Bornaer SV

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Bornaer SV
logo
Basic data
Surname Bornaer Sportverein 91 eV
Seat Borna , Saxony
founding September 1, 1991
Colours black yellow
Website www.fussballclub-borna.de
First soccer team
Head coach Marco Gruhne
Venue Rudolf Harbig Stadium
Places 4,000
league District Oberliga Muldental / Leipziger Land
2018/19 3rd place
home
Away

The Bornaer SV is a football club from Borna in Leipzig district . The home of the 370-member association is the Rudolf Harbig Stadium in the north of Borna.

history

1948 - 1990: BSG activist Borna

Historical logo of the BSG activist Borna

The predecessors of Bornaer SV 91 were SG Borna , founded in 1946, and the company sports association BSG Aktivist Borna from the district town south of Leipzig, which emerged from this in 1948 . The Borna lignite power station was the carrier company . The first soccer team of activist Borna played for many years at the regional level of the GDR district of Leipzig .

In the 1986/87 season, the BSG won the championship title in the Leipzig district league . In the promotion round to the GDR league , the BSG activist Borna narrowly failed and only reached third place behind the BSG Lokomotive Stendal and the BSG Robotron Sömmerda .

Also in the following season 1987/88 the activist team prevailed in the Leipzig district league and was able to defend their championship. After the Saxons had reached second place in the promotion round to the GDR league before chemistry PCK Schwedt , the promotion to the second division followed. After just one season, the Bornaers had to leave the GDR league together with Motor Grimma . In 1990 the Borna team returned to the GDR league together with the FSV Kali Werra Tiefenort .

1990 - 1991: BSV Borna

In 1990 the company sports association was transformed into the Borna mining sports club . After eighth place could be achieved in the last GDR league season 1990/91, the black and yellow were classified in the NOFV Oberliga for the coming season .

Since 1991: Bornaer SV 91

On September 1, 1991, the name was again changed to Bornaer Sportverein 91 . After ten seasons in the Oberliga, there was relegation to the Sachsenliga in 2000 . A year later, the BSV was relegated to the Leipzig district league , where at the end of the season he was only just able to avoid the direct fall into the district class. After winning the district championship and the associated promotion in 2006, Bornaer SV 91 played in the Sachsenliga until his voluntary retirement in 2010.

Due to the bankruptcy proceedings opened in the 2011/12 season, the club had to relegate from the District League North. On January 1, 2012, the other sections were spun off from Bornaer SV 91, so that the club has been a pure football club ever since. In the district league Muldental / Leipziger Land the black and yellow managed to win the title and the immediate return to the district league North. At the end of the 2017/2018 season, Bornaer SV 91 had to relegate from the division, which has now been renamed Landesklasse Nord, and has since played again in the Muldental / Leipziger Land regional league.

Stadion

The main square in the Rudolf Harbig Stadium

Bornaer SV 91 plays the home games of its first men's team in the urban Rudolf Harbig Stadium. In the period from September 2000 to July 2001, the stadium was extensively modernized and has since offered space for 4,000 spectators. In addition to the main square with natural grass, an artificial grass pitch with floodlights was inaugurated in January 2008. In addition, the main grandstand was roofed in 2010 so that larger sports competitions can also be held in the future.

The record number of spectators in Borna’s Rudolf-Harbig-Stadion is 4,600 spectators who attended the first matchday of the GDR League Season B between BSG activist Borna and BSG Chemie Leipzig on August 14, 1988 .

statistics

  • Participation in the GDR League: 1988/89, 1990/91
  • Participation in Oberliga Nordost : 1991 / 92–1999 / 00
  • Eternal table DDR-Liga: Rank 120

people

  • Torsten Jülich , young player in Borna, later in the 2nd Bundesliga for VfB Leipzig and Eintracht Braunschweig
  • Jochen Kunath , 44-time GDR league player, coach with activist Borna and later with Bornaer SV 91
  • Erik Majetschak , young player in Borna, youth national team of the DFB, active in the 2nd Bundesliga for FC Erzgebirge Aue
  • Harro Miller , 62-time East German league player, was a coach in Borna in the 1990s
  • Hans-Jürgen Naumann , GDR national player and 165 times GDR league player, played for activist Borna in 1975/76
  • Konrad Schaller , young player in Borna, later 313 league games for SC Leipzig and Wismut Aue

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Thomas Lieb: Bornaer SV files for bankruptcy. December 23, 2011, accessed April 1, 2020 .