HC Vienna
HC Vienna | |||
Full name | Hockey Club Vienna | ||
place | Vienna | ||
Founded | 1922 as WASC | ||
Club colors | Violet blue / carmine | ||
Stadion | Vienna hockey stadium | ||
Places | |||
president | Alexander Kaiser | ||
Trainer | Leszek Specjal (men) Lukasz Staniczek (women) |
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Homepage | www.hcwien.at | ||
league | Bundesliga | ||
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The Hockey Club Wien ( HC Wien ) is an Austrian club for field and indoor hockey. The home of the club is the hockey stadium in Vienna's Prater .
history
HC Wien was established in 1947 by former members of the all-round sports club founded in 1922. The Hockey Club in Vienna is therefore the legitimate successor to the Vienna Allround Sports Club - WASC. In 1928 the WASC joined the ÖEHV because its members played ice hockey in winter . In the early 1930s, the club played at times in the top ice hockey league, the 1st class.
The club is a member of the Austrian Hockey Association .
The flagship of HC Wien, which has produced various national hockey players, are the two national league hockey teams in the women's and men's areas. The current president has been Alexander Kaiser since 2013. In 2015, HC Wien caused a real sensation and secured the men's championship title in Austria's top division for the first time in 22 years. This success also meant qualification for the Euro Hockey League , the premier class in hockey.
Player of the championship team:
- Abel Jan
- Gerritsen Steven
- Glaser Lukas
- Handel-Mazzetti Tobias
- Hilbert Marcel
- Klingenbrunner Thomas
- Kölbl Georg
- Landsteiner Simon
- Lindengrün Franz
- Linden green Felix
- Polak Klaus
- Puchhammer Jakob
- Rauscher Markus
- Romanec Michal
- Rusnjak Clemens
- Rusnjak Fabian
- Siejkowski Michal
- Staniczek Lukasz
- Szmidt Bartosz
- Thörnblom Leon
- Wellan Andreas
- Zdrojewski Michal
European Cup
European Cup balance men's field | ||||
year | competition | level | space | place |
1991 | Club Champions Trophy | 2 | 4th | Glasgow |
1992 | Club Champions Trophy | 2 | 1 | Prague |
1993 | Club Champions Cup | 1 | 8th | Brussels |
1994 | Club Champions Trophy | 2 | 4th | Milan |
1995 | Club Champions Trophy | 2 | 7th | Glasgow |
1996 | Cup Winners Trophy | 2 | 7th | Gibraltar |
1997 | Cup Winners Challenge | 3 | 2 | Vienna |
2016 | Euro Hockey League | 1 | 20.5 | Hamburg |
Successes (selection)
- 1947 and 1952: third place
- 1955–1960: runner-up
- 1961 Austrian champion
- 1964
- Ladies State Champion.
- Men's runner-up
- 1966 national championship among men
- 1967 runner-up
- 1969 double: Austrian Cup + national championship title
- 1970 and 1971 national championship for women
- 1973 and 1974 national champion men
- 1989–1993 national champion men
- 1992 Champion in the B-European Cup (Prague)
- 2015 national champion men
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Archived copy ( memento of the original dated November 12, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) 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.
- ↑ Compilation from EHF Handbook 2016 ( memento of the original from March 14, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) 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.