1942–43 Gauliga Donau-Alpenland

The football championship in annexed Austria 1942/43, was held as part of the Danube Gauliga Alpine country. The winner of the Gauliga may lead he had gained title as the Austrian league title. The master of the former Ostmark was also entitled to participate in the final competition to the German soccer championship.

Gauliga Danube Alps Country

The Vienna was Austrian champion for the second time in a row champion of Gauliga and a total of 4 times. Relegated from the Gauliga were the bottom team SK Admira Wien and SK Sturm Graz. The eighth and ninth in the table, SG Reichsbahn and SC Wacker, had to compete against each other for the whereabouts in the Gauliga. This was necessary, since one in the league again would reduce from eleven to ten the number of clubs. This season eleven teams were exceptionally represented as Sturm Graz last season next season on stopped, but this is now resumed and was allowed to participate as an " eleventh " team at the Gauliga.

Scorer of the season was Karl Kerbach from Floridsdorfer AC with 31 hits in 20 games.

Movers & Shakers:

  • SK Amateurs Steyr (Upper Danube )
  • LSV marker village ( Lower Danube )

German Championship

The First Vienna FC took part in the German championship as a representative of Gauliga. This was held in Cup mode. It started with a 5-2 home victory over MSV Brno from the Sudetenland in the qualifying round and a 8-0 thrashing away in Wroclaw against the LSV Reinecke Brieg from Lower Silesia in the second round. In the quarterfinals, the Vienna TSV 1860 Munich defeated in the Prater Stadium 2-0 and thus met in the semifinals of the FV Saarbrücken. The Saarbrücken won the game, which was played in Stuttgart, surprisingly 2-1, which the Vienna only the match for third place remained. This took place on June 26, 1943 in Berlin Postal Stadium and ended with a 1:4 defeat of demotivated Vienna against Holstein Kiel.

Second power level and state leagues

There was no standard second game stage. The master of Vienna's 1st class, the country class of Styria, Lower Danube, Carinthia, Upper Danube and Salzburg played in two different modes to the two small championship climb places. The master of Vienna's 1st class A and B, 1st FFC forward 06 and SC Donaufelder turf players had been competing against each other because only one Vienna-based organization was allowed to participate in the promotion round.

Promotion round

Group 1

Group 2

1st Class Vienna A

1st Class Vienna B

SV ice and Mawas presented prematurely a game operation.

Upper Danube 1st class

Salzburg 1st class

The Season at the Salzburger first class was canceled in the spring, because the clubs were almost no players available. Salzburg was therefore in the promotion round of the FG Salzburg ( Salzburg football community ) represented, which consisted mainly of young players as well as many elderly players of Salzburg Austria and the SAC 1914.

Lower Danube

Information about a possible championship mode are not available. There are only known to the results of the semi-final or the final.

Gauliga Styria

Information about a possible championship mode are not available. There are only known the result of the finale.

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 1942
  • Football in 1943
  • Austrian Football Championship
  • Sport ( German Reich 1933 to 1945)
  • Austria in the period of National Socialism
356827
de