AntajaSW

joined 1 year ago
 

This is the fourth and final part of a post I made looking at every club that was relegated from the Austrian Bundesliga once and never returned, part of a larger series on clubs who only had one stint in their country's top flight. Parts one, two, and three are here if you missed them.

Every Team that was Relegated from the Austrian Bundesliga Once and Never Came Back: Where Are They Now? (Part 4)

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Kapfenberger SV

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  • Full Name: Kapfenberger Sportvereiningung
  • Founded: 1919
  • Time in the Ö. Bundesliga: 2008-2012 (Four seasons)
  • Current Status: 2. Liga (2nd tier)

Keeping with the trend of Austrian clubs founded in 1919 and slightly changing their name post World War II, Kapfenberg were originally founded as Kapfenberger Sports Club, and by 1923 had found themselves in the top division of the state of Styria. Kapfenberg were decently competitive, winning their first state title in 1942 and again in 1943, though in the latter they failed to win promotion to the Gauliga. KSV's first entry into national level football came in 1950 with their promotion to the Staatsliga B, needing only one season to win promotion to Staatsliga A. The Styrians would enjoy several stints in the old top flight between the 50s and 60s, the longest of which lasted from 1954-1959. That period gave birth to the phrase "SimmeringKapfenberg, das nenn i Brutalität" ("Simmeringer – Kapfenberg, that's called brutality") due to an incident in a game between the two clubs in 1958 where KSV striker Helmut Hauberger collided with Simmering keeper Bruno Engelmaier, ending the former's professional career. The Falken had the chance to win promotion for the Bundesliga's inaugural season, but lost the promotion playoffs in the first round to SV Heid Stockerau. Most of the club's time over the next decade was spent in the second tier (with a brief foray in the third tier in 76/77), but following relegation from the 2. Division in 1985 the club spent most of next two decades in the Regionalliga Mitte and even the 4th tier Styrian League. The club would finally return to the second tier in 2002 after a 14 year absence. In their first three seasons back, KSV made notable progress, finishing 6th in 02/03, 3rd in 03/04, and 2nd in 04/05 just six points off from SV Ried. After a few seasons of success, Kapfenberg began to struggle, finishing 8th in 05/06 and 11th in 06/07 - a result that should have relegated them were it not for the revocation of Grazer AK and Admira Wacker Mödling's professional licenses that season. Seizing this opportunity, KSV made the most of the 2007-08 season, virtually clinching promotion to the Bundesliga with three games to go following a 4-0 win over the Red Bull Salzburg's second team, ultimately finishing with an 11 point gap over second.

An overhaul to the playing squad was in order, with the club bringing in 17 new players, but the return of top flight football to the Franz Fekete Stadion proved to be a formidable challenge for Kapfenberg as they lost their opening game of the 2008-09 season 1-0 to LASK. Die Falken did manage to hold Austria Vienna to a 2-2 draw, later that month drawing Red Bull Salzburg 1-1. However, three successive defeats saw the Styrians fall to the bottom of the table by matchday seven. A 3-2 win over SCR Altach rescued KSV from the drop zone, and even though Kapfenberg's results were middling for the rest of the fall season, including 6-0 and 7-3 drubbings from Austria Kärnten and Salzburg respectively, they managed to keep themselves from 10th the entire time. They even managed to pull off an upset over the energy drink club, winning 5-2 at the Red Bull Arena in November. By the start of the spring season, KSV were in 8th and would pretty much stay there for most of the rest of the season. Heavy defeats would still follow, including a 6-0 loss to Rapid Vienna in March and a 5-1 loss to Altach (who ended up getting relegated this season) in May, but the club were much more consistent, earning as many wins in their last 14 games than in their first 22. KSV finished 08/09 with a record of ten wins, six draws, and 20 losses, enough for 8th. While the 2009-10 campaign went slightly worse for KSV, finishing in 9th on 33 points as opposed to the 36 from the previous season, this time around there weren't any matches where the club was steamrolled. On the contrary, it was KSV who were on the giving end of a thrashing, embarrassing LASK 7-2. Despite the lowly position, the club were comfortably clear of relegation, finishing 18 points ahead of relegated Kärnten.

For the first time in the 2010-11 season, Kapfenberg managed to avoid starting a Bundesliga campaign with a loss, drawing their opener against RB Salzburg 0-0. With two draws and two wins from their first five games, had to date their best start to a Bundesliga campaign, seeing them sitting at 6th. After a 1-0 loss to SV Ried, however, KSV dropped down to 8th, where they stayed for the rest of the season, finishing with 38 points. Three matches into the 2011-12 season saw Die Falken briefly climb up to 3rd in the table, but a 5-0 loss to Austria Vienna quickly dashed any chance of a title charge (however slim that was to begin with). That loss to Vienna was the start of a five game losing streak, sending the Styrians all the way down to 10th. A narrow 1-0 win over Mattersburg took them up to 9th, but they immediately dropped back down to 10th as that win would be the last Kapfenberg would earn for the rest of the Fall season. Over the past couple of seasons, Kapfenberg seemed to have become the footballing manifestation of inertia, rarely ever budging from a position once they've settled there for a time. With the club heading into the spring season bottom of the table, the club were sure to prevent this campaign to continue the trend. A 1-0 win over Austria Vienna at the start of the second half seemed to provide some hope in that quest, but victories once again were hard to come by. It took four matchdays to secure another three points (1-0 over Wiener Neustadt) and another seven to do so again (1-0 over Austria Vienna). This entire time KSV didn't budge from the foot of the table, and with five games left and nine points to make up, it was looking ever the more unlikely that the Styrians could change their fortunes. After losing 2-1 to Sturm Graz, KSV managed a draw against SV Ried, but thanks to Wiener Neustadt also drawing their game, Kapfenberg had practically no chance of avoiding relegation due to their vastly inferior goal difference. Their demotion to the 1. Liga was officially confirmed on matchday 34 with a 2-0 loss away to Mattersburg.

Kapfenberg nearly made it two for two upon their return to the second tier, finding themselves in a relegation scrap for much of the season. A strong second half (including a 7-1 trouncing of SKN St. Pölten) saw them finish the season in 5th, a position they matched in the 13/14 season. For most of its time in the second tier, KSV mostly managed mid- to upper table finishes, with the best performances up to this point coming in the 14/15 and 18/19 campaigns where they finished 4th. That's not to say that all was going well for Die Falken during this time. After the conclusion of the 2017-18 season (where Kapfenberg finished 8th), the club were initially denied a license by the Bundesliga's Senate 5 to play in the 2. Liga due to the club's poor finances, which would have seen them relegating to the Regionalliga. Kapfenberg lodged an appeal to the Bundesliga's protest committee which turned out to be successful, allowing the club to remain in the division. The 2019-20 season also proved to be a difficult one for the Styrians. After having come off their joint-best season back in the second tier, KSV had a torrid 19/20 campaign, earning just two points from their first nine games. They managed to score some victories prior to the winter break, but by that point the damage had already been done and the club were stuck in 16th. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, league play was paused in March and didn't resume until June, where KSV proceeded to win one and lose ten of their final 11 games. This should have seen the club relegated, but because the Regionalliga decided to cancel the season midway, no teams were relegated from the 2. Liga that season. The club has since had a modest rebound, mainly lingering around mid- to lower table, though it is highly uncertain how close the club are to making a top flight return in the near future.

Wiener Neustadt

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  • Full Name: 1. Wiener Neustädter Sportclub
  • Founded: 2008
  • Time in the Ö. Bundesliga: 2009-2015 (Six seasons)
    • as SC Wiener Neustadt
  • Current Status: 1-NÖN Landesliga (4th Tier)

In 1908, 1. Wiener Neustädter SC was founded by students from Vienna, with fellow clubs SC Edelweiß and FC Graphia later merging witht he club. Wiener Neustadt became eight time Lower Austrian champions between 1923 and 1950, with that last championship granting the club promotion to the Staatsliga A after winning the promotion playoffs over Styrian Champions Austria Graz and Burgenland champions ASV Siegendorf. The club only lasted a season, and it took eight years for WN to return to the top flight. This time their stay in the division lasted three seasons, during which they participated in the 1961 Mitropa Cup, where they finished last behind fellow Austrians LASK, Czechoslovak side SONP Kladno (now SK Kladno), and Italian side Udinese. In their third stint in the Staatsliga, Wiener Neustadt qualified for the 1965-66 European Cup Winner's Cup after finishing runners-up in the Austrian Cup to league champions LASK. The club's European adventures were short lived, going out in the first round of the competition after losing to Romanian side Știința Cluj (now FC Universitatea Cluj). Following a third relegation from the top flight in 1967, WN would never return, spending the next two decades wading between the second and third tiers before experiencing a steep decline by the turn of the millennium and ultimately ending up in the lower state leagues.

In the meantime, a club by the name of SC Schwanenstadt had been making a rapid ascent up the divisions, winning promotion to the 1. Liga in 2005. By 2008, however, the club was suffering heavily from financial difficulties, and in January of that year they announced that they would be moving form Upper Austria to Lower Austria, changing their name to FC Magna Wiener Neustadt. Magna, a Canadian-Austrian automotives supplier, was the clubs sponsor, and in 2008 the company's founder Frank Stronach was elected club president. FC Magna took over Schwanenstadt's league license, allowing them to play in the 2008-09 1. Liga. At the end of 2008, it was decided that FC Magna would take over 1. Wiener Neustädter SC (who at the time were playing in the 5th-tier 2. Landesliga) after the 08/09 season. FC Magna was renamed to SC Wiener Neustadt, and during the 08/09 season the club experienced tremendous success. In the Austrian Cup, the club reached the semi-finals, defeating top flight side Kapfenberg before falling to eventual winners Austria Vienna. In the league, after a hard fought battle against Admira and Wacker Innsbruck, Wiener Neustadt managed to secure promotion to the Bundesliga with a game in hand following a 4-1 win over SNK St. Pölten.

The 2009-10 season opened with Wiener Neustadt with a 3-1 come from behind win against Austria Kärnten, followed by a loss to Sturm Graz and a win over SV Ried. A poor run of form following that victory that saw WN earn just one win from their next ten games brought the club down to 8th in the table. After a 4-3 thriller over Austria Vienna, Wiener Neustadt's results became much more consistent, and by the winter break the Lower Austrians had risen up to 6th. Despite losing away to Mattersburg upon the resumption of league play, Wiener Neustadt went on their best run of form in the season, going the next six games unbeaten including draws against Rapid Vienna, RB Salzburg, and Sturm Graz, climbing up to 5th. The club stumbled a bit come the end of the season losing against the traditionally big clubs, but results against the rest of the league saw WN hold their position on 47 points. Greater success was found in the cup. After their semi-final finish in 08/09, Wiener Neustadt took it one stage further, reaching the final where they were deadlocked against Sturm Graz until the 81st minute when Slovenian striker Klemen Lavrič gave Graz the victory. Wiener Neustadt improved their points haul to 50 in the 10/11 season, but this time around that was only enough for a 7th place finish. Behind the scenes there were a lot of shakeups. In September, Magna announced that it would end its sponsorship of the club at the end of the 2010-11 season, and while Stronach initially stated that he would continue supporting the club as a private sponsor, but in February 2011 he announced that he would be stepping away from the club. With the loss of Magna, many had tipped Wiener Neustadt as favorites for relegation in the 11/12 season, and while the club certainly did struggle (failing to win any of their last 13 games for instance), the club never entered the relegation zone thanks to the poor form of Kapfenberg, finishing the season 9th and ten points clear of the drop.

The 2012-13 and 2013-14 campaigns were a similar story - strings of poor results bad enough to keep the club low in the table, but so bad as to result in relegation. WN managed to guarantee safety on the final day of the 12/13 season, beating Sturm Graz away 3-0 to finish one point above the relegation zone. 13/14 was more comfortable on paper finishing ten points clear of the drop, but their 8th place finish was merely due to Admira's points deduction due to violating license regulations. In the 2014-15 season, however, Wiener Neustadt's luck began to run out. 3-1 and 5-0 losses to Ried and Salzburg respectively saw the Lower Austrians enter the relegation zone for the first time, and after five games WN only had a single point to their name from a 2-2 draw with Austria Vienna. Back-to-back victories including a 5-4 thriller against Admira brought the club up to 8th. Those wins turned out to be a false dawn, though, and the club proceeded to fail to win any of their next eight games. Wiener Neustadt closed out the fall season with a 6-0 loss to Ried, but upon the resumption of league play in February the club once again dragged itself up to 9th thanks to wins over Austria Vienna and SV Grödig and a draw against relegation rivals Admira. But like the last time, Wiener Neustadt could not maintain their form, losing their next five games (with a 6-0 loss to RB Salzburg sending them back down to 10th) and failing to win and of their next nine. After beating Wolfsberg and drawing Rapid Vienna, Wiener Neustadt went into the final matchday needing a win over SRC Altach and for Admira to lose against Grödig to stay up. Ultimately, however, Admira's result wouldn't matter as WN lost at home to Altach 1-0, sending them down to the 1. Liga.

Wiener Neustadt struggled in their first couple of seasons back in the second tier. The club finished 7th in the 2015-16 season, dropping down to 8th in the 16/17 season. The 2017-18 season, however, presented WN with an opportunity. That season, the ÖFB decided to change the Bundesliga's format, expanding the league from 10 to 12 teams and awarding the second division two promotion spots as opposed to one, with a promotion/relegation playoff offered for the team that finishes third. As it happened, Wiener Neustadt finished third despite leading the league table for much of the early part of the season, sending them to a playoff against 10th-placed Bundesliga side St. Pölten. In the ensuing playoff, WN lost the first leg at home 2-0, and a 1-1 draw in the reverse fixture saw the tie end 3-1, thus keeping WN in the second tier. Wieneer Neustadt however filed a protest against the result, accusing St. Pölten of fielding an ineligible player in the second leg. The player in question was David Atanga, who had previously played for RB Salzburg and FC Liefering (Salzburg's reserve side). Under FIFA regulations, a player can be registered with three clubs in a season, but can only play for two. However, under Austrian regulations, youth players (like David) were allowed to play for three clubs so long as one of them was for a reserve side, a rule that Wiener Neustadt themselves made use of in the 17/18 season as St. Pölten pointed out. Ultimately, the challenge was unsuccessful. After finishing 6th in the 2018-19 season, Wiener Neustadt initially had their application for their league license approved, but a subsequent investigation into the licensing process by the Bundesliga's Senate 5 revealed that Wiener Neustadt made several misrepresentations in their application, resulting in the club's license being retroactively revoked and the club being demoted to the Regionalliga. In the summer of 2019 the club changed its name to 1. Wiener Neustädter SC as an homage to the traditional club, and continued playing in the Regionalliga Ost until 2023 when they were relegated to the Landesliga.

SV Grödig

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  • Full Name: Sportverein Grödig
  • Founded: 1948
  • Time in the Ö. Bundesliga: 2013-2016 (Three seasons)
  • Current Status: Salzburger Liga (4th Tier)

The Danube Swabians are groups of ethnic German-speaking peoples who for most of their history resided in central and eastern Europe, including in what was once northern Yugoslavia. During the end of World War II and in the post-war period, around 32,000 ethnic Germans either fled or were expelled from Yugoslavia with many of the ones that remained either being executed or confined to labor camps as they were blamed by the Yugoslav government for the actions of the Nazis while under occupation. Over 500 of them would settle in Schwabenlager Grödig, a former Russian WWI POW camp just outside the Austrian town of Grödig. It was here in 1948 that saw the founding of Union Sportklub Grödig, who went by that name until 1955. For most of its early existence, Grödig were relegated to playing in the lower levels of the Salzburg league system, with a big reason for that (at least in the early seasons) being that the Danube Swabians who made up the club's roster were considered foreigners, and thus did not comply with ÖFB regulations regarding foreign players. From here, Grödig embarked in a steady rise through the ranks, reaching the then 3rd tier Salzburger Landesliga in 1967 and qualifying for the Alpenliga in 1977. Not long after, though, Grödig experienced a dramatic decline, finding themselves by the mid 1980s as low as the 2. Klasse Nord - the 7th tier of Austrian football. The club wouldn't return to the Regionalliga again until 2006, but after just two seasons they managed promotion to the 1. Liga - the first time the club had ever reached the second tier. The Blau-Weißen's stay in the division wasn't long, lasting just a season, but neither was their absence, returning in 2010 thanks in large part to top-flight side Austria Kärnten having their Bundesliga license revoked. Grödig managed to establish themselves in the 1. Liga for a couple of seasons, but after the appointment of former Austrian international Adi Hütter as head coach in 2012, the club saw themselves become candidates for promotion. Despite trailing Austria Lustenau for most of season, a run of poor form Lustenau, combined with an excellent run from Grödig who had just one defeat in their last 16 games saw the Salzburg side steal top spot in the spring and clinch promotion to the Bundesliga with four games to spare.

Grödig were the fairytale story of the 2013-14 Bundesliga season. The club opened their first ever top flight campaign with a 0-0 draw vs SV Ried, but after defeating Sturm Graz 2-0 away and thrashing Admira 7-1 at home, Grödig had already risen to 2nd in the table. Of course, given that this came during the time of Red Bull Salzburg's dominance over the division, any chance of sneaking into first was a pipe dream, demonstrated by their 4-1 loss to Salzburg in game four. Grödig continued bouncing between 2nd and 3rd for a time, though a slight hiccup in form saw them drop to 5th in November. The club were certainly no strangers to high scoring fixtures, with over half of the games involving them featuring four goals or more. That's not to say that Grödig were on the winning end of most of those affairs, however, as the club would suffer heavy defeats including 6-0 losses to Salzburg and Sturm Graz in the spring season. The loss to Sturm Graz did have a notable impact, however, as Grödig (who had managed to hold on to 2nd place since matchday 19) had dropped to 4th on matchday 29. Grödig thus had to battle against Austria Vienna for a chance to secure a European spot. Subsequent losses to Admira and Salzburg certainly didn't help, but those were the last times the club would suffer defeat this season. With three wins from their next four, including a crucial 2-1 win over Austria Vienna, Grödig went into the final matchday needing to better Vienna's result to finish 3rd. They did just that, drawing away to Wacker Innsbruck 3-3 while Austria Vienna lost 1-2 at home to Sturm Graz. Therefore, Grödig finished 3rd and qualified for the Europa League second qualifying round. Impressive for a club hailing from a town of fewer than 7,000 people at the time.

Adi Hütter departed the club at the end of the season to take the Salzburg job, with fellow former Austrian international Michael Baur taking over. Under Baur, Grödig made it to the Europa league third qualifying round after defeating Serbian side FK Čukarički 5-2 on aggregate, but a 2-2 agg. draw with Moldovan outfit Zimbru Chișinău saw the Austrians fail to advance further due to away goals. Back in the league, Grödig were unable to replicate the excellent form they demonstrated in the 13/14 campaign. They started decently enough, drawing Austria Vienna and beating Sturm Graz to climb up to 3rd, but a 8-0 demolition at the hands of RB more or less set the tone for the season. Only once were the club able to manage two victories in a row, and with the poor runs the club would go on, including a six game losing streak between February and March ultimately saw them finish 8th. While the league was a disappointment, the 2014-15 season wasn't all doom and gloom. After being eliminated in the first round of the Austrian Cup in 13/14, Grödig were markedly improved, making it all the way to the semi-finals in 14/15, only stopped by the unstoppable force that is RB Salzburg. The 2015-16 was already off to a bad start when they were once again eliminated in the first round of the Austrian Cup, but a win and a draw from their first league games made it look as if they had put it past them. This turned out no to be the case, however, as a win and a draw from their next seven games saw Grödig slide down to 8th. Things went from bad to worse when Grödig lost the Brazilian forward Lucas Venuto to Austria Vienna in the winter transfer window, causing their results to fall off a cliff. Having finished the fall campaign with two straight defeats, Grödig extended their winless run to 11, with their only points coming from draws against Ried and Admira, dragging them to 10th. The final two months of the campaign did see Grödig pull of some impressive results, including 2-0 wins over Rapid and Austria Vienna, but it simply wasn't enough. With a 2-1 loss to Salzburg on the penultimate matchday, Grödig's relegation from the Bundesliga was confirmed.

Originally, Grödig were set to compete in the 1. Liga following relegation, but due to financial constraints, the club voluntarily withdrew their application for a Erste Liga license, opting instead to be demoted to the Regionalliga West for the 2016-17 season. In the club's first two seasons back in the third tier, they went on remarkably good starts, topping the division for most of the campaigns. However, both times they were unable to maintain that good form, ultimately losing the Regionalliga titles to USK Anif on both occasions. The 2018-19 season saw the club take a massive step backwards, dropping all the way down to 10th. Grödig were never able to mount another serious title charge, failing to qualify for the 2019-20 Eliteliga after finishing 7th in the Regionalliga Salzburg, and were 5th in the division in the 2020-21 season before the competition was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The 2021-22 season once again saw Grödig fail to qualify for the Eliteliga, and with the Regionalliga West coming back for the 2023-24 season, Grödig needed to finish 7th in the Regionalliga Salzburg's first phase to have a chance of remaining in the third tier. Unfortunately, the club finished 11th, and though they managed to avoid relegation to the 1. Landesliga after finishing comfortably ahead of UFC Hallein, their participation in the relegation playoffs meant that for the 2023-24 season the club had to drop down to the Salzburger Liga.

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Summary

League Tier Club No. of Clubs
2. Liga 2nd SW Bregenz, Kapfenberger SV 2
Regionalliga 3rd SC Neusiedl am See, Favoritner AC, Kremser SC 3
Landesliga 4th 1. Simmeringer SC, SV Spittal/Drau, Salzburger AK 1914, Wiener Neustadt, SV Grödig 5
Extinct - FC Union Wels, SV St. Veit/Glan, VSE St. Pölten, Tirol Innsbruck 4

 

This is part three of a post I made looking at every club that was relegated from the Austrian Bundesliga once and never returned, part of a larger series on clubs who only had one stint in their country's top flight. Parts one and two are here in case you missed them.

Every Team that was Relegated from the Austrian Bundesliga Once and Never Came Back: Where Are They Now? (Part 3)

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Kremser SC

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  • Full Name: Kremser Sportclub
  • Founded: 1919
  • Time in the Ö. Bundesliga: 1989-1992 (Three seasons)
  • Current Status: Regionalliga Ost (3rd Tier)

A quick 23 minute drive up the S33 brings us to the city of Krems an der Donau where we find the next entrant on this list: Kremser Sportclub. Founded in August 1919 as 1. Krems SC, the club joined the Lower Austrian Football Association a couple of months later, and after around a decade of play the club won its first regional title in 1930. In fact, the club went a step further that year and won the Austrian amateur championship, defeating Grazer AK and FA Turnerbund Lustenau en route. Kremser would win three more Landesliga titles between 1931 and 1954, and in 1956 the club won promotion to the Staatsliga A, where they managed to stay for four seasons. Following the dissolution of the Staatsliga B, Kremser played in the Regionalliga Ost for six seasons before dropping back to the Landesliga Niederösterreich in 1966. Kremser returned to the Regionalliga in 1974 (the same year the Bundesliga was formed) and won promotion again to the 2. Division in 1976, though they only lasted a season. The club bounced between the second tier and the regional leagues for the next few years, but following their promotion back to the 2. Division in 1983, the club would manage to build on their success. By two points the club missed out on promotion to the Bundesliga in 1985, and though in the following two seasons the club had to play in the relegation playoffs, they finished top of the table both times. The 1987-88 season saw Kremser qualify for the middle playoff for the first time, where they finished 6th, but even better was to come in the Austrian Cup. There Kremser managed to win the competition, defeating the likes of Wiener SC and VfB Mödling before earning the title by beating FC Swarovski Tirol 3-3 on away goals. This qualified Kremser for both the Austrian Supercup and the European Cup Winners' Cup, though they didn't have much success in either competition, losing the former to Rapid Vienna on penalties and getting eliminated in the first round of the latter to East German outfit Carl Zeiss Jena 5-1 on aggregate (though they did win the second leg). The 88/89 season was by no means a disaster, however. In the first stage of the league season, Kremser topped the 2. Division on goal difference, and a subsequent 4th place finish in the middle playoff secured their place in the Bundesliga.

Kremser opened the 1989-90 season with a 3-1 win over First Vienna, and while the club did had to contend with Austria Vienna and Salzburg (losing both those fixtures) in the first month, a 2-0 win over Wiener SC had them in midtable early on. A poor August that saw them pick up just two points from five games (1-1 draws against Sturm Graz and St. Pölten) saw them drop into the bottom four. Kremser managed to stop the slide with back-to-back wins over Grazer, but from that point on the name of the game for the Lower Austrians was inconsistency. The games against Grazer was the only time the club won two games in a row, and while the club did earn some emphatic victories such as 5-0 wins over Wiener SC and Admira/Wacker (as well as a comeback 3-3 draw with Rapid Vienna), they failed to capitalize on other games, including a 3-2 loss to Austria Vienna in October where they held the lead twice. They rounded out the Fall season with a 3-0 win over Swarovski Tirol, but thanks to St. Pölten winning their final game against Vorwärts Steyr, Kremser finished 9th and thus had to go to the middle playoff to try and stay in the Bundesliga. They managed to do just that, finishing 3rd on 15 points (5-5-4) despite failing to win any of their last five games. In the summer of 1990, Kremser managed to acquire the services of Mario Kempes, who remarkably makes a second appearance on this list. Having departed the previous entrants VSE St. Pölten that same year, the Argentine continued his foray in the region, but while still a big name, it became very clear that Kempes was nowhere near the peak of his powers. Kempes only managed to net five goals (including once against his former club) in a campaign that saw the Lower Austrians win just three times during the Fall season. Unsurprisingly the club fell into the middle playoff again, where once again they were more comfortable, finishing second.

Inconsistency would once again be the name of the game for the 91/92 campaign. After drawing First Vienna and defeating Vorwärts Steyr to start, Kremser could only manage two points from their next seven games (a 3-1 win over DSV Alpine), sending them from 3rd all the way down to 11th. The club managed to stop the slide somewhat with a 1-0 upset away to Rapid Vienna, and while the best Kremser could do in the next four games was manage two 0-0 draws, the losses at least were kept close. Kremser went unbeaten in October with a win against Sturm Graz and two draws Austria Vienna and DSV, and another draw against St. Pölten in November brought the Lower Austrians to 8th, giving them hope of avoiding the middle playoffs again. This did not come to pass, though, and Kremser proceeded to lose their final four games, including a 6-0 home loss to FC Stahl Linz and a 5-2 away loss to Austria Salzburg. Kremser finished the Fall season in 10th, and thus once again had to fight for their survival. The Spring season started slow with a loss and draw to First Vienna and Mödling respectively, though this was followed up by a 5-0 win over Grazer. By the halfway point of the season Kremser were 3rd on seven points, but after they failed to win any of their next three games (including a 5-1 loss at home to First Vienna), the club was struggling to maintain their hold. A 1-0 win over Grazer was subsequently followed by a narrow 4-3 loss to LASK, meaning that Kremser essentially had to win their last two games to stay up. Spoiler alert: they did not. They lost away to Wiener SC 3-1 and in the final game of the season they drew DSV 2-2. With that, the club finished 7th on 12 points and were relegated to the 2. Division.

Relegation from the Bundesliga hit Kremser incredibly hard. The club finished 12th in the 1992-93 2. Division Fall season, which saw them stay in the division following the restructuring of of the top two divisions. The following season was a disaster, however, as the club finished bottom with just two wins to their name, sending them down to the Regionalliga Ost, followed by a further relegation back to the Landesliga Niederösterreich. It took six seasons for Kremser to return to the third tier, where they would play for another six seasons before returning to the Landesliga in 2007. This relegation in particular marked arguably the lowest period in the club's history as both Kremser's coach and most of the club's players departed. With the club now clearly struggling, after two seasons Kremser were relegated to the 2. Landesliga West - Austria's 5th tier. They returned to the 1. NÖ in 2014 after going the entire 2013-14 campaign unbeaten, winning 23 and drawing 3 while scoring 88 goals and conceding just 15. Kremser barely missed out on back-to-back promotions after finishing one point behind ASK Ebreichsdorf in the 14/15 season, and it would take another seven attempts before the club would finally find its way back to the Regionalliga. In the 2021-22 season, they finished runners-up, which sent them to a promotion playoff against Landesliga Burgenland and Wiener Stadtliga runners-up SC/ESV Parndorf and SV Donau Wien respectively. Kremser dispatched Parndorf 7-1 and drew Donau 1-1, earning them promotion to the Regionalliga Ost.

Tirol Innsbruck

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  • Full Name: Fußballclub Tirol Innsbruck
  • Founded: 1993
  • Time in the Ö. Bundesliga: 1993-2002 (Nine seasons)
  • Current Status: Extinct

One of the most successful clubs in Austrian football throughout the late 1960s and 70s was FC Wacker Innsbruck. Founded in 1919 and a founding member of the Tyrolean Football Association, most of the club's pre-WWII history was confined in the Tiroler A-Klasse, and they wouldn't become a part of the Austrian top flight until 1964. From there began the golden age for Wacker. The club won its first major honor in 1970 in the form of the Austrian Cup, qualifying them for their first foray into European competitions in the form of the 1970-71 European Cup Winner's Cup. There they beat Albanian side Partizani before falling to eventual runners-up Real Madrid in the second round. That same season, however, the club won its first league title ahead of Austria Salzburg by a single point, qualifying them for their first European Cup. In July 1971, Wacker merged with WSG Wattens (today WSG Tirol) to form SSW Innsbruck. In the rest of the decade, the club went on to win another four Austrian league titles (including the inaugural Bundesliga title), four more Austrian Cups, and even back-to-back Mitropa Cups in 1975 and 1976, becoming a mainstay in continental tournaments, qualifying for a total of three UEFA Cup Winners' Cups, two UEFA Cups, and five European Cups in that time span. Their European campaigns typically didn't last long, however, often going out in the first round. The furthest SSW made it in any continental campaign was the 1977-78 European Cup, defeating FC Basel of Switzerland and Celtic FC of Scotland before falling to German side Borussia Mönchengladbach in the quarter-finals on away goals. However, not all was well with the club behind the scenes.

After several key players left the club in 1978, Innsbruck fell into a steep decline, resulting in their relegation from the Bundesliga in 1979. They returned in 1981, but couldn't recapture the success of the 70s, failing to win another Bundesliga title and losing consecutive cup finals in 1982 and 1983. They still managed to qualify for European competitions between 1983-1986, but each time they were met with early exits. After mounting financial pressure, it was decided in 1986 that Wacker and WSG would split, dissolving SSW Innsbruck. Around the same time, Gernot Langes-Swarovski, managing director of crystal manufacturer Swarovski founded FC Swarovski Tirol, which acquired SSW's Bundesliga License as well as most of Innsbruck's players. Conversely, Wacker Innsbruck were forced all the way down to the 2. Klasse Mitte - the 8th tier of Austrian Football at the time. Swarovski Tirol played in the Bundesliga for six seasons, winning the Bundesliga twice in 1989 and 1990 and the Austrian Cup in 1989, and qualifying for two UEFA Cups, two European Cups, and a European Cup Winners' Cup. Their debut European campaign - the 1986-87 UEFA Cup - was their best, making it all the way to the semi-finals before losing to eventual winners IFK Göteborg of Sweden. Ultimately, however, continental success wouldn't materialize, and Swarovski Tirol dissolved in 1992 with their Bundesliga license returning to Wacker Innsbruck (at the time in the 4th Tier Tiroler Liga). Wacker played in the 1992-93 Bundesliga season where they finished 5th, and in that same season they won the Austrian Cup 3-1 over Rapid Vienna, though they went out in the first round of the UEFA Cup to Italian side AS Roma. Along with the Bundesliga, Wacker were set to compete in the 1993-94 Cup Winners' Cup and the Intertoto Cup, but due to political pressure from the state of Tyrol, the professional section of Wacker Innsbruck was split off, forming FC Innsbruck Tirol, with Wacker once again demoted to the lower leagues.

The 1993 Intertoto Cup would be the first real action for the spinoff club, ultimately finishing third their group ahead of Silkeborg of Denmark and VfL Bochum of Germany, but behind Slovak side Slovan Bratislava and Swiss side FC Zürich. In terms of meaningful European competitions, Innsbruck Tirol's Cup Winners' Cup campaign (which they participated in courtesy of the efforts of Wacker) was a near mimic of their predecessor's first stint in the competition - defeating Hungarian club Ferencváros in the first round before falling in the second round to who else but Real Madrid. Back in the domestic league, given that Innsbruck Tirol maintained much of Wacker Innsbruck's old squad, no surprise they remained very competitive in the division. Much of the early portion of the season saw the Tiroleans locked in a 4-way title race with Austria Salzburg, Austria Vienna, and Admira/Wacker. A couple of hiccups in form however saw Tirol fall away from rest, ultimately finishing 4th. This was still good enough to earn participation in the 1994-95 UEFA Cup, where they once again went out in the second round, once again to a Spanish side, this time being Deportivo la Coruña. That season's Bundesliga campaign saw a dip in form, seeing the club (who by this time were renamed Tirol Innsbruck) finish 5th despite the efforts of Senegalese striker Souleyman Sané who finished as the league's top scorer with 20 goals. 1995 saw the club once again compete in the Intertoto Cup, which at this point had been taken over by UEFA, now acting as a qualifier for the UEFA Cup. In contrast to their 1994 Intertoto campaign that saw Tirol Innsbruck finish bottom of their group with just a single point, the 1995 edition saw the Austrians nearly go all the way. Grouped alongside French side RC Strasbourg, Turkish side Gençerbirliği SK, Israeli outfit Hapoel Petah Tikva, and Maltese club Floriana FC, Tirol Innsbruck finished as one of the best runners-up, sending them through to the knockouts. There they defeated German clubs FC Köln and Bayer Leverkusen in the round of 16 and quarterfinals respectively, but lost to Strasbourg (again) in the semi-finals. Back in the league, the club managed to improve to a 3rd place finish, though over the next few seasons the club began to slide down the table: 4th in 96/97, 6th in 97/98, and 6th again in 98/99. European campaigns haven't gone much better, with the club getting eliminated in the first round of the 96/97 UEFA Cup by FC Metz and getting dumped in the second qualifying round of the 97/98 UEFA Cup by Celtic.

The 1999-2000 Bundesliga campaign would see a massive turnaround for Tirol Innsbruck. The club won its first seven games straight. A 1-0 loss to Austria Salzburg broke the streak, and the excellent form did falter in the second half of the fall season, winning just two of their last nine games prior to the winter break (including a 5-0 loss to SV Ried), but a strong spring season saw the club clinch their first league title with a record of 24 wins, 5 draws, and 7 losses, beating out Sturm Graz after defeating Austria Vienna 2-1 on the final matchday. This triumph would finally see Champion's League football return to Innsbruck for the first time in a decade, albeit they would have to start in the third qualifying round. The club unfortunately failed to reach the group stage, falling to Valencia 4-1 agg. and sending them down to the first round of the UEFA Cup. There they defeated Fiorentina before falling to VfB Stuttgart in the second round. Despite the lacking European success, Tirol Innsbruck would go on to dominate the Austrian league. The Tiroleans won a second consecutive league title in 00/01, this time doing so on the penultimate matchday with a 2-0 win over Sturm Graz. Polish international Radosław Gilewicz finished as the league's top scorer with 21 goals. Europe still proved to be a challenge, though, and in the third qualifying round of the 2001-02 Champion's League season, Tirol Innsbruck once again were eliminated, this time at the hands of Russian side Lokomotiv Moscow. They dropped again into the UEFA Cup, where they defeated Czech side Viktoria Žižkov before succumbing to the revenge of Fiorentina. Once again they were as strong as ever in the domestic league, and under the reigns of future Germany national team head coach Joachim Löw for much of the campaign, Tirol Innsbruck won a third consecutive Bundesliga title - a feat only achieved by Austria Vienna (and technically Wacker Innsbruck) prior and Red Bull Salzburg since - in dominant fashion, clinching the title four games early and finishing 10 points ahead of second place Sturm Graz. In terms of league play, it seemed like the only one who could stop Tirol Innsbruck would be themselves, and as it happened, that's exactly what transpired. See, achieving all of this success required heavy spending, and by 2002, that spending had finally caught up. The club's wage bill had grown to ~€10 million, and €30 million was put into the construction of the 17,000 seater Tivoli-Neu (now Tivoli Stadion Tirol), which saw an average home attendance of just 10,000. In June 2002, the club failed to post a bond of €4.5 million with the league, and with debts of up to €50 million, Tirol Innsbruck had to try to sell of much of its assets (namely their high profile players) to salvage what they can. This proved to be futile, however, and the club had to file for the largest bankruptcy in the history of Austrian football. The club's Bundesliga lice was revoked, but this time it would be revoked for good, bringing period of 21 consecutive seasons of top-flight football in Tyrol to an end.

But what became of Wacker Innsbruck, you may ask? Well, when we last left Wacker, they had been demoted to the Regionalliga Tyrol - the third tier at the time (the Regionalliga West at this time was a playoff division for clubs from the regional leagues of Salzburg, Tyrol, and Vorarlberg). The goal was to try to earn promotion to the 2. Division, but while the club managed to reach the Regionalliga West playoffs in the 1995-96 season, they finished bottom of the eight team group. This wouldn't be a problem, however, as a league restructuring saw the return of a fully-fledged Regionalliga West for the 96/97 season, which Wacker took part in. Given, however, that Wacker was basically a squad full of amateurs, they performed very poorly, finishing bottom of the table with just five points and were relegated to the Tiroler Liga. By this point, Wacker's president Fritz Schwab, Jr. gave up any ambitions of reaching the second division, and after the 97/98 season the club voluntarily relegated all the way down to the 2. Klasse Mitte. With the sporting and financial condition of Wacker at its breaking point, it was decided in 1999 to merge the club with Tirol Innsbruck's amateur division, seeing the club officially dissolve in May of that year. With Tirol Innsbruck's dissolution in 2002, the Tyrolean government collaborated with Tyrolean businesses to form a new local team, this coming in the form of FC Wacker Tirol. The new club formed a syndicate with WSG Wattens, allowing them to begin life in the Regionalliga West and even win promotion to the Erste Liga that season. Wacker Tirol split from the syndicate following promotion, and in the 03/04 season they won promotion to the Bundesliga. the club changed its name to FC Wacker Innsbruck in 2007 as an homage to its predecessor, though it's important to note that legally they are not a continuation of the old Wacker, and thus do not inherit any of its honors. Wacker were relegated from the Bundesliga in 2008 and have since had two more stints in the top flight: 2010-2014 and 2018-2019. Today Wacker Innsbruck play in the fourth-tier Tiroler Liga following a voluntary relegation from the 2. Liga in 2022. Top flight football wouldn't escape Tyrol forever, though, as WSG Tirol are now the state's representative in the Bundesliga, having been playing there since 2019.

SW Bregenz

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  • Full Name: Sportclub Schwarz-Weiß Bregenz
  • Founded: 1919 (re-founded in 2005)
  • Time in the Ö. Bundesliga: 1999-2005 (Six seasons)
  • Current Status: 2. Liga (2nd tier)

The fourth-oldest club from the state of Vorarlberg, Schwarz-Weiß Bregenz were founded in 1919 orignally as FC Bregenz, carrying that name until 1945 when they were force to change it due to the intervention of the French occupying forces following World War II. Bregenz' first dip into top-flight football came in the 1954-55 Staatsliga A season, where they finished bottom with just two wins to their name. The club would enjoy two more stints in the top flight prior to the creation of the Bundesliga, the longest of which lasted between 1966 and 1969 with their highest finish being 6th. The 1970s would see SWB enter into a couple of mergers, the first of which came in 1973, collaborating with FC Rätia Bludenz (who had been promoted to the Nationalliga that year) to form FC Vorarlberg. The new club were immediately relegated and lasted for just another season before disbanding. The second merger came in 1979 when Bregenz (at this point playing in the 2. Division) merged with FC Dorbirn 1913 to form IG Bregenz/Dornbirn. Despite lasting for eight years, however, this new merger was not nearly as successful as the previous one, with the club never reaching the Bundesliga (the closest coming in the 1983-84 season where they missed out on the promotion playoffs on goal difference), and by the end of the collaboration the club were in the 4th tier Landesliga Vorarlberg. Following the end of the syndicate, Bregenz continued on in the Landesliga, earning promotion to the Regionalliga West in 1988. The club played between the third and fourth tiers before finally winning promotion to the 2. Division in 1996. In their first season back in the second division they finished 8th, improving to 5th in the 97/98 season. Then in the 1998-99 season, SWB had an excellent Erste Liga campaign even despite a somewhat shaky start. A 21 match unbeaten streak saw the club move to first in the table by matchday 15, at one point even holding a 14 point lead over the next closest club. Even despite losing on matchday 33, a draw from FCN St. Pölten was enough to see Bregenz clinch the league title and promotion to the Bundesliga with three matches to spare.

The first season in the Bundesliga for SWB was a difficult affair. The state capital side lost their first four games, putting them at the foot of the table. The streak was broken on matchday five with a 1-0 away upset over Austria Salzburg, followed by a 2-1 win at home to LASK. Those results brought them up to 9th, but this would not mean the end for Bregenz' struggles. Between the victory over LASK and the end of the Fall season, Bregenz only managed one more win: 2-0 over Austria Lustenau in October, picking up just four points from the other 14 matches. It took the entirety of march to lift the club from the foot of the table once again, and while the results overall were mixed, Bregenz didn't fall down to 10th again largely due to the utter collapse of Austria Lustenau. The club did go on an impressive four game win streak between April and May with 5-2, 1-0, 4-0, and 5-1 wins over Austria Vienna, Sturm Graz, Lustenau, and Austria Salzburg respectively - results good enough to temporarily get them up to 8th. They ultimately finished 9th on 35 points, 16 ahead of Lustenau. SWB managed to go one better in the 2000-01 season, moving up to 8th, and again in 01/02, finishing 7th and qualifying for the UEFA Intertoto Cup as well as offering a chance to qualify for the 2002-03 UEFA Cup. A UEFA Cup birth would not be in the cards for SWB, though, as after defeating Cypriot side Enosis Neon Paralimni 5-1 agg. in the first round, they were knocked out in the second round by Italian side Torino. The 02/03 league campaign nearly ended in disaster for the Black and White, but 14 points from their last seven games saw the club finish just one point above the relegation zone over SV Ried. The club's fifth season in the Bundesliga would be their best, never finding themselves below 6th in the table at any time. While at tiems struggling for consistency, Bregenz did just enough to finish 5th, qualifying them once again for the UEFA Intertoto Cup.

Bregenz' second and final attempt at a UEFA Cup spot was immediately cut short by a 5-1 agg. loss to Azerbaijani side Khazar Universiteti (today Shamakhi FK) in the first round. This somewhat surprising upset basically set the tone for Bregenz' domestic campaign. Things got off to a torrid start when the club lost their opener 5-1 at home to Rapid Vienna. SWB only earned their first point on matchday four with a 1-1 draw against Wacker Tirol, but not long after the club suffered an embarrassing 9-0 thrashing at home to Austria Vienna - to date the joint-3rd heaviest Bundesliga defeat in history. Bregenz' first win came in September in a 2-1 victory over SV Mattersburg, but victories would become a rarity. The cup didn't fare much better. After needing extra time to fend off FC Kärntern's amateur team, the club were dumped in the second round by third tier side SNK St. Pölten. In the rest of the Fall season, Bregenz did manage to pick up three more wins: 3-2 over Wacker Tirol, 2-1 vs Sturm Graz, and 1-0 over Admira Wacker Mödling. This meant little in the overall picture, however, as with 12 losses already under their belt, Bregenz hadn't left the foot of the table the entire time. That wasn't going to change anytime soon either, as come the Spring portion of the campaign, Bregenz failed to register a single win from 15 games. The club could only manage four measly draws against ASKÖ Pasching, Austria Vienna, and twice against Mattersburg. There wouldn't be any more demolition jobs, but the consistent lack of quality ultimately saw Bregenz' fate sealed on matchday 33 with a 4-1 loss to Rapid Vienna. Bregenz' misfortunes didn't end there, however. Due to the club's increasingly deteriorating finances, the Bundesliga's protest committee revoked Bregenz' license, forbidding them from playing in the top two divisions and forcing them down to the 5th-tier Landesliga. Bregenz challenged the decision in Austria's Permanent Neutral Arbitration Court, but lost. Following the defeat, Bregenz' main sponsor Casinos Austria decided not to extend their contract, and with a failed takeover from Austrian entrepreneur Gerhard Ströhle and debts mounting to upwards of €6.3 million, Bregenz ultimately filed for bankruptcy in June 2005, stating that they had not received expected contributions from the Bundesliga. The proceedings lasted until December 2007, which saw the club dissolve.

In the meantime, however, efforts were made to preserve the club's legacy. In late June 2005, Sportclub Bregenz was founded, taking over the old SWB's amateur and youth teams. Normally a new club would have to start out at the bottom of the Austrian pyramid, but an exception was made by the Vorarlberg Football Association and the club were allowed to begin play in the Landesliga. Starting with a squad mostly made up of 17 and 18 year olds, Bregenz impressed in their first two seasons, winning back-to-back promotions to reach the Regionalliga West in 2007. For the 2009-10 season, Bregenz changed their team colors to black and white from the original blue and white they had donned since the club's creation, and in 2013 the club changed its name to Schwarz-Weiß Bregenz, taking both the name and the badge of its predecessor. The timing of this change could have been better, though, as SWB were relegated from the Regionalliga in the 13/14 season. They returned to the third tier in 2015, only to be immediately relegated that season. It took another three seasons to get the Black and White back to the Regionalliga, but from that point on the club's trajectory was only upwards. With the Regionalliga West having become further regionalized starting in the 2019-20 season, the goal for Bregenz was to find a way to qualify for the Regionalliga West playoffs, which they did in the 2022-23 season after topping the Eliteliga Vorarlberg. After engaging in a tight three-way promotion race with SK Bischofshofen and VfB Hohenems, Bregenz managed to pull ahead and manage to clinch the division title, earning promotion to the 2. Liga for the 2023-24 season.

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This concludes part three. The fourth and final part will be out shortly.