Yorck Boyen Insterburg

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Yorck Boyen Insterburg
Logo of SV Yorck Insterburg.
Full name MSV Yorck Boyen Insterburg
place Insterburg
Founded 1921
Dissolved 1945
Club colors Black red
Stadion Barracks yard
Top league Gauliga East Prussia
successes Gauliga champions 1935, 1938
home
Away
Template: Infobox historical football club / maintenance / incomplete home

The MSV Yorck Boyen Insterburg was a German sports club from the East Prussian Insterburg (today Tschernjachowsk ). The football department was two-time champions of the Gauliga East Prussia

history

Original
logo (1921–1934)

The club was founded in 1921 as SV Yorck Insterburg and played in the league system of the Baltic Lawn and Winter Sports Association (BRWV). By winning the second-class 1st class Insterburg-Gumbinnen 1923/24, the club rose to the first-class district league Insterburg-Gumbinnen in the 1924/25 season . For the season 1926/27 the top East Prussian league was introduced, but Yorck Insterburg missed the qualification for this and therefore remained in the district league, which was henceforth second class. 1928/29 the relay was introduced as the second league level . Insterburg qualified for the Staffelliga Ost , was last placed this season, but was able to stay in the second division in the relegation round through wins over Grün-Weiß Gumbinnen and Eintracht Pillkallen . In 1929/30 Yorck Insterburg was level on points with local rivals SC Preußen Insterburg after the end of the relay league . The play-off on October 27, 1929, Yorck lost 1-0 after extra time and thus actually missed qualification for the first division. However, since the Baltic Sports Association again restructured the league system and from then on there were three leagues of equal rank in District I, Yorck Insterburg was also allowed to move up to the first-class division league North .

When the National Socialists came to power in 1933, the football associations were dissolved and replaced by Sportgaue . Only the three best teams from the division league North received a starting place in the Gauliga East Prussia 1933/34 . SV Yorck Insterburg qualified for the Gauliga East Prussia by taking first place in the league actually intended for the 1933/34 association finals . Already in the first Gauliga season the club was second behind SV Hindenburg Allenstein in group B. 1934 the club merged with the military SV von Boyen 1923 Tilsit to form MSV Yorck Boyen Insterburg . The club name went back to the two Prussian generals Ludwig Yorck von Wartenburg and Hermann von Boyen . In 1934/35 , after a 5-1 win in the first leg and a 1-2 defeat in the second leg against SV Prussia-Samland Koenigsberg, the club became East Prussian Gaumeister for the first time. In the subsequent German football championship 1934/35 Insterburg did not get beyond the group stage. 1936/37 Insterburg reached the final of the Gaume Championship again, but lost to Hindenburg Allenstein 7-0 in the second leg. The club secured the second Gau championship in 1937/38 after a win and a draw in the final against BuEV Danzig , but again the group phase could not be survived at the German soccer championship 1937/38 . The last Gauliga season was played in 1938/39 , in this Insterburg broke qualitatively and was penultimate with one point ahead of the relegated SV Rasensport-Preußen Königsberg .

With the beginning of the Second World War in 1939, the military sports club could no longer take part in the game. After the Second World War , the formerly German Insterburg was annexed by the Soviet Union . The MSV Yorck-Boyen 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.
  • 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