FFC Wacker Munich
FFC Wacker Munich | |||
Basic data | |||
---|---|---|---|
Surname | Women's football club Wacker Munich 99 e. V. |
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Seat | Munich , Bavaria | ||
founding | June 5, 1999 | ||
president | Thomas Vizjak | ||
Website | www.ffc-wacker.de | ||
First soccer team | |||
Head coach | Dragan Terzić | ||
Venue | District sports facility Demleitnerstrasse ( location ) | ||
Places | 900 | ||
league | Regional league south | ||
2018/19 | 12th place (relegation) | ||
|
The FFC Wacker Munich (full name: Frauenfußballclub Wacker München 99 eV ) is a German women's football club from Munich . The first team plays in the regional league. The second team plays in the Bavarian State League South. With more than 220 active players in three women's and nine girls' teams, FFC Wacker Munich is one of the largest women's football clubs in Germany.
history
The beginnings as FC Wacker Munich
FFC Wacker emerged in 1999 from the women's soccer department of the traditional club FC Wacker Munich , where the women's soccer department was founded in 1970 when the DFB lifted the ban on women's soccer in autumn 1970. The Bavarian championship was first won under the old name in 1991. Wacker broke through the winning streak of local rivals, FC Bayern Munich Women , who had previously won the championship 19 times in a row from 1972 onwards. Winning the Bavarian championship entitles them to participate in the promotion round to the 1st Women's Bundesliga . With only 2 wins out of 6 games, they lost out and clearly missed promotion. One season later, Wacker was able to repeat the coup and qualified again for the promotion round as Bavarian champions. There you met, among other things, TSV Crailsheim , which could be defeated twice. To date, the only two victories against the rival from Baden-Württemberg. With 6 wins from 6 games, the result was the first promotion to the first women's division. The first season in the upper house was not crowned with success and with only one win, 10 draws and seven defeats, Wacker was relegated as the penultimate. A feat that the women at Wacker knew how to repeat two seasons later.
After relegation, Wacker was again Bavarian champion and marched through the promotion round without defeat. Only to then descend again directly. This time, however, the number of defeats was exchanged for the number of draws and again only one win from 18 games was achieved. Curious: both victories in the 1st women's Bundesliga were achieved away from home.
During this most successful period in the club's history, the Wacker women were also able to win the state cup three times. As in the championship, winning the state cup in 1992 replaced the long-term winners of FC Bayern. In 1994 and 1996 the state cup could be won again. Despite the cup victories in '92 and 94 'and promotions to the women's first division, Wacker did not take part in the DFB Cup in the respective seasons, although qualified. It was only with the victory in the national cup in 1996 that the club played again in the national cup competition for the first time. It should also be the last participation for the next 9 years. After a victory in the 1st round over SC Klinge Seckach , they lost in the 2nd round, clearly, against SG Praunheim with 0:12 and were eliminated.
In the same year, Nadine Angerer , who was only 17 at the time, moved from 1. FC Nürnberg to Munich for FFC Wacker. Angerer stayed with the club until after the 1999 World Cup and then switched to the women of FC Bayern. Her departure also heralded a new era for the Wacker women.
New establishment as FFC and the 2nd Bundesliga
After the decline of the main club FC Wacker in the mid-1990s and the resulting financial difficulties, the women's football department decided to start its own business. On June 5, 1999, the time had come and the FFC Wacker Munich was born. Based on the old club, the new club kept the star in the club's coat of arms. A few weeks later, Nadine Angerer left the club for FC Bayern Munich .
Without Angerer and after a few years in the Bayern Oberliga , he was promoted to the Regionalliga Süd under coach Norbert Düwel , who was signed for the 2002/03 season . In 9th place during the winter break, Wacker signed the French Helene Brevart from its own ranks and the Swiss national player Kathrin Lehmann in the second half of the season . In 7th place, Wacker managed direct promotion to the newly created 2nd Bundesliga. In the summer, the team strengthened itself with the U-19 national player Angelika Feldbacher, Anna-Maria Thoma and Ines Ortner-Bach, both of whom moved from local rivals FC Bayern Munich . Katharina Lanzer and Janine Maier scored the two goals in the 2-1 opening win against the 2nd team of 1. FFC Frankfurt . At the end of the first season in the 2nd Bundesliga, the team from coach Düwel was 5th in the table. At the same time, Wacker competed in the DFB Cup for the first time in 9 years and failed there at Lok Leipzig with 1: 4. Maria Breitenberger scored the consolation goal for Wacker. After the season, the club surprisingly split from Norbert Düwel and Wilhelm Link took over the team.
Under the new coach Link, Wacker always played against relegation. The low point seemed to have been reached when the team at the end of the 2007/08 season only narrowly, one point that escaped relegation. Link was followed by Thorsten Zaunmüller for the 08/09 season . But things didn't go any better under his direction either. At the end of his tenure was relegation to the regional league. Although the former goalkeeper Kathrin Lehmann was signed again in April 2010, Wacker lost to Holstein Kiel 1-0 in the relegation after a return leg .
Roller coaster in the regional league
With the descent to the Regionalliga Süd, a roller coaster ride began for the club, which was to result in relegation to the Bayernliga almost 10 years later.
It was reserved for the new coach Thorsten Just to go straight back to the second division. In the core he was able to fall back on the traditional team from the previous year. The goal of recovery was clearly missed in the end with 3rd place in the table and 6 points behind ETSV Würzburg . A year later, under the new coach Stefan Schubert, the FFC escaped relegation with 9th place only because RSV Roßdorf withdrew from the league. In 2012/13 , Wacker turned the table upside down again and made it to 3rd place again. The German-Greek Christina Kokoviadou had a large share of this with 16 goals. She is still one of the most successful goalscorers of a season for the FFC. In the same year Wacker reached the Bavarian Cup final for the first time, where they were defeated by SV 67 Weinberg with 1: 3. Since Weinberg had already been promoted to the 2nd Bundesliga, the FFC from Munich was allowed to take part in the 1st round of the DFB Cup. The 1: 4 defeat against SC 07 Bad Neuenahr in the first round was also the start of a similarly bad season as in 2009/10. With only 4 wins and 20 points, the FFC was just able to avoid a relegation place. In the following season, Wacker knew how to turn the table one last time and ended up surprisingly in 2nd place. The best result in the Regionalliga. With 15 points behind Wetzlar, the gap to promotion was clear in the end.
In the following years, however, Wacker finally sank into the lower third of the table in the Regionalliga. In this phase in, coincided with the victory in the National Cup in 2017, the first title for the club since winning the Bavarian Championship 2003. With luck of the draw they met in the early rounds always on unterklassige opponents before it in the final against league rivals ETSV Würzburg went . After a goalless first half, Matilda Ford (72nd) and Bernadett Angstwurm (82nd) ensured the 2-1 victory.
During the 2017/18 season, long-time coach Schubert had to resign at the end of April after internal disagreements. With him went the long-time captain Caroline Rieger, who had played well over 150 games for Wacker up to this point. Midfielder Sarah Schaible officially took over Schubert's coaching position until the end of the season.
Christian Kaufmann came to the new season as a coach. Due to departures, in addition to Rieger, Schaible also left the club, and many serious injuries, Kaufmann and his team fought relegation until the end of the season. At Hegauer FV there was a direct relegation duel on the last matchday. A win would have meant staying up for Wacker. But in the end there was a 1: 3 defeat, which resulted in the first relegation to the fourth division.
Return to the regional league
Ironically, with the club's 20th anniversary, the Wacker women had to join the Bayern League. Despite the relegation, the team stayed together for the most part. After Dragan Terzić already acted as interim coach in the second half of the preseason, he was officially installed as a coach for the new season. The Terzić team went into the winter break as leaders and without a defeat. Because of Covid-19 , the start of the second half of the season against SV Frauenbiburg was canceled in March 2020. Three months later, all results of the previous season 2019/20 of the FFC were canceled and the club can compete in the Regionalliga Süd 2020/21.
successes
- Promotion to the 1st women's soccer Bundesliga in 1992 and 1994
- Qualification for the 2nd women's soccer Bundesliga South 2004
- Promotion to the Regionalliga Süd in 2003
- Bavarian champions 1990/91, 1991/92, 1993/94, 2002/03
- Bavarian Cup Winner (1992, 1994, 1996, 2017 )
statistics
season | league | space | S. | U | N | Gates | Points | DFB Cup | Most successful goalscorer |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1991/92 | Association League Bavaria South | -: - | -: - | 2nd round | |||||
1992/93 | Bundesliga South | 9. | 1 | 10 | 7th | 17:28 | 12:24 | not qualified | |
1993/94 | Association League Bavaria South | 1. | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0: | 00 | - | |
Championship round Bavaria | 1. | 2 | 0 | 0 | 4-0 | 4-0 | |||
Promotion lap | 1. | 6th | 1 | 0 | 26: 1 | 11: 1 | |||
1994/95 | Bundesliga South | 9. | 1 | 7th | 10 | 17:45 | 9:27 | not qualified | |
1995/96 | Association League Bavaria South | 2. | 7th | 2 | 0 | 40: | 423 | 2nd round | |
Championship round Bavaria | 3. | 5 | 2 | 3 | 20:14 | 17th | |||
1996/97 | Association League Bavaria South | 1. | 8th | 1 | 1 | 36: | 825th | 2nd round | |
Championship round Bavaria | 2. | 6th | 2 | 2 | 23:10 | 20th | |||
1997/98 | Association League Bavaria South | 2. | 7th | 2 | 1 | 38:11 | 23 | not qualified | |
Championship round Bavaria | 2. | 7th | 1 | 2 | 19: | 722nd | |||
1998/99 | Bayern League | 8th. | 5 | 1 | 12 | 25:34 | 16 | not qualified | |
1999/00 | Bayern League | 5. | 8th | 4th | 6th | 32:41 | 28 | not qualified | |
2000/01 | Bayern League | 3. | 9 | 2 | 5 | 46:20 | 29 | not qualified | |
2001/02 | Bayern League | 2. | 12 | 4th | 2 | 45:19 | 40 | not qualified | |
2002/03 | Bayern League | 1. | 12 | 4th | 2 | 43:16 | 40 | not qualified | |
2003/04 | Regional league south | 7th | 6th | 3 | 9 | 22:41 | 21st | not qualified | |
2004/05 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 5. | 7th | 9 | 4th | 34:30 | 30th | not qualified | Ines Rechl (7) |
2005/06 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 8th. | 5 | 7th | 10 | 31:32 | 22nd | 1 round | Andrea Siemer (6) |
2006/07 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 9. | 7th | 4th | 11 | 18:32 | 25th | 2nd round | Johanna Loistl (7) |
2007/08 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 10. | 5 | 5 | 12 | 22:52 | 20th | 2nd round | Helene Brevárt (4) |
2008/09 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 9. | 7th | 3 | 12 | 28:45 | 24 | 1 round | Helene Brevárt (8) |
2009/10 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 10. | 5 | 4th | 13 | 27:42 | 19th | 2nd round | Annika Fröhlich (8) |
2010/11 | Regional league south | 3. | 13 | 4th | 3 | 36:13 | 43 | 1 round | Annika Fröhlich (9) |
2011/12 | Regional league south | 9. | 4th | 1 | 13 | 19:44 | 13 | not qualified | Julia Dietsch (4) |
2012/13 | Regional league south | 3. | 12 | 2 | 8th | 36:27 | 38 | not qualified | Christina Kokoviadou (16) |
2013/14 | Regional league south | 10. | 4th | 8th | 10 | 18:32 | 20th | 1 round | Bernadett Fear Worm (4) |
2014/15 | Regional league south | 2. | 12 | 6th | 4th | 39:20 | 42 | not qualified | Bernadett fear worm (9) |
2015/16 | Regional league south | 9. | 9 | 1 | 12 | 36:39 | 28 | not qualified | Katrin Hartmannsegger (11) |
2016/17 | Regional league south | 7th | 9 | 4th | 9 | 26:35 | 31 | not qualified | Verena Pfeifer (5) |
2017/18 | Regional league south | 7th | 12 | 5 | 9 | 46:38 | 41 | 1 round | Verena Pfeifer (10) |
2018/19 | Regional league south | 12. | 7th | 1 | 18th | 36:64 | 22nd | not qualified | Verena Pfeifer (9) |
2019/20 | Bayern League * | - | - | - | - | -: - | - | not qualified | - |
2020/21 | Regional league south | ||||||||
Note: Playing times with a green background indicate an ascent, while playing times with a red background indicate a descent. |
(until 1999 as FC Wacker Munich, then as FFC Wacker Munich 99)
* No rating for FFC Wacker, all games of the club were canceled.
Well-known players
- Julia Dietsch
- Nadine Angerer
- Roswitha Bindl
- Rebecca Huyleur
- Christina Kokoviadou
- Kathrin Lehmann
- Johanna Loistl
- Christine Paul
- Sissy Raith
- Anida Salkanović
- Ulrike Schmetz
- Bärbel Weimar
- Nathalie Bishop
- Annika Fröhlich
- Veronika Hesse
- Kathrin Hosemann
- Çağla Korkmaz
- Louisa Noehr
- Veronika Gratz
- Katrin Hartmannsegger
- Stefanie Wiesmann
- Ines Ortner-Bach
List of trainers
- Fritz Bank 1993-1994
- Meryem Yamak 1994-1995
- Udo Hagen 1995-1996
- Christine Mayerhofer / Karl Pröbstl 1996–
- Robert Ohl 1997–
- Karl Pröbstl 1999-2000
- Axel Eichstätt / Angelika Lichtenegger 2000–
- Norbert Düwel 2002-2005
- Wilhelm Link 2005-2008
- Thorsten Zaunmüller 2008–2010
- Torsten Just 2010–2011
- Andrea Wolfrum 2011-2013
- Stefan Schubert 2013–2018
- Christian Kaufmann 2018/19
- Dragan Terzić 2019–
Stadion
FFC Wacker has always played its home games at the Untersendling district sports facility on Demleitnerstrasse, which it shares with FC Wacker Munich and Hellas Munich. In addition to the main pitch, the facility also has an artificial turf pitch where the women of the FFC play most of their games, especially in the autumn and winter months. Due to the dilapidation, the number of spectators on the main square is currently limited to 900.
Awards
The FFC Wacker attaches great importance to the youth work. In 2002 the association was recognized by the Sepp Herberger Foundation. For its 20th anniversary, the association was awarded the citizen's prize for social commitment by the mayor of Munich, Dieter Reiter .
Others
During the 2004/05 season, the Munich director Rainer Holzemer accompanied FFC Wacker. This later resulted in the five-part documentary series "Ballsaison", which was broadcast for the first time in May 2006 on the cultural channel Arte.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ FCC Wacker: 20th anniversary - own goal for companies? hallo-muenchen.de
- ↑ Made- to-measure debut wochenanzeiger-muenchen.de
- ↑ Thorsten Zaunmüller new trainer at Wacker womensoccer.de
- ↑ Wacker Munich brings Kathrin Lehmann back womensoccer.de
- ^ Result of the game at BFV bfv.de
- ↑ ETSV women fail in the cup final mainpost.de
- ^ Munich Bayern Cup winners In: Süddeutsche Zeitung , May 25, 2017
- ^ Out of the shadowy existence In: Süddeutsche Zeitung , December 2, 2019
- ↑ Ball season on fernsehserien.de