SV Insterburg

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SV Insterburg
Logo of the SV Insterburg
Full name Sports club 1905 Insterburg
place Insterburg
Founded 1909
Dissolved 1945
Club colors Blue White
Stadion Municipal youth playground
(6,000 seats)
Top league Gauliga East Prussia
successes
home
Away
Template: Infobox historical football club / maintenance / incomplete outward

The SV Insterburg was a German sports club in the East Prussian city ​​of Insterburg , today Chernyachovsk.

history

The SV Insterburg was founded on April 8, 1909 by eight supporters of the 1st Insterburger SC 1907 . In the 1920/21 season , the club was able to win the district class Insterburg and thus qualified for the East Prussian football championship, in which Insterburg was eliminated in the qualifying round against SC Lituania Tilsit with 0-2. From the 1927/28 season Insterburg was a participant in the single-track district league East Prussia, in which mostly midfield placements have been achieved. When the district league was divided into three regional district leagues for the 1930/31 season , SV Insterburg played in the Northern District League and was able to qualify for the East Prussian football final in the first two years. In the 1832/33 season , however, the club only managed a fifth place in the Northern District League. As a result, Insterburg was not considered for the newly created Gauliga East Prussia , as only the three best teams qualified for the new Gauliga. From then on Insterburg played in the second-rate district league.

As early as the 1934/35 season , SV Insterburg was promoted to the Gauliga, where the club achieved a midfield placement in Group B. For the following 1935/36 season , SV Insterburg was the last of the Gumbinnen district and had to relegate to the second-rate district league. The other clubs were too strong, including local rivals Yorck Boyen Insterburg and SC Preußen Insterburg . For the 1937/38 season , the club managed to rise again and he achieved his best placement with third place in the Gumbinnen group. Nevertheless, Insterburg had to relegate again, as the Gauliga was shortened to ten participants for the coming season and only the two best teams from this district were qualified. The renewed rise succeeded in the 1940/41 season . Insterburg was able to hold on until the end of the Gauliga in the 1943/44 season, and in the last season even a second place jumped out.

After the Second World War, Insterburg, which was part of the German Empire, was annexed by the Soviet Union . The SV Insterburg was - like all other German clubs and institutions - forcibly dissolved.

successes

swell

  • DSFS : Football in the Baltic Sports Association, Part 1: 1903/04 - 1932/33 . DSFS, 2018.
  • 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. ^ SV Insterburg. Retrieved November 5, 2015 .