Baltic football championship

The Baltic football championship (German: Baltische Fußball Meisterschaft) was the highest association football competition in the Prussian provinces of East Prussia, Pomerania and West Prussia. The competition was disbanded in 1933.

Baltic football championship
Founded
1908
Disbanded
1933
Nation
German Empire
Germany
Province
East Prussia
Pomerania
West Prussia
Number of Seasons
21
Replaced by
Gauliga Ostpreußen
Gauliga Pommern
Level on Pyramid
Level 1
Last Champions 1932–33
Prussia Samland Königsberg
Logo of Baltic Football Association

It should not be confused with the Baltic Cup, a competition for the national teams of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. Instead, the competition was named after the Baltic Sea, its clubs mostly based on the shore of this sea.

Overview

German football was, from its beginnings, divided into regional associations, each of which carried out their own championship matches. These often pre-dated the national German championship. With the inception of the latter in 1903, the former became qualifying tournaments. Regional championships still held a high value for the local clubs. These regional championships were:[1]

Regional championships were suspended with the rise of the Nazis to power in 1933. At the end of the Second World War, some resumed, but in league format. Others, such as the Baltic championship, completely disappeared, especially if the territories they were held in were no longer part of Germany. With the South West German football championship, a new regional competition also appeared in 1945. Ultimately, with the formation of the Fußball-Bundesliga, regional championships ceased altogether.

History

Background

The Provinces of Prussia from 1871 to 1918

When the Baltic championship was established in 1908, the region of North Eastern Germany (German: Nordostdeutschland) was politically part of the Kingdom of Prussia, as the provinces of East Prussia, Pomerania and West Prussia.

With the defeat of the German Empire in 1918 and the formation of a Republic, the former Kingdoms and Principalities of Germany became states. For most of the Prussian provinces, this only meant that the Kingdom was replaced with the Free State of Prussia, but the provinces in east of the Kingdom were far more affected by the outcome of the war.

West Prussia was almost completely awarded to Poland after the First World War, only a small strip of land of the western part of the province remained with Germany and became the border province Posen-West Prussia (German: Grenzmark Posen-West). This turned East Prussia into an exclave, separated from mainland Germany. The city of Danzig, previously part of West Prussia, became the Free City of Danzig.

A small portion of East Prussia, the region around Soldau in the south west of the province, was also awarded to Poland. In other parts of East Prussia, a plebiscite was held, resulting in a vote for remaining with Germany. The Memel Territory came initially under French protection and was later annexed by Lithuania.

Pomerania was not affected by any territorial changes after the First World War and remained completely part of Germany until 1945.

Clubs from both Danzig and Memel continued to compete in the Baltic championship despite not being part of Germany anymore. Clubs from Memel simultaneously took part in the Lithuanian championship, too.[2]

Football association

The Baltic Football Association was formed in 1907. The development of football associations in the region was separated between Pomerania and the East & West Prussia until 1910:[3][4]

Pomerania

  • Stettiner Fußball Vereinigung, formed 1903
  • Pommerscher Fußball Verband, formed 1904 in a merger of Verband Stettiner Ballspiel Vereine and Stettiner Fußball Vereinigung

In 1907, the Pommersche Fußball Verband joined the Verband Berliner Ballspielvereine but, in 1910, it moved across to the Baltischer Rasen- und Wintersport Verband.

In 1930, the western parts of Pomerania joined the Verband Brandenburgischer Ballspielvereine, to compete in the Brandenburg football championship instead.[5]

West & East Prussia

The Verband Königsberger Ballspiel Vereine was formed on 3 September 1904 and joined the new Baltischen Rasensport Verband on 26 January 1908. In 1927, this association was renamed Baltischer Sportverband.

Competition

1908 to 1914

The Baltic football championship was first contested in 1908 and won by the VfB Königsberg, a club who would play an important part in the future of the competition. Only three teams played in the competition, the champions of Danzig, Königsberg and Elbing. The champions of Pomerania did not yet take part. It was staged as a knockout competition.[6] The winner of this first competition then took part in the sixth edition of the national German championship for the first time.[7]

To qualify for the Baltic championship, a club had to take out the title in its regional competition or league. As more football clubs were formed in Germany, the number of leagues increased and thereby also the numbers of clubs taking part in the Baltic championship. The first three seasons, only three clubs competed, in 1911, this number was increased to seven, the champions coming from the following regions:[8]

  • Allenstein
  • Danzig
  • Graudenz
  • Insterburg
  • Königsberg
  • Rastenburg
  • Tilsit-Memel

In 1912, Stolp-Köslin, in eastern Pomerania, was added as an eighth region.[9] The year after, 1913, the number of clubs was increased to ten with the admittance of the Bromberg and Elbing champions.[10]

In its last pre-First World War season, 1914, the competition was staged as a mini league with three clubs. Each club played the other only once and qualified were the three provincial champions.[11]

In this era, the clubs from the Baltic region of Germany found themselves severely outclassed in the national championship. VfB Königsberg first two campaigns, 1908 and 1909, ended in 7–0 and 12–1 first-round defeats by Viktoria 89 Berlin. No club from the Baltic won a game in the national championship in this era.[12]

1915 to 1919

In 1914–15, football in Germany had come to an almost complete halt. As it became clear, that the war would last longer than anticipated, local competitions restarted in 1915. In most regions of Germany, like the South, the championships were restarted from 1915 onwards but in the Baltic, this was not so. Eastern Prussia had actually become front line in the early stages of war and a large portion of the province was under Russian occupation, until the battles of Tannenberg and the Masurian Lakes turned fortune in Germanys favour. A Baltic championship was not played again until 1920.[13]

1920 to 1933

The 1920 championship resumed in the same fashion as the last one had finished in 1914, three clubs in a mini-league competition. The Danzig champion now replaced the West Prussian one as the third team, not a great change as the former West Prussian champions had mostly come from Danzig anyway.[14] The champions, Titania Stettin, achieved the greatest success of any Baltic club so far in the national title games, when it reached the semi-finals, to bow out 3–0 to 1. FC Nürnberg.[15]

In 1921 and 1922, the three-team format remained in place. In 1923 and 1924, the number of games were doubled, each team playing the other twice.[16] The 1925 season was organised as the previous two, but now an enlarged national championship meant, the Baltic runners-up was also qualified for the national finals.[17]

The 1926 and 1927 editions saw the competition enlarged to six clubs, with the winners and runners-up of the three regions, Pomerania, East Prussia and Danzig, all qualified. The championship was held in league format with each club playing the other only once.[18]

In 1928 and 1929, the competition was reduced to five teams. Each team would play the other only once, but the top three clubs then would play once more against each other.[19] In 1930, four clubs played in the finals, but with home-and-away games again.[20] It was the last edition where clubs from Western Pomerania took part in the Baltic championship, from 1931, they competed with the clubs from Brandenburg-Berlin.

The four-team home-and-away modus remained in place for the competition's last three seasons, 1931, 1932 and 1933. At the end of the 1933 edition, the competition was disbanded.

Aftermath

The Baltic championship was replaced with the Gauliga Ostpreußen by the Nazis in 1933. In Pomerania, the Gauliga Pommern was formed.[21] In the era that followed, the clubs from the Baltic continued to see very limited success in the national finals, never advancing past the group stages.[22]

After the end of the Second World War, Germany suffered further territorial loss, and half of East Prussia, the Free City of Danzig and most of Pomerania becoming part of Poland. Only a small strip of Pomerania west of the Oder-Neisse line remained part of Germany. The northern half of East Prussia became part of the Soviet Union. German clubs in the region were either dissolved, as in most cases, or become part of the Polish football league system.[23]

Baltic football champions

Season Winner Runner-Up Result
1908 VfB Königsberg BuEV Danzig 11–0
1909 VfB Königsberg BuEV Danzig 1–0
1910 Prussia Samland Königsberg BuEV Danzig 2–1
1911 SC Lituania Tilsit SV Ostmark Danzig 4–2
1912 BuEV Danzig VfB Königsberg 3–2
1913 Prussia Samland Königsberg BuEV Danzig 7–1
1914 Prussia Samland Königsberg Stettiner FC Titania N/A
1915 not held
1916 not held
1917 not held
1918 not held
1919 not held
1920 Stettiner FC Titania VfL Danzig N/A
1921 VfB Königsberg Stettiner SC N/A
1922 VfB Königsberg Stettiner FC Titania N/A
1923 VfB Königsberg Stettiner SC N/A
1924 VfB Königsberg Stettiner SC N/A
1925 VfB Königsberg Stettiner FC Titania N/A
1926 VfB Königsberg Stettiner SC N/A
1927 Stettiner FC Titania VfB Königsberg N/A
1928 VfB Königsberg SC Preußen Stettin N/A
1929 VfB Königsberg Stettiner FC Titania 9–1
1930 VfB Königsberg VfB Stettin 4–0
1931 Prussia Samland Königsberg VfB Königsberg N/A
1932 Hindenburg Allenstein Viktoria Stolp N/A
1933 Prussia Samland Königsberg Hindenburg Allenstein N/A

Further reading

  • Stürmen für Deutschland: Die Geschichte des deutschen Fussballs von 1933, publisher: Campus Verlag

References

  1. kicker Almanach 1990 (in German) Yearbook of German football 1990, publisher: kicker, published: 1989, page: 241-42, accessed: 1 June 2009
  2. Where's My Country? – Lithuanian clubs in the German football structure RSSSF.com, accessed: 1 June 2009
  3. Verband Königsberger Ballspiel Vereine Hirschis Fussball Seiten, accessed: 1 June 2009
  4. Verband Stettiner Ballspiel Vereine Archived 2007-06-10 at Archive.today Hirschis Fussball Seiten, accessed: 1 June 2009
  5. Baltischer Rasensport Verband 1930 Archived 2007-06-10 at Archive.today Hirschis Fussball Seiten, accessed: 1 June 2009
  6. Baltischer Rasensport Verband 1908 Hirschi's Fussball Seiten, accessed: 1 June 2009
  7. kicker Almanach 1990 (in German) Yearbook of German football, page: 168, publisher: kicker, published: 1989, accessed: 1 June 2009
  8. Germany – Championship 1911 RSSSF.com, accessed: 1 June 2009
  9. Germany – Championship 1912 RSSSF.com, accessed: 1 June 2009
  10. Germany – Championship 1913 RSSSF.com, accessed: 1 June 2009
  11. Baltischer Rasensport Verband 1914 Hirschi's Fussball Seiten, accessed: 1 June 2009 2009
  12. kicker Almanach 1990 (in German) Yearbook of German football, page: 168-169, publisher: kicker, published: 1989, accessed: 1 June 2009
  13. Baltischer Rasensport Verband 1915–1919 Hirschi's Fussball Seiten, accessed: 1 June 2009
  14. Baltischer Rasensport Verband 1920 Hirschi's Fussball Seiten, accessed: 1 June 2009
  15. kicker Almanach 1990 (in German) Yearbook of German football, page: 169, publisher: kicker, published: 1989, accessed: 1 June 2009
  16. Baltischer Rasensport Verband 1923 Hirschi's Fussball Seiten, accessed: 1 June 2009
  17. kicker Almanach 1990 (in German) Yearbook of German football, page: 170, publisher: kicker, published: 1989, accessed: 1 June 2009
  18. Baltischer Rasensport Verband 1926 Hirschi's Fussball Seiten, accessed: 1 June 2009
  19. Baltischer Rasensport Verband 1929 Hirschi's Fussball Seiten, accessed: 1 June 2009
  20. Baltischer Rasensport Verband 1930 Hirschi's Fussball Seiten, accessed: 1 June 2009
  21. Soccer in the Third Reich: 1933–1945 The Abseits guide to German soccer, accessed: 1 June 2009
  22. kicker Almanach 1990 (in German) Yearbook of German football, page: 172, publisher: kicker, published: 1989, accessed: 1 June 2009
  23. Where's My Country? – Moving Countries RSSSF.com, accessed: 1 June 2009

Sources

  • Fussball-Jahrbuch Deutschland (in German) (8 vol.), Tables and results of the German tier-one leagues 1919–33, publisher: DSFS
  • Kicker Almanach, (in German) The yearbook on German football from Bundesliga to Oberliga, since 1937, published by the Kicker Sports Magazine
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