Eintracht Hildesheim
Surname | Eintracht Hildesheim from 1861 eV |
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Club colors | Green white |
Founded | July 19, 1861 |
Place of foundation | Hildesheim |
Association headquarters | At the sports fields 10 31139 Hildesheim |
Members | 7007 (2018) |
Chairman | Rolf Altmann |
Homepage | eihi.de |
Eintracht Hildesheim is the fifth largest sports club in Lower Saxony with 7007 members. Around 600 hours of sport are offered in the various disciplines every week. Among other things, handball , basketball , fencing , tennis , badminton , hockey , judo , swimming , athletics and gymnastics offered. The first men's handball team of Eintracht Hildesheim plays in the 3rd division . The team had previously played four times for one year each in the 1st handball league , most recently in the 2011/2012 season.
The Union
The MTV Eintracht Hildesheim was founded on July 19, 1861 by 73 men who had previously mostly been members of the MTV of 1848 Hildesheim. In addition to gymnastics, there was a fencing department from day one. In its 154-year history, the club has been able to increase its membership more than a hundredfold, also because other Hildesheim clubs joined the Eintracht, such as the Poseidon swimming club in 1969, the SV Hildesheim police force in 1972 and the Post-SV Hildesheim club in 2015 .
At the beginning, gymnastics took place in the former riding hall at the Ratsbauhof (which was converted into a gymnasium for an amount of 1000 gold marks) before the first Eintracht open-air facility was inaugurated in 1927. However, this was destroyed in World War II, so that one had to look for an alternative in the post-war years. On September 1, 1948, Eintracht took over the previous place of VfB Hildesheim. This facility was systematically expanded to become the most modern sports center in the Hildesheim region. The highlight so far was the inauguration of the balance exercise center in 1996. The sports center also includes the club home with changing and shower rooms, a restaurant, bowling alleys, ten tennis courts, a martial arts hall, an athletics stadium with a 400-meter synthetic track, lawn and tennis courts Plastic places. The association also operates the Himmelsthür swimming pool and the smile exercise center . Sports take place in another 30 halls in Hildesheim.
In addition to the wide range of 17 specialist sports departments, Eintracht Hildesheim also offers an extensive popular sports program and prevention and rehabilitation courses in health sports.
Handball at Eintracht Hildesheim
Men's
Full name | Eintracht Hildesheim Handball GmbH | ||
Founded | 1922 (handball department) 1998 (GmbH) |
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Club colors | green white | ||
Hall | Volksbank Arena Hildesheim | ||
Places | 2,800 | ||
Trainer | Jürgen Baetjer | ||
league | 3rd League North | ||
2018/19 | |||
rank | 2nd place | ||
DHB Cup | 1 round | ||
Website | eintracht-handball.de | ||
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The 1st men's team from Eintracht Hildesheim has been participating in the 3rd division North Relay since the 2018/19 season .
In the 2010/11 season they made direct promotion to the upper house of German handball with a narrow lead over GWD Minden , but, like three times before, were relegated from the handball Bundesliga after just one season. In the 2005/06 season they also won the championship in the 2nd Handball Bundesliga North and were promoted directly to the Handball Bundesliga. The 2006/07 Bundesliga season was - like the previous guest appearances in the first division - ended with direct relegation. Both in 1968/69 with defeats in all 14 games and in 2000/01 with only 2 wins and 3 draws, in 2006/07 (5 wins, 1 draw) and 2011/12 (2 wins) the team did not get over the bottom of the table out. With only 0.18 points per game, Eintracht Hildesheim has the third worst point average of all Bundesliga clubs in the all-time table. Only the 'mayfly' Stahl Brandenburg (0.12) achieved fewer points in the first division than the Hildesheim team. On 100 of the total of 120 match days played in the Bundesliga, Eintracht Hildesheim was last in the table, on six other match days the team was relegated to a different place.
In the 2007/08 season the direct promotion to the top German league was sought. With 54 points, the second place in the table in the northern relay of the second handball Bundesliga was achieved, one point behind the Stralsund AGM . In the relegation, the team failed against the table runner-up of the southern season HSG Düsseldorf . But in 2010/11 he was promoted back to the upper house as the first in the 2nd division north. But the joy does not last very long, so in 2011/12 you had to return to the lower house with only 4 points from a win against Frisch Auf Göppingen and Bergische HC , where you established yourself.
In the 2014/15 season, due to several failures and a few very narrow defeats, the move into the third division had to be started. The team ended the 2016/17 season as runner-up in the eastern season. In the subsequent relegation, Hildesheim was promoted to the 2nd Bundesliga.
The home games have been played in the Pappelallee sports hall (Volksbank Arena) since 2007, which has been expanded to accommodate up to 3,000 spectators. Previously, they played in Hall 39, and during the premier league, individual games were also played in the TUI Arena in Hanover.
Seasonal balances since 1998/99
season | Division | space | Sp | S. | U | N | Gates | Diff. | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1998/99 | 2nd Bundesliga North | 3 | 34 | 20th | 2 | 12 | 785: 704 | +81 | 42:26 |
1999/2000 | 2nd Bundesliga North | 2 | 32 | 24 | 1 | 7th | 798: 700 | +89 | 49:15 |
2000/01 | 1st National League | 20th | 38 | 2 | 3 | 33 | 845: 1084 | −239 | 7:69 |
2001/02 | 2nd Bundesliga North | 8th | 36 | 19th | 2 | 15th | 992: 937 | +55 | 40:32 |
2002/03 | 2nd Bundesliga North | 4th | 34 | 20th | 2 | 12 | 980: 938 | +42 | 42:26 |
2003/04 | 2nd Bundesliga North | 5 | 34 | 18th | 2 | 14th | 970: 941 | +29 | 38:30 |
2004/05 | 2nd Bundesliga North | 2 | 34 | 27 | 0 | 7th | 1084: 947 | +137 | 54:14 |
2005/06 | 2nd Bundesliga North | 1 | 38 | 28 | 4th | 6th | 1126: 979 | +147 | 60:16 |
2006/07 | 1st National League | 18th | 34 | 5 | 1 | 28 | 939: 1077 | −138 | 11:57 |
2007/08 | 2nd Bundesliga North | 2 | 34 | 25th | 4th | 5 | 1046: 870 | +176 | 54:14 |
2008/09 | 2nd Bundesliga North | 9 | 34 | 15th | 2 | 17th | 977: 988 | −11 | 32:36 |
2009/10 | 2nd Bundesliga North | 9 | 32 | 14th | 3 | 15th | 908: 925 | −17 | 31:33 |
2010/11 | 2nd Bundesliga North | 1 | 32 | 25th | 1 | 6th | 962: 855 | +107 | 51:13 |
2011/12 | 1st National League | 18th | 34 | 2 | 0 | 32 | 865: 1081 | −216 | 4:64 |
2012/13 | 2nd Bundesliga | 13 | 36 | 15th | 4th | 17th | 927: 923 | +4 | 34:38 |
2013/14 | 2nd Bundesliga | 13 | 36 | 14th | 5 | 17th | 986: 994 | −8 | 33:39 |
2014/15 | 2nd Bundesliga | 18th | 38 | 8th | 2 | 28 | 972: 1086 | −114 | 18:58 |
2015/16 | 3rd League North | 4th | 30th | 16 | 7th | 7th | 865: 786 | +79 | 39:21 |
2016/17 | 3rd League East | 2 | 30th | 22nd | 3 | 5 | 844: 713 | +131 | 47:13 |
2017/18 | 2nd Bundesliga | 18th | 38 | 8th | 5 | 25th | 954: 1051 | −97 | 21:51 |
2018/19 | 3rd League North | 2 | 30th | 24 | 2 | 4th | 893: 780 | +113 | 50:10 |
Ascent | |
descent |
Squad 2017/18
number | Surname | position | Year of birth | nation | since |
36 | Paul-Janis Twarz | TW | 1997 | 2017 | |
51 | Jakup Lefan | TW | 1989 | 2017 | |
99 | Leon Krka | TW | |||
4th | Bela Pieles | LA | 1999 | ||
6th | Lukas Schieb | RM | 1996 | 2017 | |
7th | Andreas Simon | RM / RR | 1984 | 2014 | |
9 | Jacob Nelson | RR | 1988 | 2017 | |
10 | Julius Heil | RL / RM | 2018 | ||
11 | Robin John | RM | 1991 | 2012 | |
15th | Chris Meiser | Back room | 1997 | 2017 | |
17th | Maurice Lungela | RA / RR | 1994 | 2013 | |
19th | Dimitri Ignatov | RA | 1998 | 2017 | |
21st | Johannes waiter | RA | |||
23 | Nikolaos Tzoufras | KM | 1987 | 2013 | |
24 | Fynn Wiebe | RL | 2017 | ||
33 | Dennis Weit | Back room | 1997 | 2017 | |
41 | Fin backs | LA | 1998 | 2017 | |
55 | Adam Papadopoulos | KM | 1995 | 2017 | |
72 | Nicos Passias | Back room | 1995 | 2016 | |
77 | Savvas Savvas | RL | 1997 | 2017 | |
Jost Briicker | LA | 1991 | 2018 | ||
Radek Doležel | RR | 1994 | 2018 |
Additions in 2017/18
- Dennis Weit ( TV Kirchzell )
- Fynn Wiebe ( LiT Handball NSM )
- Savvas Savvas ( ASV Hamm-Westphalia )
- Paul-Janis Twarz ( 1st VfL Potsdam )
- Spyridon Cherouveim ( FC Barcelona B )
- Chris Meiser ( HSG Burgwedel )
- Jacob Nelson ( LIF Lindesberg )
- Jost Brücker ( HC Kriens-Luzern , January 2018)
- Julius Heil ( HSG Konstanz , January 2018)
- Radek Doležel (HC Zlín, January 2018)
Departures 2017/18
- Pascal Kinzel ( Handball Hannover-Burgwedel )
- Maximilian Kroll ( TSG Altenhagen-Heepen )
- Jakup Stryc ( Dessau-Roßlauer AGM )
- Ivan Kucharik ( MTV Braunschweig )
- Max Berthold ( Northeimer HC ; loan)
- Spyridon Cherouveim ( HB Esch )
- Lothar von Hermanni ( Northeimer HC , February 2018)
Additions 2018/19
- Ole Zakrzewski ( DHK Flensborg )
- René Gruska ( TuS N-Lübbecke )
- Maurice Herbold ( Handball Hannover-Burgwedel )
Departures 2018/19
- Savvas Savvas ( GWD Minden )
- Max Berthold ( MTV Braunschweig )
- Andreas Simon (end of career)
- Dennis Weit (destination unknown, November 2018)
Well-known former players
Coaching office
The coach from 1981 to the end of the 2005/06 season was Gerald Oberbeck, who previously led the A-youth to two German championships in 1980 and 1981. On July 1, 2006, the former Russian national player Valeri Gopin took over the post of head coach, but on October 23, 2006 he was on leave. Gerald Oberbeck acted as interim trainer. From the beginning of November 2006 to June 2007 the Dane Lars Walther held the office. He was given leave of absence because the club was not sure whether the team with Walther could immediately return to the first division. Gerald Oberbeck was the new coach again. At the beginning of the 2011/2012 season, Volker Mudrow took over as coach. On January 11, 2012, the club separated from Mudrow, the coaching position took over again Gerald Oberbeck. Immediately after the match against SG Leutershausen on March 10, 2013, Oberbeck resigned from his coaching position; however, he remained a manager. Jürgen Kloth, coach of the A-youth team, and Michael Jahns took over the coaching position by the end of the season. At the press conference on July 15, 2013, Oberbeck announced that he is now back in the dual role of manager and trainer.
Ladies
The first women's team from Eintracht Hildesheim played in the 3rd League East from the 2010/11 season . After only 12th place was reached in the following season , the team was relegated to the Lower Saxony Oberliga. In 2018, the women's team managed to return to the 3rd division, from which the team was relegated after one season.
youth
Together with the CJD Elze , Eintracht Hildesheim runs a handball promotion center.
The first team of the male A-Youth has played in the A-Youth Bundesliga since it was founded in 2011/12 .
In 1980 and 1981, the male A-youth became German champions.
basketball
The first men's team in the basketball department played in the 2nd Bundesliga Group North from 1987 to 1990 . In the 1988/89 season they only just failed to qualify for the first basketball league . In the following season, however, the relegation from the 2nd basketball league followed. As a result, this level of performance could no longer be achieved.
American football
From 2002 to 2017 the Hildesheim football team of the Hildesheim Invaders belonged to the Eintracht Hildesheim club. Along with the change of club from VFV Hildesheim at the time, there was forced relegation to the association league. In 2005 the first return to the regional league could be celebrated, after some ups and downs the promotion to the German Football League 2 followed in 2008 . The class could not be held, but since 2013 the Invaders have played second class again. As early as 2015, the promotion to the German Football League could be celebrated. The American football department also had a cheerleading department, the Roses. The department left the association on December 31, 2017 and founded its own association, Hildesheim Invaders eV.
fencing
Since the club was founded in 1861, the fencing department has been an integral part of the club. Eintracht Hildesheim is still one of the most successful fencing clubs in Lower Saxony , and fencers regularly take part in the German championships, especially in youth fencing. The fencing department is primarily based in foil fencing , but the club is also successful in the epee . Training takes place in the sports hall on Pfaffenstieg in Hildesheim. For example, today's World Cup fencer Charlotte Krause trained in Hildesheim in her youth. The trainer is Piotr Jablkowski. He won a medal at the 1980 Moscow Olympics .
tennis
The tennis department is called TC Gelb-Rot Eintracht Hildesheim . It is the dominant tennis team, especially in the youth field in the Hildesheim-Peine region, and occasionally takes part in national championships.
Web links
- Official website of the entire association (with links to the departments)
- Homepage of Eintracht Hildesheim Handball GmbH
Individual evidence
- ↑ Statistics 2018. (PDF) Landesportbund Niedersachsen, p. 7 , accessed on April 23, 2019 .
- ↑ Web presence handball department: club history , accessed February 18, 2014
- ↑ eintracht-handball.de: Hanisch klar för norsk toppklubb , from May 13, 2017, accessed on August 8, 2017
- ↑ handball-world.com: Eintracht Hildesheim obliges backcourt players , from March 7, 2017, accessed on March 7, 2017
- ↑ handball-world.com: Eintracht Hildesheim signs young backcourt players , from March 10, 2017, accessed on March 10, 2017
- ↑ handball-world.com: Eintracht Hildesheim strengthens itself with returnees on May 18, 2017, accessed on May 18, 2017
- ↑ handball-world.com: Hildesheim signs junior national players for the goal on May 24, 2017, accessed on May 25, 2017
- ↑ handball-world.news: Eintracht Hildesheim gets Shooter from FC Barcelona on June 23, 2017, accessed on June 25, 2017
- ↑ dhb.de: Chris Meiser returns to Eintracht Hildesheim on March 14, 2017, accessed on August 8, 2017
- ↑ handball-world.news: Hildesheim presents new left-handers from Sweden from August 29, 2017, accessed on August 29, 2017
- ↑ handball-world.news: Hildesheim is strengthening its relegation battle in the 2nd division with outside Switzerland from January 4, 2018, accessed on January 4, 2018
- ↑ handball-world.news: Hildesheim presents new addition from January 12, 2018, accessed on January 12, 2018
- ↑ handball-world.news: Hildesheim signs Czech left-handers from January 25, 2018, accessed on January 25, 2018
- ↑ handball-world.com: Burgwedel announces two new additions for the coming season , from March 22, 2017, accessed on March 22, 2017
- ↑ handball-world.com: Goalkeeper leaves Eintracht Hildesheim , May 10, 2017, accessed on May 10, 2017
- ↑ handball-world.news: Dessau obliges league rivals , from July 19, 2017, accessed on July 19, 2017
- ↑ eintracht-handball.de: Thank you Ivo! Ivan Kucharik leaves Eintracht Hildesheim on May 20, 2017, accessed on August 8, 2017
- ↑ handball-world.news: Eintracht Hildesheim borrows Max Berthold from August 22, 2017, accessed on August 23, 2017
- ↑ handball-world.news: Eintracht Hildesheim loses Greek national players to Luxembourg on September 29, 2017, accessed on September 29, 2017
- ↑ handball-world.news: Northeimer HC presents newcomer from Hildesheim on February 10, 2018, accessed on February 10, 2018
- ↑ handball-world.news: Eintracht Hildesheim signs backcourt players from July 6, 2018, accessed on July 6, 2018.
- ↑ handball-world.news: Eintracht Hildesheim lands transfer coup: With René Gruszka comes first division experience , accessed on August 18, 2018
- ↑ handball-world.news: "One of our greatest talents in our handball boarding school" - Eintracht Hildesheim welcomes returnees , accessed on August 31, 2018
- ↑ handball-world.news: Minden brings Hildesheim top shooters for the coming season from November 3, 2017, accessed on November 3, 2017.
- ↑ handball-world.news: Hildesheim lets left-handers move to Braunschweig from July 5, 2018, accessed on July 5, 2018.
- ↑ handball-world.news: Former Junior European Champion Simon retired on July 11, 2018, accessed on July 11, 2018.
- ↑ handball-world.news: Backcourt player terminates contract with Eintracht Hildesheim from November 2, 2018, accessed on November 2, 2018.
- ↑ Eintracht Hildesheim website on June 23, 2011
- ^ Homepage Eintracht Hildesheim, viewed on January 14, 2012
- ^ Website Eintracht Hildesheim, accessed on March 24, 2013
- ^ Website Eintracht Hildesheim, accessed on March 24, 2013
- ^ Website Eintracht Hildesheim, accessed on July 16, 2013
- ↑ handball-world.news: 3rd division women: All decisions made , accessed on July 19, 2018
- ^ Website of Eintracht Hildesheim, accessed on August 12, 2012
Coordinates: 52 ° 8 ′ 16.1 ″ N , 9 ° 56 ′ 44.1 ″ E