Cuxhavener SV

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Cuxhavener SV
Club logo
Full name Cuxhavener Sport-Verein eV
place Cuxhaven , Lower Saxony
Founded 1945
Dissolved 1990
Club colors green white
Stadion Sports field arena
Top league Gauliga East Hanover
successes Participation in the
DFB Cup 1975/76
home
Away

The Cuxhavener SV (officially: Cuxhavener Sport-Verein eV ) was a sports club from Cuxhaven . The first soccer team played for two years in the first-class Gauliga Osthannover and ten years in the highest amateur league in Lower Saxony.

history

development

On August 4, 1911, higher ranks of the IV Sailor Artillery Department founded the Cuxhaven Marine Sports Club . After the end of the First World War , it became the civil association Spiel-Verein Cuxhaven . With the accession of the clubs SC Cuxhaven and SC Hansa Cuxhaven , the CSV became a large club. After quarrels about the board, the association had to be dissolved in 1924. A successor was founded with the Cuxhaven sports club . After the end of the Second World War , the Cuxhaven sports club was not allowed to be re-established. Former members founded the Cuxhaven game association , which was renamed the Cuxhaven sports association in 1950. In 1990 the Cuxhavener SV merged with Eintracht Cuxhaven and Brockeswalder SV to form SV Rot-Weiss Cuxhaven . The home arena has been the Kampfbahn sports field since 1950 .

Early years

Due to the good connections to the Imperial Navy , the Marine SV quickly became one of the top teams in the region. In 1917 the team qualified for the final round of the North German Championship. In the quarterfinals, the Cuxhaven team lost 4-2 to Marine SC Wilhelmshaven . After a brief stint in the Unterweser district league in the 1919/20 season, the club, now known as SVC, rose to the first-class Weser / Jade district league in 1922 . Two years later the relegation followed and as a result the dissolution of the club.

The newly founded Cuxhavener SV was more pacifist than its predecessor. Instead of the Reich War flag , the club's coat of arms showed the Cuxhaven landmark, the Kugelbake . In 1928 the CSV moved to the new Brockeswalde sports field. In terms of sport, however, the club was only able to make headlines again after the reintroduction of conscription in 1935, which brought numerous marines to Cuxhaven.

In 1937 the CSV won the German Naval Championship. Five years later, the future national player Ottmar Walter moved to Cuxhaven. In 1943 the CSV was included in the newly created Gauliga Osthannover, where the team immediately became runner-up behind the WSV Nebeltruppe Celle . Also in 1943, the team moved into the final round of the Reich-wide as Gau Cup winners, but lost a qualifying game on their own pitch with 1: 3 against the eventual finalists LSV Hamburg . The following season 1944/45 was canceled because of the Second World War . A 4-1 victory of the CSV against Sparta Bremerhaven is reported .

post war period

For the 1946/47 season a Lower Saxony North Oberliga was set up. To qualify for it, the CSV had to complete a playoff against local rivals Eintracht, which the CSV won 6-1. In the league, the team was third from bottom and suffered a 12-0 defeat at Werder Bremen during the season. The CSV was then grouped into the second-class state league Bremen . As fourth in the 1948/49 season, the club was included in the newly created amateur league Lower Saxony- West.

Under the coach of Wirsig, the team reached third place in the 1951/52 season behind VfB Oldenburg and Eintracht Nordhorn . At that time, the club regularly brought players to Cuxhaven who were retired from the top division Bremerhaven 93 . During the other 1950s, the team regularly reached placements in the upper half of the table, but without getting close to the promotion round places. In 1959 the CSV rose from the amateur league and had to give up the local leadership role to Eintracht.

For the CSV five years followed in the third class amateur league 6 . After two runner-up championships, the CSV won the title in 1962 and 1963, but failed both times in the promotion round. After a league reform, the fourth-class Verbandsliga Nord continued from 1964 , from which they relegated two years later together with Eintracht. This made Brockeswalder SV , which split off from CSV in 1933, the local number one.

The years until the merger

In 1969 the CSV returned to the association league for four years. After relegation, the club increasingly relied on its own offspring. As early as 1975, the club returned to the association league and qualified for the DFB Cup . There the team had to travel to SV Chio Waldhof in the first round and lost just 1: 2. In 1977 and 1978 the team knocked again on the door of the highest division in Lower Saxony, but the CSV was each runner-up.

A year later, after another league reform, the Cuxhaven were grouped into the fifth-class Landesliga Ost , in which one had to travel 11,500 kilometers. After a third place in 1981, the board fell out, before relegation to the Lüneburg regional league followed a year later . In the 1987/88 season, the team returned once more to the Landesliga West . In 1990 the Cuxhavener SV merged with Eintracht Cuxhaven and Brockeswalder SV to form SV Rot-Weiss Cuxhaven .

literature

  • Hardy Greens : Legendary football clubs. Northern Germany. Between TSV Achim, Hamburger SV and TuS Zeven. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2004, ISBN 3-89784-223-8 , p. 264.