1. FC Paderborn

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1. FC Paderborn
Club logo
Full name 1. Football Club
Paderborn 08/13 e. V.
place Paderborn , North Rhine-Westphalia
Founded 1969
Dissolved June 30, 1985
Club colors blue White
Stadion Paderkampfbahn
Top league Oberliga Westfalen
successes Westphalia Champion 1981
home
Template: Infobox historical football club / maintenance / incomplete outward

The 1. FC Paderborn (officially . 1. Football Club Paderborn 8.13 eV ) was a sports club from Paderborn . The first soccer team played for seven years in the then third-class Oberliga Westfalen . The home ground was the Paderkampfbahn. 1. FC Paderborn is a predecessor of today's SC Paderborn 07 .

history

The parent clubs

1. FC Paderborn was created in 1969 through the merger of VfJ 08 Paderborn with SV Paderborn . VfJ 08 was founded in 1908 as FC Preußen Paderborn and was called VfB Paderborn from 1909 . After a brief merger with TV Jahn Paderborn , VfB became the Association for Youth Care 08 Paderborn . In the 1920s and 1930s, VfJ played in the top Westphalian league for five years. After the Second World War , another five years followed in the highest Westphalian amateur league, before the team crashed into the district class in the mid-1960s. The SV Paderborn in turn was founded on October 12, 1913 by former players of FC Prussia. In terms of sport, the SV reached the Landesliga Westfalen between 1955 and 1958 , which was the highest Westphalian amateur league for the last time in the 1955/56 season . The club then hired itself out in the district class.

During the Second World War , the VfJ entered a war syndicate with local rivals SV Paderborn. From then on, they joined the Sportfreunde Rot-Weiß Paderborn and were accepted into the Gauliga Westfalen in 1944 without any athletic qualifications. There the so-called " tank team " defeated Union Herford 3-0 and SV 07 Neuhaus even 5-0. After these games, game operations were canceled.

After the merger (1969 to 1978)

Because of the championship in the district class won by VfJ 08, 1. FC Paderborn started in the state league in the 1969/70 season and was promptly two points ahead of VfL Schlangen champions. This made 1. FC the first Paderborn club to be promoted to the then third-class Association League Westphalia , although a second followed a year later with TuS Sennelager . In terms of sport, the team reached fourth place in 1972. Three years later the season ended in third place, just three points behind SVA Gütersloh and SC Herford .

Two years of mediocrity followed, before 1. FC Paderborn first reached the top of the table in 1978 . The team ended the season tied with VfB Rheine . In the playoffs for the relay victory, the Paderborn team were able to secure the title after a 1-0 win in Rheine and a 1-1 draw in the Paderkampfbahn. This was followed by the finals for the Westphalia Championship against the champions of the parallel relay DSC Wanne-Eickel . Wanne-Eickel won the first leg in their own stadium 2-0. In the second leg, the Paderborn team were able to win 2-1, but had to be content with the role of runner-up.

Now the 1. FC had to play qualifying games against the fourth of the Oberliga Nord Holstein Kiel for a place in the promotion round to the 2. Bundesliga . Both games ended in a 2-2 draw, so a playoff was scheduled in neutral Osnabrück . This ended with 1: 1 after extra time and finally with a 3-1 win on penalties in favor of Kiel. Paderborn's playmaker Werner Brosda went into the third game, handicapped by a bruise he suffered in the second game, and failed on penalties, as did his team-mates Lüning and Vanderfeesten. In the event of the promotion, a move to the Inselbad stadium was planned, which should be modernized for two million marks.

Oberliga and Fusion (1978 to 1985)

After failing in qualification, 1. FC Paderborn continued to play in the newly founded Oberliga Westfalen. After a fifth place in the 1978/79 season , the team became a year later under coach Franz Wolny runner-up behind SpVgg Erkenschwick . Finally, 1. FC Paderborn secured the championship title of the Oberliga Westfalen in the 1980/81 season with two points ahead of VfL Gevelsberg . But the championship was worthless in terms of sport, as the 2nd Bundesliga converted from a two-track to a single-track league for the 1982/83 season and the DFB suspended promotion for 1982.

The team took part in the German Amateur Championship , where the Paderborn team was able to prevail against SV Sandhausen . In the semifinals, the amateurs of 1. FC Köln were opponents of 1. FC. In Cologne, the two teams separated 2-2, before Cologne won the second leg in Paderborn with 5-0. As a consolation, 1. FC Paderborn took a trip to Africa for several friendlies in the winter of 1981 , which was organized and paid for by the DFB.

1. FC Paderborn should not recover from the worthless championship. In the following years, the team only reached midfield or fought relegation. Paderborn was only more successful in the Westphalia Cup, where they reached the final in 1982 and 1984. Both times 1. FC went as a loser from the field. In 1982 Rot-Weiss Lüdenscheid prevailed 2-0, while two years later SC Herford beat Paderborn 3-1. 1. FC Paderborn took part in the DFB Cup twice. In the 1981/82 season , the team lost 3-2 in round one at VfL Bochum , while the Paderborn team lost 4-1 at home to Hannover 96 in the 1984/85 season in the first round .

Since TuS Schloß Neuhaus also stagnated after relegation from the 2nd Bundesliga in 1983, both clubs merged on June 1, 1985 to form TuS Paderborn-Neuhaus . In 1997 it was renamed SC Paderborn 07. The goal set during the merger of returning to professional football was achieved in 2005.

Personalities

Individual evidence

  1. a b The Paderborn Line (1908-1985). SC Paderborn 07 , accessed on August 23, 2013 .
  2. Hardy Greens : Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 1: From the Crown Prince to the Bundesliga. 1890 to 1963. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-85-1 , p. 262.
  3. ^ A b Hardy Green , Christian Karn: The big book of the German football clubs . AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2009, ISBN 978-3-89784-362-2 , p. 421.
  4. ^ Frank beinke: Tatort Osnabrück . In: Neue Westfälische from 20./21. May 2017
  5. René Martens: There are always miracles - The history of FC St. Pauli . Verlag Die Werkstatt, Göttingen 2009, ISBN 978-3-89533-673-7 , p. 127 .
  6. ^ Westphalia Cup winner since 1982. FLVW , accessed on February 10, 2019 .