FVgg Weingarten

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Fvgg Weingarten
Surname FVgg Weingarten
Club colors Red-white-black
Founded September 23, 1906
Association headquarters Lärchenweg 2
76356 Weingarten (Baden)
Departments 5
Chairman Gerhard Fritscher
Homepage www.fvgg-weingarten.de

The 1906 football association , or FVgg Weingarten for short (also: FV Weingarten ) from Weingarten in Baden, is a sports club. It consists of the departments soccer, women's gymnastics, judo, swimming and tennis. The place name is not part of the club name.

history

The club was founded on September 23, 1906 as the Südstern Weingarten football club . In 1908 FC Viktoria Weingarten joined the Südstern. As early as 1911, the club changed its name to the first Weingarten football club . Through the merger with FV 1910 Weingarten in 1919, the association took on its current name, FVgg Weingarten . After workers' sport was banned in Germany in 1933, the football department of the dissolved TV 1890 Weingarten joined the FVgg. However, on August 28, 1949, the workers' athletes separated again from the club and re-founded TSV 1890 Weingarten . In December 1969, the Weingarten sports club finally joined. This had previously been founded as a tennis department for former footballers of the FVgg and also brought the swimming and judo departments into the merger.

Soccer

Soccer department
Division District League Karlsruhe
Venue Waldstadion (approx. 1,000 seats)
2015/16 season 11th place

The FVgg footballers were never among the top clubs in Baden like the teams from Freiburg, Karlsruhe or Mannheim. Nevertheless, they mixed up again and again in the second row and belonged to the Association League North Baden for several years . The FVgg experienced phases of second and fifth class, as the North Baden league was downgraded more and more through various reforms.

Second rate until 1948

As early as 1941, the FVgg was in the promotion round to the Gauliga Baden . The footballers failed there, however, due to the competition from VfTuR Feudenheim and TSG Plankstadt . When the football leagues in southern Germany were reorganized after the war , the Oberliga Süd was created as a new supraregional upper house . The Weingarteners were divided into the second-class substructure, which, however, was very fragmented in the Baden area. From 1946, the FVgg played in the amateur league North Baden-South and met opponents like the former German champions Karlsruhe FV and Phoenix Karlsruhe . When the two North Baden leagues were merged into a single-track amateur league in North Baden for the 1948/49 season, the FVgg missed qualifying by four points as tenth in the table and was third class.

Two short phases of third-class status

With the introduction of the II. Division as a new level of the second division, the FVgg even slipped into the fourth division with the whole league. It was not until fourteen years later that the people of Weingarten managed to make the leap to the upper house in North Baden. In 1962/63 , however, the newcomer had to relegate immediately as a knock-off bottom of the table.

The Weingarteners kept the fourteen-year rhythm. 1976 succeeded again the promotion to the third class amateur league. While in 1976/77 twelfth place was still enough to secure relegation, the FVgg should have reached fifth place in 1977/78 to qualify for the new amateur league Baden-Württemberg . With the 12th place again, the FVgg clearly missed the qualification and slipped, together with the entire North Baden amateur league, into fourth class.

In the elevator between fourth and fifth league

In the class now known as the Baden Association , the FVgg remained until they were relegated again in 1982. This was followed by years in which the FVgg changed leagues from year to year. Although the immediate ascent was achieved in 1983, which was followed by an equally prompt relegation in 1984. This procedure was repeated with the renewed return to the Association League in 1985 and the following relegation in 1986 again.

One last year in fifth class

It took until 1995 until the next promotion to the association league, which has only been fifth class since 1994. But this time, too, it was a one-year event, one could not prove oneself on the highest north Baden level.

Another comeback in the association league, which has only been fifth class since 1994, has not since taken place. On the contrary, the first team has only played in the seventh-class Karlsruhe district league since the 2007/08 season.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hardy Greens: FVgg Weingarten / Baden. In: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 7: Club Lexicon. AGON-Sportverlag, Kassel 2001, ISBN 3-89784-147-9 , p. 466.
  2. Hardy Greens: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 1: From the Crown Prince to the Bundesliga. 1890 to 1963. German championship, Gauliga, Oberliga. Numbers, pictures, stories. AGON-Sportverlag, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-85-1 , p. 207.
  3. Greens 1996, p. 290
  4. Amateur League North Baden 1962/63 , www.f-archiv.de (January 24, 2008)
  5. Amateur League North Baden 1977/78 , www.f-archiv.de (January 24, 2008)
  6. Amateur League North Baden 1981/82 , www.f-archiv.de (January 24, 2008)
  7. Amateur League North Baden 1982/83 , www.f-archiv.de (January 24, 2008)
  8. Amateur League North Baden 1983/84 , www.f-archiv.de (January 24, 2008)
  9. Amateur League North Baden 1984/85 , www.f-archiv.de (January 24, 2008)
  10. Amateur League North Baden 1985/86 , www.f-archiv.de (January 24, 2008)
  11. Amateur League North Baden 1994/95 , www.f-archiv.de (January 24, 2008)
  12. Amateur League North Baden 1995/96 , www.f-archiv.de (January 24, 2008)

Web links

Coordinates: 49 ° 3 ′ 55.6 "  N , 8 ° 30 ′ 34.4"  E