Baden handball association
Badischer Handball-Verband (BHV) | |
founding | March 17, 1958 (1st entry in the register of associations) |
region | |
President | Peter Knapp |
Clubs (approx.) | 147 (as of January 1, 2019) |
Members (approx.) | 36,800 (as of January 1, 2019) |
Teams (approx.) | 777 (as of July 1, 2020) |
Seat | Karlsruhe |
Website | [1] |
The Badischer Handball-Verband e. V. (BHV), based in Karlsruhe, is a regional association within the German Handball Federation .
organization
The association has 36,800 members in its 147 clubs with a total of 777 teams. It is thus the fourth largest sports association in the Badischer Sportbund Nord (as of January 1, 2019).
The highest divisions of the BHV are the Baden League Men and the Baden League Women . The respective Baden champion rises to the Baden-Württemberg-Oberliga (BWOL). This was re-established for the 2000/2001 season and is jointly supported by the three Baden-Württemberg associations. Below the Baden League, the two national leagues North and South were introduced in 1981/1982, which are also directly subordinate to the BHV. Since the 2016/2017 season, the single-track association league has been located between the Baden league and the state leagues.
The BHV is divided into six handball circles , which are responsible for playing in the classes below the national leagues.
A specialty is the Neckar-Odenwald-Tauber district, which is partly affiliated with the handball association Württemberg . On the other hand, TSV Birkenau and TSV Viernheim , for example, play in the BHV game classes, although both belong to the Hessian administrative district of Darmstadt .
Web links
Association structure
Circles
There are six handball circles in the Baden Handball Association: Bruchsal, Heidelberg, Karlsruhe, Mannheim, Pforzheim and Neckar-Odenwald-Tauber. The handball group Neckar-Odenwald-Tauber was founded in 2015 from the two former districts of Tauberbischofsheim / Buchen and Mosbach.
Bureau
- President: Peter Knapp
- Deputy President: Franz Schneider
- Vice President Finances: Tanja Grether
- Vice President Playing Technology: Harry Sauer
- Vice President School: Sara Schmechel
- Vice-President Youth: Sebastian Krieger
- Vice President recruiting: Jana Weinbrecht
- Vice-President Legal: Lutz Pittner
- Vice President Referees: Ulrich Schuler
- Equal Opportunities Officer: Marion Laupp
- Chairman of the Bruchsal district: Uwe Grammel
- Chairman of the Heidelberg district: Jürgen Brachmann
- Chairman of the Karlsruhe district: Franz Schneider
- Chairman of the Mannheim district: Andreas Pfrang
- Chairman of the Pforzheim district: Thomas Dörflinger
- Chairman of the Neckar-Odenwald-Tauber district: Bernhard Spitznagel
Commitment of the Baden handball association
Children's handball
Promoting the sport of handball in schools is the focus of the cross-association project "Handball moves schools".
Personnel development
So far, the association has trained more than 1,035 student mentors and promoted the use of graduates of the Voluntary Social Year and the Federal Voluntary Service in Baden. In this way, the clubs can be provided with the trainers they need and the youngsters can be introduced to voluntary work.
Training concept
The aim of the BHV is to enable every trainer to complete basic training. With the school mentor training, the decentralized courses and the renowned pool of speakers, the BHV offers its associations a training structure tailored to all target groups.
social commitment
Four integrative training groups with people with disabilities are currently active in the BHV. The BHV takes on the subject of addiction prevention in cooperation with the dry alcoholic Frank Milbich.
competitive sport
Since 2006, teams of the Baden handball association have won the German championship of the selection teams (country cup) six times and have become vice-champions twice. Since 2009 alone, 21 players from the ranks of the BHV have been transferred to the youth and junior national teams of the DHB. The current and former national players and top stars Uwe Gensheimer , Patrick Groetzki and Christian Zeitz also went through the BHV selection teams.
Short chronicle of sporting successes
Selection teams
1997: Team Baden (m80) - German youth regional cup winner
2006: Team Baden (m89) - German youth regional cup winner
2007: Team Baden (m90) - German youth regional cup winner
2009: Team Baden (w93) - 2nd place German youth Country Cup
2010: Team Baden (m93) - German Youth Country
Cup Winner 2010: Team Baden (w94) - 3rd place German Youth Country Cup
2011: Team Baden (m94) - German Youth Country Cup Winner
2012: Team Baden (w96) - German Youth - Country
Cup winners 2013: Team Baden (w97) - 2nd place German Youth Country Cup
2014: Team Baden (m97) - 3rd place German Youth Country Cup
2014: Team Baden (w98) - 3rd place German Youth Country Cup
Club teams
1933: SV Waldhof Mannheim - German Champion (Großfeld, German Sports Authority)
1939: VfR Mannheim / Women - German Champion (Großfeld)
1941: VfR Mannheim / Women - German Champion (Großfeld)
1947: SV Waldhof Mannheim - German Vice-Champion (Großfeld )
1948: SV Waldhof Mannheim - German Vice Champion (Großfeld)
1949: TSV Rintheim - South German Champion (Halle)
1953: TSV 05 Rot - South German Champion (Halle)
1956: SG Leutershausen - German Vice Champion (Großfeld)
1957: SG Leutershausen - German Vice-Champion (Großfeld)
1964: SG Leutershausen - South German Champion (Halle)
1966: SG Leutershausen - German Vice-Master, South German Champion (Halle)
1968: SG Leutershausen - German Champion (Halle) and German Vice-Champion, Relay champion BL Süd (Großfeld)
1969: SG Leutershausen - German runner-up, relay champion Bundesliga south (Halle) and German champion (Großfeld)
1969: TSV Birkenau - runner-up Bundesliga south (Großfeld)
1970: SG Leutershausen - Finalist in the Eur opapokal (Großfeld)
1970: SG Leutershausen - Relay Champion Bundesliga South (Großfeld)
1972: VfR Mannheim / Women - German Champion (Kleinfeld)
1974: TSV Birkenau - German Champion (Großfeld)
1992: SG Leutershausen - German Vice Champion (Halle)
2006 : Rhein-Neckar Löwen - Finalist in the DHB-Pokal (Halle)
2007: Rhein-Neckar Löwen - Finalist in the DHB-Pokal (Halle)
2008: Rhein-Neckar Löwen - Finalist in the European Cup Winners' Cup (Halle)
2009: Rhein-Neckar Löwen - Semi-finalist in the DHB-Pokal (Halle)
2009: Rhein-Neckar Löwen - Semi-finalist in the EHF Champions League (Halle)
2010: Rhein-Neckar Löwen - Finalist in the DHB-Pokal (Halle)
2011: Rhein-Neckar Löwen - Semi-finalist in the EHF Champions League (Halle)
2011: Rhein-Neckar Löwen - semi-finalist in the DHB-Pokal (Halle)
2012: Rhein-Neckar Löwen - semi-finalist in the EHF Champions League (Halle)
2013: Rhein-Neckar Löwen - EHF Cup winner ( Halle)
2014: Rhein-Neckar Löwen - German runner-up (Halle)
2015: Rhein-Neckar Löwen - German runner-up r (Halle)
2016: Rhein-Neckar Löwen - German Champion (Halle)
2016: Rhein-Neckar Löwen - DHB Supercup Winner (Halle)
2017: Rhein-Neckar Löwen - German Champion (Halle)
2016: Rhein-Neckar Löwen - Dhb-Supercup-Winner (Halle)
2018: Rhein-Neckar Löwen - German Vice- Champion (Halle)
2018: Rhein-Neckar Löwen - DHB-Cup Winner (Halle)
2018: Rhein-Neckar Löwen - DHB-Supercup-Winner (Halle)
Current Baden Bundesliga clubs
In the 2019/2020 season, the BHV is represented with nine teams in the national leagues and the 3rd division: For men with the Rhein-Neckar Löwen in the 1st Bundesliga , with SG Nussloch, SG Kronau / Östringen II, the TGS Pforzheim and HG Oftersheim / Schwetzingen in Südstaffel and the SG Leutershausen and the TVG Großsachsen in Oststaffel the 3. Liga , and among women with the TSG Ketsch in the first Bundesliga and the TSG Ketsch II in Südstaffel .
society | Years in the Bundesliga | Years in the 2nd Bundesliga | Years in the 3rd division |
---|---|---|---|
Rhine-Neckar lion | 2003/04, since 2005 | 2002/03, 2004/05 | - |
SG Leutershausen | 1966-1977, 1988/89, 1990-1995 | 1981–1988, 1989/90, 1995–2006, 2012–2014, 2016–2017 | 2010–2012, 2014–2016, since 2017 |
HG Oftersheim / Schwetzingen | - | 2004-2009 | since 2016 |
TVG Großsachsen | - | - | 2011/11, since 2012 |
SG Kronau / Östringen II | - | - | since 2012 |
TGS Pforzheim | - | - | since 2013 |
SG Nussloch | - | - | since 2014 |
TSG Ketsch (women) | 1994/95, 1999/2000, 2005-2008, 2019/2020 | 1992–1994, 1995–1999, 2000–2005, 2008–2010, 2011/2012, 2016–2018 | 2010/11, 2012–2016 |
Former Baden Bundesliga club
Men
society | Years in the Bundesliga | Years in the 2nd Bundesliga | Years in the 3rd division | |
---|---|---|---|---|
TSV 1896 Rintheim | 1969–1977 and 1978/79 | 1988/89 and 1990-1996 | - | |
TSV Birkenau | 1966-1969 and 1979/80 | 1981-1986 | - | |
TSV Oftersheim | - | 1983-1991 | - | |
TSV Baden Oestringen | - | 1995-2002 | - | |
TSV 05 red | - | 1981-1988 | - | |
TV Schwetzingen 1864 | - | 1994-1996 | - | |
HSG Kronau / Bad Schönborn | - | 2000-2002 | - | |
SG Pforzheim / Eutingen | - | - | 2010–2011, 2016–2017 |
Women
society | Years in the Bundesliga | Years in the 2nd Bundesliga | Years in the 3rd division | |
---|---|---|---|---|
HSG TB / TG 88 Pforzheim | 1994/95, 1999/2000, 2005-2008 | 1992–1994, 1995–1999, 2000–2005, 2008–2010, 2011/2012 | 2010/11, 2012–2017 | |
TSV Malsch | 1979-1985 | 1989-1991 | - | |
VfR Mannheim | 1975-1979 | - | - | |
TSG Weinheim | 1977-1980 | - | - | |
Post SV Karlsruhe | 1975/76 | - | - | |
TSV Birkenau | - | - |
Individual evidence
- ↑ "Handball moves schools"
- ^ Addiction prevention: The crate of beer after the game and then ..... Pestalozzi School Liedolsheim, accessed on June 30, 2013 .