Wanderpokal

From International Hockey Wiki
Revision as of 12:42, 10 November 2016 by Admin (talk | contribs) (1 revision)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Wanderpokal
Sport Bandy hockey
Founded 1901
No. of teams 6 (1901-02)
Country(ies) Flag of Germany German Empire

The Wanderpokal (also known as the Tebbutt Cup and the Herausforderungspokal [Challenge Cup]) was an early German bandy hockey competition staged in Berlin.

History

The Tebbutt brothers from England had visited Germany with their venerable Bury Fen Bandy Club in 1899. They played four games in Berlin (out of a scheduled six) at the Neue West Eisbahn and the Friedenauer Eisbahn.

On December 24, 1901, the Neue Hamburger Zeitung reported that the brothers had donated a "Herausforderungspokal" to the newly-formed Berliner Eishockey-Verband.[1]

The first games known to be played for the "Tebbutt Cup" are from around February 18, 1902, when Britannia beat Preussen 25-2 and Akademischer Sportclub beat Britannia 11-5. Six clubs entered the competition, and Akademischer Sportclub claimed the inaugural championship.

In 1902-03, there was a Berlin Championship staged in Berlin. The newspapers did not mention if it was for the "Tebbutt Cup", but it likely was. On December 8, 1902, BFC Preussen defeated Berliner Hockey-und-Radpolo-Klub 10-2. ASC Berlin later defeated Britannia 19-1 on January 18, 1903. The final scheduled for January 25 between ASC and BFC was cancelled due to thaw.

In January 1904, the Prager Tagblatt noted that the "Wanderpokal" was scheduled to be played for the third time since 1901. The participating teams were listed as being: Preussen, Ballspielclub, Britannia, Berliner Hockey-und-Radpolo-Klub, Akademischer Sportklub. The winner would then play a "grand match" against Deutscher akad.-tech. Radfahrverein Prag.[2] It is unknown if the cup was actually contested this year, as no results were subsequently reported.

Contemporary accounts

References

  1. Neue Hamburger Zeitung, December 24, 1901
  2. Prager Tagblatt, January 4, 1904

Credits

Special thanks to Patrick H. for supplying information on the competition.