SG Dynamo Fürstenwalde

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Dynamo Fürstenwalde
logo
Full name Sports community Dynamo Fürstenwalde
place
Founded 1971
Dissolved 1990
(successor clubs: SG Union Fürstenwalde and FSV Preußen Bad Saarow )
Club colors Wine red and white
Stadion Rudolf Harbig Stadium
Top league GDR League
successes GDR league champions 1980 (season B)

The SG Dynamo Fürstenwalde (1989–1990 SG Union Fürstenwalde ) was a sports community of the Dynamo sports association from Fürstenwalde / Spree , which existed from 1971 to 1990. She was a long-time member of the GDR League in the 1970s and 1980s . After its dissolution in 1990, the sports community of SG Union Fürstenwalde and FSV Preußen Bad Saarow joined.

history

founding

Dynamo Fürstenwalde was created in 1971 through the merger of TSG Fürstenwalde with SG Dynamo Frankfurt and SG Dynamo Fürstenwalde / Bad Saarow. The background to this action were plans by SV Dynamo to create a new youth center within reach of FC Dynamo in Berlin . The Frankfurt (Oder) location appeared to be disadvantageous because, with FC Vorwärts and BSG Semiconductor Factory , two powerful football teams were already based in Frankfurt. In Fürstenwalde, on the other hand, the competition from TSG, Dynamo or BSG Pneumant (all three in the district league or lower) was less high for the Dynamo Frankfurt team, which had qualified for the GDR league. In addition, Fürstenwalde had a suitable venue with the Rudolf Harbig Stadium, which at that time had a capacity of 4,000.

Success in the GDR league

In the 1971/72 season , the new team took the place of Dynamo Frankfurt in the GDR league. Until 1977, Fürstenwalde always occupied places in the middle of the field, before a 10th place was no longer enough for relegation the following year. In the following district league year, the team around their top performers Gerd Pröger (goal), Klaus Malzahn (defense) and captain Peter Wötzel (midfield) matured into a powerful squad that immediately rose again with a 2nd place behind the reserve team from Vorwärts Frankfurt who were not eligible for promotion managed.

As part of its plan to develop its own talents in Fürstenwalde, the BFC Dynamo immediately helped to strengthen the team by delegating young talents such as Peter Kaehlitz , Bernd Kuhlke and Bernd Lüdtke. With that, coach Egon Rohde (father of the league players Peter , Rainer and Frank Rohde ) had a squad available that was of sufficient quality for the second division. This was already proven in the first GDR league year ( 1979/80 ) when the team reached first place in league season B. Thus Fürstenwalde qualified for the promotion round to the GDR Oberliga , but there was no chance against Hansa Rostock , Chemie Böhlen and Energie Cottbus . Only against Wismut Gera there was a victory.

Despite the excellent season, an average of only 1,100 spectators came to the home games. In the league games of the 1979/80 season 19 players were used, their average age was 23.1 years. The following eleven had an average age of 23.9 years:

Gerd Pröger (22 missions, 25 years)
Hans Joachim Hubrich (16/25)
Klaus Malzahn (21/24), Knut Schulz (11/20), Jürgen Marquering (22/26)
Stefan Ott (17/23), Peter Wötzel (22/28), Dieter Müller (21/25)
Bernd Stiegel (13/21), Detlef Schulz (18/26), Bernd Lüdtke (22/20)

Until the end of the GDR and after the reunification

Until the end of the GDR football operation in 1990, Dynamo Fürstenwalde was mostly able to hold its own in the top ranks of the GDR league. The plan to supply the BFC with top division players was only partially realized. Only a few Fürstenwalder players like Burkhard Reich (102 league games), Thorsten Boer (32) and Peter Kaehlitz (9) were later used at the BFC.

With the beginning of the turning point in the GDR in 1989 and the dissolution of the MfS , the main support for SV Dynamo also ceased. In addition, the name of the club changed to SG Union Fürstenwalde for a few months. Since the SG Union Fürstenwalde could no longer secure the financial area, the SG dissolved after the 1989/90 season .

The players then joined the newly founded clubs SG Union Fürstenwalde and FSV Preußen Bad Saarow . The SG Union merged with Wacker Fürstenwalde in 2002 to form the FSV Union Fürstenwalde .

literature

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d History from Brandenburg. (No longer available online.) In: sscbb.de. Sports souvenir collectors clubs Berlin-Brandenburg 1983 e. V., archived from the original on October 29, 2013 ; Retrieved July 12, 2013 .
  2. League football with an intermediate sprint . In: Berliner Zeitung . April 12, 1990 ( staatsbibliothek-berlin.de [accessed on July 23, 2013]).