Gauliga Schleswig-Holstein
Gauliga Schleswig-Holstein | |
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Association | Football department |
First edition | 1942 |
Last event | 1945 |
hierarchy | 1st League |
Teams | 10 (1942/43 - 1944/45) |
Record champions | Holstein Kiel (2) |
Qualification for | German soccer championship |
region | Hamburg |
↓ District classes
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The Gauliga Schleswig-Holstein was created in 1942 through the war-related division of the previous Gauliga Nordmark into the Gauligen Schleswig-Holstein, Hamburg and Mecklenburg . Ten teams took part in the game, two of which were relegated. Most of the clubs came from Kiel . Holstein Kiel was two-time league champions. In the 1944/45 season, due to the war, game operations had to be canceled after a total of eight played games, after several of the scheduled games could no longer be played - due to possible bomb attacks, they had already been scheduled in the morning hours anyway. Only the two newcomers from Eckernförde ( Eckernförder SV and TVA Eckernförde ) each competed outside their own municipality boundaries, while games between Kiel clubs that had already been scheduled did not take place. From 1939 to 1942 the Gauligen were officially called "Sports Area Classes", possibly because the National Socialists saw the word "League" as too "English" and therefore no longer politically opportune.
Gaumeister 1942–1945
season | Gaumeister Schleswig-Holstein |
Cutting off German championship |
German champions |
---|---|---|---|
1942/43 | Holstein Kiel | Third | Dresdner SC |
1943/44 | Holstein Kiel | Round of 16 | Dresdner SC |
1944/45 | canceled due to the war |
Record champions
society | title | year | |
---|---|---|---|
|
Holstein Kiel | 2 | 1943, 1944 |
Successors
After the game was stopped after a total of eight games in the 1944/45 season, an attempt was made to play the Gauliga in the regional seasons of Kiel and Lübeck (details under: Gauliga Schleswig-Holstein 1944/45 ).
After the Second World War, the game was started in 1945/46, initially in four leagues around the district championships ; in the following year the highest competition was the state championship Schleswig-Holstein 1946/47 and from the season 1947/48, today's Oberliga Schleswig-Holstein was introduced as the highest state division, initially under the name Landesliga Schleswig-Holstein in three seasons .
Eternal table
All seasons of the Gauliga Schleswig-Holstein between the seasons 1942/43 and 1943/44 are taken into account. The table is based on the two-point rule customary at the time .
Pl. | society | Years | Sp. | S. | U | N | T + | T- | Diff. | Points | Ø pt. | title | Playing times by calendar year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Holstein Kiel | 2 | 36 | 31 | 2 | 3 | 199 | 42 | +157 | 64: 8 | 1.78 | 2 | 1942-44 |
2. | SC Friedrichsort 08 | 2 | 36 | 23 | 6th | 7th | 97 | 66 | +31 | 52:20 | 1.44 | - | 1942-44 |
3. | FC Kilia Kiel | 2 | 36 | 22nd | 4th | 10 | 134 | 75 | +59 | 48:24 | 1.33 | - | 1942-44 |
4th | SG Ordnungspolizei Lübeck | 2 | 36 | 19th | 3 | 14th | 104 | 85 | +19 | 41:31 | 1.14 | - | 1942-44 |
5. | SV Ellerbek | 2 | 36 | 14th | 9 | 13 | 93 | 90 | +3 | 37:35 | 1.03 | - | 1942-44 |
6th | Fortuna Glückstadt | 2 | 36 | 9 | 9 | 18th | 76 | 105 | −29 | 27:45 | 0.75 | - | 1942-44 |
7th | Borussia Gaarden | 2 | 36 | 9 | 6th | 21st | 60 | 123 | −63 | 24:48 | 0.67 | - | 1942-44 |
8th. | SC Comet Kiel | 2 | 36 | 8th | 6th | 22nd | 65 | 131 | −66 | 22:50 | 0.61 | - | 1942-44 |
9. | VfB Kiel | 1 | 18th | 7th | 2 | 9 | 50 | 49 | +1 | 16:20 | 0.89 | - | 1943/44 |
10. | TSG Gaarden | 1 | 18th | 6th | 2 | 10 | 48 | 66 | −18 | 14:22 | 0.78 | - | 1943/44 |
11. | BV Phoenix Lübeck | 1 | 18th | 4th | 1 | 13 | 22nd | 63 | −41 | 9:27 | 0.5 | - | 1942/43 |
12. | Reichsbahn SG Neumünster | 1 | 18th | 3 | 1 | 14th | 28 | 81 | −53 | 7:29 | 0.39 | - | 1942/43 |
swell
- Patrick Nawe, 100 years of Holstein Kiel: Kieler SV Holstein from 1900, Berliner Sportverlag, 2000, ISBN 3-328-00891-8 .
- German Football Archive http://www.f-archiv.de