Gauliga Central Saxony

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Gauliga Central Saxony
Full name Gauliga Central Saxony
Association VMBV
First edition 1905
Last event 1933
hierarchy 1st League
Teams 5 - 10
Record champions Chemnitz BC (12)
Qualification for Central German football championship
region Chemnitz and the surrounding areaTemplate: Infobox football competition / maintenance / card format
↓ 2nd class

The Gauliga Mittelachsen ( Gauliga Südwestsachsen until 1919 ) was one of the top football leagues of the Association of Central German Ball Game Clubs (VMBV). It was founded in 1905 and existed until the VMBV was dissolved in 1933. The winner qualified for the finals of the Central German soccer championship .

overview

With the inclusion of the Chemnitz Football Association in the VMBV, the Gau Südwestsachsen was formed for the clubs from Chemnitz , Mittweida , Plauen and the surrounding area in the 1905/06 season . The Chemnitzer BC was previously a member of the VMBV and changed from the Gau Ostsachsen to the newly created Gauliga. The league started with five participating teams. In 1906, the Gau Vogtland was founded as an independent league for the Plauen clubs, which was first class in the 1907/08 season. The Gauliga Südwestsachsen was gradually increased to eight clubs by 1914.

With the beginning of the First World War , gaming operations initially stalled. In the Gau Südwestsachsen a game round has been handed down that was probably not played to the end. According to contemporary newspapers, a war championship was held in the spring of 1915. Results of this round have not been recorded. According to the Leipziger Neuesten Nachrichten and the Illustrierte Sportzeitung on November 29, 1915, Mittweidaer FC was declared war champion of the district of South West Saxony in 1899 . The other seasons during the war took place normally.

In the course of the game class reform of the VMBV in 1919, the Gauliga Südwestsachsen was only second class. With the Central Saxony District League, a new top division was created which, in addition to the Gau Südwestsachsen, also included the Gaue Erzgebirge, Central Saxony and Upper Ore Mountains, but was dominated by the Chemnitz clubs. In the 1923/24 season , the district leagues were abolished again, the former Gauliga Südwestsachsen was now renamed Gauliga Mittelachsen and was again first class. The Gauliga Middle Saxony , which was designated before 1919, was now named Gauliga North Saxony . From 1924/25 the top division was played with ten clubs.

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

The Gauliga Central Saxony was predominantly dominated by the Chemnitz clubs. Until the First World War and in the war years, clubs from Mittweida could also fight for the Gaume Championship. After returning to the Gauligen league system, Chemnitz BC dominated the league and secured the championship six times in a row. It was not until the 1930s the strengthened could PSV Chemnitz the Chemnitzer BC outdo.

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 Südwestsachsen / Mittelachsen were among the strongest clubs in the association. While the sails had to be canceled early in the Central German finals before and during the war, the clubs gained strength in the 1920s. In 1926/27 , with Chemnitzer BC , a club from Central Saxony reached the final of the Central German Football Championship for the first time, but this was lost on May 1, 1927 with 0: 4 against VfB Leipzig . Two years later, Chemnitzer BC was able to advance again into the Central German final, but this game was also lost, against Dresdner SC it was a 2-3 defeat. So it was not the Gauseriensieger Chemnitz BC , but the up-and-coming PSV Chemnitz granted to win the Central German Football Championship as the first club from the Central Saxony Gau. In the 1931/32 season , the club secured the championship and participation in the German football championship with a 3-2 win after extra time against Dresdner SC . A year later, PSV Chemnitz was able to advance to the final of the Central German finals, but this time the Dresdner SC prevailed 3-1 in a new edition of last year's final .

The clubs from the former Central Saxony Gau were also able to celebrate successes in the Gauliga Sachsen , introduced from 1933 , while PSV Chemnitz and BC Hartha managed to win the Gaume Championship twice. Except for the two clubs, however, only the Chemnitz BC managed to make the leap into the Gauliga Sachsen.

Master of the Gauliga South West Saxony / Central Saxony 1906–1933

year Gaumeister
Southwest / Central Saxony
Cut off
medium. Championship a
Central German master
1905/06 Chemnitz BC Semi-finals (1) VfB Leipzig
1906/07 Mittweidaer BC Semi-finals (1) VfB Leipzig
1907/08 Chemnitz BC Semi-finals (2) Wacker Leipzig
1908/09 Mittweidaer FC 1899 b Quarter finals (1) b SC Erfurt
1909/10 Germania Mittweida 1st intermediate round (2) VfB Leipzig
1910/11 Chemnitz BC Preliminary round (1) VfB Leipzig
1911/12 Chemnitz BC Quarter finals (2) SpVgg 1899 Leipzig-Lindenau
1912/13 FC Sturm Chemnitz Quarter Finals A (1) VfB Leipzig
1913/14 Chemnitz BC Semi-finals (4) SpVgg 1899 Leipzig-Lindenau
1914/15 Mittweidaer FC 1899 no Central German finals
1915/16 Mittweidaer FC 1899 2nd intermediate round (3) FC Eintracht Leipzig
1916/17 Chemnitz BC Intermediate round (2) Hallescher FC 1896
1917/18 SV Teutonia 1901 Chemnitz Quarter finals (2) VfB Leipzig
1918/19 VfB Chemnitz Quarter finals (2) Hallescher FC 1896
1919/20 District League Central Saxony VfB Leipzig
1920/21 FC Wacker Halle
1921/22 SpVgg 1899 Leipzig-Lindenau
1922/23 SV Guts Muts Dresden
1923/24 Chemnitz BC Quarter finals (3) SpVgg 1899 Leipzig-Lindenau
1924/25 Chemnitz BC Quarter finals (3) VfB Leipzig
1925/26 Chemnitz BC 2nd round (2) Dresdner SC
1926/27 Chemnitz BC Finals (5) VfB Leipzig
1927/28 Chemnitz BC Quarter finals (3) FC Wacker Halle
1928/29 Chemnitz BC Finals (5) Dresdner SC
1929/30 SV Sturm Chemnitz Semi-finals (4) Dresdner SC
1930/31 PSV Chemnitz 2nd preliminary round (2) Dresdner SC
1931/32 PSV Chemnitz winner PSV Chemnitz
1932/33 PSV Chemnitz Finals (5) Dresdner SC
a The number of the game round reached is shown in brackets.
bFor unknown reasons, Chemnitzer BC, who came second, took part in the Central German football finals in 1908/09 .

Record champions

Chemnitz BC , who won the title twelve times, is the record champion of the Gauliga Südwestsachsen / Mittel Sachsen .

society title year
Chemnitzer BC.svg Chemnitz BC 12 1905/06, 1907/08, 1910/11, 1911/12, 1913/14, 1916/17, 1923/24, 1924/25, 1925/26, 1926/27, 1927/28, 1928/29
Coats of arms of None.svg Mittweidaer FC 1899 3 1908/09, 1914/15, 1915/16
PSV Chemnitz Logo.svg PSV Chemnitz 3 1930/31, 1931/32, 1932/33
Storm Chemnitz - Kurmark.png SV Sturm Chemnitz 2 1912/13, 1929/30
Coats of arms of None.svg Mittweidaer BC 1 1906/07
Mittweida germania sv.png Germania Mittweida 1 1909/10
Sv teutonia chemnitz.png SV Teutonia 1901 Chemnitz 1 1917/18
Coats of arms of None.svg VfB Chemnitz 1 1918/19

Eternal table

All recorded seasons of the first-class Gauliga Südwestsachsen up to 1919 and central Saxony from 1923 to 1933 are taken into account. The seasons 1914/15 and 1918/19 are currently not recorded. Since there were games in some seasons that were counted as a defeat for both teams, there are more counterpoints than pluses.

Pl. society Years Sp. S. U N T + T- Diff. Points Ø pt. title Playing times
 1. Chemnitz BC 22nd  288  212  20th  56 1212 462 +750 444: 132 1.54 12 1907-1914, 1915-1918, 1923-1933
 2. Storm Chemnitz 20th  279  157  22nd  100 854 591 +263 336: 222 1.2 2 1905-1914, 1915-1918, 1923-1933
 3. FC Preussen Chemnitz 10  178  86  24  68 486 432 +54 196: 160 1.1 0 1923-1933
 4th SV Teutonia 1901 Chemnitz 13  204  83  26th  95 497 559 −62 192: 216 0.94 1 1915-1918, 1923-1933
 5. PSV Chemnitz 8th  143  89  12  42 628 365 +263 190: 96 1.33 3 1925-1933
 6th SC National Chemnitz 12  206  79  29  98 487 561 −74 187: 225 0.91 0 1911-1913, 1923-1933
 7th SC Hellas Chemnitz 12  178  56  27  95 310 518 −208 139: 217 0.78 0 1913/14, 1915-1918, 1923-1931
 8th. SC 1913 Harthau /
Sportfreunde Harthau
9  162  54  26th  82 346 504 −158 134: 190 0.83 0 1924-1933
 9. Mittweidaer FC 1899 11  130  51  12  67 262 335 −73 114: 146 0.88 3 1908-1914, 1915-1918, 1923-1925, 1927/28
10. Germania Mittweida 9  87  40  6th  41 276 240 +36 86:88 0.99 1 1905-1914
11. Mittweidaer BC 10  89  37  6th  46 207 199  +8 80:98 0.9 1 1905-1914
12. SV Wacker Chemnitz 4th  72  32  9  31 182 189  −7 73:71 1.01 0 1926-1930
13. SC Reunion Chemnitz /
FC Hohenzollern Chemnitz
7th  78  31  5  42 101 214 −113 67:89 0.86 0 1909-1914, 1915-1918
14th 1. SC 1909 Limbach 4th  72  27  12  33 200 215 −15 66:78 0.92 0 1929-1933
15th VfB Chemnitz 5  88  28  9  51 178 251 −73 65: 111 0.74 1 1923-1927, 1932/33
16. Einsiedeler SC /
Viktoria 03 Einsiedel
4th  60  16  6th  38 113 187 −74 38:82 0.63 0 1915/16, 1923-1926
17th Chemnitzer SC /
United Chemnitzer SC /
SC 1900 Chemnitz
7th  70  15th  7th  48 99 270 −171 37: 103 0.53 0 1907-1914
18th BC Hartha 2  36  9  5  22nd 78 160 −82 23:49 0.64 0 1931-1933
19th SV Grüna 12 2  31  6th  3  22nd 70 193 −123 15:47 0.48 0 1930-1932
20th VfL 05 Hohenstein-Ernstthal 1  18th  5  0  13 43 63 −20 10:26 0.56 0 1928/29
21st 1st Vogtland FC Plauen 2  10  4th  1  5 36 31  +5 9:11 0.9 0 1905-1907
22nd VfR 1908 Chemnitz 1  6th  1  1  4th 16 30th −14 3: 90 0.5 0 1915/16
23. Zwickau BC 2  16  1  0  15th 10 83 −73 2:30 0.13 0 1906-1908
24. Chemnitz Sports Friends Association 2  8th  0  0  8th 12 51 −39 0:16 0 0 1905-1906

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 .
  • Final tables Germany
  • Final tables on oberberg-fussball.de