Gauliga East Saxony

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Gauliga East Saxony
Full name Gauliga East Saxony
Association VMBV
First edition 1902
Last event 1933
hierarchy 1st League
Teams 3 - 11
Record champions Dresdner SC (17)
Qualification for Central German football championship
region Dresden and the surrounding areaTemplate: Infobox football competition / maintenance / card format
↓ 2nd class

The Gauliga Ostsachsen (also 1st class East Saxony ) was one of the top soccer leagues of the Association of Central German Ball Game Clubs (VMBV). It was founded in 1902 and existed until the VMBV was dissolved in 1933. The winner qualified for the finals of the Central German soccer championship .

overview

In the first game time after the founding of the VMBV, the winner of the championship organized by the Dresden Ball Game Association was allowed to compete against the winner of the Gauliga Nordwestsachsen organized by the VMBV . In 1902/03 the Gau Ostsachsen was created, which contained two clubs from Mittweida in addition to the Dresdner SC . The remaining Dresden clubs continued to play in the championship of the Dresden Association and were not approved for the Central German football championship. For the 1903/04 season , Chemnitz BC was included in the Gau Ostsachsen. For the 1905/06 season , the Dresden Ball Game Association was finally incorporated into the VMBV and the teams incorporated into the league structure of the Gaus Ostsachsen. The Mittweidaer clubs and the Chemnitzer BC switched to the newly created Gauliga Südwestsachsen this season . The league was then played with seven participants. For the 1907/08 season the top division was divided into two seasons with four teams each, the season winners then competed in a final game for the Gaume Championship. For the following season, the game was played in a league with six participants. In the following years the number of participants was increased, from 1912/13 there were ten clubs in the top Gauliga.

With the beginning of the First World War , gaming operations initially stalled. In the Gau Ostsachsen it was decided to play the 1st class games for an Iron Cup, in which eleven teams took part. The other war championships also took place.

In the course of the game class reform of the VMBV in 1919, the Gauliga Ostsachsen was only second class. With the district league East Saxony , a new top division was created, which included the Gau Oberlausitz in addition to the Gau Ostsachsen, but was completely dominated by the Dresden clubs. The district leagues were abolished again for the 1923/24 season , and from then on the Gauliga Ostsachsen was again first class until 1933. The league consisted from now on of ten participating clubs.

In the course of the Gleichschaltung , the VMBV and consequently also the Gauliga Ostsachsen were dissolved a few months after the National Socialists came to power in 1933. The Gaumeister and the runner-up in the 1932/33 season were given a starting place in the future first-class Gauliga Sachsen , the other teams were placed in the lower divisions.

The Gauliga Ostsachsen was dominated by the Dresden clubs. The Meißner SV 08 and the Radebeuler BC 08 were the only clubs outside Dresden that were able to stay in the Gauliga for a long time. The Dresdner SC dominates the league and was able to secure the Gaume Championship a total of 17 times. Only during the 1910s and early 1920s were other clubs from Dresden able to establish themselves in the long term. The Dresden Football Ring in 1902 was particularly strong during the First World War and achieved five Gaume championships. The BC Sportlust Dresden broke through first in 1910 the phalanx of Dresdner SC and could again in 1914/15 the championship secure. Guts Muts Dresden was able to play for the championship especially in the early 1920s, in addition to winning the Central German soccer championship in 1922/23 as district champion of East Saxony, the club was able to win the Gauliga in 1924/25 . Other championship honors came 1917/18 the war syndicate consisting of the VfB 1903 Dresden and the FV Dresden Saxony and 1923/24 of SV Brandenburg 01 Dresden .

classification

The excessive number of first-class Gauligen within the VMBV had caused a dilution of the game level, there were sometimes double-digit results in the Central German football finals. The clubs from the Gauliga Ostsachsen were among the strongest clubs in the association from the 1920s. Until the beginning of the First World War, only the Dresdner SC 1904/05 managed to win the Central German soccer championship, in the other seasons the Gaumeister Ostsachsen was mostly eliminated before reaching the final. During the war, however, Dresden football grew stronger. In the four Central German finals held during the war, the final twice and the semi-finals twice. By the 1920s at the latest, the clubs from East Saxony were among the dominant clubs in the association. From 1924/25 the Gausieger Ostsachsen always reached at least the semi-finals of the Central German football championship. The Dresdner SC was able to secure the football championship five more times, between 1928/29 and 1930/31 even three times in a row, which no other club has achieved during the existence of the VMBV.

This dominance was continued in the first-class Gauliga Sachsen introduced in 1933 . While the Leipzig clubs fell behind in terms of quality, the Dresdner SC managed to win this Gauliga six times. Other clubs from the Gauliga Ostsachsen, which later played in the Gauliga Sachsen at least for a short time, were Guts Muts Dresden , Sportfreunde 01 Dresden (fusion of the Dresdner Fußballring and Brandenburg Dresden ) and Dresdensia Dresden .

Master of the Gauliga East Saxony 1903–1933

year Gaumeister
East Saxony
Cut off
medium. Championship a
Central German master
1902/03 Dresdner SC Finals (1) VfB Leipzig
1903/04 Dresdner SC Finals (1) VfB Leipzig
1904/05 Dresdner SC winner Dresdner SC
1905/06 Dresdner SC Final (2) VfB Leipzig
1906/07 Dresdner SC Semi-finals (1) VfB Leipzig
1907/08 Dresdner SC Quarter finals (1) Wacker Leipzig
1908/09 Dresdner SC Semi-finals (2) SC Erfurt
1909/10 BC Sportlust Dresden Preliminary round (1) VfB Leipzig
1910/11 Dresdner SC Quarter finals (2) VfB Leipzig
1911/12 Dresdner SC no participation SpVgg 1899 Leipzig-Lindenau
1912/13 Dresden Football Ring 1902 Quarter Finals A (1) VfB Leipzig
1913/14 Dresden Football Ring 1902 Quarter finals (3) SpVgg 1899 Leipzig-Lindenau
1914/15 BC Sportlust Dresden no Central German finals
1915/16 b Dresden Football Ring 1902 b Semi-finals (4) b FC Eintracht Leipzig
1916/17 Dresden Football Ring 1902 Finals (4) Hallescher FC 1896
1917/18 KSG VfB 1903 / FV Sachsen Dresden Semi-finals (3) VfB Leipzig
1918/19 Dresden Football Ring 1902 Finals (4) Hallescher FC 1896
1919/20 District League East Saxony VfB Leipzig
1920/21 FC Wacker Halle
1921/22 SpVgg 1899 Leipzig-Lindenau
1922/23 SV Guts Muts Dresden
1923/24 SV Brandenburg 01 Dresden Quarter finals (3) SpVgg 1899 Leipzig-Lindenau
1924/25 Guts Muts Dresden Semi-finals (4) VfB Leipzig
1925/26 Dresdner SC winner Dresdner SC
1926/27 Dresdner SC Semi-finals (5) VfB Leipzig
1927/28 Dresdner SC Finals (5) FC Wacker Halle
1928/29 Dresdner SC winner Dresdner SC
1929/30 Dresdner SC winner Dresdner SC
1930/31 Dresdner SC winner Dresdner SC
1931/32 Dresdner SC Finals (5) PSV Chemnitz
1932/33 Dresdner SC winner Dresdner SC
a The number of the game round reached is shown in brackets.
bSince the Gau Ostsachsen had not yet determined its champion at the beginning of the Central German football final, the participant in the final was determined by lot. The drawing of lots was won by the Dresdner SC , but in the championship, which ended later, the Dresdner Fußballring took the place in 1902 . Due to the late announcement, the Dresdner SC was set for the semi-finals of the Central German soccer final.

Record champions

The record champions of the Gauliga Ostsachsen is the Dresdner SC , who have won the title 17 times.

society title year
DSCFahneHistorisch.svg Dresdner SC 17th 1902/03, 1903/04, 1904/05, 1905/06, 1906/07, 1907/08, 1908/09, 1910/11, 1911/12,
1925/26, 1926/27, 1927/28, 1928 / 29, 1929/30, 1930/31, 1931/32, 1932/33
Dresdner Fußballring.png Dresden Football Ring 1902 5 1912/13, 1913/14, 1915/16, 1916/17, 1918/19
Coats of arms of None.svg BC Sportlust Dresden 2 1909/10, 1914/15
Coats of arms of None.svg KSG VfB 1903 / FV Sachsen Dresden 1 1917/18
Coats of arms of None.svg SV Brandenburg 01 Dresden 1 1923/24
Guts Muts Dresden 1920-45.png Guts Muts Dresden 1 1924/25

Eternal table

All traditional seasons of the first-class Gauliga Ostsachsen from 1902 to 1933 including the final games between the relay champions in 1907/08 and 1916/17 are taken into account. The 1918/19 season has not survived.

Pl. society Years Sp. S. U N T + T- Diff. Points Ø pt. title Playing times
 1. Dresdner SC 26th  370  273  35  62 1486 502 +984 581: 159 1.57 17th 1902-1918, 1923-1933
 2. Guts Muts Dresden 23  353  204  46  103 1111 603 +508 454: 252 1.29 1 1905-1918, 1923-1933
 3. Dresden Football Ring 1902 16  279  166  39  74 680 460 +220 371: 187 1.33 5 1912-1918, 1923-1933
 4th Brandenburg Dresden 16  275  130  45  100 707 603 +104 305: 245 1.11 1 1912-1918, 1923-1933
 5. Habsburg Dresden / Dresdner SV 06 18th  306  111  55  140 600 773 −173 277: 335 0.91 0 1910-1918, 1923-1933
 6th Dresdner FC 1893 / Dresdner SG 1893 21st  330  87  53  190 575 1034 −459 227: 433 0.69 0 1905-1916, 1923-1933
 7th SpVgg 1905 Dresden 14th  240  90  32  118 492 587 −95 212: 268 0.88 0 1914-1918, 1923-1933
 8th. BC Sportlust Dresden 15th  200  90  27  83 535 500 +35 207: 193 1.04 2 1904-1918, 1923/24
 9. Dresdensia Dresden 19th  250  73  33  144 410 744 −334 179: 321 0.72 0 1905-1914, 1915-1918, 1924-1931
10. VfB 1903 Dresden / VTB Jahn Dresden c 12  200  64  23  113 386 556 −170 151: 249 0.76 0 1910-1917, 1923-1925, 1926-1928, 1929/30
11. FV 1900 Saxony Dresden c 12  158  45  15th  98 329 490 −161 105: 211 0.66 0 1905-1917
12. Meissner SV 08 5  90  28  18th  44 182 229 −47 74: 106 0.82 0 1927-1932
13. VfR 1908 Dresden 5  79  27  7th  45 145 223 −78 61:97 0.77 0 1916-1918, 1930-1933
14th Radebeuler BC 08 4th  72  16  11  45 125 251 −126 43: 101 0.6 0 1923-1927
15th Riesaer SV 03 2  36  12  5  19th 63 97 −34 29:43 0.81 0 1931-1933
16. KSG VfB 1903 / FV Sachsen Dresden 1  16  13  1  2 63 13 +50 27: 50 1.69 1 1917/18
17th Mittweidaer BC 3  14th  8th  3  3 54 22nd +32 19: 90 1.36 0 1902-1905
18th Dresden FC Germania 1901 3  30th  7th  3  20th 38 127 −89 17:43 0.57 0 1905-1908
19th Sportfreunde 1904 Freiberg 1  18th  4th  4th  10 19th 37 −18 12:24 0.67 0 1932/33
20th SpVgg Eintracht / Viktoria Dresden 1  18th  3  4th  11 30th 58 −28 10:26 0.56 0 1928/29
21st SC 1904 Freital 1  18th  2  1  15th 32 82 −50 5:31 0.28 0 1925/26
22nd Germania Mittweida 1  4th  0  2  2 3 6th  −3 2: 60 0.5 0 1902/03
23. FV 1900 Hohenzollern Dresden 1  6th  1  0  5 2 17th −15 2:10 0.33 0 1907/08
24. Chemnitz BC 2  10  1  0  9 18th 71 −53 2:18 0.2 0 1903-1905
25th Academic FC Freiberg d 1  0  0  0  0 0 0  ± 0 0-00 0 0 1903/04
cFormed a war syndicate in the 1917/18 season (listed separately in the table).
d Retired from gaming operations during the 1903/04 season.

swell

  • Udo Luy: Results and tables in the Association of Central German Ball Game Clubs 1900 - 1914. , 2015.
  • Udo Luy: Results and tables in the Association of Central German Ball Game Clubs 1914/15 - 1917/18. , 2016.
  • Hardy Greens : Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 1: From the Crown Prince to the Bundesliga. 1890 to 1963. German championship, Gauliga, Oberliga. Numbers, pictures, stories. AGON-Sportverlag, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-85-1 .
  • Hardy Greens: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 7: Club Lexicon . AGON-Sportverlag, Kassel 2001, ISBN 3-89784-147-9 .
  • Kurt Pauckert: 30 years Gau Northwest Saxony in the Association of Central German Ball Game Clubs. , Leipzig 1927. (Jubilee Foundation of the Leipziger Neuesten Nachrichten)
  • Final tables Germany
  • Final tables on oberberg-fussball.de