1918–19 Austrian Cup
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1918–19 Austrian Cup
The 1918–19 Austrian Cup () was the first season of Austria's nationwide football cup competition. The final was held at the WAF-Platz, Vienna on 3 July 1919. The competition was won by Rapid Wien after beating Wiener Sport-Club 3–0. Second preliminary round , - , colspan="3" style="background-color:#fcc;", , - , colspan="3" style="background-color:#fcc;", Intermediate round , - , colspan="3" style="background-color:#fcc;", Third round , - , colspan="3" style="background-color:#fcc;", Quarter-finals , - , colspan="3" style="background-color:#fcc;", , - , colspan="3" style="background-color:#fcc;", Semi-finals , - , colspan="3" style="background-color:#fcc;", Final References External links RSSSF page {{DEFAULTSORT:1918-19 Austrian Cup Austrian Cup seasons Cup A cup is an open-top vessel (container) used to hold liquids for drinking, typically with a flattened hemispherical shape, and often with a capacity of abou ...
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SK Rapid Wien
Sportklub Rapid (), commonly known as Rapid Wien or Rapid Vienna in English language, English, is an Football in Austria, Austrian professional football club playing in the country's capital city of Vienna. Rapid has won the most Austrian championship titles (32), including the first title in the season 1911–12, as well as a German championship in 1941 German football championship, 1941 during Austria in the time of National Socialism, Nazi rule, although its cross-city arch rival FK Austria Vienna has won more combined league and cup titles. They share the honour of List of unrelegated association football clubs, never being relegated with Austria Vienna. Rapid twice reached the final of the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, European Cup Winners' Cup in 1985 and 1996, losing on both occasions. The club is often known as ''Die Grün-Weißen'' (The Green-Whites) for its team colours or as ''Hütteldorfer'', in reference to the location of the Gerhard Hanappi Stadium, which is in Hütteld ...
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Floridsdorfer AC
The Floridsdorfer Athletics Sports Club or simply Floridsdorfer AC or FAC is a professional football club based in Floridsdorf, the 21st district of Vienna Vienna ( ; ; ) is the capital city, capital, List of largest cities in Austria, most populous city, and one of Federal states of Austria, nine federal states of Austria. It is Austria's primate city, with just over two million inhabitants. .... The club was founded in August 1904. Floridsdorfer AC won the Austrian football championship in 1918 and are currently playing in the Austrian 2. Liga, the second tier of Austrian football. The club colours are blue and white. Current squad Honours * Austrian Championship (1): 1917–18 List of managers ''From 1930 onwards'' * Richard Ziegler / Karl Schrott (1930–1931) * Karl Jiszda (1931–1934) * Ferdinand Humenberger (1935) * Rudolf Seidl (1935–1940) * Eduard Frühwirth (1939–1947) * Anton Artes (1947–1948) * Ka ...
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Hugo Meisl
Hugo Meisl (16 November 1881 – 17 February 1937), brother of the journalist Willy Meisl, was the multi-lingual football coach of the famous Austrian ' Wunderteam' of the early 1930s, as well as a referee. Background Meisl was born to a Jewish family in Bohemia, starting out as a bank clerk after moving to Vienna in 1895 but soon developed an interest in football, playing as a winger for the Vienna Cricket and Football-Club. In his early 30s, following a short playing career, he found employment as an administrator with the Austrian Football Association, rising to the position of General Secretary. In the 1912 Olympic Games in Stockholm, Meisl appeared as a match referee. He had previously refereed the first international match between Hungary and England on 10 June 1908. Interest in football Meisl's enthusiasm for the game resulted in the development of a Central European club tournament: the Mitropa Cup, the development of the Central European International Cup and the ...
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Richard Kuthan
Richard "Rigo" Kuthan (3 July 1891 – 10 February 1958) was an Austrian international footballer A football player or footballer is a sportsperson who plays one of the different types of football. The main types of football are association football, American football, Canadian football, Australian rules football, Gaelic football, rugby lea .... References 1891 births 1958 deaths Men's association football forwards Austrian men's footballers Austria men's international footballers SK Rapid Wien players Place of birth missing {{austria-footy-forward-stub ...
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Josef Uridil
Josef Uridil (nicknamed ''Pepi, der Tank''; 24 December 1895 – 20 May 1962) was an Austrian footballer and coach. Biography Pepi Uridil, third son of the taylor Kajetan Uridil, was born on Christmas Eve 1895 in the Vienna suburb of Ottakring. He began to play football aged eight in the streets of his neighbourhood with his brother Franz. Pepi Uridil played for numerous clubs in his youth, such as ''Sportklub Orion'', ''Tasmania'', ''Rekord'' and then Blue Star Vienne, before leaving for the great club of SK Rapid Wien in Hütteldorf. During the First World War, he got the nickname "Tank". Pepi Uridil played for a number of seasons with Rapid, and in 1919, his team won in the final 3–0 against Wiener Sport-Club. Throughout his career Uridil is said to have scored around 1,000 goals. He was one of the main players in the Championship victory in 1921 against Wiener AC. Dionys Schönecker's men were losing 1–5 at half-time, 3–5 with 15 minutes remaining, and finished wi ...
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SC Hakoah Wien
SC Hakoah Vienna (; ' means "the strength" in Hebrew) is a Jewish sports club in Vienna, Austria. Prior to World War II, it produced several Olympic athletes and was notable for fielding an entirely Jewish association football team with players drawn from across Europe. Closed by the Nazis in 1938 following the ', it re-formed in 1945, though its football team was disbanded in 1949. History 1909–1919 A pair of Austrian Zionists, cabaret librettist (') Fritz "Beda" Löhner and dentist Ignaz Herman Körner as well as some others founded the club in 1909. Influenced by Max Nordau's doctrine of "Muscular Judaism" (), they named the club "Hakoah" (), meaning "the strength" or "the power" in Hebrew. In its first year, the club's athletes competed in fencing, football, field hockey, track & field, wrestling and swimming. Hakoah Vienna was one of the first football teams to market themselves globally by travelling frequently where they would attract thousands of Jewish fans to their ...
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Wiener AF
Wiener AF or WAF was a football club which played in Austria. It dissolved in 2004. History The club was established at the end of the 1909–10 season after most of the first-team squad of Wiener AC (known as WAC) left the club to form a new club.Austria - Tagblatt-Pokal 1900-1903
RSSSF
The club was named Wiener Assoziationsfootball Club, aiming to inherit the WAC abbreviation. However, the club became generally known as Wiener Assoziations Footballclub (WAF). On 21 September 1910, the club gained entry to the 1. Klasse division. WAF and

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Wiener AC
Wiener Athletiksport Club, also known as Wiener AC or WAC, is an Austrian sports club in Vienna. It is particularly noted for its hockey team, which was established in 1900. Its football team won the Austrian Championships and was Runner-up in the Mitropa Cup. History The football section of the club was founded on 14 October 1897. By 1904, it had won the Challenge Cup and the Wiener Tagblatt Pokal three times each. They were the most important trophies in Austrian football at the time. In September 1910, most of the first team left the club to found a new club, Wiener AF. Despite this, Wiener AC finished fourth in the Austrian football championship 1910–11, although the new club finished higher. The club won the Austrian football championship 1914–15, in which the ten clubs only played each other once each. Wiener AF finished in second place. In 1928, the club reached the Austrian Cup final, losing 2–1 to SK Admira Wien. In the 1930–31 season, Wiener AC won ...
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First Vienna FC
First Vienna FC is an Austrian football club based in the Döbling district of Vienna. Established on 22 August 1894, it is the country's oldest team and has played a notable role in the history of the game there. It is familiarly known to Austrians by the English name ''Vienna''. __TOC__ History In the early 1890s English and Austrian gardeners working for Nathaniel Anselm von Rothschild began to play football on his estates. To avoid further damage to his flowers Nathaniel ceded them a pasture nearby and also granted the team's blue-yellow kits, former jockey costumes of his riding stable. The Manx player William Beale designed the triskelion logo, also in the Rothschild colours blue and yellow, which ''Vienna'' still uses. The team played its first match on 15 November 1894 against the '' Vienna Cricket and Football-Club'' losing 0–4 to the club which would become a bitter longtime rival until the ''Cricketers football team was finally dissolved in 1936. The city of Vien ...
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Wiener Sport-Club
The Wiener Sport-Club, sometimes abbreviated as WSC, was established in 1883 in Vienna, Austria and is one of the country's oldest athletics clubs. Their traditional home is in the Dornbach quarter of the city ( 17th district). History At various times throughout its history the club has had departments for fencing, boxing, wrestling, cycling, handball, track and field, field hockey, tennis, squash, football and water polo. The football team enjoyed success in Austria National Championship in 1922, 1958 and 1959. Their 1958 season included an impressive 7–0 victory over Juventus in European Champions Cup. Two bankruptcies in the 1990s eventually led the team to slip into the lower leagues. In 2001, the football section split off as ''Wiener Sportklub'' due to financial troubles and was re-integrated back into WSC in 2017. The first squad currently plays in the Austrian Regional League East (3rd Division). The club's home ground ''Wiener Sport-Club Stadium'' (or ''Wiene ...
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Admira Wien
Admira Wacker is an Austrian professional Association football, football club based in Maria Enzersdorf, a town in the Mödling District of Lower Austria. The team competes in the 2. Liga (Austria), 2. Liga, the second tier of the Football in Austria#League system, Austrian football league system. The club was formed as Admira/Wacker in 1971 through the merger of SK Admira and SC Wacker, making it the legal successor to both clubs and inheriting their combined titles and achievements. SC Wacker, founded in 1907 in Vienna's Meidling, Obermeidling district, won the List of Austrian football champions, Austrian Championship and Austrian Cup once each. SK Admira, founded in 1905 in the Jedlesee district of Vienna and based in Südstadt since 1967, won eight Austrian Championships, five Austrian Cups, and one Austrian Supercup. Admira's greatest international achievement was reaching the Mitropa Cup final in 1934, while the merged club reached the quarter-finals of the European Cup Wi ...
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SK Slovan Wien
Sportklub Slovan Hütteldorfer Athletikclub Wien, better known as SK Slovan HAC, is an Austrian football club located in Hütteldorf, Vienna, Austria. History Sk Slovan HAC was founded on 11 January 1902 as '' Sportovni Klub Slovan ve Vídni'' - better known as ''SK Slovan'' - by the Czech minority in Vienna. They were promoted to the Austrian First Division in 1923, and built a new stadium - the České srdce (now known as the ''Generali Arena''). The stadium was so large that it caused the club financial problems. The club was relegated in 1928/29 season, but was in the first division again in 1930. They again achieved promotion to the first division in 1949/50 as ''AC Sparta''. In 1960, the club merged with ''ÖMV Olympia 33'' and the club was known as ''SK Slovan-Olympia''. In 1976, they merged with ''Hütteldorfer AC'' founded in 1911, and was thereafter known as ''SK Slovan-Hütteldorfer AC''. They have mostly played in the Wiener Stadtliga since the 1980s and 90s. Co ...
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