Sylow-Tournament (Danish: Sylow-Turneringen) was a knockout association football competition contested annually between 1918 and 1926, organised by the Danish FA (DBU), which determined the championship of the representative teams, referred to as Sylow-teams, of the six Danish regional football associations.[1] The competition was held between the selected teams (Danish: unionshold) of Copenhagen FA, Funen FA, Jutland FA, Lolland-Falster FA and Zealand FA for the first three seasons (1918–1920), before being joined by the Bornholm FA team in 1921 and eventually an additional Copenhagen FA team exclusively composed of players from the KBUs A-række competing in 1926.[1][2] The 1926 season became the last edition of the Sylow Tournament, which was abolished and replaced by a year-long league format for clubs, known as Danmarksmesterskabsturneringen i Fodbold, the following season.[1] The competition was created in 1918 after a proposal from the chairman of the Danish FA, Louis Østrup, modelled after the Landsfodboldturneringen, and named after a previous chairman of the national organisation, Ludvig Sylow.[1][3]
Organising body | Danish FA (DBU) |
---|---|
Founded | 1918 |
Abolished | 1926 |
Region | Bornholm, Copenhagen, Funen, Jutland, Lolland-Falster and Zealand |
Number of teams | 5 (1918–1920) 6 (1921–1925) 7 (1926) |
Last champions | Copenhagen FA (1926) |
Most successful club(s) | Copenhagen FA (5 titles) |
The matches in the tournament played a major role in the development of association football outside the Danish capital city.[4][5] The Denmark national team had been playing official matches since 1908, but the roster consisted solely of players from clubs in Copenhagen, who were leading the development of Danish association football until World War II, and a player from a provincial club only first made it on the roster in 1923.[4] The most successful association in the history of the tournament's 9 editions was Sylow-team of the Copenhagen FA, who by default only participated in the final match, was won the only trophy, distributed during the tournament's history, for permanent ownership.[1][6] The most capped players from the Copenhagen FA were the forwards Viggo Jørgensen (B 1903) and Einard Larsen (KFUMs BK), while the Copenhagen FA top goalscorer in the entire tournament were the forwards Pauli Jørgensen (BK Frem) and Frithjof Steen (B 1903).[1]
History
editThe creation of the tournament was proposed at an executive Committee meeting on 26 July 1918 by the newly appointed chairman of the Danish FA, Louis Østrup (1918–1935), and named in honour of the departing chairman of the national organisation, Ludvig Sylow (1911–1918).[7][8][3] The tournament would be organised and financed by the Danish FA, would be modelled after the club's Landsfodboldturneringen, that had been created five years earlier, and was to be played by the representative teams (Danish: unionshold; referred to as Sylow-teams) of all 6 regional football associations.[1][7][5] On 27 August 1918, the board finally approved of the tournament, which happened after the acceptance of the previous chairman.[7] Initially, the board of the Copenhagen FA had their concerns regarding the new competition, but decided to have a representative team participate.[6][2] Following the conclusion of the tournament in 1927, the Fredericia Social-Demokrat argued that the major drawbacks surrounding Sylow-matches were to gather the selected teams with players from so many scattered clubs, and making them work as a unit.[9]
In the 1925 final of the tournament, the selection committee decided that the Copenhagen FA team would consist entirely of players from the second highest Copenhagen Football League, the KBUs A-række.[10] The following 1926 tournament, two representative teams for the Copenhagen FA participated in the tournament, each teams composed of players of either the KBUs Mesterskabsrække (almost identical with the national football squad) or the KBUs A-række. The ninth and last edition of the tournament was won by the Copenhagen FA for the fifth time, which meant that the organization obtained five lots and now had the honour of keeping the trophy permanently. The competition was abolished the following season and replaced by the year-long league format for clubs, known as Danmarksmesterskabsturneringen i Fodbold.
Finals
editKey | Explanation |
(number of cup wins) | A running tally of the total number of titles won by each team is kept in brackets. |
Season | Final Date | Winner | Result | Runner-up | Venue | Attendance | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1918 | 20 October 1918 | Copenhagen FA (1) | 4–1 | Lolland-Falster FA | Københavns Idrætspark, Copenhagen | — | [1] |
1919 | 12 October 1919 | Copenhagen FA (2) | 6–0 | Zealand FA | Københavns Idrætspark, Copenhagen | — | [1] |
1920 | 10 October 1920 | Jutland FA (1) | 2–0 | Copenhagen FA | Københavns Idrætspark, Copenhagen | — | [1] |
1921 | 9 October 1921 | Copenhagen FA (3) | 4–2 | Funen FA | Odense | — | [1] |
1922 | 22 October 1922 | Copenhagen FA (4) | 2–0 | Lolland-Falster FA | Nykøbing Falster | — | [1] |
1923 | 11 November 1923 | Jutland FA (2) | 1–0 | Copenhagen FA | Aarhus Stadium, Aarhus | — | [1] |
1924 | 2 November 1924 | Zealand FA (1) | 5–2 | Copenhagen FA | Københavns Idrætspark, Copenhagen | — | [1][11] |
1925 | 8 November 1925 | Lolland-Falster FA (1) | 3–1 (a.e.t.) | Copenhagen FA | Nykøbing Falster Stadium, Nykøbing Falster | 1,750 | [1][12][10][13] |
1926 | 7 November 1926 | Copenhagen FA (5) | 8–2 | Lolland-Falster FA | Nykøbing Falster | — | [1] |
Performance
editAssociation | Seasons | Wins | First final won | Last final won | Runners-up | Last final lost | Total final appearances |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Copenhagen FA (KBU) | 9 | 5 | 1918 | 1926 | 4 | 1925 | 9 |
Jutland FA (JBU) | 9 | 2 | 1920 | 1923 | 0 | — | 2 |
Lolland-Falster FA (LFBU) | 9 | 1 | 1925 | 1925 | 3 | 1926 | 4 |
Zealand FA (SBU) | 9 | 1 | 1924 | 1924 | 1 | 1919 | 2 |
Funen FA (FBU) | 9 | 0 | — | — | 1 | 1921 | 1 |
Bornholm FA (BBU) | 6 | 0 | — | — | 0 | — | 0 |
Copenhagen FA (KBU; 2nd team) | 1 | 0 | — | — | 0 | — | 0 |
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "Historie - KBUs Historie. Unionshold - Sylow Hold - Sylow - Sylow-turneringen". www.dbukoebenhavn.dk (in Danish). Copenhagen: DBU Copenhagen. Archived from the original on 6 December 2017. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
- ^ a b "Historie - KBUs Historie - Unionshold - Udvalgt Seriehold - KBUs Udvalgte Seriehold". www.dbukoebenhavn.dk (in Danish). Copenhagen: DBU Copenhagen. Archived from the original on 9 December 2017. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- ^ a b "Profil / Klubbens historie / KBs formænd siden 1876 / Formænd / Ludvig Sylow". www.kb-boldklub.dk (in Danish). Copenhagen: Kjøbenhavns Boldklub (KB). Archived from the original on 9 December 2017. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- ^ a b Birch, Claus (28 January – 1 April 2006). "Den nordsjællandske fodboldkrønike: 3. kapitel: 1918–1927: Sylowkampene og oprøret i de brølende tyvere". www.nordsjaelland.fodboldhistorie.dk (in Danish). Frederiksborg Amts Avis. Archived from the original on 9 December 2017. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
Sylowkampene: De gode erfaringer fra Landsfodboldturneringen, betød at DBU i 1918 udskrev endnu en turnering. Den skulle spilles mellem udvalgte hold fra lokalunionerne, og blev døbt Sylow-turneringen til ære for DBU's afgåede formand Ludvig Sylow. Disse kampe fik stor betydning for fodboldens udvikling udenfor hovedstaden. Selvom det danske landshold spillede sin første kamp tilbage i 1908, havde den første provinsspiller fortsat sin debut til gode. Det var København udviklingen udgik fra, og i Idrætsparken man spillede opvisningskampe mod alle de kendte engelske og skotske hold. Ikke overraskende sikrede dét de københavnske spillere et sportsligt forspring, der holdt helt frem til efter Anden Verdenskrig.
- ^ a b Grønkjær, Allan; Olsen, David Holt (2007). "Landsfodboldturneringen". Fodbold, fair play og forretning - Dansk klubfodbolds historie (in Danish) (1 ed.). Aarhus: Turbine Forlaget. pp. 66–67. ISBN 978-87-91415-97-5.
- ^ a b "Historie - KBUs Historie - Byholdet - Københavns byhold 1906-74". www.dbukoebenhavn.dk (in Danish). Copenhagen: DBU Copenhagen. Archived from the original on 9 December 2017. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- ^ a b c Johannes Gandil (1935). "1918; Sylow-Turneringen 1918". Dansk Fodbold (in Danish) (1 ed.). Copenhagen: Sportsbladets Forlag. pp. 133–134.
- ^ "Flaskepost Fra P - Ugebrev 9: Fodbold". www.hik.dk (in Danish). Hellerup IK. 1 March 2017. Archived from the original on 9 December 2017. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- ^ "Fodbold. Landskampen på Søndag" (in Danish). No. 202. Fredericia Social-Demokrat. 2 September 1927. p. 3.
- ^ a b "Lolland-Falster vandt Sylow-Finalen" (in Danish). No. 259. Copenhagen: Klokken 5. 9 November 2019. p. 8, Klokken 5s Sportsside.
- ^ Teglskov, Mads Munkholm. "Unionskampe: SBU mod andre lokalunioner". holbaek.fodboldarkiv.dk (in Danish). Holbæk. Archived from the original on 9 December 2017. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
I 1924 vandt SBU for første og sidste gang Sylow-turneringen efter en finalesejr over KBU. I finalen stillede SBU med følgende mandskab: Einer Jensen (Skovshoved IF), Chr. Andersen (»Søstjernen« Roskilde), Rasmus Christensen (Skovshoved IF), Albert Hasløv (Køge BK), Chr. Andersen (FIF Hillerød), Helmuth Thomas (Skovshoved IF), Ernst Hansen (Skovshoved IF), Ole Andersen (Køge BK), Harry Hansen (Holbæk IF), Frits Andersen (Vordingborg IF) og Petrus Petersen (Korsør BK).
- ^ "Lolland-Falster slog København efter Omkamp" (in Danish). No. 259. Nakskov: Lolland-Falster Social-Demokrat. 9 November 1925. p. 3.
- ^ "Lolland-Falster vandt Sylow-Turneringen" (in Danish). No. 309. Copenhagen: Dagbladet. 9 November 2019. p. 7, Dagens Nyheder's Sports–Avis.