TuS Eintracht Dortmund

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TuS Eintracht Dortmund
Surname Gymnastics and Sports Club Eintracht
1848 Dortmund e. V.
Founded July 15, 1848
resolution 1969
Association headquarters Dortmund , North Rhine-Westphalia

The TuS Eintracht Dortmund (officially: Turn- und Sportverein Eintracht 1848 Dortmund eV ) was a sports club from Dortmund . In 1969 the TuS Eintracht merged with the Dortmund SC 95 to form TSC Eintracht Dortmund .

history

The club was founded on July 15, 1848 as TV Eintracht Dortmund by twenty young gymnasts , making it the city's oldest sports club. After the end of the Second World War , the name was changed to TuS Eintracht Dortmund. The club owned a stadium and a sports hall on the Rheinlanddamm . From there, the organized Gestapo the deportation of 800 Jews to today Polish Zamość , where they were eventually murdered.

Handball

The field handball players of TV Eintracht played in the 1930s in the then first-class Gauliga Westfalen and was runner-up there in 1936 and 1939, behind MSV Hindenburg Minden . After the end of the Second World War, the handball players of the club now called TuS Eintracht belonged to the founding members of the Oberliga Westfalen in 1947 , but from which they had to relegate at the end of the season and never return. In indoor handball , Eintracht reached the finals for the Westphalia Championship in 1957 and 1966, but did not get beyond the group stage in both participations. In 1968 Dortmund qualified for the newly created Oberliga Westfalen , where they qualified for the newly created regional league a year later . There, after the merger, Eintracht started under the name TSC Eintracht Dortmund.

ice Hockey

In 1956, TuS Eintracht Dortmund founded an ice hockey department, which was promoted to the second-class league at the time just three years later . Two years later , under coach wurdenriks Koņeckis , the Dortmund team became champions there and prevailed against ESV Kaufbeuren in the relegation to the Bundesliga . Arrived in the top division, Dortmund fought against relegation. In 1962 , Eintracht managed to stay in the relegation against EV Landshut . A year later the relegation was reissued, where they were able to enforce the Landshut team. As champions of the league season 1963/64 , the Dortmund team managed to get promoted again. The Eintracht was knocked-off bottom of the table in the following season and failed in the relegation at VfL Bad Nauheim . Before the start of the league season 1965/66 , the Dortmund team withdrew and the department was dissolved.

Heinz Ohlber took part with the German national team in the 1963 World Cup in the Swedish city ​​of Stockholm . Dieter Hoja was German champion in 1967 with the Düsseldorf EG .

Soccer

The football department of the then TV Eintracht was founded in 1920 after a planned merger with Dortmund's SC 95 had failed. The Eintracht took part in the game operation of the German Turnerschaft (DT). In 1930, Eintracht qualified for the final round of the German championship of the DT, but failed there in the first round after a 2: 3 defeat against Kruppsche TG Essen . After the gymnastics dispute was settled in the same year, the team switched to the game operations of the German Football Association , but could no longer build on the success of 1930. After the end of the Second World War , Eintracht initially only played at the district level for a long time. The club only played in the district class from 1961 to 1963. TuS Eintracht Dortmund produced three Bundesliga players with Jürgen Boduszek , Ulrich Braun and Karl-Heinz Granitza .

Roller hockey

The TuS Eintracht roller hockey team became German champions in 1950 .

athletics

Alfred Lingau became German champion in two-handed discus throwing in 1928 and German champion in stone throwing three years later .

do gymnastics

Ernst Braun became German gymnastics champion in Krems an der Donau in 1944 .

Individual evidence

  1. Werner Skrentny (ed.): The big book of the German football stadiums . Verlag Die Werkstatt , Göttingen 2010, ISBN 978-3-89533-668-3 , p. 96 .
  2. ^ Sven Webers: Field handball Gauklassen 1935/36 (Gaue IX - XII). Bundesligainfo.de, accessed on November 29, 2015 .
  3. ^ Sven Webers: Field handball Gauklassen 1938/39 (Gaue IX - XII). Bundesligainfo.de, accessed on November 29, 2015 .
  4. ^ Sven Webers: Oberliga Westfalen 1968/69. Bundesligainfo.de, accessed on November 29, 2015 .
  5. 100 years on the ball in Dortmund ... the 95s. TSC Eintracht Dortmund, accessed on November 29, 2015 .
  6. Hardy Greens : Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 1: From the Crown Prince to the Bundesliga. 1890 to 1963. German championship, Gauliga, Oberliga. Numbers, pictures, stories. Agon-Sportverlag, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-85-1 , p. 110.
  7. ^ German Sports Club for Soccer Statistics : Soccer in West Germany 1952-1958 . Hövelhof 2012, p. 129, 232 .