Amateur Championship 1928-1937.
VAFÖ Liga 1928-1934.
Before the VAFÖ, another FA challenging the ÖFB was the Football Union of Austrian Nations (FUAN), which had subbranches in Lower Austria (Niederösterreich) and Bohemia (Böhmen); the Lower Austrian branch FINÖ (Fußball-Interessenverband Niederösterreichs) organised a championship in 1915.
1911/12 Rapid 1912/13 Rapid 1913/14 WAF 1914/15 WAC 1915/16 Rapid 1916/17 Rapid 1917/18 Floridsdorfer AC 1918/19 Rapid 1919/20 Rapid 1920/21 Rapid 1921/22 Wiener Sport-Club 1922/23 Rapid 1923/24 Amateure 1924/25 Hakoah 1925/26 Amateure 1926/27 Admira 1927/28 Admira 1928/29 Rapid 1929/30 Rapid 1930/31 First Vienna 1931/32 Admira 1932/33 First Vienna 1933/34 Admira 1934/35 Rapid 1935/36 Admira 1936/37 Admira 1937/38 Rapid 1938/39 Admira 1939/40 Rapid 1940/41 Rapid 1941/42 First Vienna 1942/43 First Vienna 1943/44 First Vienna 1944/45 not awarded 1945/46 Rapid 1946/47 Wacker 1947/48 Rapid 1948/49 Austria 1949/50 Austria 1950/51 Rapid 1951/52 Rapid 1952/53 Austria 1953/54 Rapid 1954/55 First Vienna 1955/56 Rapid 1956/57 Rapid 1957/58 Wiener Sport-Club 1958/59 Wiener Sport-Club 1959/60 Rapid 1960/61 Austria 1961/62 Austria 1962/63 Austria 1963/64 Rapid 1964/65 LASK 1965/66 Admira 1966/67 Rapid 1967/68 Rapid 1968/69 Austria 1969/70 Austria 1970/71 Wacker Innsbruck 1971/72 Wacker Innsbruck 1972/73 Wacker Innsbruck 1973/74 VÖEST Linz 1974/75 Wacker Innsbruck 1975/76 Austria 1976/77 Wacker Innsbruck 1977/78 Austria 1978/79 Austria 1979/80 Austria 1980/81 Austria 1981/82 Rapid 1982/83 Rapid 1983/84 Austria 1984/85 Austria 1985/86 Austria 1986/87 Rapid 1987/88 Rapid 1988/89 FC Tirol Innsbruck 1989/90 FC Tirol Innsbruck 1990/91 Austria 1991/92 Austria 1992/93 Austria 1993/94 Austria Salzburg 1994/95 Austria Salzburg 1995/96 Rapid 1996/97 Austria Salzburg 1997/98 Sturm Graz 1998/99 Sturm Graz 1999/00 FC Tirol Innsbruck 2000/01 FC Tirol Innsbruck 2001/02 FC Tirol Innsbruck 2002/03 Austria 2003/04 GAK 2004/05 Rapid 2005/06 Austria 2006/07 RB Salzburg 2007/08 Rapid 2008/09 RB Salzburg 2009/10 RB Salzburg 2010/11 Sturm Graz 2011/12 RB Salzburg 2012/13 Austria 2013/14 RB Salzburg 2014/15 RB Salzburg 2015/16 RB Salzburg 2016/17 RB Salzburg 2017/18 RB Salzburg 2018/19 RB Salzburg 2019/20 RB Salzburg 2020/21 RB Salzburg 2021/22 RB Salzburg 2022/23 RB Salzburg 2023/24 Sturm Graz 2024/25 Number of Titles (112) 32 Rapid (Wien) 24 Austria (Wien) 17 Salzburg (3 as Austria, 14 as RB) 10 Wacker/FC Tirol (Innsbruck) 8 Admira (Wien) 6 First Vienna 4 Sturm Graz 3 Wiener Sport-Club 1 Floridsdorfer AC (Wien) Grazer AK Hakoah (Wien) Linzer ASK VÖEST (Linz) WAC (Wien) Wacker (Wien) WAF (Wien) NB: from 1911 until 1923 the championship was organized by the FA of Niederösterreich (the province of which Vienna was the capital), and contained only teams from Vienna. It was then taken over by a newly formed FA of Vienna (WFV, Wiener Fußball-Verband), which organized the first professional league on the European continent in 1924/25. After the Anschluß in 1938 the German authorities organized a championship of the Gauliga Ostmark, in which for the first time some clubs from outside Vienna were included (Sturm Graz had failed to gain promotion in the playoffs 1937). In the first years after WW II, the championship was restricted to clubs from Vienna until 1948/49; in 1949/50 clubs from outside gained admission for the first time. Remarks: Austria Wien were known as Amateure until the mid-twenties. Admira and Wacker Wien merged around 1970, long played as Admira/Wacker in the Südstadt Stadium (Maria Enzersdorf), until the merger with VfB Mödling in 1997, which saw them renamed VfB Admira/Wacker Mödling. Wacker Innsbruck changed names very often, and also merged with WSG Wattens for a few seasons. Their current name is FC Wacker Innsbruck. Salzburg won 3 titles as SV Austria Salzburg (with differing sponsor names attached) before they were taken over by Red Bull and completely rebranded; the 9 titles won under that guise may be considered as having been won by a separate club. SV Austria Salzburg were refounded and rose from the lowest regional level to the second national level in 2015/16, but only lasted a single season there.
Prepared and maintained by Tamas Karpati for the Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation
Author: Tamas Karpati
Last updated: 21 Aug 2024
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