Academic SV Dresden

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
ASV Dresden
Men's team of the ASC Dresden (1910)
Surname Academic Sports Club 1897
Academic Sports Club 1906
Academic Sports Club 1910
Club colors Green white
Founded 1897
Place of foundation Dresden
resolution 1945
Venue Club grounds on Zellescher Weg
Association headquarters Schnorrstrasse 12 (ASC 1906)

The Academic Sports Club Dresden was a sports club from Dresden , which was founded in 1897 and was dissolved after the Second World War. The club was particularly known for its hockey , bandy and ice hockey teams , and later for athletics and tennis .

history

The Academic Sports Club 1897 was founded on March 4, 1897 by students from what was then the Royal Saxon Technical University . The association mainly consisted of students from Germany, Scandinavia (Norway and Finland), England and members of the Dresden Society. The club colors at that time were blue and black with a gold border. In addition to tennis, the sports practiced at the time initially included track riding, shooting and indoor cycling . The club soon organized the first academic lawn tennis tournament in Dresden .

From 1905 there were efforts mostly by English students to practice hockey in clubs. However, they did not receive any support from other members of the association, especially those interested in social entertainment.

ASC Dresden team in December 1907

In 1906 the members who supported hockey resigned from the ASV and founded the Academic Sports Club in 1906 . The ASC's club colors were green and white. In the same year the ASC competed with a hockey team against the then leading Berlin and Hamburg teams. In tennis, too, the ASC members soon outperformed the old ASV. Nevertheless, the ASV remained the organizer of the Dresden International Tennis Tournament. In 1908, the ASC rented an apartment on Schnorrstrasse , which until 1924 formed the center of society including lunch for the club. During this time, the venues of the two clubs were on Wiener Strasse (ASC, hockey and tennis) and Reichenbachstrasse (ASC, tennis) as well as George-Bähr-Strasse (ASV, tennis).

The women's team against the Berlin HC (1910s)
ASV sports fields on Godeffroystraße, Zellesche Weg in the foreground (1932)

Due to increasing competition from academic associations such as lashing associations, fraternities and corps, a reunification of the two associations was initiated in 1910. On March 11, 1910, the merger of the two associations in the Hotel Continental was sealed by the two chairmen Richard Bayer from ASC 1906 and Bruno Spies from ASV 1897. While the name was adopted from the original club, the colors of the sports club (green and white) replaced the blue and black of the ASV. Furthermore, the association consisted mainly of students enrolled in Dresden, many of whom came from Switzerland, Scandinavian countries and England. In 1924 its own sports facility was completed on Zellescher Weg , which consisted of a small clubhouse, eight tennis courts and a soccer field, two hockey fields, a cinder track and facilities for athletics competitions. Outside of Dresden, members of the association practiced winter sports such as ski jumping , alpine skiing and bobsleigh . The number of members grew to 700 in the 1920s.

Well-known members of the sports club included Richard Bayer , Erik von Frenckell , Luitwin Maria von Boch-Galhau , Willy van Delden , Friedrich Merck , Karl Merck , Hanns Voith , Hellmuth Wortmann and Reinhold Woeste . During the Second World War , sports activities came to a standstill and the ASV was dissolved in 1945. The ASV sports facility on Zellescher Weg was destroyed in a bomb attack on April 17, 1945 . The Andreas Schubert Building of the TU Dresden and an office building that houses the Institute for Saxon History and Folklore , a student union cafeteria and a departmental library of the Saxon State and University Library are now on the former ASV site .

Former members of the ASV founded the ASV Munich as a successor club in the post-war period , which sees itself in the tradition of the Dresden student sports club. Independently of this, the HSG Wissenschaft TH Dresden was established in 1949 as a university sports association of the Technical University of Dresden, and after the reunification then under the name of USV TU Dresden .

Departments

hockey

The ASC team after winning the Silver Shield (1908)

The hockey team of the 1906 newly founded Academic Sports Club in 1906 consisted largely of English people who lived in Dresden and had played their first games against the "ASC" before 1906. On February 8, 1906, the magazine “Sport im Wort” reported on the first official field hockey game in the Kingdom of Saxony: “Last Saturday there was a hockey match between an English team and one of the students of the Royal Saxon Technical Department on the sports field at Nossener Brücke in Dresden Dresden University of Applied Sciences (ASC Dresden). The English winners remained with 4-2 goals. "

In the game against Vienna AC , ASC Dresden won the Austrian championship in 1909

First game of the Leipziger SC against the ASC in March 1908. That was the first match between two Saxon teams, while the Dresden team lost 1: 5 (1: 2) at home to the Leipzig sports club. At Easter 1908, the men of ASC Dresden beat SC Frankfurt 1880 3: 2 (1: 1) in the final for the “Silver Shield” in Frankfurt am Main and thus won the most important trophy of that time, comparable to today's German championship. The ASC team managed to defend this challenge cup for nine months against the Berlin HC , Uhlenhorster HC and FC Frankfurt 1880.

In April 1909, the ASC Dresden team traveled to Vienna and beat Vienna AC 6: 1. The ASC won the Austrian championship held by the WAC at the time. In 1910, the ASC won the Austrian championship again. In March 1910, the newly established women's team of Leipziger SC played their first game against the women of ASC Dresden. On March 11, 1910, the “Leipziger Latest Nachrichten” reported: “The first women's hockey game in Leipzig. The women's hockey department of the Leipzig sports club will play their first game tomorrow, Saturday afternoon at a quarter to four o'clock on the Leipzig sports field against the women's hockey department of the Academic Sports Club Dresden. ... The Academic Sports Club Dresden launched the women's hockey department much earlier, so the skill level of the ladies from the Saxon residence will be greater. ”At Easter 1912, the hockey team of the academic sports club traveled again Vienna to the so-called Easter competitions, the ASV played twice against the WAC on the sports field at the Prater .

Until the Second World War , the ASV was one of the strongest hockey clubs in the city, along with the Dresdner SC, in both the men's and women's areas. After the World War, some former members of the ASV, who still wore the green and white playing clothes of the ASV, were accepted into the hockey section of the BSG locomotive .

Ice hockey and bandy

In the Academic SC 1906, bandy was played in addition to field hockey ( land hockey ) in winter . The first recorded bandy games of the student club took place in January and February 1907. The Dresden team at that time consisted of Erich Dannenfelser im Tor and the field players Ove Collett (Norwegian), Lindemann, Risch, Koch, A. Jacobi and Bär. The opponents of Dresden were the German Ice Hockey Society Prague ( Bubentsch ) and the Ruch Prague sports club .

January 27, 1907 Academic SC Dresden
Jacobi (7)
9: 2
(4: 1, 5: 1)
match report
DEHG Bubentsch
Dresden
February 16, 1907
3:30 p.m.
SK Ruch Prague
5: 9
(3: 6, 2: 3)
match report
Academic SC Dresden
Rifle Island, Prague
February 17, 1907
3:30 p.m.
DEHG Bubentsch
3: 3
(0: 0, 3: 3)
match report
Academic SC Dresden
Rifle Island, Prague
Charles Hartley shaped the early sport of ice hockey in Germany

Charles Hartley , a Canadian dentist and passionate ice hockey player, came to Dresden in April 1906 and became (later) assistant dentist at the Saxon royal court of Friedrich August III. and later at the court of Wilhelm II. In his spare time he played for the Academic Sports Club 1906 Dresden. But instead of ice hockey, the ASC played bandy, with a ball instead of a puck, eleven field players and an ice surface the size of a soccer field. Most of all Hartley was amazed by the bandy rules, among other things it was forbidden at the time to wield the ball like a puck on the club and to hold the club with both hands. In about 1907, Hartley asked a friend from Toronto to send him hockey sticks and pucks to equip his teammates with. In the next few years Hartley helped to build up the ice hockey game in Germany by taking part in various ice hockey tournaments with ASC Dresden. From around 1910 he also played in international appearances by the Berlin ice skating club in parallel with ASC Dresden .

In January 1908 Hartley played with the ASC 1906 against Leipziger SC and lost 6:18. Dresden played with the following line-up: Koch (goal), Ove Collett in defense, Otto Lindemann (left half field) and Gerhard Tavel (right half field) as well as Baer (left), Charles Hartley and Jakobi in the storm. The ice hockey club Podol Prague was in Dresden a few weeks for a game in which the ASC competed with the following team: Team: G. Greene, A. Jakobi, Charles Hartley, Gerhard Tavel, Lindemann, Ove Collett, Freinhell.

February 1, 1909 German EmpireThe German Imperium Academic SC Dresden
Charles Hartley (11)
15: 4
(8: 2, 7: 2)
BohemiaBohemia Ice hockey club Podol Prague
Palais pond , Dresden

At the end of February of the same year, the ASC traveled to Prague in 1906 for the second leg against Podol and for a match against the German Ice Hockey Society . Albert Marquard was in goal at the time, while Ove Collett, Gerhard Tavel, Lindemann, Green, Jacobi and Charles Hartley were field players. In the game against DEHG Hartley scored all seven goals for the ASC.

February 21, 1909 BohemiaBohemia Ice hockey club Podol Prague
1:13
(0: 6, 1: 7)
German EmpireThe German Imperium Academic Sports Club Dresden
Rifle Island, Prague
February 21, 1909
3:15 p.m.
BohemiaBohemia German Ice Hockey Society Prague
6: 7
(2: 6, 4: 1)
German EmpireThe German Imperium Academic Sports Club Dresden
Charles Hartley (11)
Belvedere (DFC Square) , Prague
The ASC 1906 at the 1909 Berlin International Ice Hockey Tournament
Forwards : Robert Tikkanen , Charles Hartley , G. Green
Rover : Gerhard Tavel, Jacobi
Defense : Ove Collett
Goalkeeper : Albert Marquard

In 1909 and 1910, the club took part in the international ice hockey tournament in Berlin , the first ice hockey tournament on German soil. In March 1909 , the ASC defeated the Brussels ice hockey club 5: 3 after extra time and won the tournament.

March 6, 1909 in the
evening
German EmpireThe German Imperium Academic SC 1906 Dresden
5: 3 n.V.
(2: 0, 0: 2, 1: 1, 2: 0)
game report
BelgiumBelgium Brussels Ice Hockey Club
Ice Palace, Berlin

The following year, the club lost 4-5 in the semi-finals after extra time against the Club des Patineurs de Paris .

February 11, 1910 German EmpireThe German ImperiumAcademic SC 1906 Dresden
Robert Tikkanen (2)
Dietrich
Charles Hartley
4-5 a.d.
(3-2, 1-2, 0-1)
game report
FranceFrance Club des Patineurs de Paris
Alfred de Rauch
A. J. MacDonald
Robert Masson
Alfred de Rauch
A. J. MacDonald
Ice Palace, Berlin

In January 1911 the bandy team in Berlin faced the Oxford Canadians and lost with 2:15. In January 1912, the members of the team traveled to Budapest and played two (bandy) games against the Budapest Ice Skating Club. The team at that time consisted of Albert Marquard in goal, defender Wilhelm Hoffmann, M. Pappia and Alfred Erlach played in cover and Gerhard Tavel (Swiss), Charles Hartley and Herbert Lechla played in the storm. A year later, the team traveled to Budapest again and lost the game against Budapest EV with 2: 6. In 1912, the ASV was also one of the favorites for the first German championship, but did not take part. With the departure of Hartley to Berlin, the ice hockey and bandy team of the ASV disappeared from the scene.

tennis

Dorothea Köring and Heinrich Schomburgk (1912)

Dora Köring won the mixed gold medal at the 1912 Olympic Games in Stockholm together with Heinrich Schomburgk from Leipzig . In the individual she was defeated in the final by the French Marguerite Broquedis in three sets and thus won the silver medal. She also became German tennis champions in 1912 and 1913 . Robert Spieß also took part in the 1912 Olympic Games and started in the singles and doubles competition. He reached the second round in singles, with Luis Heyden in doubles he was defeated in the quarterfinals. In addition, Spieß was German champion like Köring in 1912 .

athletics

Jutta Treitschke (right) represented the ASV at the university championships in 1929

The Berliner Wilhelm Tarnogrocki came to Dresden to the Academic Sports Club Dresden for reasons of study. In addition to Otto Peltzer , Müller and Hermann Engelhard , Tarnogrocki was the fourth German participant in the IX over 800 meters . 1928 Olympic Games in Amsterdam . There he finished fourth in the preliminary run and was eliminated. At the German championships in 1928 he was second behind Engelhard on the podium, this was his only individual medal at the German championships. He continued to take part in German championships until around 1932.

At the German championships in 1925 , Elaine Gütschow (née Kindermann) , who started for ASV, won the 100-meter run . A year later, at the German championships in 1926 , Gütschow was third in the 100-meter run and also third in the three-way battle .

Web links

Commons : Akademischer SV Dresden  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c asv-muc.de, 18.HoTeGoGermanOpen2010 - Chronik des ASV Dresden , p. 32ff, PDF file
  2. Thomas Beck Wine: The establishment of the Academic Sports Association ASV. In: asv-muc.de. Retrieved January 15, 2020 .
  3. ^ Dresden and the Elbgelände Association for the Promotion of Dresden and Tourism, pp. 77f, Friedrich Kummer, online
  4. Winter sports festival in Eichwald. In:  Der Tourismus , February 27, 1910, p. 6 (online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / dfv
  5. Thomas Beck Wine: The foundation of the ASV Dresden - Academic Sports Association Munich - hockey and tennis. In: asv-muc.de. January 27, 2020, accessed January 27, 2020 .
  6. ^ Stephan Jaensch, Jan Vesper, Marian Gaebler, Kri: Hockeytradition. In: urbanite.net. February 18, 2016, accessed April 22, 2020 .
  7. LSC 1901 - Chronicle. In: lsc1901.de. Retrieved January 16, 2020 .
  8. dresden-hockey.de, ESV Dresden e. V. Hockey Department: "Bläddl" No. 05 from May 13, 2018 (PDF file)
  9. Field hockey other German competitions. In: sport-record.de. Retrieved February 4, 2020 .
  10. International hockey match. In:  Wiener Mondags-Journal , April 12, 1909, p. 7 (online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / wmj
  11. Hockey: Dresden Academic Sports Club versus Athletics Sports Club. In:  Die Zeit , April 5, 1910, p. 16 (online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / zei
  12. Meistertafeln - Austrian Hockey Association. In: hockey.at. September 24, 2019, accessed January 16, 2020 .
  13. hessenhockey.de, Sachsen Hockey, March 2010: From the history of women's hockey , p. 9, (PDF file)
  14. Hockey: Easter Games. In:  Neues Wiener Abendblatt , April 6, 1912, p. 48 (online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / nwg
  15. ^ The Dresden academy. Sports club in Prague. In:  Prager Abendblatt. Supplement to the Prager Zeitung / Prager Abendblatt , February 15, 1907, p. 6 (online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / pab
  16. sihss.se, Swedish Ice hockey Historical And Statistical Society: Charles Hartley, a famous Dentist who developed European Ice Hockey ( Memento of March 28, 2008 in the Internet Archive )
  17. ^ Chris Wescott: Dominik and the Rise of German Hockey. In: nhl.com. Accessed January 16, 2020 (English).
  18. ^ History of hockey in Germany (1897-1945). In: internationalhockey.fandom.com. Accessed January 21, 2020 (English).
  19. Leipzig sports club beats Dresden academy. Sports club 1906 18: 6. In:  Prager Tagblatt , January 27, 1908, p. 5 (online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / ptb
  20. German Eidhockeyges. G. Dresden Akad. Sportver. Sunday 3 1/4 a.m. Belvedere (DFC Platz). In:  Prager Tagblatt , February 20, 1909, p. 6 (online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / ptb
  21. The Oxford Canadians in Prague. In:  The morning. Wiener Montagblatt , January 9, 1911, p. 10 (online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / dmo
  22. ^ Stephan Müller, German Ice Hockey Championships , Print on Demand, 2000, ISBN 3-8311-0997-4 , p. 6
  23. a b Profile of Dora Köring at olympic.org
  24. Tennis tournaments - German Open. In: sport-komplett.de. Retrieved January 17, 2020 .
  25. Robert Spieß in the Sports-Reference database (English; archived from the original )
  26. Leichtathletik-dresden.de, German champions and GDR champions from Dresden clubs (PDF file)