SC Prussia Stettin

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SC Prussia Stettin
Prussia Stettin.png
Full name Sports Club Prussia 1901 Stettin
place Szczecin
Founded May 1, 1901
Dissolved 1937
Club colors Black-and-white
Stadion Hans-Peltzer-Kampfbahn
(from 1933 Preußenplatz at the Stoewerwerke)
Top league Gauliga Pomerania
successes Baltic runner-up in 1928
home
Away
Template: Infobox historical football club / maintenance / incomplete outward

The SC Preußen Stettin was a German sports club from Stettin , which was founded on May 1, 1901 as FC Preußen Stettin . In 1905 the name was changed to SC Preußen Stettin .

Soccer

The FC Preußen Stettin was a founding member of the Association of Stettiner Ball Game Clubs . In 1905 the Association of Pomeranian Ball Game Clubs (VPBV) was founded, also with Prussia Stettin as a founding member. In the first season of the association Prussia formed a syndicate with the Stettiner SVgg Wacker , which was dissolved again after the season. In 1911/12 and 1912/13 the association became Pomeranian Football Champions, but since the association did not belong to any of the seven major regional associations, the Pomeranian football champions were not qualified for the final round of the German football championship at this time.

In 1913/14 the VPBV was joined to the Baltic Lawn and Winter Sports Association . In the coming seasons Prussia Stettin reached midfield placements in the district league Stettin . In 1923/24 and 1924/25 , the second place in the league was achieved. From 1927/28 the three best Szczecin clubs were each qualified for the Pomeranian football final. Prussia Stettin was third in the Stettin district league, but in the Pomeranian finals the local rival Stettiner FC Titania was beaten 3-1 in a playoff, so that Prussia moved into the Baltic football finals for the first time. In this Stettin reached second place, you only had to admit defeat to the series winner VfB Königsberg with 1: 2 and 0: 6. Through the Baltic runner-up, Stettin qualified for the German soccer championship 1927/28 , but was eliminated in the round of 16 after a 4-1 defeat on the local Hans-Peltzer-Kampfbahn against Holstein Kiel . Also in 1928/29 Prussia Stettin reached the Pomeranian finals with a third place in the Stettin district league, but was defeated in this season by VfB Stettin and Stettiner FC Titania .

In 1930 the Pomeranian district moved from the Baltic Sports Association to the Brandenburg Ball Game Association , Prussia Stettin fell back into midfield. In the course of the conformity , the Association of Brandenburg Ball Game Clubs was dissolved a few months after the National Socialists came to power in 1933. With the Gauliga Pommern there was a new top division from 1933. By the fifth place in the table in the district league Stettin 1932/33 Prussia qualified for the Gauliga. There the club reached midfield placements. In 1937 the club merged with 1. Stettiner SV Borussia-Poseidon in 1900 to form SV Preußen-Borussia Stettin .

Sports facility

The SC Preußen Stettin played its games in the Hans-Peltzer-Kampfbahn in the northwestern district of Neuwestend. In 1933 the stadium had to be renamed Preußenplatz at the Stoewerwerke . The stadium is now called Miejski Stadion Lekkoatletyczny w Szczecinie and is mainly used for athletics .

Successes (soccer)

athletics

Several athletes from SC Preußen Stettin were able to achieve medals at the German Athletics Championships in the 1920s and 1930s :

Medals obtained at German athletics championships
gold silver bronze total
18th 6th 7th 31

Handball

The field handball departments of the men and women of SC Preußen Stettin played in the first-class handball Gauliga Pomerania in the 1930s. The women qualified as Gaumeister for the German field handball championship of women 1933/34 , the German field handball championship of women 1935/36 and the German field handball championship of women 1936/37 , but were eliminated in the first round.

swell

  • DSFS : Football in the Baltic Sports Association, Part 1: 1903/04 - 1932/33 . DSFS, 2018, p. 34 ff .
  • Udo Luy: Football in East Prussia, Danzig and West Prussia 1900 - 1914. , 2015.
  • 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 .

Individual evidence

  1. fussball-historie.de: Founding of associations up to 1905 ( Memento of the original from February 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 / www.fussball-historie.de
  2. ↑ Season balance sheets of the German women's field handball championship 1934 - 1968. Accessed on January 23, 2019 .

Coordinates: 53 ° 27 ′ 11.4 "  N , 14 ° 30 ′ 20.3"  E