Mülheimer SV 06
Mülheimer SV 06 | |||
Full name |
Mülheimer Sport- Verein 1906 e. V. |
||
place | Cologne - Mülheim | ||
Founded | 1906 | ||
Dissolved | July 28, 1949 | ||
Club colors | Red White | ||
Stadion | |||
Top league | Gauliga Middle Rhine | ||
successes | Champion of the Gauliga Mittelrhein 1934, 1940 |
||
|
The Mülheimer SV 06 was a sports club from Cologne . The soccer team won the championship of the Gauliga Mittelrhein in 1934 and 1940 . The Mülheimer SV 06 is a predecessor club of FC Viktoria Köln .
history
The Mülheimer SV 06 was founded in 1906 as the Mülheimer Ballspiel-Club . This later merged with FC Union Mülheim to form Mülheimer SV 06. This first played in the top division in 1911. Although the Mülheimers remained first class until the National Socialists came to power in 1933, the team usually only placed in the middle of the table. In 1929 the MSV was runner-up in his season behind Borussia Munich-Gladbach in 1932 and in 1933 this success was repeated behind Alemannia Aachen .
The MSV qualified for the Gauliga Mittelrhein and promptly became their first champion. In the German championship , the Mülheimers came second behind SV Waldhof. After several years of mediocrity, the second Gaume Championship was celebrated in 1940. First, the MSV secured the relay victory, including a 19-0 win over Rhenania Würselen . In the finals for the Gaume Championship, the Mülheim team prevailed against SSV Troisdorf 05 .
At the German championship it was only enough to place third in group III. Against FC Schalke 04 , MSV suffered two bitter defeats. In the last years of the war, the Mülheimers still achieved good placements, but missed the Gaume Championship by a long way. In 1949 the MSV qualified for the newly introduced II. Division, at which the club after the merger with VfR Köln 04 rrh. participated under the name SC Rapid Cologne . The merger took place on July 29, 1949 in the congress hall of the Cologne trade fair.
successes
- Champion of the Gauliga Mittelrhein 1934, 1940
Personalities
Individual evidence
- ↑ 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 , p. 126.
- ↑ Grüne (1996), page 187