TV oak wreath Eulo

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TV oak wreath Eulo
Full name Gymnastics Club Eichenkranz Eulo
place Eulo
Founded 1897
Dissolved 2011
Club colors Red White
Stadion Sperlingsgasse sports field (formerly Kleines Str.)
Top league 1st class District 16 ATSB (TV Eichenkranz Eulo)
District League Cottbus (BSG Motor Forst)
State Class South Brandenburg (Rot-Weiß Forst)
successes Niederlausitz ATSB champions 1921, 1924

The TV Eichenkranz 1897 Eulo was a gymnastics club from the place Eulo , which from 1940 is part of Forst (Lausitz) . The club's soccer department played in District 16 (Niederlausitz) of the ATSB championship . After the Second World War , SG Eulo re-established the company as BSG Motor Forst . After the reunification, the club was renamed SV Rot-Weiß Forst and in 2011 merged with SV Süd Forst to become SV Lausitz Forst .

TV oak wreath Eulo

The association was founded in 1893. The football department of TV Eichenkranz Eulo won District 16 (Niederlausitz) of the ATSB football championship in 1921/22 and thus qualified for the association championship. Eulo won the semi-final game of the Association Championship East on May 28, 1922 in Breslau against SV Stern Breslau 1-0. The East final, which was held in Berlin on June 25, 1922 , Eulo lost to Brandenburg Lichtenberg and thus missed the qualification for the Germany-wide ATSB final. In 1924/25 Eulo was again able to become ATSB district champion of Niederlausitz. At the Association Championship East, Eulo was eliminated in the semifinals after a 2: 6 defeat against SV Stralau 10 . After the National Socialists came to power , the ATSB was dissolved. It is currently not known whether a soccer match took place in the DFB . On October 20, 1934, TV Eichenkranz merged with TV Gut Heil Eulo to form TV Eulo . After Germany surrendered in 1945, all sports clubs were dissolved.

After the Second World War

After the dissolution of the sports and gymnastics clubs, sports communities were founded in 1946 . In the Eulo was an indirect successor TV Eulo the SG Eulo founded. The sports field of Gut Heil Eulo gave way to an allotment garden, the gymnasium was converted into a kindergarten, so that only the football field of Eichenkranz remains. After being renamed BSG Konsum Forst and BSG Empor Forst in the meantime, it was renamed BSG Motor Forst in 1953 . For the 1983/84 season , Forst was promoted to the third-rate football district league Cottbus , which was left again after one season. Also in 1985/86 the ascent was opposed to the direct relegation. The last time the club rose to the district league in 1987/88 , this time Forst was able to stay in this league for two years. After the political change and the disappearance of the company sports associations , the club called itself on June 20, 1990 in SV Rot-Weiß 1990 Forst and played mainly in the lower leagues of Brandenburg. In the 1995/96 season, the club missed the league as second in the South Brandenburg regional class. On May 20, 2011, Rot-Weiß Forst merged with SV Süd Forst to form SV Lausitz Forst .

Well-known former players

successes

Individual evidence

  1. a b ATSB district master sorted by district. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on January 17, 2017 ; accessed on January 17, 2017 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.arbeiterfussball.de
  2. ^ Forest: Gymnastics Club 'Gut Heil' Eulo on Friedrich-Klinke-Weg. In: The Märkische Bote. July 23, 2011, accessed January 17, 2017 .
  3. ↑ Playtime of the district league Cottbus. Retrieved January 17, 2017 .

literature

  • Christian Wolter : Workers' football in Berlin and Brandenburg 1910–1933 . Arete Verlag, Hildesheim 2015, ISBN 978-3-942468-49-7 (results of the ATSB championship games from 1919 to 1933).
  • Forster Stadtbuch - address book of the industrial and commercial town of Forst-Lausitz 1939
  • City map Forst (Lausitz) 1934. Niederlausitzer Verlag, Guben 2004, ISBN 3-935881-21-5 .
  • Hardy Greens : Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 7: Club Lexicon . AGON-Sportverlag, Kassel 2001, ISBN 3-89784-147-9 .