SSV Jahn Regensburg

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SSV Jahn Regensburg
Club coat of arms of SSV Jahn Regensburg
society
Template: Infobox football company / maintenance / no picture
Surname Sports and swimming club
Jahn Regensburg e. V.
Seat Regensburg , Bavaria
founding October 4, 1907
(soccer department of TB Jahn Regensburg)
May 26, 2000
(separation of the soccer department)
Colours White-red
Members 3,200 (July 1, 2019)
Board Hans Rothammer (Chairman)
Christian Keller
Philipp Hausner
Daniel Lesser
Football company
Template: Infobox football company / maintenance / no picture
Surname SSV Jahn Regensburg
GmbH & Co. KGaA
Limited partners 90%: SSV Jahn Regensburg e. V.
10%: various investors
General partner GmbH SSV Jahn 2000 GmbH
Marketing and Administration
→ 100%: SSV Jahn Regensburg e. V.
Managing Director
(general partner GmbH)
Christian Keller
Website ssv-jahn.de
First team
Head coach Mersad Selimbegović
Venue Jahn Stadium Regensburg
Places 15.210
league 2nd Bundesliga
2019/20 12th place
home
Away
Alternatively

The SSV Jahn Regensburg (officially: Sports and Swimming Club Jahn Regensburg eV ) is a football club from the Bavarian city ​​of Regensburg . The club was created in its current form in 2000 when it was separated from the parent club SSV Jahn 1889 Regensburg , which has no longer had a football department since then. It is based on the Turnerbund Jahn Regensburg , established in 1886, and was named after Friedrich Ludwig Jahn , the initiator of the German gymnastics movement . The SSV Jahn currently has 3,200 members (as of July 1, 2019). The club colors are white and red.

The first and second teams as well as the A-youth have been outsourced to SSV Jahn Regensburg GmbH & Co. KGaA since May 2009 . 90 percent of your shares are held by the association and ten percent by various investors. The general partner authorized to manage the company and fully liable is SSV Jahn 2000 GmbH Marketing und Verwaltung , whose shares are entirely held by the association.

The first team, also called Jahnelf , has been playing in the 2nd Bundesliga since the 2017/18 season after a successful relegation against 1860 Munich .

history

General and name history

The Jahn footballers have played under the umbrella of various clubs since 1907

The footballers from Jahn Regensburg played under the umbrella of various clubs throughout history. Today's sports and swimming club Jahn Regensburg e. V. is a pure football club in which all youth teams below the U-19 juniors are organized. This is based on the Turnerbund Jahn Regensburg , which was founded in 1886 and in which the football department was founded in 1907. This parted with the athletes from the gymnasts in 1924 and continued playing as the Jahn Regensburg sports association . In 1934 the SB Jahn merged with the sports club from 1889 Regensburg and the swimming club from 1920 Regensburg to the sports and swimming club Jahn from 1889 Regensburg e. V. In 2000 the football department split off from the main club and was renamed SSV Jahn 2000 Regensburg e. V. independent, the parent club still exists as a sports club with eight departments. In 2002, the soccer department of SG Post / Süd Regensburg joined SSV Jahn 2000 . In 2009 the professionals, the U-21 and the U-19, were spun off into SSV Jahn 2000 Regensburg GmbH & Co. KGaA . In 2016 the year was deleted from the name. The football club has been called SSV Jahn Regensburg e. V. , the corporation SSV Jahn Regensburg GmbH & Co. KGaA .

1907 to 1926: the first years

Friedrich Ludwig Jahn becomes the namesake of the Turnerbund in 1886

In TB Jahn Regensburg at first there was no football department. However, it can be assumed that young gymnasts played football in clubs as early as the turn of the century. In the spring of 1907 it was then officially permitted to build a team. About the establishment of the new football department, four lines from a newspaper advertisement from May 4, 1907, which says: "Those interested in the football game can still take part in the newly founded football team and are asked to report to the club on Saturday evening". Finally, 16 men were present at the official founding meeting in the Café Union , some of whom only their surname has survived today: Feldmeier, Franz Fritzsche, Karl Heider, Ludwig Herrmann, Josef Kirmayer, Adalbert Krämer, Pauli, Max Pommersberger, Hans Regl, Fritz Reichl, Theo Schuster, Schweiger, Oskar Vogt, Weinzierl and Georg Wiesnet.

“The aim and purpose of the department was to maintain football as part of general physical exercise and to maintain sociability and camaraderie. Access to our department was open to all social classes and stood outside of any political tendency. "

- Ludwig Herrmann, first captain of the Jahn footballers :

In January 1908 Jahn was accepted into the South German Football Association, the following autumn the premier of the league game in the C-Class of the Bavarian East District was on the program, in which the rival Turnverein 1861 Regensburg was also an opponent for the first time ; the first Regensburg derby ended with a 3: 5 defeat of the TB. As early as 1911 there was a decisive change in the appearance of the Jahn footballers: instead of the traditional black, red and gold colors of the gymnastics movement , they appeared in the white and red of the city of Regensburg from October 20th - the club's colors to this day. In 1916, in the middle of the First World War , the gymnastics association was first gaumeister before the gymnastics club, after the war the red-whites overtook the red-blue ones permanently as Regensburg's best football club. In 1921 Jahn was the first team in the region to be promoted to the southern Bavarian district league - the highest league at the time. And the Jahn caused a sensation in his first season , finishing third behind FC Bayern and TSV 1860 Munich . After fifth place in the following season , however, there was relegation again, as the four best district league teams from the northern and southern seasons founded a Bavaria-wide district league for the first time .

In the course of the organizational separation of athletes and gymnasts, the clean divorce , the footballers and gymnasts went their separate ways from 1923. Together with the athletics department, the footballers started on February 28, 1924 under a new name as Sportbund Jahn Regensburg . Another milestone in Jahn football took place in 1926 with the move toCheckinger Strasse: After the Jahnelf played on the sports field of the Oberrealschule (today's Goethe Gymnasium) in their first few years, the Jahnplatz on Dech Bettener Strasse was their home venue from 1912. But in 1923 the club was given notice. The reason was that the landlord apparently no longer suffered when "men with bare knees romped about on his premises during church times." A location on the Upper Woehrd and the grounds of the 1. FC Regensburg were briefly venue, 1926, the SB Jahn leased the premises in relation to the secondary school, which on September 19 with a 7: 0 victory over 1. FC Passau officially was inaugurated and was to be the home of Regensburg football for 89 years.

1926 to 1945: The Hans Jakob era

In 1926/27 the Jahnelf managed to return to the first division. After the Regensburg team played first-class in the southern Bavarian district league from 1921 to 1923, they were promoted to the district league with Hans Jakob im Tor. In addition to the goalkeeper, who joined the newly founded Sportbund in 1924 and was appointed goalkeeper of the first team at the age of 18 in 1926, the Austrian coach Gustav Lanzer was an important part of the promotion. Lanzer had previously become champions and cup winners with Austria Wien . In the debut season 1927/28 the SB Jahn reached fourth place. The following years were also extremely successful, in the next four seasons SB Jahn Regensburg always landed in the top five. With second place in the 1929/30 season, Jakob's team even qualified for the first time for the finals of the South German Championship , where the first competitive games with the (then) record champions 1. FC Nürnberg took place. On February 9, 1930, the Jahnelf was able to defeat the club in front of 8,000 spectators on Jahn-Platz, which was one of the impetus for the construction of a grandstand - the Jahnstadion was soon born.

During this final round, Jahn's goalkeeper Hans Jakob was discovered by Reich trainer Otto Nerz and at the end of 1930 he was appointed to the national team for the first time . Jakob made his debut on November 2nd in a 1-1 draw against Norway , the first of a total of 38 international matches for Germany until 1939. Until 1967, when he was replaced by Hans Tilkowski , Jakob was the national team's record goalkeeper .

From 1933, with the seizure of power of the Nazis , there were changes in the Jahn-football again. On the one hand, Regensburg was classified in the new Gauliga Bayern for the 1933/34 season . On the other hand, the form of the club changed for the second time. Through the establishment of so-called 'large clubs' associated by the National Socialists, the Jahn Sports Association merged on May 24, 1934 with the swimming club from 1920 and the sports club from 1889 to form the sports and swimming club from 1889 Jahn Regensburg . The new SSV Jahn had to accept relegation to the district league in 1935, but was able to return to the first division two years later, in which the Regensburg team under player-coach Hans Jakob could remain in top positions until the end of the war. Game operations during the Second World War could be maintained until the summer of 1944.

1945 to 1963: back and forth between first and second class

After the Second World War, SSV Jahn Regensburg commuted between Oberliga and II. Division . As early as the summer of 1945, the ball was rolling again on Prüfinger Strasse, and on December 2nd there was the first point game. However, the SSV did not appear in the newly founded Oberliga as expected , but only in the second-class Bayernliga . The last placements in the Gauliga would have been sufficient for a renewed place in the first class, but the new league was to be filled with teams from the metropolitan areas and not with a club from the " Upper Palatinate Province". In 1947, however, the first post-war success was celebrated; the Jahnelf won the Bavarian State Cup with a 2: 1 in the final in Landshut against MTV Ingolstadt .

It took four years until Jahn finally landed in the top division. Right up to the end, the Regensburg team fought for the title with SpVgg Fürth , which they ultimately won, thanks in part to a 2-1 win at the sold-out Ronhof , and after the championship in the 1948/49 season also against in the relegation round Hessen Kassel , VfL Neckarau and SG 07 Untertürkheim were able to prevail.

In 1949/50, 1953 to 1958 and 1960/61 Jahn belonged to the top division. From 1954 to 1957, the Austrian football legend Josef “Pepi” Uridil took over the coaching post of SSV Jahn Regensburg as the successor to his compatriot Franz “Bimbo” Binders .

The best placement was rank 8 in 1954. From 1967 to 1974 ( Regionalliga Süd ) and from 1975 to 1977 ( 2nd Bundesliga South ) the team was in second class.

1996 to 2008: The difficult way back up

On June 1, 1996, the club's absolute low point was reached. For the first time Jahn was relegated to the fifth-class regional league , after the rise of local rivals SG Post / Süd Regensburg in the Bavarian League , the club was only number 2 in the city.

In addition to the structural and economic start, a new beginning was necessary. With Josef Schuderer, a trainer was brought toprüfung, who had already climbed up with Jahn seven years earlier. And it looked good too, as far as immediate resurgence was concerned; after the main round they were third in the Landesliga Mitte, level on points with second table SC 04 Schwabach . After a playoff against Middle Franconia (3-2), the SSV qualified for the relegation. In the first game the Bayernliga -15. SpVgg Bayreuth are defeated 2-1. Landesliga-Süd participant TSV Landsberg turned out to be too strong in the second game; Despite the lead, the Rothosen lost 1: 4 - Landsberg rose.

Even in the second year of the fifth division, the promotion was not made. Schuderer was replaced by Günter Brandl after a negative series , but there was no more than 3rd place this season. In the third attempt you wanted to be on the safe side. After their failed regional league promotion, manager Karl Viertler and coach Karsten Wettberg (initially as sports director) were released from SG Post / Süd , as well as seven regular players. First, player-coach Roland Seitz was supposed to lead the Jahn back up, but after a few unsuccessful weeks Wettberg took over the training and this time it should work: ten wins in a row culminated on May 29, 1999 in a 6-0 win against ASV Neumarkt and in the rise in the Bayernliga.

SSV Jahn remained successful with Wettberg, and the next year they won the championship title in the Bavarian League. In order to get through to the Regionalliga Süd , four relegation games had to be played against SV Sandhausen (champions Oberliga Baden-Württemberg) and FSV Frankfurt (Regionalliga-14th). Since Sandhausen (2: 3 in the Hardtwald Stadium , 4: 2 in the Jahn Stadium ) and finally also the FSV (3: 1, 3: 2) could be defeated in the European Cup mode , Jahn was the only club to climb into the newly designed two-track regional league in 2000 on. As early as May 2000, those responsible decided to separate the football department from the main club SSV Jahn 1889 Regensburg - SSV Jahn 2000 Regensburg was born.

In their first regional league season, the Regensburg team managed to stay up in the league despite several failures of top performers. Coach Wettberg was replaced by Günter Sebert from Mannheim during the season . In two seasons under him the promotion to the 2nd Bundesliga was made, with which Jahn played for the first time in over 20 years in professional football. But already at the beginning of the second division season 2003/04 there was a major upheaval; the coach and almost the entire promotion team were replaced. Ingo Peter , who was previously employed by Sportfreunde Siegen , joined the successful coach Sebert ; The reason for this should have been too high salary demands from Sebert. With more than 17 new players at the start of the season and four more during the winter break, the squad grew to a total of 31 players (those with at least one season appearance). Since Jahn could only record three wins and four draws with five defeats by November, Ingo Peter was dismissed. Amateur trainer Günter Brandl took over for him . In the 2003/04 DFB-Pokal they were only eliminated in the round of 16 (see section DFB-Pokal ); after two convincing 3-0 wins against LR Ahlen and Karlsruher SC Brandl was firmly committed. Until the 27th matchday it looked as if Jahn could hold the class; So they won against the huge favorites 1. FC Nürnberg in the home stadium with 2-1. Since only three out of 21 possible points were taken from the last seven games, Jahn was relegated to the regional league. Günter Brandl was fired.

In the following season, Jahn received a lot of media attention when ex- national player Mario Basler was signed as team manager and ex-professional Dariusz Pasieka as assistant coach. During his coaching debut, Basler had the difficult task of building a completely new team, as only three of the second division players remained. At the end of May 2005, Jahn, who found it difficult to compensate for his relegation from the 2nd Bundesliga financially, was about to end because the presidium was not relieved at the general meeting. Insolvency proceedings were initiated and there was a risk of forced relegation to the Bayern League. Despite these incidents off the field, the Jahn was able to convince on a sporting level, he reached eighth place in the regional league . The highlight of the season was the last match day when rivals FC Augsburg were able to turn a 0-1 deficit into a 2-1 win with two goals in the last five minutes. Because of this defeat, the Swabians had to give way to the sports fans Siegen and the Offenbacher Kickers as promoted players. This is one of the reasons for the rivalry between the fan camps of both clubs.

At a press conference on June 10, 2005 it was announced that the city of Regensburg and a sponsor, Volker Tretzel, would raise the missing money for a guarantee . Thus the bankruptcy could be averted and the remaining in the regional league secured. A large part of the presidium drew the consequences and then resigned. The newly elected board consisted of a. from the sports manager Jenö Rauch, president Franz Nerb and his deputy Gerhard Süß, who had started the campaign “Save the Jahn” before the insolvency proceedings in order to collect money for the threatened sports club.

In the coming regional league season, the team remained in the first seven games without a win. Basler was replaced by assistant coach Pasieka after a 4-0 home defeat against FC Augsburg on September 19, 2005 . On April 7, 2006, the nine-month-old board member resigned, except for President Franz Nerb, after a dispute about athletic competencies. Nerb had demanded a sporting power of attorney under threats of resignation, with which the board did not agree. Although Nerb had asserted at the beginning of his tenure not to interfere in the sporting business and only to take care of the economic interests of the club, he had requested a power of attorney that would have enabled him to intervene in the daily training. After his resignation, Nerb built a "lean" board of directors, which only Jenö Rauch and ex-Jahnplayer Horst Eberl belonged to.

At the same time, things didn't go well in terms of sport. On matchday 27, coach Pasieka was dismissed after just under seven months and ex-Bundesliga player Günter Güttler was hired. The Jahn was in 15th place and therefore in acute danger of relegation. However, Güttler could no longer prevent the descent. With a 2-0 defeat against VfR Aalen on May 20, 2006, the move to the fourth-class Bayernliga was sealed. Since the second team already played in this league, it had to relegate to the state league. At the end of the season, the contract with sports manager Jenö Rauch was also terminated; the top management of the club now consisted of President Nerb and the sporting director Eberl.

For the 2006/07 season, the highest budget in the Bavarian League was estimated at 1.2 million euros in order to enable immediate promotion. The season went according to plan; With 44 points they became winter champions in December and with a 4-0 win against 1. FC Nürnberg II , the championship was made perfect ahead of time. The club's financial situation was still tense at this point. President Nerb had to admit in April 2007 that he was two months in arrears with his salary payments because of outstanding sponsorship money. However, due to the early championship, the funds were paid out and the players received their salaries on time again. This also paved the way for the regional league license. In the 2007/08 season, Jahn played again in the Regionalliga Süd with the goal of the season: qualification for the upcoming 3rd division .

The team, which had hardly changed since the previous season, started surprisingly well; after eight game days they were in first place in the regional league with seven wins and one draw. In the vicinity of the club, the immediate march through to the second division was already demanded - but the following seven games Jahn remained without a win and slipped to fifth place in the table. The sporty roller coaster ride was accompanied by unrest in the club's management. President Nerb announced that he would not run again in the coming season. After weeks of speculation about how things would go on with Jahn without him, he withdrew his decision and was confirmed in office - also in the absence of an opposing candidate. The second half of the season was very mixed with five wins, two draws and ten defeats, but in the end the SSV was able to assert itself in 9th place and thus qualify for the 3rd division.

2008 to 2015: Establishment in professional football

At the beginning of the 2008/09 season , the two-time promotion coach Günter Güttler suddenly left the club, he signed a two-year contract with league competitor and arch-rival Wacker Burghausen , of all places . Although his contract with the qualification for the 3rd division had been extended by a year, Güttler wanted to leave the Jahn, which he described in retrospect as "the biggest mistake of my coaching career". The reasons he named were the catastrophic framework conditions and the poor management of the Upper Palatinate club. His successor was Thomas Kristl , who was born in Regensburg and former Jahn player , who previously coached the regional division FC Amberg and had thrown Jahn out of the regional cup just a few weeks earlier . But Kristl was unsuccessful; after a 2-0 defeat against 1. FC Union Berlin on matchday 16, he was relegated to SSV Jahn with only 12 points. The presidium felt compelled to replace him with the then co-trainer - and also former Jahnplayer - Markus Weinzierl .

Under Weinzierl, five games followed without defeat and conceded a goal, at the end of the season the relegation was made perfect with a home win against Eintracht Braunschweig . For the first time after three attempts since 1963 ( 1975/76 , 1976/77 and 2003/04 ) SSV Jahn Regensburg held the sporty class in a professional league. In 2009/10 (16th place) and 2010/11 (8th place) the class could also be held. Jahn should establish himself in professional football by 2015.

In terms of sport, things went uphill, but the SSV was still at an amateur level economically. At the beginning of April, President Nerb took the opportunity to announce his resignation at the end of the season, inconvenience with the major local sponsor REWAG and the poor financial situation of Jahn as well as the lack of backing from the friends' association. His successor on July 1, 2009 was the previous Vice President Manfred Kraml.

In the 2009/10 season, Jahn was able to win the Bavarian Toto Cup ; thus he was allowed to participate in the DFB-Pokal for the first time in five years (see section DFB-Pokal ). The special thing about the 2010/11 season was that they were the third-worst home team with only three home games won, but were the third-best away team of the season with ten away wins. The difference of 18 points between home and away points was a new record in German professional football.

The Jahn defended the Toto Cup in 2011 and thus secured the right to start in the DFB Cup again. In the 2011/12 season he reached third place in the 3rd division with 61 points (16 wins, 13 draws, 9 defeats), which entitles him to relegation for promotion to the 2nd Bundesliga . In the two play-offs against Karlsruher SC , they were promoted to 1: 1 in the first leg and 2: 2 away in the second leg. On May 17, 2012 - immediately after the promotion success with Jahn - first division club FC Augsburg announced that coach Weinzierl will work there as head coach for the 2012/13 season .

For the second division season 2012/13 Oscar Corrochano was signed as the new head coach (two-year contract). After nine points from twelve games and most recently four games without a win in a row, which meant 15th place in the table, Corrochano was suspended on November 4, 2012 due to unsuccessfulness. Sports director Franz Gerber temporarily took over his post . For the second half of the season, the former Polish national coach Franciszek Smuda took over and received a contract until the end of the season.

On April 26, 2013, Jahn was the first to be relegated from the 2nd Bundesliga after losing 0-1 away to Union Berlin and not being able to reach the relegation place with 19 points in three outstanding games. In the fourth season of the second division there was the fourth sporting descent.

In preparation for the 2013/14 season , the club announced a sporting reorientation. Head of sport Gerber was sacked and replaced by Christian Keller, and Thomas Stratos , a young coach, was hired again. The new assistant coach was Harry Gfreiter , who already held this position on an interim basis in the 2nd Bundesliga. After the season, which the Jahn finished in 11th place, the contract with Stratos was not extended.

In May 2014 Alexander Schmidt was signed as his successor. After an unsuccessful start to the 2014/15 season , Schmidt was released on November 9, 2014. After a 1: 4 defeat at Chemnitzer FC and with just twelve points from 17 games, Jahn was last in the table at this point. On November 18, 2014, Schmidt's successor Christian Brand was introduced, who received a contract until the end of the season. But even Brand could not save Jahn, on matchday 31 Regensburg was relegated to the Regional League Bayern after a 1: 2 defeat at Halleschen FC . For the first time since 2008, SSV Jahn was no longer represented in professional football.

2015 to today: New era in Oberisling

In the summer of 2015, the new soccer stadium in Regensburg was inaugurated with the Jahnstadion Regensburg . With the opening and the move from the old Jahnstadion in the Westenviertel to Oberisling , the club wanted to usher in a new era, with the new opportunities they wanted to get closer to the other clubs in the third division for the first time. Initially, the Regensburg found themselves because of relegation to the fourth division but in amateur football. In terms of sport, things went well in the new stadium at the beginning, with nine wins from ten games in the 2015/16 season , Jahn Regensburg was clearly on course for the championship. But a temporary lead of twelve points over Wacker Burghausen , the main competitor for the relegation place, was gambled away until the winter break, so that coach Christian Brand was released. As a successor, the SSV presented the former national player Heiko Herrlich . Under Herrlich, the team found its way back on track and took the title in the regional league ahead of schedule. In the relegation to the 3rd division , Jahn finally won 0: 1 and 2: 0 against VfL Wolfsburg II , making Regensburg the first team ever to achieve direct promotion to the 3rd division via relegation.

As a climber, Jahn caused a sensation right from the start in the 2016/17 season , made the best offensive and in the end took third place, with which the Upper Palatinate qualified for the relegation against TSV 1860 Munich . After a 1-1 draw in the first leg in Regensburg, coach Herrlich's team won 2-0 in front of 62,200 spectators in the Allianz Arena , making the march into the 2nd Bundesliga perfect. After being promoted twice, Heiko Herrlich moved to Bundesliga club Bayer Leverkusen ; Achim Beierlorzer was presented by the association as his successor . In the 2017/18 season , the Jahnelf was fifth. Thus, in the fifth attempt, the sporting league in the 2nd Bundesliga succeeded for the first time, although the SSV again had the lowest budget in the league with around 7 million euros.

In the 2018/19 season , Jahn was able to impress again - including a 5-0 away win against Hamburger SV - and secured relegation on matchday 30 with a 1-0 win against 1. FC Magdeburg . For the following season Achim Beierlorzer moved to Bundesliga promoted 1. FC Cologne ; his successor was the previous assistant coach and former Jahnplayer Mersad Selimbegović .

League membership and placements of SSV Jahn Regensburg since 1945

SSV Jahn in the DFB Cup

Overview

Regensburg has already qualified for the DFB Cup 20 times and has played a total of 25 cup games. SSV Jahn survived the first round five times and made it into the second round twice - in 1970 and 2004 . Jahn Regensburg II was once ( 2004/05 ) qualified for the first main round.

Special

Whenever the home stadium went into extra time (four times) or penalties (three times), Jahn always lost. Only in the away game in Velbert could he win a game after extra time. With Eintracht Braunschweig ( 1970 ) and VfL Bochum ( 2003 ), a higher-class opponent, in both cases from the Bundesliga , was defeated twice . Regensburg itself was defeated three times ( 1992 , 2018 and 2019 ) as a higher-class club.

The most frequent opponent was FC Bayern Munich . There was one defeat in all three games with four goals conceded ( 1968 , 1970 and 2012 ).

SSV Jahn competed four times in the first round against one of the later finalists: 1952 Rot-Weiss Essen (winner), 1954 FC Schalke 04 (loser), 2001 Bayer 04 Leverkusen (loser) and 2012 FC Bayern (winner).

From 2001 to 2005, the Regensburg team took part in the DFB Cup for five years in a row ; to date, these are the most successive participations.

Names and numbers

Eleven of the century

Soccer Field Transparant.svg

Peter Stokowy
Hans Meichel
Josef Hubeny
Alfred Popp
Michael Fersch
Jahn Regensburg eleven of the century
Trainer: Alfred "Aki" Schmidt

From August 26th to September 29th 2007, www.jahn1907.de and the Jahn-Journal searched for the Jahn-Elf and the Jahn-Trainer of the century as part of a survey on the 100th birthday of SSV Jahn.

  • goal
  • Defense
    • Johann "Hans" Meichel: 1966 to 1977 - played 73 second division games for Jahn, later coach
    • Peter Stokowy †: 1967 to 1978 - played 18 games for Jahn in the 2nd Bundesliga
    • Dennis Grassow : 2006 to 2009 - led Jahn as captain of the Bayern League into the 3rd division
  • midfield
    • Alfred Kohlhäufl : 1967 to 1969 and 1970 to 1973 - came to Jahn as German champion with TSV 1860 Munich , later also a trainer
    • Harry Gfreiter : 2000 to 2007 - Jahn veteran, crowd favorite, played for Jahn in both the 2nd Bundesliga and the Bayern League ; After his career, he stayed with the club in various positions until 2017
    • Alfred Popp: 1941 to 1958
    • Michael Fersch: 1998 to 2002
  • attack
    • Gerd Faltermeier †: 1963 to 1972 - successful Jahnstürmer, in March 1971 first “goal of the month” in history
    • Manfred Ritschel : 1968 to 1970 - applied with great performance to Jahn in his most successful time for the Bundesliga and later became a Kickers-Offenbach and national player
    • Josef Hubeny : 1946 to 1958 - when he shot a legendary game against Karlsruher SC , the Karlsruher goal collapsed
  • Trainer
    • Alfred "Aki" Schmidt †: 1968 to 1970, 1973 to 1975, 1990 to 1992, 1993 to 1994 - most successful trainer; Knocked on the Bundesliga gate with Jahn in 1969 , led him into this class after the introduction of the 2nd Bundesliga and established Jahn again in the Bayern League after his fall into the fourth division

Coach history

Term of office Nat. Trainer
1945/46 - Otto Blau
1946/47 - Karl Eckl
1947/48 - Hans Schmidt
1948/49 - Josef Eisenschenk
1949 to 1993 - NN
1993 to 1995 - Josef Beller
1995 - Klaus Sturm
1995 to 1996 - Walter Schwabenbauer
1996 - Johann Biederer
1996 to 1998 - Josef Schuderer
1998 - Günter Brandl
1998 - Roland Seitz
1998 to 2001 GermanyGermany Karsten Wettberg
2001 to 2003 GermanyGermany Günter Sebert
2003 to November 17, 2003 GermanyGermany Ingo Peter
Term of office Nat. Trainer
11/18/2003 to 2004 GermanyGermany Günter Brandl
2004 to September 20, 2005 GermanyGermany Mario Basler
09/21/2005 to 04/9/2006 PolandPoland Dariusz Pasieka
0April 9, 2006 to June 20, 2008 GermanyGermany Günter Güttler
2008 to November 24, 2008 GermanyGermany Thomas Kristl
November 24, 2008 to June 30, 2012 GermanyGermany Markus Weinzierl
07/01/2012 to 11/04/2012 GermanyGermany SpainSpain Oscar Corrochano
05.11.2012 to 01.01.2013 GermanyGermany Franz Gerber
01/02/2013 to 06/30/2013 GermanyGermany PolandPoland Franciszek Smuda
07/01/2013 to 06/30/2014 GermanyGermany GreeceGreece Thomas Stratos
07/01/2014 to 11/08/2014 GermanyGermany Alexander Schmidt
11/18/2014 to 11/27/2015 GermanyGermany Christian Brand
01/01/2016 to 06/30/2017 GermanyGermany Heiko Herrlich
07/01/2017 to 06/30/2019 GermanyGermany Achim Beierlorzer
Since July 1st, 2019 Bosnia and HerzegovinaBosnia and Herzegovina Mersad Selimbegović

italic: interim trainer

Presidential history

  • Richard Seidl (2000 to 2005)
  • Franz Nerb (2005 to 2009)
  • Manfred Kraml (2009 to 2010)
  • Matthias Klemens (2010 to 2011)
  • Ulrich Weber (2011 to 2014)
  • Hans Rothammer (since 2014)

Coat of arms history

successes

* = Victory of the second team

Squad 2020/21

Current squad

As of August 18, 2020

No. Nat. player Date of birth (age) with Jahn since Contract until Last club
goal
01 GermanyGermany Alexander Meyer Apr 13, 1991 (29) 2019 06/30/2021 VfB Stuttgart
30th GermanyGermany Kevin Kunz Jan 22, 1992 (28) 2020 06/30/2021 SC Austria Lustenau
32 GermanyGermany Alexander Weidinger Apr 16, 1998 (22) 2012 06/30/2021 1. FC Nürnberg Youth
Defense
04th GermanyGermany Jan-Niklas Best 1 0Jan 4, 1999 (21) 2020 06/30/2022 Werder Bremen
05 GermanyGermany Benedict Gimber Feb 19, 1997 (23) 2019 06/30/2023 FC Ingolstadt 04
06th GermanyGermany Benedikt Saller 22 Sep 1992 (27) 2016 06/30/2024 1. FSV Mainz 05
16 LithuaniaLithuania Markus Palionis May 12, 1987 (33) 2014 06/30/2021 SC Paderborn 07 II
17th GermanyGermany Oliver Hein 22 Mar 1990 (30) 2007 06/30/2021 FC Dingolfing
24 CanadaCanada Scott Kennedy 31 Mar 1997 (23) 2020 06/30/2023 SK Austria Klagenfurt
28 GermanyGermany Sebastian Nachreiner Nov 23, 1988 (31) 2010 06/30/2022 FC Dingolfing
33 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Jan Elvedi Sep 30 1996 (23) 2020 06/30/2022 SC Kriens
midfield
07th GermanyGermany Max Besushkov May 31, 1997 (23) 2019 06/30/2022 Eintracht Frankfurt
08th KosovoKosovo Albion Vrenezi 0Oct 4, 1993 (26) 2017 06/30/2021 SV Sandhausen
09 GermanyGermany Jann George July 31, 1992 (28) 2015 06/30/2022 SpVgg Greuther Fürth II
11 GermanyGermany Florian Heister 02nd Mar 1997 (23) 2019 06/30/2022 TSV Steinbach Haiger
22nd GermanyGermany Sebastian Stolze Jan 29, 1995 (25) 2017 06/30/2021 VfL Wolfsburg II
23 GermanyGermany Nicolas Wähling Aug 24, 1997 (22) 2019 06/30/2022 TSG 1899 Hoffenheim II
27 GermanyGermany Kevin Hoffmann 0June 6, 1995 (25) 2017 06/30/2020 SpVgg Greuther Fürth II
31 GermanyGermany Tom Baack 13 Mar 1999 (21) 2019 06/30/2022 VfL Bochum
attack
10 GermanyGermany Kaan Caliskaner 0Nov 3, 1999 (20) 2020 06/30/2023 1. FC Cologne II
13 GermanyGermany Erik Wekesser 0July 3, 1997 (23) 2019 06/30/2022 FC Astoria Walldorf
19th DenmarkDenmark Andreas Albers 23 Mar 1990 (30) 2019 06/30/2022 Viborg FF
20th GermanyGermany Federico Palacios 0Apr 9, 1995 (25) 2019 06/30/2022 1. FC Nuremberg
21st GermanyGermany Jan-Marc Schneider 25th Mar 1994 (26) 2019 06/30/2021 FC St. Pauli
26th GermanyGermany Charalambos Makridis 0July 5, 1996 (24) 2020 06/30/2023 Borussia Mönchengladbach II
29 GermanyGermany André Becker July 26, 1996 (24) 2020 06/30/2023 FC Astoria Walldorf
1 borrowed

Transfers 2020/21

As of August 18, 2020

Accesses Departures
Summer 2020

Current coaching staff

As of August 7, 2020

Nat. Surname function since
Bosnia and HerzegovinaBosnia and Herzegovina Mersad Selimbegović Trainer 2019
GermanyGermany Andreas Gehlen Assistant coach 2012
GermanyGermany Jonas Maier Assistant coach 2018
GermanyGermany Sebastian Dreier Assistant coach 2019
GermanyGermany Ronny Zeiss Goalkeeping coach 2020
GermanyGermany Christian Keller Sports director 2013

offspring

U21

The U21s of SSV Jahn have been coached by Yavuz Ak since 2017 and will play in the Bayernliga Süd in the 2019/20 season . The Jahn U21s play their games in the Kaulbachweg sports park . The second team of SSV Jahn was re-established in 2002: After the connection of SG Post / Süd Regensburg , SSV Jahn Regensburg II took over the playing rights of Post / Süd in the Bayernliga.

goalkeeper
  • GermanyGermany Julio Peutler
  • GermanyGermany Merlin Rudzki
Defense
  • GermanyGermany Daniel Ertel
  • GermanyGermany Elias Herzig
  • GermanyGermany Lucas Schmitt
  • GermanyGermany Fabian Vogl
midfield
  • GermanyGermany Saher Rehman Bhatti
  • GermanyGermany Tom Bögl
  • GermanyGermany Valentin Gressel
  • GermanyGermany Benedikt Köppel
  • GermanyGermany Marco Pfab
  • GermanyGermany Eduard Root
  • GermanyGermany Bjorn Zempelin
attack
  • KosovoKosovo Veron Dobruna
  • GermanyGermany Manuel Geiger
  • GermanyGermany Ediz Medineli
  • GermanyGermany Cihangir Özlokman
  • GermanyGermany Pavel Panafidin
  • GermanyGermany Thomas Stowasser

youth

SSV Jahn ran its own sports boarding school for a long time, but it had to be closed for financial reasons in the 2007/08 season. The greatest successes were celebrated when the A-Juniors were able to play in the U-19 Bundesliga for the first time in the 2005/06 season . Recently, various youth teams have repeatedly been promoted to the top divisions - most recently the B-Juniors played in the U-17 Bundesliga .

The football school SSV Jahn Regensburg was launched in the 2011 Whitsun holidays. It now takes place regularly during the Easter, Whitsun, summer and autumn holidays for children from 6 to 14 years.

social commitment

The Jahn is committed to the project Bananenflankenliga eV , which gives mentally handicapped children and young people the opportunity to play football games together, supported by professional supervision.

Stadiums and training facilities

Jahnstadion

The main stand, almost in its original condition from 1931

From 1926, the Jahn played its home games in the Jahn Stadium, which was the largest stadium in the city with a capacity of 12,500 seats (including 3,200 seats). Before that, the Jahn footballers played on various pitches in the city park or on the sports field of the then Oberrealschule (today: Goethe-Gymnasium), just a few meters from today's stadium. From 1912 to 1923 a sports field on Dech Bettener Strasse was the home of the club. In the course of the clean divorce and the independence of the footballers and the athletes as SB Jahn Regensburg, the red-whites had to look for a new place to stay again. A location on Oberen Wöhrd and the grounds of 1. FC Regensburg were the venue for a short time. Finally, in 1926, the club leased the site onprüfunginger Strasse, Jahn-Platz, which was officially inaugurated on September 19 with a 7-0 win over 1. FC Passau . The first grandstand was built in 1931, at the time one of the most modern of its kind, which was almost completely in its original state until the end. In 1949, the stadium was expanded and renovated for the first time, and standing room areas were built around the field. The “tower” was also created, an analog score display with a clock on the back straight - the area where the fans stood.

In 1987 the Jahnstadion was sold to the city of Regensburg. With several renovations (1987) and extensions (2003, 2008, 2012) the attempt was made to keep the Jahnstadion always on a modern, competitive level and to adapt it to the respective league requirements as much as possible. However, in the end it was hardly able to meet the high requirements; it no longer met the required standard. The new stadium, the Jahnstadion Regensburg , opened in summer 2015. The Jahnstadion is to be demolished later.

Jahn Stadium Regensburg

The Jahnstadion Regensburg in August 2015

As early as the 1980s, Regensburg had the idea of ​​a new building, but this was never realized due to a lack of financial resources. When Jahn played in the 2nd Bundesliga in the 2003/04 season , they already had more concrete plans for a new stadium based on Innsbruck's Tivoli as a model. These were discarded after the immediate relegation and the fall in the Bayern League . At the beginning of the 2007/08 season, the stadium discussion in Regensburg was rekindled because the Jahn had started the new season surprisingly well. The city's leading parties declared qualification for the 3rd division to be a prerequisite. When Jahn was able to stay in this for three years, the Regensburg city ​​council finally decided on July 28, 2011 to build the arena. The new stadium was built in January 2014 south of the A3 in the Oberisling district and offers space for 15,210 spectators. On July 10, 2015 it was opened in front of 14,780 spectators as part of a test match against FC Augsburg . The game ended 1: 3 in favor of the guests.

In the 4: 3 home win of SSV Jahn against FC Amberg on August 14, 2015, a new record was set for the Regionalliga Bayern in the Jahn Stadium in Regensburg with 12,689 spectators .

Kaulbachweg sports park

The training area of ​​Jahn Regensburg has been the Kaulbachweg sports park in the Kumpfmühl district since 2002 , and the area owned by the city of Regensburg is shared by SSV Jahn with SG Post / Süd Regensburg . The facility includes, among other things, a stadium (capacity 7,000) in which the youth teams from the U23 onwards play their games, as well as three training grounds. Before that, SSV Jahn had been training at the sports grounds on Weinweg, right next to the Free TuS facility, since 1965 (when the next area to the Jahn Stadium had to give way) .

Fan scene

The SSV Jahn fan scene was reorganized for the new millennium. The Ultras Regensburg , initially as a sub-group in the Ratisbona Fanatica fan club , form the core of the Regensburg ultra movement . The fan block in the old Jahn Stadium was not in a curve, as in most other stadiums, but on the back straight, at the so-called “tower” - a structure that contains a clock and an analog score display. Since the opening of the new stadium, the fan block, as in most German stadiums, has been behind the gate. The grandstand, which offers standing room for 5264 fans of the home team, is divided into three blocks and was named after the German national player Hans Jakob . 22 fan clubs are currently officially listed at Jahn.

Rivalries and fan friendships

The fans of SSV Jahn have rivalries with some regional competitors such as SpVgg Unterhaching or FC Ingolstadt 04 . The biggest rivalry, however, is with the fans of SV Wacker Burghausen . For many fans the Ostbayern - Derby to determine the number one in Eastern Bavaria is the season highlight.

The Ultras Regensburg have a national fan friendship with the Blue Bombers, an ultra group of the Stuttgarter Kickers . There are also friendly contacts with the Blue Helmets, a fan group of the Austrian second division club FC Blau-Weiß Linz .

Outfitters, sponsors and donors

Shares in the GmbH

The SSV Jahn Regensburg e. V. owns 90% of the shares in SSV Jahn Regensburg GmbH & Co. KGaA. 10% of the shares are held by various investors, including the former sports director and managing director Franz Gerber and his brother Josef.

The Global Sports Invest AG with the Board Philipp Schober had in the period from June to October 2017 90% of the shares of the club. Schober acquired the shares from Volker Tretzel, who with his real estate company BTT Bauteam Tretzel GmbH had been an investor since 2005. After major fan protests, Schober sold his shares back to Tretzel, making it possible for SSV Jahn Regensburg to buy the shares.

Sponsorship

Saller , official supplier to Jahn Regensburg since the 2012/13 season
The discounter Netto , founded in Regensburg, has been the main sponsor since the 2015/16 season
Period Outfitter Main sponsor Branch
2000-2001 Adidas Bishop's court brewery
2001-2003 Erreà MATT optics Optics specialist shop
2003-2006 bumblebee Vatro Building renovation
2006-2008 Jako Rhino's Energy drink
2008-2011 Südfinanz AG / UNITIS Group Financial services
2011–2012 FG.de Renewable energy
2012-2015 Saller Handelmaier Mustard production
Since 2015 net Grocery retail

2017 donation affair

In 2005 the SSV Jahn Regensburg was facing bankruptcy. The Regensburg building contractor Volker Tretzel rescued the association from bankruptcy at the request of the then mayor Hans Schaidinger with a cash injection. Since then, he has repeatedly helped Jahn out with financial bottlenecks. Most recently, Tretzel was the main shareholder of SSV Jahn Regensburg GmbH & Co. KGaA with over seven million euros of share capital and 90% of the shares and is said to have invested a total of twelve million euros since 2005. In 2016, in the course of the mayor Joachim Wolbergs' donation affair, the accusation arose that Tretzel only supported the SSV Jahn because it would give the city leaders preferential treatment for large construction contracts. Among other things, it was about the area of ​​the former Nibelungen barracks , which went to Tretzel in October 2014. Two months later, the entrepreneur paid the club 1.2 million euros to secure relegation in the third division . Volker Tretzel and Joachim Wolbergs, who is also chairman of the association's supervisory board, were in custody for several weeks in January 2017. After his dismissal, Tretzel temporarily sold his shares in the club to Global Sports Invest AG , and finally to the club in October 2017.

Mother association

The sports and swimming club Jahn 1889 Regensburg e. V. , from which the footballers broke up in 2000, now has 600 members in eight departments: boxing , futsal , handball , bowling , kendo , athletics , swimming and gymnastics . In the past there was still a heavy athletics , women's sport , fistball , chess and hiking section .

Boxing

Even before the Second World War, there was a boxing department at Jahn, which was rebuilt after the end of the war and over the years produced several German championships. At the end of the 1970s, boxers even had more spectators than footballers.

Futsal

In 2015 the futsal department was founded. Department head and founder Oliver Vogel brought the idea with him from Australia, where he played futsal for years and looked after three teams. The Jahn-Futsaler started in the Bayernliga, where they won five games in six games with only one draw and then secured promotion to the first-class Regionalliga Süd in the finals : In the semifinals, the Regensburg Futsal Club came in with two wins defeated, in the final, the team of player-coach Lucas Kruel managed to rise with a 10: 4 first leg win and a 1: 2 defeat in the second leg against USC Bayreuth.

In the 2016/17 season , SSV Jahn competed in the regional league and won the season with 18 wins in 18 games. In the final round he prevailed against Holzpfosten Schwerte , defending champion Hamburg Panthers and in the final against VfL 05 Hohenstein-Ernstthal and was thus German champion only two years after it was founded . After the championship, SSV Jahn played in the UEFA Futsal Cup . He survived the preliminary round and was eliminated in the main round. In the following regional league seasons 2017/18 and 2018/19 , the Jahn-Futsal team came second behind TSV Weilimdorf and were among the last ten in the final round of the German championship. After the 2019/20 season ended three game days before the end of the season due to the COVID-19 pandemic , the SSV took part again in the finals of the German championship as second in the Regionalliga Süd and became runner-up, in the final the Regensburg team failed to Hohenstein-Ernstthal. The SSV provided the top scorer with eight tournament goals in the final round with Alexander Günter, who is also the current German futsal national player.

Handball

The handball department was founded in 1921, initially playing on the large field. In 1941 the (more successful) women's team was added. From 1953 Jahn also played in the hall, sometimes in the first-class league . Little by little, the successes declined, even a syndicate HG Jahn / Nord failed. In 2012 all teams were withdrawn from match operations, and we are currently working on rebuilding match operations.

Bowling

As part of the expansion of the Jahn Stadium in 1949, a bowling alley was built and the corresponding bowling department at Jahn was founded in 1950. After the initial influx, it continued to decline in the 1980s, and gaming was discontinued at the beginning of the 2000s. Currently bowling is only done on a leisure basis.

Kendo

The kendo department was founded in 1990. The athletes keep achieving success throughout Bavaria. SSV Jahn hosted the Bavarian Kendo Championships four times in 1889.

athletics

The athletics department already existed in the Turnerbund Jahn and moved together with the footballers to the Sportbund in 1924 and to the SSV Jahn in 1933. After the Second World War, the department was rebuilt. The Jahn athletes have been running under the umbrella of LG Telis Finanz Regensburg since 1970 . One of the most successful athletes in Jahn is Olympic participant Corinna Harrer .

swim

The swimming department was transferred from the swimming club to SSV Jahn in 1934. Over the years the sport has declined due to better training conditions for other clubs, today there is only leisure swimming for members. The club grounds give the Jahninsel on the Oberer Wöhrd its name.

do gymnastics

The oldest department in SSV Jahn 1889 is the gymnastics department , the nucleus of the root club Turnerbund Jahn Regensburg, which was at times the largest department behind the footballers. After the Second World War, gymnasts concentrated on popular sports and women's gymnastics.

literature

  • Otto, Gerd / Otto, Wolfgang. Dreams, tears and triumphs - 100 years of Jahn football. Forum-Verlag Dr. Wolfgang Otto, Regensburg 1975. ISBN 978-3-00-023271-8 .
  • Schauppmeier, Kurt . The SSV Jahn Regensburg through the ages. Walhalla and Praetoria-Verlag, Regensburg 1975.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Data & facts. In: transfermarkt.de. Retrieved November 1, 2019 .
  2. 3000 Jahn members. In: ssv-jahn.de. SSV Jahn Regensburg GmbH & Co. KGaA, December 31, 2018, accessed on January 7, 2019 .
  3. ^ Jahn Regensburg | Club info | 2nd Bundesliga 2019/20. Retrieved March 15, 2020 .
  4. ^ SSV Jahn Regensburg e. V. (Ed.): Association statutes . In the current version decided in the general meeting of SSV Jahn Regensburg e. V. on September 25, 2017. Regensburg July 18, 2011, § 1 Name, legal form, seat colors, emblem, p. 2 ( ssv-jahn.de [PDF; accessed October 19, 2017]).
  5. GmbH & Co. KGaA. In: ssv-jahn.de. SSV Jahn Regensburg GmbH & Co. KGaA, June 2, 2017, accessed on October 28, 2019 .
  6. a b c d E. V. acquires 90% of Aktienan GmbH & Co. KGaA thanks to BTT. In: ssv-jahn.de. SSV Jahn Regensburg GmbH & Co. KGaA, October 13, 2017, accessed on October 28, 2019 .
  7. a b Gerd and Wolfgang Otto: Dreams, Tears and Triumphs - 100 Years of Jahn Football. Regensburg 2007, ISBN 978-3-00-023271-8 , p. 9 f.
  8. Gerd and Wolfgang Otto: Dreams, Tears and Triumphs - 100 Years of Jahn Football. Regensburg 2007, ISBN 978-3-00-023271-8 , p. 10.
  9. Gerd and Wolfgang Otto: Dreams, Tears and Triumphs - 100 Years of Jahn Football. Regensburg 2007, ISBN 978-3-00-023271-8 , p. 13 f.
  10. Gerd and Wolfgang Otto: Dreams, Tears and Triumphs - 100 Years of Jahn Football. Regensburg 2007, ISBN 978-3-00-023271-8 , p. 14 f.
  11. Gerd and Wolfgang Otto: Dreams, Tears and Triumphs - 100 Years of Jahn Football. Regensburg 2007, ISBN 978-3-00-023271-8 , p. 19 f.
  12. ^ Wolfgang Otto: SSV Jahn 2000 Regensburg . Erfurt 2002, ISBN 978-3-89-702496-0 , p. 12.
  13. Gerd and Wolfgang Otto: Dreams, Tears and Triumphs - 100 Years of Jahn Football. Regensburg 2007, ISBN 978-3-00-023271-8 , p. 23 f.
  14. Gerd and Wolfgang Otto: Dreams, Tears and Triumphs - 100 Years of Jahn Football. Forum-Verlag, Regensburg 2007, ISBN 978-3-00-023271-8 , p. 24.
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  41. The audience average only refers to the games from the 1st to the 25th matchday, as the remaining nine games took place to the exclusion of viewers due to the COVID-19 pandemic .
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  89. Kendo. In: ssv-jahn.com. SSV Jahn 1889 Regensburg e. V., accessed on October 28, 2019 .
  90. Athletics. In: ssv-jahn.com. SSV Jahn 1889 Regensburg e. V., accessed on October 28, 2019 .
  91. Swimming. In: ssv-jahn.com. SSV Jahn 1889 Regensburg e. V., accessed on October 28, 2019 .
  92. Gymnastics. In: ssv-jahn.com. SSV Jahn 1889 Regensburg e. V., accessed on October 28, 2019 .