Saarland Football Association
Formation | 25 July 1948 |
---|---|
Type | Football association |
Headquarters | Hermann-Neuberger-Sportschule |
Location | |
Membership | 98,112 (2016) |
Franz Josef Schumann | |
Parent organization | German Football Association |
Website | Saar-fv.de |
The Saarland Football Association (German: Saarländischer Fussball-Verband), the SFV, is one of 21 state organisations of the German Football Association, the DFB, and covers the state of Saarland.[1]
The SFV is also part of the Southwestern Regional Football Association, one of five regional federations in Germany. The other member of the regional association are the Southwest German Football Association and the Rhineland Football Association.[1]
In 2016, the SFV had 98,112 members, 370 member clubs and 2,361 teams playing in its league system.[2]
History
Formed in 1948, in what was then the Saar Protectorate, the Saarländischer Fußball Bund (SFB) became the organising body of football in the region, when Saar was split from the rest of occupied Germany. The SFB rejected membership in the French Football Federation on 17 July 1949 when 67 per cent of the delegates of the association voted against it. Instead the SFB was admitted as a member of FIFA in June 1950. From 1950 onwards Hermann Neuberger, later to become president of the German Football Association, the DFB, led the SFB and negotiated the admittance of the latter to FIFA. The Saarland national football team took part in international competitions, among them the qualifying to the 1954 FIFA World Cup where it played against West Germany. In 1956, following the reunification of the protectorate with West Germany, the SFB became part of the DFB again and was renamed to Saarländischer Fußball-Verband.[3]
References
- 1 2 Regional Associations DFB website - Map and details of the regional associations, accessed: 4 April 2015
- ↑ "Mitglieder-Statistik 2016" (PDF) (in German). Deutscher Fussball-Bund. Retrieved 2016-08-31.
- ↑ Die Geschichte des Fußballs an der Saar (in German) SFV website, accessed: 4 April 2015
External links
- German FA website (in German) (in English)
- Southwestern Regional FA website (in German)
- SFV website (in German)