Viktoria Stolp

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SV Viktoria Stolp
Club logo
Full name Sports club Viktoria 09 e. V. Stolp
place Stumble
Founded September 5, 1909
Dissolved 1945
Club colors Black-and-white
Stadion Hindenburg arena
Top league Gauliga Pomerania
successes Gaumeister Pomerania:
1934, 1936, 1937 and 1939
home
Away
Template: Infobox historical football club / maintenance / incomplete outward

The SV Viktoria Stolp was a German sports club from the Pomeranian town of Stolp (today Słupsk ). With four championship and two runner-up titles in the Gauliga Pomerania , the football department was one of the most successful Pomeranian football clubs.

history

The club was founded on September 5, 1909 in the Franz Squar inn and played in the league system of the Baltic Lawn and Winter Sports Association (BRWV). In February 1910, the wild club (then the name for clubs that did not belong to a football association) joined FC Britannia Stolp of Viktoria. In 1910/11 the club won the District League IX Stolp / Lauenburg , but as a Pomeranian club was not yet allowed to take part in the Baltic football finals. In 1911/12 Stolp repeated winning the district championship title, but in the Baltic football finals the team failed already in the quarter-finals after a 7-0 defeat against BuEV Danzig . In the next two seasons Viktoria Stolp was defeated in the district league by local competitor SV Germania Stolp . As early as 1913, the league structure of the BRWV was restructured, from then on the Stolper and Lauenburg clubs played in the district league I Stolp within the district III Pomerania . The district champion was therefore no longer directly qualified for the Baltic soccer final, but for the Pomeranian soccer final, in which the participants in the Baltic soccer final were determined.

1919/20 was Viktoria Stolp for the third time district champion, in the Pomeranian football finals, the club failed in the semifinals on Szczecin FC Titania with 0: 9th In the years to come, the team in the district fell back into midfield, Germania Stolp and SV Sturm Lauenburg were stronger at that time. In 1925/26 the district league, which was merged with the district league Köslin during this season , could be won again. However, the semi-finals of the Pomeranian football final were again over, Stolp lost to Stettiner SC 1: 5. Also in 1926/27 , 1927/28 and 1928/29 Stolp failed as district champion at Szczecin clubs in the Pomeranian finals. For the 1929/30 season, the clubs from Stolp moved from what is now called District III Pomerania to District II Grenzmark , where they formed District I Stolp . Again Viktoria Stolp was able to prevail in the circle and qualified for the Grenzmarks football final. In this, Stolp reached second place one point behind the SV Schutzpolizei Danzig and qualified for the second time for the Baltic football finals. There, however, Stolp was eliminated in the qualifying games of the district runners-up, they were clearly defeated by VfB Stettin with a score of 1: 7. In 1930 the district numbering was changed to District III Stolp .

1931/32 was to be the most successful season for Viktoria Stolp to date . With the renewed district champion title, the qualification for the Grenzmark finals took place, in which Stolp reached the final. In two games (3-0, 1-0), the club was able to prevail against Danziger SC and was district champion of Grenzmark for the first time. Linked to this success was participation in the Baltic football finals, here too Stolp was able to convince and came second one point behind SV Hindenburg Allenstein . The decisive game for the Baltic runner-up against the series winner VfB Königsberg was surprisingly won by Stolp 1-0, whereby the club qualified for the German soccer championship 1931/32 . On May 8, 1932, Stolp competed in the round of 16 of the German soccer championship in the Berlin SCC Stadium against Tennis Borussia Berlin , the game was lost 0: 3 and Stolp was eliminated.

When the National Socialists came to power in 1933, the football associations were dissolved and replaced by Sportgaue . Only the three best teams in the Stolp district received a starting place in the Gauliga Pommern 1933/34 . Viktoria Stolp qualified for the Gauliga Pomerania by taking first place in the league that was actually intended for the 1933/34 association finals . Already in 1933/34 the first Gaumeist title could be celebrated by a final victory over the Stettiner SC , at the German soccer championship 1933/34 , however, Stolp was already eliminated in the group phase. In 1934/35 the Stettiner SC could reciprocate in the final, so that Stolp was runner-up. Also in 1935/36 the final game Stettiner SC against Viktoria Stolp was called , this time Stolp prevailed again. The Gauliga title could also be won in 1936/37 and 1938/39 , but Stolp was eliminated in the group stages at the German soccer championships. With the beginning of the Second World War , the dominance of military sports clubs and air force sports clubs in Pomerania began. In 1941/42 Viktoria Stolp reached the final of the Pomeranian Gaume Championship again, but after a 1: 6 defeat in the first leg she waived the second leg against LSV Pütnitz . Stolp was able to stay in this league until the end of the Gauliga, in the all-time table of the Gauliga Pomerania Viktoria Stolp occupies first place.

After the Second World War , the formerly German Stolp was annexed by the Soviet Union and placed under Polish administration . The SV Viktoria Stolp was, like all other German clubs and facilities, forcing dissolved.

successes

Venue

SV Viktoria Stolp played its home games on the Elysium sports field . Later they used the 1926 inaugurated in the presence of President von Hindenburg Hindenburg arena . The arena held up to 15,000 spectators and had 1,600 seats. The attendance record (1926) was 16,000. Today the SKLA Slupsk plays its home games in the former Hindenburg arena (today's name: Stadion 650-lecia w Słupsku).

Known players

swell

  • DSFS : Football in the Baltic Sports Association, Part 1: 1903/04 - 1932/33 . DSFS, 2018.
  • 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 .

Web links