BFC Prussia
BFC Prussia | |||
Basic data | |||
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Surname | Berlin Football Club Preussen 1894 e. V. |
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Seat | Berlin | ||
founding | May 1, 1894 | ||
Colours | black-and-white | ||
Website | www.bfc-preussen.de | ||
First soccer team | |||
Head coach | Thomas Häßler | ||
Venue | Prussia Stadium | ||
Places | 3000 | ||
league | Landesliga Berlin | ||
2018/19 | 16th place ( Berlin League ) | ||
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The BFC Preussen (officially: Berliner Fußballclub Preussen 1894 eV ) is a Berlin sports club that today has departments in football , futsal , handball , volleyball , athletics and gymnastics. Historically significant was the hockey department of the association from 1983 together with the Berliner Schlittschuhclub the BSC Preussen formed.
Soccer
In 1894, the Friedrich-Wilhelm-Gymnasium students founded a football club, Friedrich-Wilhelm , which was re-established as BFC Preussen in order to avoid conflicts and played the first games in the same year.
In 1897 the BFC was one of the founding members of the Association of German Ball Game Clubs (VDB), later renamed the Association of Berlin Ball Game Clubs (VBB). Before the First World War, the Berlin championships in 1899 , 1900 , 1901 , 1910 and 1912 and also the runner-up in 1905 and 1906 could be achieved. In March 1901, BFC Preussen succeeded 8: 3 over the Surrey Wanderers, the first victory of a German team over a club from England. In 1909 a friendly game against Newcastle United took place with a visit from the Crown Prince couple.
After the Second World War, the BFC could not be re-established until 1949. In 1970 he was promoted to the Berlin amateur league and in 1972 he was promoted to the Berlin Regionalliga . In 1974 the qualification for the new amateur league Berlin was unfortunately missed, in which the BFC Prussia rose in 1975 with the achievement of the amateur league championship. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, the club was one of the strongest in West Berlin. In 1977, 1980 and 1981 the club took first place in the major league, which in addition to winning the Berlin soccer championship also meant participating in the relegation games for promotion to the second division . However, the Prussians each missed the rise. In addition, in 1978 and 1979 the runner-up in the major league and between 1978 and 1981 the final of the Paul Rusch Cup four times in a row were achieved, with the BFC leaving the field three times as the winner.
In 1991 the Oberliga Berlin was dissolved and the clubs were incorporated into the new NOFV Oberliga. This league could only be held for one year, and in 1992 the BFC was a founding member of the new Association League Berlin. Here, too, one had to cope with two temporary relegations (1993 and 1999) before moving up to the fourth-class Oberliga Nord-Ost / Nord in 2005 when the Berlin championship title was once again achieved. In the 2008/09 season, the Prussians played , through the introduction of the new 3rd division, in the now fifth-class Oberliga Nordost . There the club could not keep the class and played in the Berlin League since the 2009/10 season . After two years in the Berlin League, the club was relegated to the Landesliga Berlin at the end of the 2011/12 season. At the beginning of the 2014/15 season, a well-known coach, former Bundesliga professional Andreas Neuendorf , was signed; Under Neuendorf's leadership, the team separated from the rest of the field early in the season and returned as champions in the Berlin League. With a 3-2 win after extra time against SC Staaken, the club reached the final of the Berlin State Cup on May 28, 2016, which was won 1-0 against SV Lichtenberg 47 . This enabled them to qualify for the 2016/17 DFB Cup , in which they lost to 1. FC Köln in the first round. In the 2018/19 season, he was relegated from the Berlin League again.
successes
- Berlin champions (8): 1899, 1900, 1901, 1910 (each in the VDB / VBB ), 1977, 1980, 1981 (each in the Oberliga Berlin ) and 2005 (in the Verbandsliga Berlin )
- Berlin Cup Winner (4): 1979, 1980, 1981 and 2016
Trainer
- Andreas Neuendorf : from 7/14 to 6/15
- Guido Spork : from 7/15 to 10/15
National player
- Edwin Dutton
- Erich Massini
- Gustav Unfried
- Rudolf Droz
- Walter Sorkale
- Otto Thiel
- Otto Völker
- Oliver Pötschke
Other people and players
- Gerd Achterberg
- Andreas Neuendorf
- Christoph Dabrowski
- Stephan Schmidt
- Gambia Momar Njie
- Vincent Rabiega , in the club since 2/17
- Uwe Brunn , youth player in the club
- Michael Sziedat , youth player in the club
- Taygun Kuru , youth player in the club
- Christian Herrmann
Venues
BFC Preussen has played in the following stages in its history.
- 1894–1900 Tempelhofer Feld
- 1900–1903 athletic sports field in Charlottenburg
- 1903–1913 Sports field on the Teltow Canal in Tempelhof
- 1913–1924 sports field on Kaiserstraße in Mariendorf
- 1924–1936 Hauptkampfbahn Tempelhofer Feld ("Preussen-Platz")
- 1936–1938 Blau-Weiß-Platz on Rathausstrasse in Mariendorf
- since 1938 Preussenstadion on Malteserstraße in Lankwitz
Season overview since 1971
Placements on a green background indicate an ascent, while a red background indicates a descent.
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Futsal
The BFC Preussen futsal team has been playing in the first-class NOFV futsal league since 2016 . The team started under the name eighteen ninety-four , which was a reference to the year the club was founded. In the 2017/18 season , the team was runner-up behind VfL 05 Hohenstein-Ernstthal and qualified for the 2018 German Futsal Championship . From the 2019/20 season, the futsal team will play under the name 1894 Futsal Berlin .
ice Hockey
In addition to the Berlin Ice Skating Club (BSchC) and the SC Charlottenburg , the BFC Preussen was one of the pioneering clubs in German ice hockey at the beginning of the 20th century . The first two Berlin championships were won against the BSchC in 1911 and 1912 . In 1928 and 1940 the team took part in the final round of the German championship . The first time you were third, while the second time you were eliminated from the preliminary round in a war game community with the Zehlendorfer Wasps .
After the Second World War, the department was reactivated in 1954. In 1958/59 she missed promotion to the second-class league in an ice hockey community with SC Brandenburg Berlin under the name EG Brandenburg-Preussen Berlin - they waived a possible short-term move up. In 1960/61 , the BFC Preussen missed promotion to the second-rate league , but then played in the newly introduced group league in 1961/62 , the third nationwide league level (later regional league ). In 1968 the team was promoted to the Oberliga Nord and qualified for promotion to the Bundesliga two years later .
In 1971 the ice hockey team of the BFC Preussen was dissolved and the best players joined the Berlin ice skating club (as well as the dissolved ice hockey department of Hertha BSC ). Four years later, the merger of FASS Berlin with EHC Nord Berlin resulted in a re-establishment of the ice hockey department at BFC Preussen, which started in the Oberliga Nord from the 1975/76 season . After the preliminary round of the 1977/78 season , the team refrained from participating in the qualifying round for the Oberliga Nord and was automatically relegated to the Regionalliga Nord. In the following season , they were promoted to the league again, where the Prussians played until 1983. However, the club was not very successful and came in last three times in a row after the preliminary round.
In the 1982/83 season , however, the BFC was promoted to the 2nd Bundesliga . After that, the ice hockey sport at BFC Preussen was discontinued and the department merged with the ice hockey department of the Berlin ice skating club to form BSC Preussen , which then started in the second division in the 1983/84 season .
See also: Ice hockey in Berlin
Handball
The handball department was added to the club in 1927. After the re-establishment of the club in 1949, the handball department was reactivated in 1952, which suffered a setback in 1962 when the senior teams left the club after differences with the entire club. From 1980 to 1981 the attempt to build a handball performance center in cooperation with other Berlin clubs in the south of Berlin failed, with the BFC continuing to work with HC Steglitz until the 1987/88 season . In the summer of 1989, the BFC succeeded in attracting the youth of Granitas Kaunas from Lithuania at its annual cup tournament - the International Preussen Juniors Cup - which was followed by a return visit by the BFC team in Lithuania in the summer of 1990 . After the promotion to the Oberliga Berlin was achieved for the first time in 1997, the promotion to the Regionalliga Nord-Ost was achieved in 1999 with the achievement of the Berlin championship title, which could be kept sporty - but no longer financed due to the departure of TuS Lichterfelde from the syndicate was. Since the 2001/02 season, the first senior team of the BFC took part in the Berlin-Brandenburg League. From the 2007/08 season, the first men's team played in the Regionalliga Nord-Ost. In the 2009/10 season they qualified for the third division , in which the club was already in last place before the end of the season.
rugby
A rugby department was founded in 1923 by Hans Müller and Kohlhammer from Heidelberg. As early as 1924 the Prussians were able to win the Berlin championship title. In 1928 the entire ice hockey team joined the rugby division. However, some "Prussians" who are based in Karlshorst founded a new rugby department there on January 1, 1929 at the Karlshorster Sports Club. In 1930 the team waived due to a lack of players in the game traffic in the B season.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ [1]
- ↑ Andreas M. Tschorn (Ed.): Berliner FC Preussen. Retrieved May 24, 2012 .