsbruck football club. Austria Edition, Vienna 1966.
  • Walther Prüller: The Wacker Story; Triumphs - goals - tears. Pinguin Verlag, Innsbruck 1978.
  • Dieter Chmelar: Swarovski Tirol Football Club - The Alpine Kings. Youth and People, Vienna 1987.
  • ECHO - Special: King Football; Successes - Legends - Tivoli new. ECHO Verlag, Innsbruck 2000.
  • Georg Hermann: FC Wacker Innsbruck-The legend. Heymon Verlag, Innsbruck 2010.

General

  • Karl Kastler: Football in Austria, from the beginnings to the present. Trauner, Linz 1972.
  • Josef Huber: Diary of the Century, Football Austria from 1901 to 2000. Wolfgang Drabesch Verlag, Vienna 2000.

statistics

  • Anton Egger, Kurt Kaiser: Austria's Bundesliga from A – Z, chronicle from 1974. Verlag Anton Egger, Fohnsdorf 1995.
  • Anton Egger: Austria's Football Championship, Chronicle 1945–1974. Publisher Anton Egger, Fohnsdorf 1998.

Web links

Footnotes

  1. a b Bote für Tirol, Official Gazette of the Authorities, Offices, and Courts of Tyrol, Item 48/1999, Communications, Dissolution of the Association (page 644). In: www.tirol.gv.at. Retrieved December 8, 2016 .
  2. Langisch 1966, p. 22.
  3. Allgemeine Tiroler Anzeiger from January 22, 1919
  4. ^ General Tiroler Anzeiger from July 21, 1914
  5. Allgemeine Tiroler Anzeiger from January 22, 1919
  6. ^ General Tyrolean Gazette of March 29, 1919
  7. Langisch 1966, p. 27.
  8. Langisch 1966, p. 28
  9. Kastler 1972, p. 345.
  10. "Wacker-Innsbruck was no longer able to use the 5: 1 (3: 1) victory over SW-Bregenz" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna June 25, 1967, p. 12 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  11. Goals in the 77th and 83rd minutes of play by José Antonio Grande and Manuel Bueno . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna November 6, 1970, p. 15 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  12. "Senekowitsch now as the new coach at Wacker Innsbruck?" In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna July 14, 1978, p. 17 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  13. ^ «Praschak extrapolation» . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna September 8, 1978, p. 13 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  14. «Middle right, glossary" gries-kram "» . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna November 23, 1978, p. 32 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  15. «The sponsor has already had enough and comment" gritty stuff "» . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna November 25, 1978, p.  ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  16. ^ Tables 1990/91, Landesliga West (Tyrol). In: www.fussballoesterreich.at. Retrieved January 20, 2014 .
  17. Tables 1991/92, Tyrolean League. In: www.fussballoesterreich.at. Retrieved January 20, 2014 .
  18. Tables 1993/94, Tyrolean Regionalliga. In: www.fussballoesterreich.at. Retrieved January 20, 2014 .
  19. Austria 1994/95. In: rsssf.com. Retrieved January 20, 2014 .
  20. Austria 1995/96. In: rsssf.com. Retrieved January 20, 2014 .
  21. Austria 1996/97. In: rsssf.com. Retrieved January 20, 2014 .
  22. Austria 1997/98. In: rsssf.com. Retrieved January 20, 2014 .
  23. ^ Austria 1998/99. In: rsssf.com. Retrieved January 20, 2014 .