Oberliga Berlin-Brandenburg Explained

See main article: Brandenburg football championship.

Oberliga Berlin-Brandenburg
Organiser:Verband Brandenburgischer Ballspielvereine (VBB)
Pixels:180px
Region Type:Province
Region: Province of Brandenburg
Successor:Gauliga Berlin-Brandenburg
Level:Level 1
Domest Cup:Berlin Cup
Season:1932–33
Champions:Hertha BSC Berlin

The Oberliga Berlin-Brandenburg, also known as the VBB-Oberliga, was the highest association football competition in the Prussian Province of Brandenburg, including Berlin, from 1923 to 1933. The competition was disbanded in 1933 with the rise of the Nazis to power.

History

The league was organized by Verband Brandenburgischer Ballspielvereine (VBB) and formed in 1923, after a league reform which was decided upon in Darmstadt, Hesse.[1]

Until the introduction of the Oberliga, the Verbandsliga Berlin-Brandenburg was the highest league in the state. This league had been formed after the First World War.

The Oberliga, like the Verbandsliga before, consisted of two divisions of ten clubs each who would determine their champions in a home-and-away format. The two divisional champions would then play for the Brandenburg championship in a two-game series. Should each team win one game, a third game was held as a decider.[2]

The Brandenburg champion would then continue on to play in the German football championship. From 1925 onwards, the runners-up of Brandenburg was also qualified for an enlarged national championship.[3]

Below the league, as the second division in Brandenburg, four Kreisligas were set, those being:

From 1925 onwards, until 1931, the league was dominated by Hertha BSC Berlin, who won it every season in this time. Hertha, after reaching the semi-finals of the national championship in 1925, played in each of the German final games from 1926 to 1931, a record only matched by FC Schalke 04 from 1937 to 1942. Unlike Schalke, who won four of those finals and only lost two, Hertha lost the first four to win the last two.[4]

The league and its modus did not change at all until 1930, when, on 18 January, the clubs from the western part of Pomerania joined the Brandenburg football championship, but not the Oberliga.[5] This meant, instead of two or three final games between the two divisional champions, a four team finals tournament was introduced in 1931, consisting of the two Oberliga division winners, the Pomeranian champion and the Berlin Cup winner.[6]

The 1932 edition saw the end of an era; Hertha only came second in its division and was therefore not qualified for the Brandenburg championship. The tournament was held with only three clubs, the Berlin Cup winner, incidentally Hertha, did not take part.[7]

Hertha returned in 1933 to win the last championship of the Oberliga and Brandenburg. The club's golden age had come to an end, however, as evident by the fact that it bowed out in the first round of the German championship to un-heralded SV Hindenburg Allenstein, which in turn was beaten 12-2 by Eintracht Frankfurt in the second round.[8]

With the rise of the Nazis to power, the Gauligas were introduced as the highest football leagues in Germany. In Brandenburg, the Gauliga Berlin-Brandenburg replaced the Oberliga as the highest level of play. The eleven best teams from the league qualified for this new single-division league. A twelfth team, the SV Cottbus-Süd, came from the Bezirksliga Niederlausitz.

Champions

SeasonDivision ADivision BGame 1Game 2Game 3
1924BFC 90 Alemannia2-21-3 -
1925Hertha BSC BerlinBFC 90 Alemannia3-13-2 -
1926Hertha BSC BerlinNorden-Nordwest Berlin7-02-1 -
1927Hertha BSC BerlinBSC Kickers 19004-16-2 -
1928Hertha BSC BerlinTennis Borussia Berlin3-11-24-0
1929Hertha BSC BerlinTennis Borussia Berlin1-00-15-2
1930Hertha BSC BerlinTennis Borussia Berlin3-12-0 -
SeasonDivision ADivision BPomeraniaBerlin Cup
1931Hertha BSC BerlinTennis Borussia BerlinBerliner SV 92
1932Tennis Borussia BerlinStettiner SCN/A
1933Hertha BSC BerlinBFC Viktoria 89Stettiner SCBerliner SV 92

References

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://ofv.avenit.de/files/upload/Vereinsgeschichte.pdf History of the Offenburger Fußballverein
  2. http://www.fussball-historie.de/Berlin_ab_1892/VBB1924.html Verband Brandenburgischer Ballspielvereine 1924
  3. kicker Almanach 1990 Yearbook of German football 1990, publisher: kicker, published: 1989, page: 170, accessed: 17 April 2009
  4. kicker Almanach 1990 Yearbook of German football 1990, publisher: kicker, published: 1989, page: 170-174, accessed: 17 April 2009
  5. http://www.fussball-historie.de/Berlin_ab_1892/VBB1930.html Verband Brandenburgischer Ballspielvereine 1930
  6. http://www.fussball-historie.de/Berlin_ab_1892/VBB1931.html Verband Brandenburgischer Ballspielvereine 1931
  7. http://www.fussball-historie.de/Berlin_ab_1892/VBB1932.html Verband Brandenburgischer Ballspielvereine 1932
  8. kicker Almanach 1990 Yearbook of German football 1990, publisher: kicker, published: 1989, page: 171, accessed: 17 April 2009