Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Kreisliga Württemberg

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Country
  
Germany

Folded
  
1923

Date founded
  
1919

Kreisliga Württemberg

State
  
Province of Hohenzollern Württemberg

Last champions
  
Stuttgarter Kickers (1922–23)

Replaced by
  
Bezirksliga Württemberg-Baden

Level on pyramid
  
German football league system

The Kreisliga Württemberg (English: District league Württemberg) was the highest association football league in the German state of Württemberg from 1919 to 1923. The league was disbanded with the introduction of the Bezirksliga Württemberg-Baden in 1923.

Contents

Predecessor

From 1907, four regional leagues were formed within the structure of the Southern German football championship, in a move to improve the organisation of football in Southern Germany, these being:

  • Ostkreis-Liga, covering Bavaria
  • Nordkreis-Liga, covering Hesse
  • Südkreis-Liga, covering Württemberg, Baden and Alsace
  • Westkreis-Liga, covering the Palatinate, Lorraine and the southern Rhine Province
  • In 1908, a first Südkreis-Liga (English: Southern District League) was established, consisting of ten clubs and playing a home-and-away season. With the outbreak of the First World War, league football came to a halt and, during the war, games were only played on a limited level.

    Post-First World War

    With the collapse of the German Empire in 1918, no Württemberg championship was played in 1918-19 but football returned to a more organised system in 1919.

    Southern Germany, now without the Alsace region, which had to be returned to France, was sub-divided into ten Kreisligas, these being:

  • Kreisliga Hessen
  • Kreisliga Nordbayern
  • Kreisliga Nordmain
  • Kreisliga Odenwald
  • Kreisliga Pfalz
  • Kreisliga Saar
  • Kreisliga Südbayern
  • Kreisliga Südmain
  • Kreisliga Südwest
  • Kreisliga Württemberg
  • The Südkreis-Liga was split into three regional competitions, Württemberg, Odenwald and Südwest, each with ten clubs. The three league winners advanced to the Southern championship. This system applied for the 1919-20 and 1920-21 season.

    In 1921-22, the Kreisliga Württemberg was split into two groups of eight, increasing the number of tier-one clubs in Württemberg to 16. The two league winners then played a final to determine the Württemberg champion, which in turn advanced to a Baden-Württemberg championship final against the Südwest champion. The Odenwald champion was not part of this series but rather played a Rhine championship. This "watering down" of Württemberg football lasted for only one season, in 1922-23, the number of top clubs was reduced to eight clubs in a single division, with a Baden-Württemberg final against the Südwest champion once more.

    In 1923, a league reform which was decided upon in Darmstadt, Hesse, established the Southern German Bezirksligas which were to replace the Kreisligas. The best four teams each from the Südwest and Württemberg were admitted to the new Bezirksliga Württemberg-Baden. The four clubs from Württemberg were:

  • Stuttgarter Kickers
  • SV Feuerbach
  • VfR Heilbronn
  • SC Stuttgart
  • National success

    The clubs from the Kreisliga Württemberg were not particularly successful in this era and none managed to qualify for the German championship.

    Baden-Württemberg championship

    Played in 1922 and 1923, these were the finals:

  • 1922:
  • Württemberg final: Sportfreunde Stuttgart - Stuttgarter Kickers 1-0 / 3-2
  • Baden-Württemberg final: Sportfreunde Stuttgart - Karlsruher FV 1-0 / 1-1
  • 1923:
  • Baden-Württemberg final: 1. FC Pforzheim - Stuttgarter Kickers 3-0 / 1-1
  • Southern German championship

    Qualified teams and their success:

  • 1920:
  • SC Stuttgart, Group stage
  • 1921:
  • Stuttgarter Kickers, Group stage
  • 1922:
  • Sportfreunde Stuttgart, Semi-finals
  • 1923:
  • Stuttgarter Kickers, not qualified
  • References

    Kreisliga Württemberg Wikipedia