Floorball Association Germany
Floorball Association Germany | |
---|---|
sport | Floorball |
Founded | January 30, 1992 |
Place of foundation | Clausthal-Zellerfeld |
president | Jan Hoffmann |
societies | 212 |
Members | 13,063 |
Association headquarters |
Leipzig (seat) Office: Goesselstr. 55 28215 Bremen |
Official languages) | German |
Homepage | www.floorball.de |
The Floorball Association Germany e. V. (spelling: floorball deutschland; formerly: Deutscher Unihockey Bund , DUB), founded on January 30, 1992 in Clausthal-Zellerfeld , is the top and professional sports association that represents the sport of floorball in Germany. He has been a member of the International Floorball Federation (IFF), the world floorball association , since 1994 and of the German Olympic Sports Confederation since 2014 . The seat is in Leipzig and the office is in Bremen . The association has around 13,000 members (2019).
National team
At the B World Championship in Prague in 2008, the German team won gold. At the Floorball World Cup in Switzerland in 2012 , the men's national team achieved its most successful placement to date, fourth place, and was able to move into the semi-finals of a world championship for the first time.
National competitions
At the national level, the Floorball Germany Cup for men's teams has been played annually on a large field since 2007 . The Floorball Germany Cup for women's teams has also been held annually since the 2011/12 season . In addition, the association organizes the 1st and 2nd floorball Bundesliga for men and women on the large field .
Members
Floorball Germany has united twelve regional associations with around 11,968 members in 195 clubs since the beginning of September 2017. The following state associations are direct members of the Floorball Association Germany:
- Floorball Association Baden-Württemberg e. V.
- Floorball Association Bavaria e. V.
- Floorball Association Berlin-Brandenburg e. V.
- Bremer Floorball Federation e. V.
- Floorball Federation Hamburg e. V.
- Floorball Association Hessen e. V.
- Floorball Association Lower Saxony e. V.
- North Rhine-Westphalian Floorball Association e. V.
- Floorball Association Rhineland-Palatinate / Saarland e. V.
- Floorball Association Saxony e. V.
- Floorball Association Saxony-Anhalt e. V.
- Floorball Association Schleswig-Holstein e. V.
tasks
The Floorball Association Germany has been a member of the German Olympic Sports Association (DOSB) since December 2014 .
The association publishes the rules and regulations to be applied in Germany, controls referee training and coordinates national match operations within the men's first and second division as well as the women's first division. Furthermore, the Floorball Germany Cup has been organized since 2007 .
He also coordinates floorball development in schools and clubs, in particular organizing the nationwide Floorball Cup as a school sport competition for mixed teams and having it hosted by the regional associations. In some federal states, this competition is partly included as a complementary sport in the Youth Trained for the Olympics (JtfO) program.
Renaming of the sport
The name of the sport has an eventful history behind it.
At its eleventh regular assembly of delegates on August 9, 1997 in Grasleben, the Fachverband Deutscher Unihoc Bund eV (DUB) adopted the term Unihoc by a majority and replaced it with floorball. Unihoc is the brand name of a well-known manufacturer of floorball playground equipment and the DUB would not have been approved for the world championships of the International Floorball Federation at the time .
At the 15th ordinary delegates 'meeting on September 25, 1999 in Berlin, the majority of the delegates - in solidarity with the Swiss Floorball Association (SUHV) - held on to the name floorball, but on September 26th, 2009, a decision was made at an extraordinary delegates' meeting in Weißenfels to use the term floorball from now on. As a result, the terminology of the internationally customary naming was adjusted. In addition, confusion, especially with hockey or university sports, is avoided and the uniqueness of the sport is clearly positioned and made marketable. The association's name change was confirmed in 2010 by the general assembly in Bordesholm. The change in the register of associations took place shortly afterwards.
Special events
- In 2001 the association hosted the 1st U19 Junior World Championship in the Weißenfels, Halle and Leipzig area.
- In January 2004 the European Cup finals took place in the Weißenfels district.
- In November 2006 the 2nd U19 World Championships for Juniors took place in Naunhof and Leipzig.
- In July 2007, the sport was presented to a specialist audience for the first time as part of a 'floorball village' at the ISPO trade fair, together with the world floorball association IFF and manufacturers.
- During the B World Cup in Prague in 2008, the German national floorball team won gold.
- The 6th U19 Junior World Championships took place in Weißenfels from May 3rd to 7th, 2011 .
- At the men's floorball world championship in Switzerland in 2012 , the national team reached a semi-finals of a world championship for the first time and finished fourth.
statistics
Development of the number of registered players and clubs in Germany:
date | Players | societies |
---|---|---|
31 December 1996 |
200 |
25 |
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Floorball Germany: Executive Board
- ↑ a b inventory survey 2019. (PDF) German Olympic Sports Confederation, accessed on August 13, 2020 .
- ↑ according to Entry in the register of associations, Leipzig District Court, registration number: VR3945
- ↑ Floorball players celebrate a historic coup . News from December 7, 2012 on sportschau.de
- ↑ floorball.org: Players (licensed / registered) per Association 1996-2006 (accessed January 27, 2012)
- ↑ floorball.org: Players (licensed / registered) per Association 2006-2015 (accessed September 29, 2018)
- ↑ floorball.org: Players (licensed / registered) per Association 2015-2017 ( Accessed September 29, 2018)