1895–96 FC Basel season

The FC Basel 1895–96 season was their third season since the club's foundation on 15 November 1893. Emanuel Schiess was elected as second chairman in the club's history at the club's AGM. FC Basel's home ground was the Landhof, in the Wettstein neighborhood of Kleinbasel (lesser Basel), but they also played home games at the Stadion Schützenmatte in the Bachletten quartier in Grossbasel (greater Basel). The Swiss national championships had not yet been called to into life.

FC Basel
1895–96 season
ChairmanSwitzerland Roland Geldner
Switzerland Emanuel Schiess
First team coachSwitzerland Ferdinand Isler
(as team captain)
GroundLandhof, Basel
and Stadion Schützenmatte, Basel
No championship this year[note League 1]
Top goalscorern/a
Average home league attendancen/a

Overview

Roland Geldner had been the club's chairman, but he stood down at the club's AGM held on 1 September 1895 and Emanuel Schiess was elected as new chairman. At this AGM on it was announced that 31 footballers had joined the club since the first day, 14 members had since left and so they had 17 active footballers.[1]

The Swiss Football Association (ASF-SFV) was founded on 7 April 1895. FC Basel were founder members, although they were not present at the founder meeting. Basel goalkeeper and local businessman John Tollmann joined the ASF-SFV board of directors and was the first secretary-treasurer. Local rivals Old Boys were soon to become ASF-SFV members. The idea of a Swiss national championship following the form of the English championship was discussed as priority.[2]

Ferdinand Isler was selected as team captain, he was responsible for leading the team trainings and choosing the player line-ups. For this season club organised ten friendly matches for their first team. Six of these matches were held in Basel, two in the Landhof, two on the Schützenmatte and from the other two games the playing fields are uncertain. In the autumn season Basel played twice against FC Excelsior Zürich, were defeated away and drew at home and in the spring they played them again twice and managed two victories. Basel played twice against French team FC Mulhouse, drawing away and winning at home. They also played twice against Grasshopper Club and won both games. Last season the team had lost the game against Buckjumpers Club Basel, this season they won the revenge. But the Buckjumpers were to dissolve their club at the end of the season, due to lack of members and therefore a number of their remaining members joined Basel before the beginning of the following season.[3]

At the end of November 1895 Basel also played their very first game against Anglo-American Club Zürich, the game ended with a defeat. The ten games ended with six victories, two draws and two defeats.[4] The team scored 18 scored goals and 15 conceded.[note Scorers 1]

Players

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK Switzerland SUI Adolf Rittmann
DF Switzerland SUI Otto Bossart
DF Switzerland SUI Josy Ebinger
DF Switzerland SUI Christian Heyd
DF Switzerland SUI Carl Albert Hintermann
DF Switzerland SUI Ferdinand Isler
DF Germany GER Erwin Schricker
DF Switzerland SUI Charles Volderauer
FW   S. A. de Clerk
FW Switzerland SUI Roland Geldner
FW Switzerland SUI Wilhelm Glaser
FW Switzerland SUI W. Huber
FW   A. Kohts
No. Pos. Nation Player
FW Switzerland SUI Emanuel Schiess
Germany GER Ivo Schricker
  Henry Devick
Switzerland SUI Joan Gamper
Switzerland SUI Wilhelm Götz
Switzerland SUI Hans Koch
Switzerland SUI Albert Linder
Switzerland SUI Heinrich Preiswerk
Switzerland SUI J. Schneider
Switzerland SUI H. Siegrist
Switzerland SUI Fr. Stauber
Switzerland SUI John Tollmann
  R. C. Vanorden

Results

Legend

  Win   Draw   Loss

Autumn season

29 September 1895 Friendly Basel Switzerland 1 – 0 Switzerland Buckjumpers Club Basel Landhof, Basel
Schiess Summary Referee: Netherlands F. H. de Boer
3 November 1895 Friendly FC Excelsior Zürich Switzerland 5 – 0 Switzerland Basel Allmend Brunau, (FC Zürich)
15:00



Summary
17 November 1895 Friendly Basel Switzerland 2 – 1 Switzerland Grasshopper Club Stadion Schützenmatte, Basel
Glaser (1:0)
Glaser (2:1)
Summary (1:1) E. A. Westermann Referee: Switzerland Carl Hintermann, (FC Basel)
Note: For FCB Ivo Schricker from Strasbourg FV played as guest player. An FCB player injured himself in the second half and, with the consent of GC, was substituted.
23 November 1895 Friendly Basel Switzerland 0 – 1 Switzerland Anglo-American Club Zürich Basel
Summary (0:1) Morris Referee: Switzerland Fritz Schäublin, (FC Basel)
1 December 1895 Friendly Basel Switzerland 2 – 2 Switzerland FC Excelsior Zürich Landhof, Basel

Summary
Referee: Switzerland Carl Albert Hintermann, (FC Basel)

Spring season

1 March 1896 Friendly FC Mulhouse France 1 – 1 Switzerland Basel Mulhouse
Summary
8 March 1896 Friendly Grasshopper Club Switzerland 1 – 3 Switzerland Basel Zürich
Schwarzenbach (1:0) Summary (1:1)
(1:2)
(1:3)
23 March 1896 Friendly Basel Switzerland 3 – 2 France FC Mulhouse Stadion Schützenmatte Basel
15:00 (1:0)
(2:0)
(3:2)
Summary (2:1)
(2:2)
Referee: Switzerland Carl Albert Hintermann, (FC Basel)
12 April 1896 Friendly Basel Switzerland 3 – 0 Switzerland FC Excelsior Zürich Basel
10:30 (1:0)
(2:0)
(3:0)
Summary Referee: Switzerland Reynolds, Basel
26 April 1896 Friendly FC Excelsior Zürich Switzerland 2 – 3 Switzerland Basel Zürich
10:30
Summary

Note: The result of this match was also reported as 0–3

See also

Notes

Footnotes

  1. League: up until 1898 there was no league football in Switzerland.
  1. Scorers: many pre-First World War game sheets no longer exist or are incomplete and so, many line ups and most goal scorers in this period remain unknown.

References

  1. Kieslich, Christoph (15 November 2013). "Die Geburtsstunde des FCB". The hour of FC Basel's birth. TagesWoche. Retrieved 2020-11-16.
  2. Schweizerischer Fussballverband. "Die englischen anfänge des schweizer fussballs". The english beginnings of swiss football. org.football.ch. Retrieved 2020-11-16.
  3. Stefan Peter. "Basler Fussballvereine / Basler football clubs". Retrieved 2020-11-16.
  4. Verein "Basler Fussballarchiv”. "Bilanz 1895–96". Verein "Basler Fussballarchiv”. Retrieved 2020-11-16.

Sources

  • Rotblau: Jahrbuch Saison 2014/2015. Publisher: FC Basel Marketing AG. ISBN 978-3-7245-2027-6
  • Die ersten 125 Jahre. Publisher: Josef Zindel im Friedrich Reinhardt Verlag, Basel. ISBN 978-3-7245-2305-5
  • FCB squad 1895–1896 at fcb-archiv.ch

(NB: Despite all efforts, the editors of these books and the authors in "Basler Fussballarchiv" have failed to be able to identify all the players, their date and place of birth or date and place of death, who played in the games during the early years of FC Basel. Much match documentation for this season is missing.)

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