HSG Wetzlar
Full name | Handball syndicate Wetzlar Handball Bundesliga Spielbetriebs GmbH & Co. KG | ||
Founded | 1904 (TSV Dutenhofen) 1909 (TV Münchholzhausen) 1992 (HSG Wetzlar) |
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Club colors | green white | ||
Hall | Rittal Arena Wetzlar | ||
Places | 4,421 | ||
president | Horst Knorz (TSV Dutenhofen) Jörg Schneider (TV Münchholzhausen) |
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executive Director | Bjorn Seipp | ||
Trainer | Kai Wandschneider | ||
league | Handball Bundesliga | ||
2019/20 | |||
rank | 9th place | ||
DHB Cup | Round of 16 | ||
Website | www.hsg-wetzlar.de | ||
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Greatest successes | |||
National |
DHB Cup finalist 1997, 2001 German youth champion 1980, 1982, 1984, 2002, 2017 |
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International |
1998 European Cup Winners' Cup finalist |
The HSG Wetzlar is a German handball club from the Hessian city of Wetzlar . The first men's team at the HSG has been playing in the first handball league since 1998 , which is considered one of the strongest handball leagues in the world.
history
TSV Dutenhofen was founded in 1904 and TV Münchholzhausen in 1909 . From the traditional handball departments of these two Wetzlar district clubs, the handball community Dutenhofen / Münchholzhausen was formed in 1992 , the parent club of HSG Wetzlar. Since the 1999/2000 season , the club's Bundesliga team started under the name “HSG D / M Wetzlar”, which was changed to “HSG Wetzlar” in spring 2004.
Second Bundesliga, European Cup and promotion to the first division
In the eighties, the team, at that time still under the name TSV Dutenhofen , rose to the 2nd Bundesliga. The basic structure of the promotion team consisted of players who came from their own youth teams and who won the German youth championship three times (1979/80, 82 and 84). The most famous players of this time were circle runner Wolfgang Klimpke and director Ralf Kraft, both with the club since 1973.
Under coach Rainer Dotzauer , who later switched to management, the club established itself in the upper third of the table (5th place 1986/87 , 3rd place 1987/88 ) of the 2nd Bundesliga. The club began by signing the first foreign players such as Dragoslav Dajović from the former Yugoslavia. Already in the 1991/92 season, the rise to the first class almost succeeded. The team around Wolfgang Klimpke, Ola Lindgren and the twins Ralf and Uwe Inderthal came second - due to the goal difference, which was only one goal worse than Eintracht Hagen .
In 1996 and 1997, the club, now operating under the name of HSG Dutenhofen / Münchholzhausen , barely missed promotion again with second places each. In 1997 the HSG switched off VfL Bad Schwartau in the relegation that was first introduced , but ultimately failed at the Bundesliga club TSV Bayer Dormagen .
In 1997 the team moved sensationally into the final of the DHB Cup as a second division team and first had to admit defeat to German champions TBV Lemgo . As a vice-cup winner, the team reached the qualification for the European Cup.
European Cup Winners' Cup 1997/98 | |||
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round | opponent | First leg | Return leg |
1/16 finals | Steaua Bucharest | 30:20 (A) | 27:19 (H) |
Round of 16 | Sporting Lisbon | 24:16 (H) | 26:30 (A) |
Quarter finals | Electromos Budapest | 18:22 (A) | 22:16 (H) |
Semifinals | Polyot Chelyabinsk | 26:13 (H) | 32:28 (A) |
final | CB Cantabria Santander | 15:30 (A) | 24:26 (H) |
Overall record: 10 games, 6 wins, 0 draws, 4 defeats |
In 1997/98 the HSG achieved their greatest success when they made it through to the final after winning the European Cup Winners' Cup . The HSG eliminated such well-known teams as Steaua Bucharest , Sporting Lisbon , Elektromos Budapest and in the semifinals Polyot Tscheljabinsk. Even if they failed in the final against the Spanish team from Santander , the team wrote handball history as the first second division team in a European Cup final. In order to do justice to the European Cup euphoria at the time, the semi-finals and final had to be moved to Rotenburg , as there was no hall of sufficient size in Wetzlar at that time.
season | league | space | Gates | Points |
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1986/87 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 5. | 557: 506 | 32:20 |
1987/88 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 3. | 542: 496 | 34:18 |
1988/89 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 5. | 528: 514 | 27:25 |
1989/90 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 5. | 543: 513 | 28:24 |
1990/91 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 4th | 538: 448 | 38:14 |
1991/92 | 2nd Bundesliga center | 2. | 587: 451 | 41:11 |
1992/93 | 2nd Bundesliga center | 7th | 569: 559 | 26:26 |
1993/94 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 4th | 721: 631 | 48:20 |
1994/95 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 4th | 755: 671 | 47:21 |
1995/96 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 2. | 776: 665 | 51:17 |
1996/97 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 2. | 881: 706 | 55:13 |
1997/98 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 1. | 885: 765 | 52:16 |
1998/99 | 1st National League | 14th | 698: 743 | 18:42 |
1999/00 | 1st National League | 11. | 812: 846 | 34:34 |
2000/01 | 1st National League | 12. | 967: 967 | 35:41 |
2001/02 | 1st National League | 8th. | 900: 907 | 36:32 |
2002/03 | 1st National League | 10. | 846: 918 | 28:40 |
2003/04 | 1st National League | 12. | 870: 945 | 25:43 |
2004/05 | 1st National League | 14th | 934: 1031 | 22:46 |
2005/06 | 1st National League | 15th | 941: 1051 | 19:49 |
2006/07 | 1st National League | 15th | 905: 1042 | 18:50 |
2007/08 | 1st National League | 14th | 903: 986 | 21:47 |
2008/09 | 1st National League | 14th | 927: 975 | 23:45 |
2009/10 | 1st National League | 13. | 879: 987 | 23:45 |
2010/11 | 1st National League | 11. | 842: 931 | 27:41 |
2011/12 | 1st National League | 15th | 857: 896 | 23:45 * |
2012/13 | 1st National League | 7th | 996: 975 | 37:31 |
2013/14 | 1st National League | 11. | 883: 902 | 29:39 |
2014/15 | 1st National League | 8th. | 958: 952 | 34:38 |
2015/16 | 1st National League | 10. | 823: 822 | 34:30 |
2016/17 | 1st National League | 6th | 897: 857 | 41:27 |
2017/18 | 1st National League | 11. | 896: 884 | 30:38 |
2018/19 | 1st National League | 10. | 859: 883 | 29:39 |
2019/20 | 1st National League | 9. | 754: 754 | 27:27 |
* Athletic points were scored 25:43 (13th place), but 2 points were deducted due to a sports court decision. |
In the 1997/98 season, the HSG finally achieved the longed-for promotion to the first Bundesliga. As with the promotion to the second division twelve years earlier, Wolfgang Klimpke and Ralf Kraft were again instrumental in the success. Klimpke played for the club continuously for 30 years.
The Petković era: successful years in the Bundesliga
Under coach Velimir Petković , who coached the team for a total of six years, the club, which started as a blatant outsider, quickly established itself in the first division. Equipped with one of the lowest budgets in the league, the team around director Markus Baur managed to stay up in 1998/99. In the following year there was another step upwards: With 34:34 points, the team landed in midfield, one place ahead of their Hessian rivals SG Wallau / Massenheim .
In 2001, the Petković troop again made it into the final of the DHB Cup.
In the 2001/2002 season , the HSG was able to cope with the departure of national player and leading figure Markus Baur, contrary to expectations, and even advanced within reach of the European Cup places. With the 8th place she achieved her best placement in the Bundesliga so far, leaving behind a number of teams that were previously rated as stronger. The top performers of the surprise team of the season were goalkeeper Axel Geerken , right winger Björn Monnberg , the backcourt players Gennadij Chalepo and Sigurður Bjarnason and the Bosnian international Nebojša Golić as Baur's successor. Golić shaped Wetzlar handball as a game designer for five years. At that time, the home games of HSG D / M Wetzlar were still being played in the narrow Dutenhofen sports hall, which was feared by opponents, while the planning for a modern, large arena was already underway.
Difficult years until almost relegation in 2007
In 2004 Petković, considered the father of success, left the club. Frequent changes of coach shaped the following years. The 2004/05 season was also a year of upheaval due to the move to the large Rittal Arena . Despite the unsuccessful second half of the season, the minimum goal of staying up in the league was ultimately secured.
Since 2003 the Bundesliga has been going downhill from season to season. The low point was reached in 2007 when the club faced relegation on the last day of the season. Only a 30:29 win against SC Magdeburg, achieved with great fighting performance, was able to keep the class in the last second.
Upward trend with young players in the region
For a few years now, but increasingly since 2008, the HSG has been relying on young German players, some of whom come from the Wetzlar region. Players like Kevin Schmidt , Michael Allendorf , Timo Salzer or Nikolai Weber became the team's leading players and some made it into the national team. The concept not only led to a higher level of identification among the fans, the downward trend in sport could also be stopped. Since 2007 the HSG has gradually improved from season to season. After a bad start to the season, Gennadij Chalepo took over the team as coach in 2010/11 and took them back to midfield for the first time since 2003. In March 2012, however, Gennadij Chalepo was dismissed after a miserable start to the second half of the season. Kai Wandschneider came as a trainer for him .
In the 2012/13 season, the best result to date since promotion to the Bundesliga was achieved. The team around goalkeeper Nikolai Weber with the twins Philipp and Michael Müller in the backcourt and the three young German national players Tobias Reichmann , Kevin Schmidt and Steffen Fäth played an outstanding first half of the season in which they were placed third at times. After a small drop in performance at the beginning of the second half of the season, the team recovered and ultimately reached seventh place in the table with 37:31 points.
In the following three seasons midfield placements were achieved. In 2013, Ivano Balić, one of the best handball players in handball history, could be won for two seasons . In 2016, Andreas Wolff , Jannik Kohlbacher and Steffen Fäth, three national players from the ranks of the HSG, won the European championship for Germany.
Despite well-known departures before the season, 2016/17 was one of the most successful seasons in the club's history. The HSG achieved sixth place for the first time with over 40 points - and thus their best Bundesliga placement to date. In addition, Philipp Weber was elected top scorer , Kai Wandschneider was elected coach of the year, Benjamin Burić was named goalkeeper of the season by handball week and the A-youth won the German championship title . Siege u. a. against the champions Rhein-Neckar-Löwen and the record champions THW Kiel .
Fans and rivalries
The HSG Wetzlar is a traditional club and has had the highest average of all handball clubs in Hessen for years. The home games in the Rittal Arena are attended by an average of 4,000 spectators. There are several fan clubs, the largest of which is now the "Grün-Weiss Fan Club", founded in 2003.
A strong sporting rivalry traditionally exists between the HSG Wetzlar and the old local rival TV Hüttenberg . The “Mittelhessenderby” was a regular crowd puller, especially in the 80s and 90s, and is still of great symbolic importance for handball fans in the region. After Hüttenberger's promotion to the 1st Bundesliga, there were derby games again in the 2011/12 and 2017/18 seasons. While HSG Wetzlar won them clearly in 2011/12, 2017 was an exciting game that ended in a draw for the HSG after a 5-0 lead.
The derby against MT Melsungen has also been explosive since they made it to the Bundesliga in 2005. Especially after the departure of the former HSG trainer Michael Roth to North Hesse, the games are always under great tension. A high point in the derby history came on December 23, 2010, when around 650 supporters of HSG Wetzlar loudly supported their team in the away game immediately after the change of coach.
The club's mascot is the beaver Karlchen , who replaced Wetzi in 2011 .
Women's teams
The first women's team was promoted from the league to the third division in the 2012/13 season , in which the team reached eighth place in 2013/14 . In 2014/15 relegation could no longer be achieved.
Youth teams
The association operates a very successful youth work, through which a number of titles on the Hessian, southwest German and federal level could be won. The fourth German championship won the male B-youth in 2002 against SC Magdeburg . In 2013, the B-youth missed the fifth German championship title just after throwing seven meters in the final against the Füchse Berlin.
The A-Jugend of the HSG has qualified for this top division every year since the A-Jugend-Bundesliga was founded . The club received the youth certificate of the DKB Handball Bundesliga in 2014, and in 2015 the certificate was also awarded to the Wetzlar team. In 2015 the A-youth of HSG Wetzlar missed the German championship title and, after a 32:26 first leg win, lost the second leg with 25:33 against the youth of SC DHFK Leipzig .
In 2017, the A-youth was again in the final, in which they won the German championship against Füchse Berlin .
As a hinge between the Bundesliga and youth teams, the 2nd team starts as HSG Wetzlar U23 or HSG Dutenhofen-Münchholzhausen II in the 3rd division .
Halls
Rittal Arena
The Rittal Arena Wetzlar , which holds 4,421 spectators and was also the venue for the 2007 handball world championship, serves as the home ground for the Bundesliga games . The Rittal Arena was completed in spring 2005.
Dutenhofen sports hall
The 1750-seat sports hall in Dutenhofen is today the training hall for the first team, the venue for DHB Cup games and the venue for the reserve and youth teams of the HSG. Before the completion of the Rittal Arena, the HSG's Bundesliga home games were also played in the hall.
Squad season 2020/21
No. | Surname | Nat. | Item | birthday | size | In the team since | Contract until | Last club |
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11 | Till Klimpke | TW | 04/01/98 | 1.98 m | 1998 | 2023 | own youth | |
12 | Anadin Suljaković | TW | 06/16/98 | 1.96 m | 2019 | 2021 | Al-Ahli HC | |
16 | Tibor Ivanišević | TW | 08/16/90 | 1.98 m | 2018 | 2022 | Skjern Håndbold | |
2 | Alexander Field | RM | 06/15/93 | 1.88 m | 2019 | 2022 | TSG Friesenheim | |
3 | Ivan Sršen | RR | 19.09.92 | 1.97 m | 2020 | 2022 | RK Našice | |
6th | Philip Henningsson | RL | 06/14/95 | 1.96 m | 2020 | 2022 | IFK Kristianstad | |
7th | Kristian Bjørnsen | RA | 1/10/89 | 1.91 m | 2016 | 2021 | IFK Kristianstad | |
19th | Lars Weisgerber | RA | 03/29/97 | 1.83 m | 2018 | 2022 | HG Saarlouis | |
22nd | Maximilian Holst | LA | 06/23/89 | 1.80 m | 2014 | 2022 | TV Großwallstadt | |
23 | Magnus Fredriksen | RM | 05/24/97 | 1.88 m | 2020 | 2022 | Elverum Håndball | |
25th | Olle Forsell Schefvert | RL | 08/13/93 | 1.96 m | 2017 | 2021 | IK Sävehof | |
31 | Patrick Gempp | KM | 06/13/96 | 1.90 m | 2020 | 2022 | DJK Rimpar | |
33 | Emil Mellegård | LA | 11/06/97 | 1.95 m | 2020 | 2022 | Redbergslids IK | |
44 | Lenny Rubin | RL | 02/01/96 | 2.04 m | 2018 | 2022 | Wacker Thun | |
66 | Anton Lindskog | KM | 12/07/93 | 1.98 m | 2016 | 2022 | IFK Kristianstad | |
77 | Stefan Čavor | RR | 11/03/94 | 1.98 m | 2016 | 2022 | Csurgói KK | |
Kai Wandschneider | Trainer | 11/02/59 | 1.76 m | 2012 | DHC Rhineland | |||
Filip Mirkulovski | Co-trainer and RM | 09/14/83 | 1.89 m | 2015 | 2022 | TSV Hannover-Burgdorf | ||
Jasmin Čamdžić | Co and goalkeeper coach | 06/07/70 | 1.89 m | 2011 | TV Gelnhausen | |||
Thomas Reichel | Athletic trainer | 03/17/92 | 1.78 m | 2010 | ||||
Marco Kettrukat | Team doctor | 05/09/67 | 1.83 m | |||||
Frank Thiel | Team doctor | 12/13/61 | 1.75 m | 2011 | ||||
Thomas Stubner | Physiotherapist | |||||||
Painted power | Physiotherapist | 06/25/94 | 1.98 m | |||||
Maximilian Schuller | Physiotherapist | 03/22/94 | 1.84 m | 2016 | ||||
Stefan Rühl | supervisor | 05/17/71 | 1.76 m |
Transfers
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Well-known former players
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For more see: Category: Handball players (HSG Wetzlar)
Trainer
- Kai Wandschneider (since March 2012)
- Jasmin Camdzic (assistant coach and goalkeeping coach, since November 2011)
Former trainers:
Name (s) | from | to |
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Jochen Beppler / Gennadij Chalepo | 2010 | 03/2012 |
Michael Roth | 2009 | 2010 |
Zoran Đorđić | 2009 | 2009 |
Volker Mudrow | 02/2007 | 04/2009 |
Wolfgang Klimpke / Róbert Sighvatsson | 10/2006 | 02/2007 |
Dragan Marković | 2005 | 2006 |
Martin Schwalb | 2005 | 2005 |
Holger Schneider | 2004 | 2005 |
Velimir Petković | 1998 | 2004 |
Horst Spengler | 1998 | 1998 |
Enyi Okpara / Dieter Schmidt | 1997 | 1998 |
Rainer Dotzauer | 1985 | 1990 |
Individual evidence
- ↑ Wetterauer Zeitung: German champion for the fifth time , accessed on June 1, 2018
- ^ Page of the HSG Dutenhofen / Münchholzhausen
- ↑ My handball ticket: DKB Handball Bundesliga - spectators 2017/18 , accessed on September 18, 2018.
- ↑ HSG mascot is called "Karlchen"! Retrieved December 4, 2013
- ↑ handball-world.news: Successor to Emil Frend Öfors: HSG Wetzlar signs left winger from Sweden , accessed on December 10, 2019
- ↑ handball-world.news: HSG Wetzlar signs Swedish national players - Kneer leaves the club , accessed on December 17, 2019
- ↑ a b handball-world.news: HSG Wetzlar signs playmaker , accessed on December 23, 2019
- ↑ handball-world.news: New team from Lindskog - HSG Wetzlar changes the district , accessed on January 23, 2020
- ↑ handball-world.news: HSG Wetzlar closes the personnel gap in the right backcourt with a Croatian national player , accessed on July 3, 2020
- ↑ handball-world.news: TV Hüttenberg signs ex-national player Kneer and reports departure , accessed on January 31, 2020
- ↑ handball-world.news: Two new additions and one farewell: TVB Stuttgart is filling the right back space position , accessed on January 17, 2020
- ↑ whvhandball.de: WHV commits Nils Torbrügge , accessed on February 13, 2020
- ↑ handball-world.news: Portuguese Ferraz is not returning to Wetzlar , accessed on January 31, 2020
- ↑ handball-world.news: Junior national player changes from Wetzlar to Hüttenberg , accessed on February 10, 2020
Web links
- Side of the club
- Site of the parent club HSG Dutenhofen / Münchholzhausen
- Site of the parent club TSV Dutenhofen