FC 08 Homburg

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FC 08 Homburg
Club crest of FC 08 Homburg
Basic data
Surname FC 08 Homburg-Saar eV
Seat Homburg , Saarland
founding August 1, 1908
Colours Green white
1. Chairman Herbert Eder
Website fc08homburg.de
First soccer team
Head coach Matthias Mink
Venue Waldstadion Homburg
Places 16,488
league Regionalliga southwest
2019/20 4th Place
home
Away

The soccer club 08 Homburg-Saar is a German soccer club in Homburg in Saarland . He became known nationwide through his membership in the Bundesliga in the 1980s. He has been playing in the Regionalliga Südwest since the 2018/19 season . The most famous former players include Werner Kohlmeyer , member of the German national team , which became world champion in 1954 , and Miroslav Klose , 2014 world champion .

history

Monument of the FVH at the old sports field on the Schloßberg

FC 08 Homburg was founded on August 1, 1908 as the Homburg 1908 football club in the Hohenburg Inn. Because Homburg was part of Bavaria at the time , the club's colors were initially blue and white . In the second half of 1910 she joined the Association of South German Football Associations . On October 6, 1912, the first league game in the club's history (FC Homburg 08 - FC Viktoria 1906 Kaiserslautern 3: 2) took place; on February 13, 1913, the entry in the club register as the football club Homburg, Pfalz e. V. made.

On November 9, 1932, the 1931 Homburg-Saar athletic sports club joined the FV Homburg as a division. In the summer of 1936 took place in the wake of the DC circuit , the merger of the three major associations Homburger in two stages. On July 25, 1936, the members of the two football clubs FV Homburg and Sportclub Union voted almost unanimously for the merger of the two clubs. On August 27, 1936, the soccer players merged with the gymnastics club 1878/1910 Homburg / Saar to form the Verein für Leibesübungen e. V. Homburg . VfL Homburg was dissolved by the Allied Control Council Act No. 2 of October 10, 1945.

The footballers played their first friendly game after the Second World War on January 27, 1946 at TSV Dudweiler under the name of Sportverein Homburg . They were not allowed to use their previous club name because of the ordinance on sports associations of October 6, 1945. The Homburg sports club was initially purely a football club. Due to the French regulations, all permitted sports were only allowed to be played in an omnisport club. On January 26, 1949 the statutes of the sports club Homburg took place. After the regulations were relaxed, the various divisions left SV Homburg in the first half of the 1950s.

On July 23, 1958, on the occasion of its 50th anniversary, the club became a football club. V. Homburg renamed. On July 9, 1966, the name was changed to FC 08 Homburg-Saar e. V. At the general meeting on December 20, 1968, the club name was unintentionally changed to FC Homburg-Saar e. V. changed. The addition 08 was forgotten in the articles of association submitted. The change went unnoticed for several years. On December 16, 1976 the mistake was corrected. The club received its name, which is still valid today, Fußball-Club 08 Homburg-Saar e. V. again.

Playtime League 0(division) space Points Gates
1960/61 Amateur League Saarland (3) 02. 40 083:33
1961/62 Amateur League Saarland (3) 15th 28 079:49
1962/63 Amateur League Saarland (3) 09. 26th 050:48
1963/64 Amateur League Saarland (3) 03. 44 080:53
1964/65 Amateur League Saarland (3) 06th 39 099:52
1965/66 Amateur League Saarland (3) 01. 41 086:49
1966/67 Regionalliga Southwest (2) 11. 23 046:81
1967/68 Regionalliga Southwest (2) 10. 30th 041:53
1968/69 Regionalliga Southwest (2) 09. 29 040:49
1969/70 Regionalliga Southwest (2) 14th 20th 041:54
1970/71 Regionalliga Southwest (2) 08th. 30th 046:50
1971/72 Regionalliga Southwest (2) 09. 29 038:30
1972/73 Regionalliga Southwest (2) 07th 34 072:52
1973/74 Regionalliga Southwest (2) 03. 41 065:35
1974/75 2nd Bundesliga South (2) 14th 34 071:74
1975/76 2nd Bundesliga South (2) 03. 51 072:41
1976/77 2nd Bundesliga South (2) 04th 49 084:56
1977/78 2nd Bundesliga South (2) 03. 49 065:45
1978/79 2nd Bundesliga South (2) 07th 43 065:47
1979/80 2nd Bundesliga South (2) 12. 37 058:62
1980/81 2nd Bundesliga South (2) 11. 38 066:69
1981/82 Oberliga Southwest (3) 01. 61 099:52
1982/83 Oberliga Southwest (3) 02. 53 066:32
1983/84 Oberliga Southwest (3) 01. 51 086:27
1984/85 2nd Bundesliga (2) 16. 34 057:58
1985/86 2nd Bundesliga (2) 01. 49 075:42
1986/87 1st Bundesliga (1) 16. 21st 033:79
1987/88 1st Bundesliga (1) 17th 24 037:70
1988/89 2nd Bundesliga (2) 02. 47 055:36
1989/90 1st Bundesliga (1) 18th 24 033:51
1990/91 2nd Bundesliga (2) 04th 45 042:37
1991/92 2nd Bundesliga South (2) 06th 32 041:36
1992/93 2nd Bundesliga (2) 16. 43 050:53
1993/94 2nd Bundesliga (2) 10. 37 053:46
1994/95 2nd Bundesliga (2) 17th 23 041:63
1995/96 Regionalliga West (3) 03. 67 069:37
1996/97 Regionalliga West (3) 08th. 45 047:47
1997/98 Regionalliga West (3) 03. 59 070:38
1998/99 Regionalliga West (3) 13. 36 029:49
1999/00 Oberliga Southwest (4) 03. 65 055:34
2000/01 Oberliga Southwest (4) 04th 67 085:47
2001/02 Oberliga Southwest (4) 09. 49 055:45
2002/03 Oberliga Southwest (4) 12. 48 048:51
2003/04 Oberliga Southwest (4) 04th 66 052:44
2004/05 Oberliga Southwest (4) 04th 64 069:33
2005/06 Oberliga Southwest (4) 02. 68 061:34
2006/07 Oberliga Southwest (4) 04th 53 059:44
2007/08 Oberliga Southwest (4) 07th 50 049:41
2008/09 Oberliga Südwest (5) 02. 74 067:29
2009/10 Oberliga Südwest (5) 01. 64 053:32
2010/11 Regionalliga West (4) 17th 30th 029:49
2011/12 Oberliga Südwest (5) 01. 71 071:34
2012/13 Regionalliga Southwest (4) 14th 43 051:64
2013/14 Regionalliga Southwest (4) 11. 44 050:47
2014/15 Regionalliga Southwest (4) 06th 57 048:31
2015/16 Regionalliga Southwest (4) 06th 59 059:42
2016/17 Regionalliga Southwest (4) 15th 41 041:59
2017/18 Oberliga Rhineland-Palatinate / Saar (5) 01. 96 112: 20
2018/19 Regionalliga Southwest (4) 03. 64 054:30
2019/20 Regionalliga Southwest (4) 04th 46 042:30

Venues

The first venue was the oval in the interior of the cycling track below the III in 1908 . Palatinate sanatorium and nursing home . In 1909 the sports field was built on the Schlossberg . For 750 marks the club acquired an area of ​​8650 m² and built a soccer field with hard work and later a roofed grandstand with 216 seats. After the Second World War, the club moved to the Waldstadion , inaugurated in 1937, and the club's own sports field on the Schlossberg was transferred to the city of Homburg in 1968.

Bundesliga

In 1986, the FCH rose to the Bundesliga for the first time . In the first season the relegation was barely avoided in the relegation against FC St. Pauli , after the second season the FCH was relegated as the penultimate. The immediate resurgence was then followed by relegation, so that the 1989/90 season was the last season in the Bundesliga for the time being.

2nd Bundesliga

The club was a founding member of the 2nd Bundesliga South and regularly took top places there. The successes were linked to the person of the chairman Udo Geitlinger , who partially financed the association with his private assets.

Condom manufacturer as sponsor

For the 1987/88 season, President Manfred Ommer had won the condom manufacturer London as the main sponsor (contract amount : DM  200,000). The DFB was outraged and threatened to deduct points, so that the homeburger had to cover the sponsor lettering on the shirt with black bars for the time being. The 13th Chamber of the Regional Court of Frankfurt am Main finally found that the condom advertising on the jerseys did not violate custom or morality, from then on the players played uncensored.

1995 to 2018

In 1995 the FCH said goodbye to professional football until further notice. As 17th in the 2nd Bundesliga, the club was relegated to the Regionalliga West / Südwest. In the 1995/96 season, the FCH caused another sensation in the DFB Cup. After victories against FC St. Pauli, SV Sandhausen and TSV 1860 Munich , the team failed in the quarter-finals in the sold-out Waldstadion 3: 4 after extra time against the eventual title holder 1. FC Kaiserslautern .

After the re-promotion to the 2nd Bundesliga was narrowly missed twice, the FCH signed a cooperation agreement in 1998 with the neighboring club and rival 1. FC Saarbrücken , according to which the best players had to be handed over from Homburg to Saarbrücken. Due to financial irregularities and after bankruptcy, the FCH was forcibly transferred to the Oberliga Südwest after the 1998/99 season . Since 1999, the FCH has played continuously in the first division, which was only fifth from the 2008/09 season , and it was not until 2010 that it was promoted to the Regionalliga West , from which it was turned away and promoted again, so that the team returned from the 2012/13 season played in the regional league. In the 2016/17 season, the team did not get beyond 15th place in the regional league, which was synonymous with relegation to the major league. In the 2017/18 season , the team was first placed in the Oberliga Rheinland-Pfalz / Saar and was promoted to the Regionalliga Südwest. With the support of the sponsor Dr. Theiss Naturwaren is planning to move up to the 3rd division by 2020 .

The second team of the FCH plays in the 6th division, the Saarland League. The women play in the association league in cooperation with SV Beeden. The youth department takes part with 12 teams in ongoing matches (A-youth, 2x B-youth, B-juniors, 2x C-youth, 2x D-youth, 2 x E-youth, F-youth and G-youth).

DFB Cup

Between 1970 and 1995 the club reached the quarter-finals three times.

The greatest successes were achieved in the 1970s and early 1980s. In the 1975/76 season, the FCH made it to the quarter-finals, in which, in the sold-out Waldstadion, they lost 2-1 to Hamburger SV . In the 1977/78 season, the FCH met the then World Cup winner FC Bayern Munich on October 15, 1977 . With 3-1, FC Homburg defeated Bayern, who had traveled with prominent players such as Sepp Maier , Gerd Müller , Karl-Heinz Rummenigge and Uli Hoeneß . In 1979/80 the FCH reached the quarter-finals again, but lost again at home to 1. FC Köln (1: 4).

In the 1991/92 season, FC Homburg was allowed to travel to Munich in the second main round and defeated Bayern 4-2 after extra time. Until March 2, 2011, this was Bayern's last home defeat in the DFB Cup. In 1992/93, the FCH only lost on penalties in the round of 16 against 1. FC Nürnberg .

FC Homburg caused a stir again in the 1995/96 season. As relegated to the Regionalliga , the FCH lost the quarter-finals against 1. FC Kaiserslautern with 3: 4 after extra time.

Saarland Cup

FC Homburg is a constant in the Saarland Cup every season and is regularly one of the favorites. After winning the final in 1983, 2001 and 2006, they won the final against Borussia Neunkirchen 2-1 in the 2007/08 season and qualified for the first main round of the 2008/09 DFB Cup . FC Homburg won their fifth title in 2014 after defeating SV Elversberg 2-0 in the final. In 2016 Homburg met Elversberg in the final for the third time in a row. In Dillingen they prevailed 1-0 and won their sixth cup.

organization

The first chairman of FC 08 Homburg is the Homburg tax advisor and auditor Herbert Eder. Further members of the board are Rafael Kowollik as second chairman and the entrepreneur Franz-Holger Woitowitz as treasurer. Kowollik is also the managing director of the association. The board of directors is the Homburg lawyer and first member of the Saarpfalz district , Dieter Knicker.

successes

Championships

  • District Master: 1914
  • Master of the Saar district class: 1940
  • Honorary class Saar: 1948
  • Gaumeister Hinterpfalz and promotion to the district class (second highest division) in 1926
  • Saarland champion 1948 and 1957
  • Southwest German amateur champion: 1957
  • Champion of the 1st amateur league Saar: 1961, 1966
  • Champion 2nd Bundesliga: 1986 ,
  • German amateur soccer champions 1983
  • Champion of the Oberliga Südwest: 1982 , 1984 , 2010 , 2012 , 2018

Vice championships

  • Gau 13 Südwest district Pfalz, district class Pfalz-West: 1936
  • State class Saar: 1954, 1956
  • 1. Saar amateur league: 1964
  • 2nd Bundesliga: 1989
  • Oberliga Südwest: 2006, 2009

Promotion lap

  • Promotion round to Gau Südwest - Group West: 1938
  • Ascent round to Gau Südwest - Saar-Palatinate group: 1941
  • Promotion round of the 2nd Southwest League: 1957
  • Promotion round to the 2nd Bundesliga group south: 1982, 1984

trophies

  • Saarland Cup winners : 1983, 2001, 2006, 2008, 2014, 2016
  • Saarland Cup Vice: 1996, 1998, 2003, 2007, 2015
  • DFB Cup quarter-finals: 1976 , 1979 , 1996

Personalities

player

Source: Club archive and weltfussball.com .

Trainer

Source: Club archive and weltfussball.com .

  • 1937/38 Voss
  • 1939 Neureuther
  • ? Rösch
  • 1945–1949 Neureuther
  • ? Germann
  • ? Jaschok
  • 1956 Kugler
  • ? Tiator
  • ? Lathe operator
  • 1956/57 Franz Klees
  • 07.1957 - 06.1958 Karl Striebinger
  • 07.1958 - 03.1960 Ossi Müller
  • 04.1960 - 06.1960 Franz Klees
  • 07.1960 - 06.1965 Peter Momber
  • 07.1965 - 07.1970 Herbert Binkert
  • 08.1970 - 06.1971 Uwe Klimaschefski
  • 07.1971 - 06.1972 Kurt Sommerlatt
  • 07.1972 - 10.1972 Radoslav Momirski
  • 11.1972 - 06.1974 Uwe Klimaschefski
  • 07.1974 - 09.1974 Herbert Wenz
  • 09.1974 - 06.1980 Uwe Klimaschefski
  • 07.1980 - 08.1980 Harald Braner
  • 09.1980 - 03.1981 Siegfried Melzig
  • 03.1981 - 03.1981 Heinz Nitze
  • 04.1981 - 06.1981 Heinz Nitze / Albert Müller
  • 07.1981 - 09.1981 Heinz Nitze
  • 10.1981 - 06.1982 Albert Müller
  • 07.1982 - 10.1982 Stefan Abadschiev
  • 11.1982 - 06.1985 Albert Müller
  • 07.1985 - 08.1986 Fritz Fuchs
  • 08.1986 - 05.1987 Udo Klug
  • 05.1987 - 06.1987 Gerd Schwickert
  • 07.1987 - 10.1987 Uwe Klimaschefski
  • 10.1987 - 02.1988 Gerd Schwickert
  • 02.1988 - 05.1989 Slobodan Cendic
  • 05.1989 - 06.1989 Gerd Schwickert
  • 07.1989 - 04.1990 Josef Stabel
  • 04.1990 - 06.1990 Manfred Lenz
  • 07.1990 - 07.1992 Gerd Schwickert
  • 08.1992 - 12.1992 Hans-Ulrich Thomale
  • 01.1993 - 04.1994 Uwe Klimaschefski
  • 04.1994 - 06.1994 Manfred Lenz
  • 07.1994 - 04.1995 Ulrich Sude
  • 05.1995 - 06.1995 Manfred Lenz
  • 07.1995 - 05.1998 Ulrich Sude
  • 06.1998 - 12.1998 Werner Kartz
  • 12.1998 - 09.2001 Peter Rubeck
  • 09.2001 - 09.2001 Manfred Lenz
  • 09.2001 - 06.2008 Gerd Warken
  • 07/2008 - 06/2010 Jens Kiefer
  • 07.2010 - 11.2010 Alfred Kaminski
  • 11.2010 - 04.2011 Christian Hock
  • 04.2011 - 07.2011 Taifour Diane
  • 07.2011 - 04.2014 Christian Titz
  • 04.2014 - 04.2014 Sebastian Stache (interim)
  • 04/2014 - 06/2014 Robert Jung
  • 06.2014 - 04.2017 Jens Kiefer
  • 04.2017 - 07.2020 Jürgen Luginger
  • since July 24th, 2020 Matthias Mink

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Homburger Zeitung , July 31, 1909.
  2. ^ Founding statutes of SV Homburg from January 26, 1949.
  3. a b c d e press kit 2012/13 of FC 08 Homburg (PDF)  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , Section Club Chronicle , p. 11, accessed on July 29, 2013.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.fc08homburg.de  
  4. Club profile football club 08 Homburg-Saar e. V. on the private fansite ludwigspark.de , accessed on July 29, 2013.
  5. ^ Homburger Zeitung of November 10, 1932.
  6. Homburger Zeitung , July 27, 1936.
  7. ^ Homburger Zeitung of August 28, 1936.
  8. ^ Stations in the history of the FCH , on the private website fch-archiv , accessed on July 29, 2013.
  9. ^ Mathias Ehlers: When FC Homburg advertised condoms. In: 11 friends . May 31, 2011, accessed December 14, 2018 .
  10. Jörg Jung: Bitter descent of FC Homburg: Despite a 4-2 final victory at SC Watzenborn, it is in the upper league. Retrieved June 15, 2017 .
  11. a b Regional Football League: Eder announces promotion to the 3rd league as a two-year goal , Saarbrücker Zeitung , April 19, 2018
  12. FC 08 Homburg: Players from A – Z , on the weltfussball.com website, accessed on July 29, 2013.
  13. ^ FC 08 Homburg: Coach from A – Z , on the website weltfussball.com, accessed on July 29, 2013.