Fencing Club Tauberbischofsheim

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FC TBB
Olympic Base Tauberbischofsheim (2013) - Schild.JPG
Surname Fecht-Club Tauberbischofsheim eV
Founded 1967
Place of foundation Tauberbischofsheim
Association headquarters Pestalozziallee 12
97941 Tauberbischofsheim
Chairperson Lothar Derr (club, popular sport, young talent)

Thomas Bayer (finance, controlling, organization)
Samuel Unterhauser (athletes spokesman)

Homepage www.fechtentbb.de

The Fecht-Club Tauberbischofsheim registered association ( FC Tauberbischofsheim e.V. for short ) is an ideal association for the promotion of sport based in Tauberbischofsheim in the Main-Tauber district in Baden-Württemberg . FC Tauberbischofsheim works at the federal base and former Olympic base in Tauberbischofsheim, in particular on the further development and promotion of the sport of fencing . With over 380 medals at the Olympic Games, World and European Championships and over 650 medals at German championships, the fencing club is one of the most successful sports clubs in the world.

history

prehistory

On October 12, 1954, on the initiative of Emil Beck - who was inspired by fencing scenes from the film The Three Musketeers in a cinema newsreel - the founding meeting of a fencing department at TSV Tauberbischofsheim took place in the “Gasthaus zum Schwanen” . The first training evenings were held in the auditorium of the old building of the Matthias-Grünewald-Gymnasium in Tauberbischofsheim. The gymnasium of the grammar school and the newly built festival hall of the city of Tauberbischofsheim were added later. The first public club tournament took place in 1955 in the "Gasthaus zur Bretze". In 1958 the first fencing piste was purchased. With the fencing tournament for the Frankenland trophy , the fencing club soon attracted international participants to Tauberbischofsheim since 1966.

Foundation and development of the fencing club

Entrance area of ​​the fencing center Tauberbischofsheim (2016)

On June 30, 1967, the fencing department resigned from the TSV Tauberbischofsheim and on October 14 the official founding meeting of the Tauberbischofsheim fencing club took place in the Block service area. In 1972, 14 fencing tracks were set up in the first of many construction phases, before the inauguration of social rooms, boarding rooms and training rooms followed in 1976 after a second construction phase. In the same year Tauberbischofsheimer fencers won gold medals at the Olympic Games for the first time. Ten Tauberbischofsheim participants returned from the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal with eleven medals. In 1983 a new fencing hall with 18 lanes and a basement with conditioning room, workshop and armory was built in the fifth construction phase. The boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow prevented the participation of ten firmly nominated fencers from Tauberbischofsheim. Four years later, the fencing club won twelve medals at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles .

On the initiative of Emil Beck, the Tauberbischofsheim fencing club became part of a newly founded Olympic base (OSP) in Tauberbischofsheim on September 22, 1986. The women's epee world cup tournament for the " Reinhold Würth Cup" has been taking place regularly in Tauberbischofsheim since 1987. In 1988 the Berghof boarding school was inaugurated in order to promote educational support for young fencers as well as athletic support . In the same year the greatest success in the club's history was achieved: The foil team with Sabine Bau , Anja Fichtel and Zita Funkenhauser won gold at the Summer Olympics in Seoul in 1988 and the three from Tauberbischofsheim were also ahead in the individual and won gold and silver and win bronze for the Tauberbischofsheim fencing club. This feat - three starters from one club not only won the team competition, but also won all three medals in the individual discipline - has never before been achieved by any club.

The fencing club in the 21st century

To improve the regeneration measures, a vital center was founded as a separate GmbH in 2002. In 2007 the Tauberbischofsheim fencing club celebrated its 40th anniversary, and in 2011 the 25th anniversary of the Olympic base was celebrated. The Emil Beck Memorial Prize was first awarded in 2008 by the Tauberbischofsheim Fecht Club. With this award, the club honors personalities who have made a special contribution to the sport of fencing.

The final hall of the fencing center was renamed Emil-Beck-Halle on July 20, 2015. The occasion was the 80th birthday of the honorary citizen of Tauberbischofsheim, who died in 2006. As a reminder, a stele was set up in front of the hall. The main speaker was the former fencer from Tauberbischofsheim and 9th IOC President Thomas Bach.

In 2017 the Tauberbischofsheim fencing center lost its status as an Olympic base after 31 years and has been run as a federal base ever since.

Base functions

The Fecht-Club Tauberbischofsheim has the following support functions at its headquarters in Tauberbischofsheim to further develop and promote the traditional sport of fencing:

State Center for Fencing

Already in 1970 Tauberbischofsheim became the official state center for fencing of the state of Baden-Württemberg . In addition, the fencing center also recognized federal duties for the sport of fencing. As a result, the Tauberbischofsheim fencing infrastructure was quickly expanded, which led to a leap in performance: as early as 1973, athletes from the center of excellence won their first medals at world fencing championships.

Former Federal Center for Fencing

The German federal center for fencing was located in Tauberbischofsheim from 1976.

Former Olympic base in Tauberbischofsheim

At the Tauberbischofsheim fencing club, Emil Beck founded the Olympic Training Center (OSP) Tauberbischofsheim on September 22, 1986 . Until 2017 it was one of 19 Olympic training centers in Germany. The Fecht-Club Tauberbischofsheim was awarded this title in accordance with certain sporting performance requirements (e.g. number of cadre athletes, spatial connection to universities, etc.). In 2011 the 25th anniversary of the Olympic base was celebrated.

In July 2017, the state sports association of Baden-Württemberg announced that the Tauberbischofsheim fencing center would lose its status as an Olympic base after 31 years. One of the reasons given was that the world-famous center recently looked after less than 100 federal cadre athletes. Furthermore, compared to other Olympic bases, there is only one sport at home. In future the Tauberbischofsheim fencing center will only be classified as a federal base. The Tauberbischofsheim fencing club initially refused to sign this agreement. In September 2017, the fencing club finally signed the basic agreement "Olympiastützpunkt Baden-Württemberg", whereby the status change became official and the fencing club lost ownership of the olympic base. In addition to the OSP Tauberbischofsheim, the other, still existing Olympic training centers in Baden-Württemberg ( OSP Freiburg-Black Forest , OSP Rhein-Neckar and OSP Stuttgart ) were merged under the legal sponsorship of the State Sports Association (LSV) Baden-Württemberg in January 2018 .

Elite school of sport

The fencing club Tauberbischofsheim offers with the "Model Tauberbischofsheim " a full / partial boarding school as an elite school of sport . The school environment is provided in cooperation with five partner schools with a sports profile: the Matthias Grünewald grammar school , the Tauberbischofsheim commercial school, the Tauberbischofsheim commercial school, the Riemenschneider secondary school and the Pestalozzi secondary school. This means that fencers can take all school-leaving certificates. An elite sports student has been elected annually since 2009.

Federal Fencing Center

After a reorganization of the DOSB base concept, the fencing club is now one of three federal bases for active fencing, alongside OFC Bonn and Heidenheimer SB . In January 2018, the legal entity of the Tauberbischofsheim Federal Training Center switched from the Tauberbischofsheim Fencing Club to the Baden-Württemberg State Sports Association (LSV). After the dissolution of the status as an Olympic base in 2017, the tasks of the former Olympic base will be continued by the federal base at the Tauberbischofsheim fencing center. According to Sven Ressel, sports director of the German Fencing Association , it is important to mention "that the services offered so far can still be used by athletes and that the operating costs for Tauber as a base for competitive sports are secured". And Ressel continued: "As far as we know, there are currently no financial cuts associated with this."

tasks

The Bundesstützpunkt Tauberbischofsheim is a support and service facility for top-class sport and part of the national overall concept of the German Olympic Sports Confederation (DOSB) for federal cadre athletes (ABC cadres). At the federal base, the competitive sports concept of the central association DOSB is implemented in the daily training process.

Fencing exercises at the Olympic base (2013)

The Bundesstützpunkt Tauberbischofsheim pursues the overriding goals of further developing the sport of fencing on the international stage, ensuring quality standards, sustainably promoting disabled sport (wheelchair fencing) and making the integrative power and value system of sport usable within the framework of project-related measures for the integration and personal development of young people . The main task of the federal base in Tauberbischofsheim is to ensure comprehensive support for the national squad athletes, in particular in preparing the teams for competitions in daily training on site and in central measures of the central associations. These measures touched on sports medicine, physiotherapy, training science, social, psychological and nutritional tasks.

Due to its spatial, technical and infrastructural requirements, the federal base Tauberbischofsheim is one of the leading training facilities worldwide and has been able to shape the reputation of the city of Tauberbischofsheim as the "Mecca of fencing sport", since, for example, over 50 fencing nations visit the base every year and provide central training, advanced and Further training measures of the German Fencing Association take place in Tauberbischofsheim. This know-how about the sport of fencing is also made available for courses at home and abroad. The federal base provides the necessary support service for athletes and coaches, which high-performance sport requires with its high expenditure of time.

The services of the federal base Tauberbischofsheim extended to the following areas:

German fencing championships 2017 in women's florets (team) at the Tauberbischofsheim
fencing base. The winning team of the Tauberbischofsheim fencing club.
German fencing championships 2017 in foil at the Olympic base Tauberbischofsheim 22.jpg

Focus

The focus of the scientific training measures at the Tauberbischofsheim Federal Base is on the cadre fencers of the German Fencing Federation, including wheelchair fencers, while federal cadre athletes from other sports also train in Tauberbischofsheim, including basketball, athletics, cycling, rowing, shooting, swimming and karate.

Disabled sports

The disabled sports is promoted sustainably on fencing center Tauberbischofsheim. This is underscored by numerous national and international medals of the fencing club in wheelchair fencing . Wheelchair fencing was practiced as early as 1960 at the first official Paralympic Games (at that time still the “World Games of the Paralyzed”) in Rome, making it one of the oldest Paralympic sports. After Esther Weber won the gold medal in the epee singles at the 1992 Paralympics in Barcelona , she became an active member of the fencing club. As a result, an independent, integrative department of the association was set up at the fencing center for wheelchair fencing. Since then, the best wheelchair fencers from all over Germany have regularly come together for joint training camps in Tauberbischofsheim.

Venue of German championships

The Tauberbischofsheim fencing center is a regular venue for German fencing championships in all or individual disciplines (foil, saber and epee). The fencing club was involved in organizing the following German championships in fencing: 1978 , 2003 , 2004 , 2005 , 2006 , 2007 , 2008 , 2009 , 2010 , 2011 , 2012 , 2013 , 2014 , 2015 , 2016 , 2017 , 2018 , 2019 .

successes

The successes of the Tauberbischofsheimer fencers at a glance (as of June 2016):

Olympic Games & Paralympics

Medals from the Tauberbischofsheim fencing club at the Olympic Games & Paralympics:

Medals singles team total
gold 3 6th 9
silver 8th 9 17th
bronze 6th 8th 14th
total 17th 23 40

World championships

Medals from the Tauberbischofsheim fencing club at world championships:

Medals singles team total
gold 10 16 26th
silver 22nd 27 49
bronze 16 23 39
total 48 66 114

Medals from the Tauberbischofsheim fencing club at junior world championships:

Medals singles team total
gold 13 7th 20th
silver 14th 5 19th
bronze 13 13 26th
total 40 25th 65

Medals from the Tauberbischofsheim fencing club at cadet world championships:

Medals singles
gold 7th
silver 9
bronze 15th
total 31

European championships

Medals from the Tauberbischofsheim fencing club at European championships:

Medals singles team total
gold 17th 11 28
silver 15th 10 25th
bronze 22nd 15th 37
total 53 36 90

Medals from the Tauberbischofsheim fencing club at junior European championships:

Medals singles team total
gold 8th 5 13
silver 4th 6th 10
bronze 12 6th 18th
total 24 17th 41

German championships

At the German fencing championships , the Tauberbischofsheimer fencers have won 655 medals in individual and team championships since the fencing club was founded (as of 2012).

German individual championships

The most successful female fencer from Tauberbischofsheim was Anja Fichtel , who won ten individual titles in women's floret. The most successful fencer from Tauberbischofsheim was Alexander Pusch , who won eight individual titles in the men's epee. Jürgen Hehn , from Tauberbischofsheimer , was the last German fencer to date to become German individual champion with a sword in 1972 and in 1974 with the foil , with increasing specialization in one weapon .

The following are the athletes of the fencing club with at least two titles in German individual fencing championships :

Legend
 FAT  Overall title         Most successful fencer of the fencing club in the respective individual discipline         Two individual titles in different disciplines - Status: data up to 2019 taken into account
No. Surname total foil Sword saber
1 Anja Fichtel 10 10 0 0
2 Alexander Push 8th 0 8th 0
3 Claudia Bokel 5 0 5 0
Beate Christmann 5 0 5 0
Mathias Gey 5 5 0 0
Carolin Golubytskyi 5 5 0 0
Harald Hein 5 5 0 0
Benjamin Kleibrink 5 5 0 0
9 Sven Schmid 4th 0 4th 0
10 Reinhold Behr 3 0 3 0
Elmar Borrmann 3 0 3 0
Rita King 3 3 0 0
Anja Schache 3 3 0 0
Katja Wächter 3 3 0 0
Udo Wagner 3 3 0 0
16 Thomas Bach 2 2 0 0
Simone Bauer 2 2 0 0
Matthias Behr 2 2 0 0
Sandra Bingenheimer 2 2 0 0
Sabine Bischoff 2 2 0 0
Claudia Bokel 2 0 2 0
Jörg Fiedler 2 0 2 0
Karin Gießelmann 2 2 0 0
Jürgen Hehn 2 1 1 0
Jacek Huchwajda 2 0 0 2
Benjamin Kleibrink 2 2 0 0
Uwe Römer 2 2 0 0
Anne Sauer 2 2 0 0
Martin Schmitt 2 0 2 0
Katja Wächter 2 2 0 0
André Weßels 2 2 0 0
Steffen Wiesinger 2 0 0 2

German team championships

Most of all clubs - a total of 118 - German team championships in fencing were won by the Tauberbischofsheim fencing club. In addition, FC Tauberbischofsheim was the only club so far to be team champions in all disciplines with both men and women.

Legend
 FAT  Overall title         Most successful club in the respective individual discipline - Status: data up to the German Fencing Championships 2019 taken into account
society Championship title Foil
(women)
Foil
(men)
Epee
(women)
Sword
(men)
Saber
(women)
Sabers
(men)
Fencing Club Tauberbischofsheim 118 42 29 3 31 2 11

Well-known athletes

Thomas Bach, former fencer of FC TBB and current president of the IOC

Outstanding personalities

Medalist

The following fencers, who competed for the Fecht-Club-Tauberbischofsheim and are immortalized in the entrance area of ​​the fencing base on a WALL of FAME , were able to win gold, silver and bronze medals at the Olympic Games and World Championships (status: October 2015):

A.

Norman Ackermann , Christian Adrians.

B.

Thomas Bach , Sebastian Bachmann , Maria Bartkowski , Uwe Bartmann, Sabine Bau , Simone Bauer , Frank Beck , Thorsten Becker, Manfred Beckmann , Dominik Behr , Matthias Behr , Reinhold Behr , Elmar Beierstettel , Reinhard Berger, Sandra Bingenheimer , Elke Birthelmer, Sabine Bischoff , Claudia Bokel , Elmar Borrmann , Rico Braun .

C.

Roman Christians, Beate Christmann .

D.

Annette Dobmeier , Annekathrin Donath.

E.

Leonie Ebert , Ulrich Eifler , Thomas Endres .

F.

Robert Felisiak , Anja Fichtel -Mauritz, Jörg Fiedler , Volker Fischer , Michael Flegler, Sebastian Flegler, Tobias Frank, Zita Funkenhauser , Hedwig Funkenhauser .

G

Stefanie Geiger, Michael Gerull, Thomas Gerull , Mathias Gey , Karin Gießelmann , Carolin Golubytskyi , Matthias Grimm.

H

Yvonne Haag, Viola Haenlein, Doreen Häntzsch , Gerhard Heer , Jürgen Hehn , Harald Hein , Isabell Hertlein, Denis Holzkamp, Stefan Hörger , Björn Hübner , Jacek Huchwajda , Rosalia Huszti.

J

Hanns Jana .

K

Barbara Kasperska, Wolfgang Kempf, Martin Kindt, Johannes Klebes, Benjamin Kleibrink , Annette Klug , Jochen Knies, Johannes Kobsik, Susanne König , Rita König-Römer , Melanie Kura.

L.

Susanne Lang, Tobias Link, Wilfried Lipinski, Carsten Lotter, Gudrun Lotter, Natascha Lotter.

M.

Maximilian Mutze.

N

Carolin Neckermann, Rafael Nickel .

O

Patrycia Osyczkav.

P

Alexander Push .

R.

Jan-Erich Rauhaus, Markus Reiter, Wladimir Resnitschenko , Hannah Roder, Uwe Römer , Alexander Rüdinger, Luisa Ruppert.

S.

Anja Schache , Lars Schache , Ute Schaeper, Gesine Schiel , Sven Schmid , Arnd Schmitt , Ulrich Schmitt, Martin Schmitt , Ulrich Schreck , Silke Schwarz, Erk Sens-Gorius , Etelka Sike, Waltraut Stollwerck, Daniel Strigel , Mariusz Strzałka .

U

Samuel Unterhauser .

W.

Katja Wächter , Udo Wagner , Alexander Weber , Esther Weber-Kranz , Thorsten Weidner , Benjamin Weinkauf, Ingo Weißenborn , Martin Wendel, André Weßels , Steffen Wiesinger , Rhena Wolf.

Z

Boris Zorc .

Wheelchair fencer

The most successful wheelchair fencers in the fencing club include: Esther Weber and Simone Briese-Baetke .

Club structure

Members

The number of members of the fencing department at TSV Tauberbischofsheim, founded in 1954, developed as follows: 1954 (21 members), 1956 (35), 1965 (110). The fencing club, founded in 1976, had the following membership figures over the years: 1967 (267 members), 1969 (365), 1970 (477), 2018 (600).

The fencing center Tauberbischofsheim is divided into the association (fencing club), the federal base, the Vital Centrum GmbH and the Sport Marketing GmbH. The individual areas are managed by the following people:

management

Board of the fencing club

The current board of the Tauberbischofsheim fencing club consists of the following three people (as of February 2019):

Board member function
Lothar Derr Club, mass sport, young talent
Thomas Bayer Finance, controlling, organization
Samuel Unterhauser Athlete spokesman
Advisory Board

An advisory board supports the board of the fencing club. It consists of the following people (as of February 2019): Christoph Palm, Ditmar Hilpert, Günther Krajewski, Igor Borrmann, Manfred Vollrath, Reinhold Barlian, Simone Bauer-Höpfl and Ulrich Boelcke.

Management of the Vital Centrum GmbH

Tanja Nissen is entrusted with the management of Vital Centrum GmbH.

Head of Sport Marketing GmbH

The management of Sport Marketing GmbH is currently vacant.

Sponsors

The Tauberbischofsheimer Fechtzentrum receives grants from the Federal Ministry of the Interior and the Ministry of Culture, Youth and Sport Baden-Württemberg. There are also a number of sponsors. Current top and main sponsors are Sparkasse Tauberfranken , Cellagon, Michael Weinig AG , the Winzerkeller im Taubertal, the Distelhäuser Brewery , Bartec , Lauda Dr. R. Wobser , Volksbank Main-Tauber , Möbel Schott, Sporlastik, AOK , allstar, VS Vereinigte Spezialmöbelfabriken , uhlmann fencing and Stadtwerke Tauberfranken. There are also other local advertising partners.

media

The Fecht-Club Tauberbischofsheim uses the following communication channels to publish its information: a homepage, a Facebook page and a YouTube channel.

criticism

After internal quarrels at the Olympic base in Tauberbischofsheim, Emil Beck had to resign in 1999. After more and more critics spoke up, the public prosecutor's office was investigated from 2004 onwards for embezzlement of one million euros. The court proceedings could not be brought to an end during Beck's lifetime.

After the turn of the millennium, Emil Beck's successors assumed a difficult legacy. The fencing club's waning sporting success led to increasing criticism of the former medal manufacturer. Around the 2016 Olympic Games , in which no German fencing team qualified, this criticism led to the questioning of the status as an Olympic base before the Tauberbischofsheim fencing center finally lost this function in 2017 and has only been run as a federal base since then.

The fencing center hit the headlines in 2017 after allegations of abuse. The magazine Der Spiegel reported, among other things, that between 2003 and 2016 there were allegedly cases of sexual harassment of individual athletes by a trainer. The lengthy process was ended with a settlement before the regional labor court in 2018.

Due to the lack of great success and the constantly public disagreements, the two largest sponsors of the fencing club turned away in 2018. In addition to this loss of financially strong sponsors and a battered reputation, the club also suffered from a decline in membership and a wave of resignations from successful athletes.

literature

  • Richard Möll (Author): The fencing legend from Tauberbischofsheim. A programmed path to success. Laub Verlag, Elztal 1987, ISBN 978-3-88260-033-9 .
  • Emil Beck (Author): Tauberbischofsheimer fencing lessons for beginners and advanced. Philippka-Sportverlag , Münster 1987, ISBN 978-3-87039-015-0 .
  • Corinna Egerer, Michael Latzel: Tauberbischofsheim . Fränkische Nachrichten, Tauberbischofsheim 2005, 168 pages, chapter fencing (pp. 90–99), ISBN 3-924780-48-X .
  • Deutscher Fechter-Bund (Ed.), Andreas Schirmer (Author): En Garde! Allez! Touché !: 100 years of fencing in Germany - a success story. Meyer Verlag, Aachen 2011, ISBN 978-3-89899-690-7 .

Web links

Commons : Fecht-Club Tauberbischofsheim  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Board of Directors & Advisory Board. Fecht-Club Tauberbischofsheim eV, accessed on February 8, 2019 .
  2. Entry in the association register VR67 at the Tauberbischofsheim District Court
  3. a b c d e f g h i The Tauberbischofsheim Medal Forge: Successes of the Tauberbischofsheim fencing club. (No longer available online.) Fecht-Club Tauberbischofsheim eV, archived from the original on May 5, 2015 ; accessed on June 4, 2016 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.fechtentbb.de
  4. a b (…) Tauberbischofsheim Fencing Club for London 2012. (No longer available online.) Mott, archived from the original on June 11, 2016 ; accessed on June 4, 2016 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.mott-stages.com
  5. a b c d e f g h i j k l FROM THE HEATING CELLAR TO THE OLYMPIC VICTORY. THE SUCCESS STORY OF FC TAUBERBISCHOFSHEIM. Fecht-Club Tauberbischofsheim eV, accessed on February 8, 2019 .
  6. ^ Corinna Egerer, Michael Latzel: Tauberbischofsheim , Fränkische Nachrichten, Tauberbischofsheim 2005, p. 93.
  7. Richard Möll: The fencing legend of Tauberbischofsheim. A programmed path to success . Elztal: Verlag Laub 1987, p. 180.
  8. Richard Möll: The fencing legend of Tauberbischofsheim. A programmed path to success . Elztal: Verlag Laub 1987, p. 7.
  9. a b Richard Möll: The fencing legend from Tauberbischofsheim. A programmed path to success . Elztal: Verlag Laub 1987, p. 171.
  10. ^ Corinna Egerer, Michael Latzel: Tauberbischofsheim , Fränkische Nachrichten, Tauberbischofsheim 2005, p. 95.
  11. Proud that Samsung has received an award. (No longer available online.) In: Südwest Presse Online. Tauber-Zeitung , Bad Mergentheim, December 18, 2009, formerly in the original ; accessed on November 28, 2015 .  ( 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.@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.swp.de  
  12. Reinhold Würth receives Emil Beck Memorial Prize. Main-Post , October 6, 2011, accessed on November 28, 2015 (only excerpts freely available).
  13. Fencing: The final hall in the Olympic base has been named after the legendary fencing trainer Emil Beck since yesterday / IOC President Dr. Bach and Beck's son René unveil a stele / a visionary with specific objectives. Fränkische Nachrichten , July 21, 2015, accessed on November 28, 2015 .
  14. a b c d Spiegel: After 31 years: Tauberbischofsheim no longer an Olympic base . July 20, 2017. Online at www.spiegel.de. Retrieved October 1, 2017.
  15. a b c Richard Möll: The fencing legend from Tauberbischofsheim. A programmed path to success . Elztal: Verlag Laub 1987, pp. 153–157 (The performance center).
  16. ^ Olympic base (OSP) Tauberbischofsheim. (No longer available online.) State Sports Association Baden-Württemberg eV (LSV), formerly in the original ; accessed on May 2, 2015 .  ( 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.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.lsvbw.de  
  17. ^ Olympic base (OSP) Tauberbischofsheim - The medal forge. (No longer available online.) Fecht-Club Tauberbischofsheim eV, archived from the original on April 13, 2015 ; Retrieved April 29, 2015 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.fechtentbb.de
  18. a b Fränkische Nachrichten: Fencing Sponsorship of the Olympic base Tauberbischofsheim changes from FC to the state sports association. Clear commitment to the location . September 29, 2017. Online at www.fnweb.de. Retrieved October 11, 2017.
  19. a b Elite School of Sports Tauberbischofsheim. (No longer available online.) German Olympic Sports Confederation (DOSB) eV, archived from the original on March 25, 2015 ; accessed on May 2, 2015 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.dosb.de
  20. Richard Möll: The fencing legend of Tauberbischofsheim. A programmed path to success . Elztal: Verlag Laub 1987, p. 141.
  21. Karate: Luca Weingötz will start at the continental title fights in Prague on the weekend / after graduation for the Junior European Championship. Fränkische Nachrichten, accessed on July 28, 2017 .
  22. ^ Franconian news: Tauberbischofsheim. Fencing club Tauberbischofsheim. Open day on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the association / guided tours through the fencing center and children's Olympics. Colorful fencing program for young and old . October 2, 2017. Online at www.fnweb.de. Retrieved February 8, 2019.
  23. For the years 1938–2011, the data was taken from: Deutscher Fechter-Bund (Ed.), Andreas Schirmer (Red): En Garde! Allez! Touchez! 100 Years of Fencing in Germany - A Success Story , Meyer & Meyer Verlag, Aachen 2012. pp. 218–225.
  24. a b Deutscher Fechter-Bund: German Masters on the DFB website at www.fechten.org, accessed on June 22, 2017.
  25. ^ Deutscher Fechter-Bund: German champions on the website of the DFB at www.fechten.org, accessed on June 22, 2017.
  26. a b c d Fechtclub Tauberbischofsheim: History. (No longer available online.) Fechtclub Tauberbischofsheim e. V., archived from the original on May 5, 2015 ; accessed on May 2, 2015 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.fechtentbb.de
  27. Former national coach Beck has died. FAZ, March 13, 2006, accessed on May 2, 2015 .
  28. Jump up ↑ Sport-Bild: “Das große Olympia Lexikon”, in Sport-Bild from June 19, 1996, p. 36.
  29. ^ Corinna Egerer, Michael Latzel: Tauberbischofsheim , Fränkische Nachrichten, Tauberbischofsheim 2005, p. 91 u. 93.
  30. Silver Laurel Leaf - Selection of previous winners - Anja Fichtel. Süddeutsche, accessed November 8, 2014 .
  31. Anja Fichtel in the “Hall of Fame”. Mannheimer Morgen, accessed on September 19, 2015 .
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Coordinates: 49 ° 37 ′ 40.3 "  N , 9 ° 39 ′ 47.8"  E