1923–24 Austrian football championship

The Austrian Football Championship 1923/24, was hosted by the club WFV and disputed by its members. As a foundation for first class served the double track guided Second Class. In addition, national championships were oriented in different modes of other federal land associations.

  • 2.1 General
  • 2.2 Endtabellen 2.2.1 Second class North
  • 2.2.2 Second class South
  • 3.1 Lower Austria
  • 3.2 Upper Austria
  • 3.3 Burgenland
  • 3.4 Salzburg
  • 3.5 Styria 3.5.1 First Class
  • 3.5.2 Second class

First Class

General

The championship in the first class was contested by 12 teams, who met during the entire game twice each year. Austrian football champions was the Wiener Amateur -SV, who won his first league title. As in the previous year had three, descend instead of two clubs, because you again reduced the league to a club so that next year only 11 teams played for the title.

Ending table

Leading scorers

The champion team of the Wiener Amateur -SV

Theodor Lohrmann - Alexander Popovich, Johann Tandler, Charles Geyer, Jenő Konrád, Alois Hiltl, Friedrich Briza, Gustav Wieser, Franz Hansel Alfréd Schaffer, Ferdinand Swatosch, Wilhelm Morocutti, Viktor Hierländer, Kálmán Konrád - Coach: Gustav Lanzer - Head of Section: Max sailor

Second class

General

The second power stage consisted of two squadrons each of 11 teams that met twice each other. Thus, increased both the winner of the Second Class North, the WAC, and with Rudolfshügel the winner of the second class south directly into the first class. Since the professionalism was introduced in the two highest Austrian league the following season, rose numerous clubs voluntarily or for financial reasons in the third game class that remained an amateur league. So two vacant places were awarded in the following season at the lower division teams of the SC Nicholson Vienna and the SC White Elf Vienna.

Endtabellen

Second class North

Second class South

Country leagues

Lower Austria

National champion of Lower Austria was the first SC Wiener Neustadt.

Upper Austria

Burgenland

Salzburg

Styria

First Class

General

The Styrian championship of the first class of the season 1923/24, was the first allowed to participate in the clubs also from the province. These were Kapfenberg SC, Bruck AAC, AAC Voitsberg and the German sports club Leoben. This was but excluded during the season from the championship because he refused against the Jewish Hakoah Graz to compete. The championship itself ended in a mess and has not played to the end. Several games were verified in retrospect criminal because undeclared players were used. Especially the story of the games of the Kapfenberg SC drove the league into chaos. The KSC sat at the games against GAK, storm, AAS Graz and Hakoah unreported a player. With the exception of SK Sturm ( who nevertheless won ) put these clubs a protest, which the Association was held. Instead these games to verify criminal, the Styrian Association decided that all games of the KSC must be grudge, even the one against storm. After storm reached only a draw in the addendum, which they fell back to second place behind the GAK, the latter appealed again protest against this decision. The rivals for the championship - Storm and GAK - agreed finally on the title in two play- off play. The first leg ended in a 3-0 victory of GAK with the return on space storm ended in a 2-2 draw. Thus was the GAK champion. The missing games were not played. In the following season they turned around to an annual championship.

  • Points and goal difference come from a submitted article from a report of the Graz 6- clock - sheet dated August 24, 1924. The game number is derived as far as possible from other newspapers. The points calculation only the supplement game against KSC was expected. An official table of the Styrian Football Association from this season was never released.

Second class

Carinthia

National champion of Carinthia was the Klagenfurt AC.

Tirol

Vorarlberg

First Class ( hosted by the Lower Austrian Football Association ) in 1911/12 ∙ 1912/13 ∙ 1913/14 ∙ 1914/15 ∙ 1915/16 ∙ 1916/17 ∙ 1917/18 ∙ 1918/19 ∙ 1919/20 ∙ 1920/21 ∙ 1921/22 ∙ 1922/23,

First Class ( Vienna Football Association): 1923/24 ∙ 1924/25 ∙ 1925/26 ∙ 1926/27 ∙ 1927/28 ∙ 1928/29 ∙ 1929/30 ∙ 1930/31 ∙ 1931/32 ∙ 1932/33 ∙ 1933/34, ∙ 1934/35 ∙ 1935/36,

National Football League ( Vienna Football Association): 1936/37 ∙ 1937/38,

Gauliga ( NS time ): 1938/39 ∙ 1939/40 ∙ 1940/41 ∙ 1941/42 ∙ 1942/43 ∙ 1943/44 ∙ 1944/45,

League ( Vienna Football Association): 1945/46 ∙ 1946/47 ∙ 1947/48 ∙ 1948/49,

State League ( gesamtösterreichisch ): 1949/50 ∙ 1950/51 ∙ 1951/52 ∙ 1952/53 ∙ 1953/54 ∙ 1954/55 ∙ 1955/56 ∙ 1956/57 ∙ 1957/58 ∙ 1958/59 ∙ 1959/60 ∙ 1960 / 61 ∙ 1961/62 ∙ 1962/63 ∙ 1963/64 ∙ 1964/65

National League: 1965/66 ∙ 1966/67 ∙ 1967/68 ∙ 1968/69 ∙ 1969/70 ∙ 1970/71 ∙ 1971/72 ∙ 1972/73 ∙ 1973/74

Bundesliga: 1974/75 ∙ 1975/76 ∙ 1976/77 ∙ 1977/78 ∙ 1978/79 ∙ 1979/80 ∙ 1980/81 ∙ 1981/82 ∙ 1982/83 ∙ 1983/84 ∙ 1984/85 ∙ 1985/86 ∙ 1986/87 ∙ 1987/88 ∙ 1988/89 ∙ 1989/90 ∙ 1990/91 ∙ 1991/92 ∙ 1992/93 ∙ 1993/94 ∙ 1994/95 ∙ 1995/96 ∙ 1996/97 ∙ 1997/98 ∙ 1998 / 99 ∙ 1999/2000 ∙ 2000/ 01 ∙ 2001/ 02 ∙ 2002/ 03 ∙ 2003/ 04 ∙ 2004/ 05 ∙ 2005/ 06 ∙ 2006/ 07 ∙ 2007/ 08 ∙ 2008/ 09 ∙ 2009/10 ∙ 2010/11 ∙ 2011/12 ∙ 2012/13 ∙ 2013/14

  • Football in 1923
  • Football in 1924
  • Austrian Football Championship
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