BC Dresden

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BC Dresden
Full name Basketball Club Dresden eV
Founded 1953 forerunner
2007 re-establishment
Hall Sports hall of the
Dreikönigschule Dresden
(250 seats)
Homepage www.basketball-dresden.org
Chairman Georg Greifzu
executive Director Frank Krummrey
Trainer Oliver Fischer Men
Hannes Ramm Women
league 2. Regionalliga Südost (North) men
  Oberliga Sachsen women
Colours blue White
Jersey colors
Kit shorts.svg
home
Jersey colors
Kit shorts.svg
Away

The Basketball Club Dresden ( BC Dresden or BCD for short ) is a basketball club from Dresden . With its predecessor organizations, it was one of the most important basketball locations in the GDR and, even after German reunification , made a name for itself primarily through its intensive work with young talent. After the club was founded in 2007, BC Dresden plays regularly in the regional league .

Club profile

BC Dresden sees itself as a performance-oriented mass sports club based on a comprehensive membership structure. The BCD accommodates both a male and a female play area, in which several adult teams are integrated. In the 2015/2016 season, the BCD was represented in six different leagues with four men's and two women's teams. In addition, the association operates an intensive promotion of young talent. The BCD looks after children and adolescents from the earliest possible playing age up to the U18 and promotes active player training. In the 2015/2016 season, the club had a total of eight youth teams.

In terms of sport, BC Dresden strives to establish itself among the best clubs in Saxony. It is the second largest club in the city after the Dresden Titans and is one of the largest basketball clubs in Saxony in terms of membership (in 2010 it was even the largest club). Against this background, the association's self-image includes participating in various national and international competitions beyond the league season (such as the Vienna Easter tournament) and organizing such tournaments itself (such as the Elbe Cup tournament).

As a non-profit association of BC Dresden also endeavors for influencing society. His goal is to interest people in basketball and to promote the establishment of basketball in the region in general. To this end, the association cooperates with various schools, has an open gym program and is, among other things, a partner in the “BasKIDball” program, which is operated throughout Germany under the patronage of Dirk Nowitzki .

history

Organizational forerunners and founding of a new club

The prehistory of BC Dresden goes back to the time of GDR sport . The club found its earliest institutional establishment in the basketball section of the HSG Lokomotive HfV Dresden, which was founded in 1953 . This university sports association, which had both men's and women's teams in league play, was finally given a youth division in 1970 when the basketball working group of the 65th Polytechnic High School in Dresden was joined, which developed into an efficient junior division within just ten years.

Due to the often large distances between the training and game halls on the one hand and the districts of origin of the players on the other hand, in 1981 the basketball section of the HSG Lokomotive HfV Dresden, which continued to exist in parallel, became a new playgroup at the Nagema Dresden company sports community (later: BSG Nagema Pactec Dresden) and under the Chaired by Werner Polte, which is now the recently completed three-field sports hall of the 114/115. Polytechnic high school in Dresden could use. In 1987, a modern basketball facility was inaugurated according to global standards. The BSG Nagema (Pactec) Dresden played an important role in East German basketball . She was represented in the top division of the GDR and her teams took part in numerous tournaments at home and abroad (for example in Poland, Czechoslovakia and Hungary). In addition, the BSG hosted large tournaments and central finals (such as the GDR championship and the DBV cup).

After the end of the SED regime, the name was changed to Turn- und Sportverein Verpackungsmaschinenbau Dresden (TSV VMB Dresden) and later to TSV Pactec Dresden. In 1995, an independent gaming community was founded from this, which cooperated as the basketball club Zschachwitz 1995 (BV Zschachwitz 95) with the Dresden-Großzschachwitz grammar school and received a new chairman in Manuela Piesche. During this time, the club was able to continue its successful youth work and produce numerous talents. With the closure of the grammar school in the summer of 2007, the club then not only lost its venue, but also its most important foundation for young talent. However, a new cooperation partner was found in the Dreikönigschule Dresden, and together with the basketball department of the Dreikönigschule sports club (SV Gymnasium DKS), a new club was founded in the same year under the chairmanship of Frank Krummrey and Michael Hentschel, which has since been called BC Dresden .

Development until today

Due to the re-establishment and the now central location in the Dresden Neustadt , the BC Dresden was able to quickly increase its level of awareness and gain numerous new members. Within a short time he was able to grow into one of the largest basketball clubs in Saxony and to move up to the regional league for the first time in 2013 with his first men's team .

Furthermore, the association places a special focus on promoting young talent. A multitude of talents emerged from this work, such as the later Bundesliga and junior national player Lucile Peroche (then ChemCats Chemnitz ) as well as Eléa Gaba and Blanca Stammer (then also ChemCats Chemnitz), who both later played in the Bundesliga and 2015 were included in the German perspective squad.

Even before it was founded, the former BV Zschachwitz 95 was significantly involved in setting up a professional basketball club in Dresden, the Dresden Titans , together with the USV TU Dresden and the HSG Lokomotive HTW Dresden . As a result, relations between the two clubs have been relatively close to this day.

successes

Predecessor organizations

Adults
4th German Championship of the GDR (men): 1983
3rd DBV Cup (men): 1983
Winner Oberliga Sachsen (men): 2007

2nd German Championship of the GDR (women): 1973
3rd German Championship of the GDR (women) : 1963, 1971, 1974
3rd German championship of the GDR (women): 1990

youth
2nd German championship of the GDR (boys; U15): 1986
3rd German championship of the GDR (boys; U19): 1988, 1989
3rd youth regional league Saxony (Boys): 1991
2nd Youth State Cup Saxony (Boys): 1991
Winner of the Dresden District League (boys; U15): 1990

2nd German Championship of the GDR (girls; U19): 1990
3rd German Championship of the GDR (girls; U17): 1986
3rd German Championship of the GDR (girls; U13): 1983
DBV-Pokal winner (girls; U13): 1982
Saxony youth league winner (girls): 1991

BC Dresden

Adult
winners Oberliga Sachsen (men): 2013
2nd Oberliga Sachsen (men): 2008, 2015, 2017
3rd Oberliga Sachsen (men): 2011, 2012
3rd Landesliga Sachsen (men): 2015, 2016
3rd Saxony Cup (men) : 2010, 2011
district league Dresden (men): 2012, 2013, 2014
2nd district league Dresden (men): 2015, 2016, 2017
3rd district league Dresden (men): 2009

3rd Oberliga Sachsen (women): 2008, 2014
winner State League Saxony (women): 2015, 2016
2nd State League Saxony (women): 2011, 2012, 2017
3rd State League Saxony (women): 2010
2nd District League Dresden (women): 2017
2nd Saxony Cup (women): 2011
3rd Sachsenpokal (women): 2010

youth
winner Landesliga Sachsen (boys; U18): 2009
winner district league Dresden (boys; U18): 2016
winner district league Dresden (boys; U16): 2015
winner district championship Dresden (U12mix): 2019
winner district cup Dresden (U12mix ): 2019
district league Dresden (boys; U12): 2009
district league Dresden (boys; U10)

winner : 2009 Dresden district cup winner (girls; U17): 2017

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. See Michael Hentschel (Red.), [Without year]: Basketball Club Dresden e. V. - The Elbriesen. [Association brochure], Dresden, page 4 ( Link ).
  2. See Michael Hentschel (Red.), [Without year]: Basketball Club Dresden e. V. - The Elbriesen. [Association brochure], Dresden, page 3 ( link ).
  3. See Michael Hentschel (Red.), [Without year]: Basketball Club Dresden e. V. - The Elbriesen. [Association brochure], Dresden, page 4 ( Link ).
  4. See Michael Hentschel (Red.), [Without year]: Basketball Club Dresden e. V. - The Elbriesen. [Association brochure], Dresden, page 2 ( Link ); Frank Krummrey, [no year]: Basketball Club Dresden e. V. [Association presentation], Dresden, slide 3, 4 ( link ).
  5. See Michael Hentschel (Red.), [Without year]: Basketball Club Dresden e. V. - The Elbriesen. [Association brochure], Dresden, page 4 ( Link ).
  6. Cf. BC Dresden, 2009: Articles of Association of the Basketball Club Dresden e. V. Version of June 25, 2009, Dresden, page 1 ( Link ).
  7. See your own website information ( link ).
  8. See your own website ( link ) and the program's homepage ( link ) on the “BasKIDball” project .
  9. See the history of the club: Sven Geisler, 2015: With his students in the Champions League. Michael Hentschel leaves the basketball club, but his building work is in good hands. In: Sächsische Zeitung (DRS) (SZ), November 6, 2015, page 17; Michael Hentschel (editor), [no year]: Basketball Club Dresden e. V. - The Elbriesen. [Association brochure], Dresden, page 2 ( Link ); Frank Krummrey, [no year]: Basketball Club Dresden e. V. [Association presentation], Dresden, slide 3 ( link ); as well as your own website information ( link ).
  10. See the development of the club: Sven Geisler, 2015: With his students in the Champions League. Michael Hentschel leaves the basketball club, but his building work is in good hands. In: Sächsische Zeitung (DRS) (SZ), November 6, 2015, page 17; Michael Hentschel (editor), [no year]: Basketball Club Dresden e. V. - The Elbriesen. [Association brochure], Dresden, page 2 ( Link ); Frank Krummrey, [no year]: Basketball Club Dresden e. V. [Association presentation], Dresden, slide 3 ( link ) and your own website information ( link ).