Mittweidaer BC

Mittweidaer Ballspielclub, or simply Mittweidaer BC, was a German association football club from the town of Mittweida, Saxony. The club is notable as the first side in the city and as a founding member of the DFB (Deutsche Fußball Bund or German Football Association) at Leipzig in 1900.

Mittweidaer BC
logo
Full nameMittweidaer Ballspielclub e.V.
Founded1896
Dissolved1945
2006–07defunct

History

Mittweidaer Ballspielclub was founded on 5 May 1896 by 12 students of the Mittweida technical school in Mittweida. The club's first chairman was Udo Steinberg, one of the founding members. On 28 January 1900, Steinberg was sent to Leipzig as one of Mittweida's delegates at the founding meeting of the DFB in the restaurant Zum Mariengarten.[1] Another well-known member of the MBC is the multiple German champion in the 110 meter hurdles Vincenz Duncker. The team played in the Mitteldeutscher Ballspiel-Verband as an anonymous local side through most of its history with few exceptions.

Mittweida BC was the breeding from of some of the very first Spanish football stars, such as Antonio Alonso and Adolfo Uribe from Vigo, Juan Arzuaga from Bilbao, and Virgilio Da Costa and Udo Steinberg from Barcelona.[2]

BC took part in the 1909–10 playoffs and were put out 6–0 by VfB Leipzig in a semi-final contest. Their next league playoff appearance was in the 1915–16 season, when they were eliminated 7–0 by Eintracht Leipzig.[3]

In the 1944–45 season, they were united with Germania Mittweida as the wartime side (Kriegspielgemeinschaft) KSG Mittweida. "BC" was lost after World War II, while Germania re-emerged as SG Mittweida and appeared in the first division Landesliga Sachsen in 1948–49 before slipping to lower level play.

References

  1. Hardy Grüne (2003). Hundert Jahre Deutsche Meisterschaft [Hundred years of German championship] (in German). Verlag Die Werkstatt. p. 42/44. ISBN 3895334103.
  2. "Mittweida (Alemania), capital del fútbol español" [Mittweida (Germany), capital of Spanish football] (in Spanish). CIHEFE. 17 October 2017. Retrieved 3 November 2022.
  3. Hardy, Grüne (2001). Vereinslexikon. Kassel: AGON Sportverlag [Encyclopedia of German league football] (in German). AGON Sportverlag. ISBN 3-89784-147-9.
  • Grüne, Hardy (2001). Vereinslexikon. Kassel: AGON Sportverlag ISBN 3-89784-147-9


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