TSG Weinheim

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TSG Weinheim
Club coat of arms of TSG Weinheim
Basic data
Surname Gymnastics and Sports Community
1862 Weinheim e. V.
Seat Weinheim , Baden-Wuerttemberg
founding August 20, 1862
Members 6,000
Website tsg-weinheim.de
First soccer team
Venue Sepp Herberger Stadium
Places 5,000
league Association League Baden
2018/19 11th place
home
Away

The TSG 1862 Weinheim e. V. is a sports club based in Weinheim with more than 6,000 members in more than 40 sports. His most successful and well-known departments include the American Footballer Weinheim Longhorns , the Weinheim Longhorns cheerleaders (multiple German champions), the fencers (vice world champion cadets and German master foil), the track and field athletes (including the multiple German champion and Olympic participant Matthias Bühler ), the football department TSG 1862/09 Weinheim and the children's sports school .

Club history

On August 20, 1862, the Weinheim gymnastics club was founded. In 1878 the TV II Weinheim split off, which was renamed the Gymnastics Cooperative Weinheim in 1883 and then in 1907 the Gymnastics Cooperative Jahn 1878 Weinheim . On June 29, 1946, the existing TV merged with this gymnastics cooperative and the DJK Schwarz-Weiß 1923 Weinheim to form today's club.

History of the football department

Today's football department was created in 1997 when TSG 1862 Weinheim took on the bankrupt FV 09 Weinheim and the football departments merged under the name TSG 1862/09 Weinheim , which is still valid today . Before the merger, FV 09 Weinheim, founded on March 20, 1909, was the more successful of the two clubs for a long time. While TSG Weinheim only played higher-class football in 1994 when it was promoted to the Baden Association League, FV 09 Weinheim had been represented almost continuously in the top amateur leagues since the 1950s.

In 1933, FV Weinheim, as the relay champion of the district class Unterbaden Ost, had the chance to rise to the top class. But in the playoffs for promotion to the Gauliga Baden, the Weinheimers were defeated by MFC 08 Lindenhof .

After the Second World War, the FV Weinheim was located in the league system in lower-class leagues. For the first time, the FV was able to rise to the third-class 1st amateur league in North Baden in 1951 . As third from last with 23:33 points and 49:69 goals, the club had to relegate after a year due to the poorer goal difference. The renewed promotion to the highest amateur class in North Baden was achieved in 1954 . This time you could keep yourself in the league and belonged to her five seasons until relegation as penultimate in 1959 . After the recovery in 1962 , the most successful period of the FV Weinheim began. In the very first year, the North Baden Association became champions. In the following years, they established themselves in the league and in 1970 won the championship again. In the promotion round to the second-rate Regionalliga Süd , the FV only narrowly failed as second in its group. As a third amateur league, the FV 09 represented North Baden in 1972 at the finals of the German amateur championship , but retired in the first round against Normannia Schwäbisch Gmünd . In 1974/75 the Weinheimers were in the main round of the DFB Cup for the first time . The first opponent was second division Bayer 05 Uerdingen . In front of a home crowd, the Weinheimers gave up 2: 4 in extra time. In the next year's cup round , the FV 09 was there again, but this time they had no chance in the 1: 7 against Hertha BSC . The fragmentation of the third-class leagues in Baden-Württemberg ended in the 1978/79 season with the establishment of the amateur league . After the FV 09 Weinheim failed as North Baden champion in the promotion round to the 2nd League South , at the later promoted SC Freiburg - against whom you could win the only point in the promotion round - as well as the SSV Ulm 1846 and the SSV Reutlingen 05 , you belonged in 1978 to the twenty founding members of the new Oberliga Baden-Württemberg.

old logo FV 09 Weinheim

In the first three years you belonged to the top group and took fourth place twice and third place once. FV 09 started the 1981/82 season with a success in the DFB Cup . With a 2: 1 after extra time over SpVgg 07 Ludwigsburg , the team qualified for the second main round. There was then the VfL Osnabrück last stop. At the end of the season, however, was relegated from the league. After you had to spend the 1982/83 season in the Baden association league , the team was back in the league from 1983. 1986 saw a new upswing in Weinheim football. Whereas in 1985/86 only 594 spectators came on average, 1,270 spectators wanted to see the FV's home games in the following season. In 1988 the FV Weinheim won an average of 1,010 spectators in the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg and took part in the promotion games to the 2nd Bundesliga , in which, however, behind 1. FSV Mainz 05 , Viktoria Aschaffenburg and SpVgg Unterhaching with 3: 9 points and 5:10 goals only finished last. In addition to the league championship in 1988, a great moment in Weinheim football was the 1990/91 season, when the first-round draw in the DFB Cup brought the FC Bayern Munich dream ticket to FV 09 Weinheim / Bergstrasse and the amateurs achieved a 1-0 victory over the record champions. In the second round they were eliminated from the second division Rot-Weiss Essen .

In the following years the decline of the FV 09 Weinheim began, which was also noticeable in the decreasing interest of the audience. In the 1990/91 season, an average of only 470 spectators came. In 1992 they were relegated from the upper league to the association league and had to compete here from 1994 against local rivals TSG Weinheim, who had long played well below FV 09 Weinheim. In the 1997/98 season the FV 09 Weinheim went bankrupt and had to withdraw its team from playing in the association league. The TSG 1862/09 Weinheim soccer department was then created through the inclusion of FV 09 soccer players in TSG . As such, the Weinheimers succeeded twice - 2001 and 2003 - in promotion to the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg , in which the club was unable to establish itself and each time failed in the first year.

In the 2006/07 season the club finished second in the Baden Association League . TSG Weinheim thus qualified for the promotion games to the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg . After Weinheim was able to prevail against Offenburg (0-0 and 1-0) in the first relegation round, they lost to TSV Schwieberdingen in the second round (2: 3 and 2: 1 n.V., 4: 5 n.E.) .), and had to stay in the association league. The 2007/08 round finished the club in 4th place. In the 2008/09 season, TSG made it to runner-up in the association league after a weak start to the season. The club was able to prevail in a relegation round. After five years, he was promoted to the now fifth-class Oberliga Baden-Württemberg. After the league could be held for the first time in 2010, relegation followed in the 2010/11 season . After you failed as a runner-up in 2016 in the promotion round at the Württemberg representative SV Göppingen , the championship of the Baden association league succeeded in the following season and thus the renewed promotion to the upper league.

successes

championship

Cup

Well-known former players and coaches

Stadium and sports facilities

Sepp Herberger Stadium

Both TSG 1862/09 Weinheim and the Weinheim Longhorns play their home games in the municipal Sepp-Herberger Stadium, which has been the home of FV 09 Weinheim since 1959. The regular TSG athletes' competitions, such as the Kurpfalz-Gala, also take place in this stadium. The stadium has around 4,000 standing and 1,000 seats. The club also has its own TSG forest stadium, which was home to the 2nd team, which was promoted to the Rhein / Neckar regional league in 2007, and the TSG 1862/09 A-youth team until the end of the 2016 season. The big beach volleyball and beach handball tournaments took place there until summer 2014. Right next to the Waldstadion is the forest swimming pool, which has been owned by the city since the renovation in 2006, but is operated by TSG Weinheim on behalf of the city. There, the swimmers and water polo players of TSG Weinheim train and (also international) comparative fights in these disciplines take place.

The club's handball and basketball players play and train in the TSG hall at Mannheimer Straße 11-13. The international mountain road tournament of young fencers from all over Germany takes place here in February. A multi-functional sports facility for indoor sports is located in the building of children's sports school 1 on Weinheimer Weststrasse. In 2009, in the direct vicinity of the Sepp-Herberger Stadium, the club opened a large sports center (Hector-Sport-Centrum) with four halls, three gymnastics rooms, a teaching pool and a large fitness center. In this building, which was designed to meet the requirements of the Children's Sports School (KiSS), almost 1,000 children are offered age-appropriate and development-appropriate sports lessons. This investment was made possible by the generous support of the Hans-Werner and Josephine Hector Foundation . The club's office is also located in this sports center.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Presentation of the association on its homepage. TSG 1862 Weinheim eV, accessed on April 26, 2019 .
  2. a b Hardy Greens : TSG Weinheim / Bergstrasse. In: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 7: Club Lexicon . AGON-Sportverlag, Kassel 2001, ISBN 3-89784-147-9 , p. 466.
  3. ^ Hardy Greens : FV 09 Weinheim / Bergstrasse. In: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 7: Club Lexicon . AGON-Sportverlag, Kassel 2001, ISBN 3-89784-147-9 , p. 466.