Post SV Vienna

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Post SV Vienna
Surname Post Sports Club Vienna
Club colors Black yellow
Founded 1919
Association headquarters Vienna
Members 6,000
Homepage postsv-wien.at

The Post SV Wien is a sports club from the city of Vienna in Austria and operates today alongside football yet another 23 sections, including handball , field hockey , tennis , basketball , volleyball , futsal , table tennis , bowling , bridge , weightlifting , gymnastics , squash , skiing , Motorsport , judo and chess .

The formerly operated basketball section won the Austrian basketball championship title for the only time in the club's history in 1950 . The extremely successful table tennis section had a number of top Austrian players such as Erwin Kaspar , Heinrich Bednar and Gertrude Pritzi , especially before the Second World War . The club itself won the German table tennis team championship for both women and men in 1939.

Football section

Post SV Vienna
Post SV Wien.png
Basic data
Seat Vienna - Hernals
founding 1919
Colours yellow black
Website postplatz.at
First soccer team
Head coach Franz Viertl
Venue Post sports facility
Places 0
league Vienna City League
2018/19 13th place

history

The club was founded on September 26, 1919 under the name Sportverein der Post, Telegraphen- und Telefonemistens Österreichs in the club colors black and white and played in the Viennese protection group in the first year. On March 22, 1924 there was a merger with the WFC Fürth and the name of the club was changed to Sportklub Post Wien , sports association for postal and telegraph employees with the club colors blue-orange. In 1924, the SK Post entered the fourth class of the General Football Association (today WFV ) and achieved the championship title in the first year and thus moved up to third class in Vienna. In this class, too, he won the championship title straight away. After separating from the football association, SK Post Wien played in the 2nd class East and rose to the 1st amateur class after winning the championship in 1927/28.

Promotion and amateur championship

On March 22, 1930, the association merged with the SpC Postsport Vienna to form the Post Sports Association of Post and Telegraph Employees in Austria, or Post SV Vienna for short. In the course of this merger, the club's colors were changed to red and white. In the following years the club played up from the 2nd class to the 2nd division north. In the 1935/36 season the Post SV was champion of the 2nd division north and achieved the greatest sporting triumph to date in the relegation games against the champions of the 2nd division south. The club SC Austro Fiat Wien was defeated 1-0 on June 27, 1936 and 2-1 on July 4, 1936, and Post SV Wien rose to the top division of Austria for the first time. With five wins and five draws they only reached the 11th and penultimate place, which resulted in immediate relegation. But in the same year, Post SV Wien celebrated its greatest sporting success to date by winning the Austrian amateur championship title . In the first round the 1. Wiener Neustädter SC was defeated with a 3-0 home win and a 0-1 away defeat. In the second round, the Klagenfurt AC was a much more difficult opponent. The postal athletes won the home game 5-2, but they lost 4-2 away in the second leg. With the narrow overall result of 7: 6, Post SV was able to move into the final and met the Salzburg AK 1914 there . This time the Viennese had to play away first and easily won the game 4-0. In the second leg, Post SV was satisfied with a 2-2 draw for the first and only amateur championship title of a Viennese club.

Guest appearances in the 1st division

In the 1940/41 season, he was promoted again to what was then the Danube-Alpenland division, the highest ( East Mark ) league. In the qualifying games, the Post SV prevailed as champions of the 2nd division A against the champions of the 2nd division B, the SV Straßenbahn Wien in two games with 2: 2 and 1: 0 and thus reached the promotion round in which the postal athletes met SK Sturm Graz , SV Austria Salzburg and BSG Traisen . Without a win and with only one draw, Post SV only finished in the disappointing ninth place in the first division (which was the last place this season because SK Sturm Graz had stopped playing) and rose again to the Vienna 1st class A. from. Due to the events of the war, the following season the Post-SG Wien was founded , a syndicate with other postal sports clubs, which was dissolved again at the end of the war in 1945. In the first post-war championship in 1945/46, the resurrected Post SV Wien won the championship title in 2nd class A Vienna and was promoted again to the top division of Austria, now known as the Vienna league . But this time, too, the club did not get past eleventh place and ended its guest appearance in the top division with only two wins and one draw.

The slow descent

In 1948/49, the Post SV also had to relegate from the second division and there was a longer period in the lower leagues until 1970, when they were promoted back to the Vienna league, which was now only the third level. On July 1, 1973, there was finally a merger with SC Hinteregger Vienna , which allowed the postal athletes to play in the regional league . The name of the merger association was SC Post Hinteregger. On July 1, 1975, the merger was dissolved and the new club colors black and yellow introduced. During the winter break of the 1975/76 season, a game community with the Wiener Sport-Club became the Wiener Sport-Club Post . The syndicate played in the second division, but broke up again after the season. The Wiener Sport-Club remained as the license holder of the course in the 2nd division of the Bundesliga , the Post SV Wien was relegated to the Wiener Liga. Since this descent in 1976, the club has played continuously in the Viennese league and is therefore one of the veterans of the same.

Club colors

  • 1919–1924 black and white
  • 1924–1930 blue-orange
  • 1930–1975 red and white
  • from 1975 black and yellow

Title & Achievements

Hockey department

European Cup balance men's field
year competition level space place
1983 Club Champions Trophy 2 7th Subotica
1992 Cup Winners Trophy 2 4th Swansea
2007 Club Champions Trophy 2 6th Prague

The department, which already existed in the 1930s and was finally established in 1939, maintains two women's and men's teams, one senior and one parents' hockey team, and seven youth teams.

  • Austrian Champion Men's Field : 2006, 1982, 1968, 1967, 1965, 1964, 1963, 1962, 1960, 1959, 1958, 1957, 1956, 1955, 1954, 1953, 1951
  • Austrian Champion Men Hall : 2020, 1974, 1966, 1965, 1964, 1963, 1962, 1961, 1959, 1958, 1951
  • Austrian champion women's field : 1980, 1960
  • Austrian champion women hall : 1982, 1981, 1979, 1977, 1976

Section futsal

The department, which was founded on May 5, 2008 and is currently the youngest, is dedicated to the emerging trend sport futsal , the official FIFA version of indoor football. With a relatively small squad, the first season surprisingly ended in 4th place in the 2nd Futsal Bundesliga. After numerous reinforcements, promotion to the 1st Austrian Futsal Bundesliga is now being targeted for the 2009/2010 season in order to gain in importance and establish itself successfully.

The 2010/11 season was played in the 2nd ÖFB Futsal League, where they reached 2nd place, behind Dynamo Triestingtal.

Volleyball section

Post SV
Austrian volleyball association
Club data
Dissolved 2002: VB Lower Austria Sokol / Post SV
Volleyball department

The volleyball department of Post SV Wien has a long tradition and looks back on many titles and successes. The women's section in particular has celebrated many championship titles in the past. In 2002 the club SV Schwechat / PSV Wien (SG SVS Post) was founded with the clubs TJ Sokol V Wien and VB NÖ Sokol, and in 2011 the club was renamed Volleyball Niederösterreich Sokol / Post SV .

  • Austrian Champion Men : 1982
  • Austrian champion women : 1973–1978, 1984, 1985, 1987–1992, 1994–2001
  • Austrian Cup Winner Men : 1981
  • Austrian Cup winner women : 1981, 1982, 1985–1987, 1989, 1990, 1994–2001

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Compilation from EHF Handbook 2016 ( memento of the original from March 14, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / eurohockey.org

Coordinates: 48 ° 13 ′ 27 ″  N , 16 ° 19 ′ 35 ″  E