1962 German football championship explained

German championship
Year:1962
Other Titles:Deutsche Fußballmeisterschaft
Country:West Germany
Dates:14 April – 12 May
Num Teams:9
Winners:1. FC Köln
1st German title
Second:1. FC Nürnberg
Continental Cup Title:European Cup
Continental Cup Qualifiers:1. FC Köln
Matches:14
Goals:65
Scoring Leader:Erwin Stein
Karl-Heinz Thielen
(6 goals each)
Prev Season:1961
Next Season:1963

The 1962 German football championship was the culmination of the football season in the Federal Republic of Germany in 1961–62. 1. FC Köln were crowned champions for the first time after a group stage and a final, having previously reached the final in 1960, where they lost to Hamburger SV.[1]

On the strength of this title, the club participated in the 1962–63 European Cup, where Köln lost to Dundee F.C. in the preliminary round.

Runners-up 1. FC Nürnberg made its twelfth and last appearance in the national title game, having won the previous year's championship.

The format used to determine the German champion was similar to the one used in the 1961 season. Nine clubs qualified for the tournament, with the runners-up of West and North having to play a qualifying match. The remaining eight clubs then played a single round in two groups of four, with the two group winners entering the final. In previous years, a home-and-away round had been played in the group stages but because of the 1962 FIFA World Cup, where Germany participated in, the schedule was reduced, as had been the case in previous world cup years.

Qualified teams

The teams qualified through the 1961–62 Oberliga season:

Club Qualified from
Oberliga Nord champions
Oberliga Nord runners-up
Oberliga West champions
Oberliga West runners-up
Oberliga Berlin champions
Oberliga Südwest champions
Oberliga Südwest runners-up
Oberliga Süd champions
Oberliga Süd runners-up

Competition

Group 1

Group 2

Final

Date Match Result Stadium Attendance
12 May 19621. FC Köln1. FC Nürnberg4–0 (2–0)Berlin, Olympiastadion82,000
1. FC Köln:
1 Fritz Ewert
2 Leo Wilden
3 Karl-Heinz Schnellinger
4
5 Matthias Hemmersbach
6
7
8
9
10
11
Manager:
Zlatko Čajkovski
1. FC Nürnberg:
1 Roland Wabra
2 Ferdinand Wenauer
3 Helmut Hilpert
4 Reinhold Gettinger
5 Paul Derbfuß
6 Stefan Reisch
7
8
9
10
11
Manager:
Herbert Widmayer
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References

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.rsssf.org/tablesd/duitchamp.html (West) Germany -List of champions