At the beginning of the 1970s, the mood was optimistic: new money and opportunities combined with total football were looking great. Yet, very soon an evidence of crisis was equally present – domestic championships suffered. Some countries reorganized their leagues – no matter what was said, it was depressing reduction of formats and clubs started to disappear. Austria ended 1973-74 season with the traditional format of 16 clubs league. Next season the league was ‘reformed’ and reduced to 10 clubs. Fiscal stability was required on one hand (and Austrians are strict about that to this very day). The other reason was the quality of football: it was clear that there were not enough good players for 16-team format. Financial stability with better competitiveness was believed to increase the quality of Austrian football. Well, the reform did not help – a string of mergers, name changes, and bankruptcies characterize Austrian domestic football ever since. Sponsor’s names were incorporated often into club names, to confuse the situation further. An example: the Innsbruck club, one of the most successful Austrian clubs, ended 1970-71 still FC Wacker. In the summer it merged with WSG Swarovski (Wattens) under the name FC Tirol. Other Tyrolean clubs protested and the federation ordered the new club to change the name – now it was SG Swarovski-Wattens-Wacker (Innsbruck), abbreviated to SSW Wacker. Under this name the club was champion next season. Since the world famous firm Swarovski was part of the venture, the future was to be… bright? In 1975-76 the name was changed to Swarovski-Schwarz-Weiss Tirol (Innsbruck) or SSW Tirol. Under this name the club finished last in 1978-79 and was relegated. The name changed to WSG Swarovski Wacker. In 1980-81, still in the second league, the club split to WSG Swarovski (Wattens) and SG Sparkasse Wacker (Innsbruck) (Sparkasse is a bank). Next year the Innsbruck club was renamed again to FC Wacker. In 1985-86 it was FC Swarovski-Tirol. In 1991-92 – FC Wacker again. Next season: FC Capillaris Tirol. In 1994-95 – FC Tirol. In 1997-98: FC Tirol-Milch. Today it is Wacker again, freshly renamed from Wacker Tirol on July 1,2007. At least the club stays in one city.
But here is the final Austrian table for 1973-74:
Austria 1973/74Nationalliga 
1.VÖEST Linz                32  18 11  3  51-28  47    
2.Wacker Innsbruck     32  19  8  5  57-21  46    
3.SK Rapid                      32  18  9  5  74-33  45    
4.FK Austria/WAC        32  16  7  9  59-37  39  
 5.SK Sturm Graz           32  14  6 12  28-35  34
6.Donawitzer SV Alpine 32  13  7 12  51-48  33
7.FC Admira/Wacker     32  11  9 12  50-48  31    
8.SV Austria Salzburg    32  10 11 11  35-35  31    
9.Linzer ASK                   32  11  8 13  38-48  30  
10.Wiener Sport-Club    32  10  9 13  43-60  29
11.1. Simmeringer SC    32  10  8 14  49-47  28
12.Grazer AK                  32   9 10 13  31-41  28
13.SC Eisenstadt             32  11  6 15  36-52  28   
14.Austria Klagenfurt    32   8 11 13  33-44  27   
15.Radenthein/Villacher SV   32   6 14 12  33-40  26
16.First Vienna FC           32   8  8 16  38-54  24
17.FC Vorarlberg             32   5  8 19  31-66  18
Compare to the current league:
Austria 2007/08
First Level (Bundesliga) Table: 
1.SK Rapid Wien                31 16  6  9 57-33  54
2.RB Salzburg                    31 15  8  8 53-37  53
3.LASK Linz                       31 14 10  7 50-39  52
4.FK Austria Wien             31 12 12  7 38-29  48
5.SK Sturm Graz                31 12 11  8 52-34  47
6.SV Mattersburg              31 10 13  8 46-39  43
7.SV Ried                             31 10  6 15 36-48  36
8.SC Rheindorf Altach       31  7 10 14 33-55  31
9.SK Austria Kärnten        31  7  7 17 21-51  28  [*2]
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10.FC Wacker Innsbruck          31  5 11 15 29-50  26  [*1]
[*1] Wacker Tirol changed name to Wacker Innsbruck on July 1, 2007[*2] Pasching moved to Klagenfurt and changed name to Austria Kärnten
Financial stability somehow never came even for the big clubs. It is hard to support a club changing names almost every year. Gates are low, in part because of that. Old clubs sunk or disappeared altogether – Grazer AK, Wiener Sport-club, First Vienna FC and others.
It was not only Austria – Belgium and Scotland were early victims of the 1970s too. 1974-75 was the last traditional 1st division of 18 clubs. Low attendance, low game quality, bad stadiums, and financial difficulties urged the Scottish Federation to introduce reforms – instead of 1st Division, a new Scottish Premier Division was unveiled. 10 clubs. Today it is increased to 12, but did it solve any problems? Yes, the new name sounds grand…
Belgium, in contrast, did not reduce the league size – actually, the league was enlarged from 16 clubs in 1973-74 to 20 in 1974-75. Today – 18, the number established in 1976-77. But the clubs?
The final table of the last ‘small season’Season 1973-1974
First Division  
1  RSC Anderlechtois                 30 17  6  7  72  38 41  
2  R. Antwerp FC                       30 15  6  9  48  33 39  
3  RWD Molenbeek                    30 13  4 13  50  25 39  
4  R. Standard de Liège             30 12  8 10  43  30 34  
5  Club Brugge KV                      30 13 11  6  61  43 32  
6  RFC Liégeois                           30 11 10  9  42  42 31  
7  KV Mechelen                          30 10  9 11  34  35 31  
8  KSV Cercle Brugge                 30  8 11 11  46  48 27  
9  KSV Waregem                       30  8 11 11  38  49 27 
10  SK Beveren                          30  7 10 13  24  30 27 
11  R. Beringen FC                     30  9 13  8  29  48 26 
12  FC Diest                                30  8 12 10  44  51 26 
13  Beerschot VAV                     30  8 12 10  36  47 26 
14  Berchem Sport                     30  7 11 12  33  45 26 
15  K.Lierse SK                           30  6 11 13  35  51 25 
16  R. St.-Truidense VV            30  6 13 11  30  50 23
and the current season:
Belgium 2007/08Table: 
1.R. Standard de Liège          27 17 10  0  51-17  61
2.Club Brugge KV                  27 16  6  5  34-20  54
3.Cercle Brugge KSV             27 15  7  5  55-25  52
4.RSC Anderlecht                   27 15  7  5  44-26  52
5.KFC Germinal Beerschot   27 14  6  7  40-24  48
6.KAA Gent                             27 12  8  7  49-36  44
7.SV Zulte-Waregem             27 11  5 11  36-44  38
8.KVC Westerlo                      27 10  8  9  38-28  38
9.KRC Genk                            27  9  8 10  39-42  35
10.R. Charleroi SC                  27  9  6 12  27-34  33
11.KV Mechelen                     27  8  8 11  34-40  32
12.R. Excelsior Mouscron     27  8  6 13  31-37  30
13.KSC Lokeren OV               27  6 12  9  21-26  30
14.FC Verbroedering Dender EH    27  8  5 14  27-43  29
15.KSV Roeselare                   27  6  9 12  29-47  27
16.RAEC Mons                        27  6  7 14  30-41  25
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17.K. Sint-Truiden VV            27  4  8 15  23-44  20
18.FC Brussels                         27  4  4 19  22-56  16
After mergers, bankruptcies, movements, splits, and new amalgamations, one has to go to club histories and careful encrypting of the abbreviations to uncover what happened. Here the mergers were not only between clubs of one city – more often clubs of different cities merged. And later dissolved. And merged again. Take Racing White (Brussels), the Belgian champions for 1974-75. The details are too many to be traced here, but it was a club of previous mergers – Racing and White Star Club (the oldest of all incorporated). Before the start of their glorious season, they merged with Daring Club (Brussels), technically more famous club than Racing White. Main reason was low attendance. Legal reasons – rules of registration – forbid the new club to use the old record of Daring Club. And probably to preserve some coherence, in Europe the club was better known as Racing Club, but in Belgium it was R.W.D. Molenbeek (Brussels). Until 2002, when the club went bankrupt. Did it disappear? Not at all – it merged with K.F.C. Strombeek, located near Brussels, and became F.C. Molenbeek Brussels Strombeek, playing at the stadium of Molenbeek, in Brussels, but registered in Strombeek. Please, do not despair! FC Brussels is this club today – promoted to the First Division in 2004, and adopting the current name. Dead last too, as you can see above. End of story? Not at all. Group of fans formed and registered new club in 2003 – it is called… R.W.D. Molenbeek. It started in the 4th Brabant Provincial Division, the very bottom of Belgian football (Level 8). And keeping with ‘tradition’, the club absorbed another one in 2006, taking its place in Brabant 1st Division (Level 5). So… who won the Belgian championship in 1974-75? Where exactly those clubs play? To which city they belong?