LBV Phönix from 1903

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LBV Phoenix
The association symbol of the LBV
Surname Lübeck Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903 eV
Club colors blue White Red
Founded 1903
Place of foundation Lübeck
Association headquarters Lübeck
Members > 1300
Departments 7th
Homepage www.lbv-phoenix.de

The Lübeck Ballspielverein Phönix von 1903 eV , short: LBV Phönix , is one of the major sports clubs (> 1000 members) in the Hanseatic city of Lübeck . It offers (as of March 2018) its members sporting activities in 7 departments:

The youth quota is 48%. Today's sports facilities of the LBV Phönix are located on the Falkenwiese in the north of the St. Jürgen an der Wakenitz district and in the immediate vicinity of the old town. The LBV Phönix holds 4.5 hectares

  • a central clubhouse with an integrated 3-court tennis hall and bowling alley,
  • another 3-place tennis hall
  • a multi-purpose hall,
  • 13 outdoor tennis courts,
  • 1 beach place,
  • a natural grass pitch and an artificial hockey pitch

in front. In addition to a restaurant, the clubhouse also houses a tennis and hockey shop as well as a physiotherapy practice.

history

  1. Lübeck Ball Game Club
    On January 13, 1903, the merchants Walter Pfohl, Wilhelm Wessel, Eduard Witt, Ludwig Bleibaum, Franz Stuwe founded the Lübeck Ballspiel-Club in the Hanseatic city with the building trade students Carl Timmermann, Max Missfeldt, August Kroß and with the volunteers Hermann Rosenkreuz and Albert Kreymann Lübeck as the first pure football club.
    The Lübeck ball game club quickly opened up to other sports. In 1906 an athletics department was established, in 1908 a tennis department and in 1909 a hockey department. As a result of the First World War , the Lübeck Ballspiel-Club lost its fortune and its sports facilities. Continuing the tradition of the Lübeck Ball Game Club, those returning from the war founded the Lübeck Ball Game Club in 1920. The addition of other sports followed: handball (1923), gymnastics (1925), fistball, children's gymnastics (1946), basketball (1953), volleyball (1974), golf (2008) and ultimate frisbee (2013).
  2. Lübeck seminar soccer club from 1904
    On March 5, 1904, teachers in training founded the Lübeck Seminar Football Club from 1904. One year later it merged with the Hohenzollern football club to form the Lübeck Sports Association of 1905, which was merged into the Lübeck Ballspiel Club in 1913.
  3. Lübeck seminar soccer club from 1907
    In 1907, teachers who were also in training founded another seminar soccer club and named it Lübeck seminar soccer club from 1907.
    Since this seminar sports club was not able to survive on its own either, he joined the Lübeck gymnastics club in 1912. This connection to the Lübeck gymnastics club was mainly due to the fact that the gymnastics club enjoyed a higher reputation than a (football) sports club.
    In February 1923 the German Gymnastics Association decreed that double membership of clubs in the German Gymnastics Association and in sports associations would be inadmissible and should be dissolved by November 1923 (clean divorce).
  4. Phoenix sports club
    With regard to the clean divorce , the members of the sports department (including soccer players, athletes, hockey players) of the Lübeck gymnastics club resigned from the LT and founded the Phoenix sports club on November 24, 1923. The Lübeck ball game club and the sports club Phönix merged after brief negotiations. Since April 15, 1924, the name of the joint multi-discipline association has been
  5. Lübeck Ballspiel Verein Phönix von 1903 eV .
    Core departments are: football, athletics and hockey, after the tennis players had joined the Lübeck-Travemünder tennis club. In 1928 the club was built up and the integration of the players who previously faced each other was completed. Football, handball, hockey, fistball, batting, folk dance and gymnastics are part of the offer of the club, which is gratefully accepted by the youth, especially the upper classes of the higher schools.

Departments

Football (until 1971)

From its foundation until 1971, the LBV Phönix maintained a football department that was known far beyond the borders of Lübeck. The financial development of the soccer department of the LBV Phönix became more and more problematic from the end of the sixties. When the debt had reached a new upper limit and the economic risks associated with league football could not be calculated, an amendment to the articles of association was submitted to the annual general meeting in 1971 to no longer operate paid football in the LBV Phönix and to return the league license. Those responsible for the soccer league pleaded not to return the league license, but to transfer it to the newly founded 1. FC Phönix. The negotiations with the German Football Association were successfully conducted in this sense. The 1. FC Phönix Lübeck was founded on this and was registered as an independent club in the association register in 1971. This ended the almost 70-year tradition of football in Lübeck's first pure football club. The 1. FC Phönix continues it, while the LBV Phönix asserts itself as a large multi-disciplinary club from Lübeck even without the footballers who donated it. A close bond between the soccer players of 1. FC and the ball players of the LBV has remained and is documented, among other things, in common traditions such as the annual “jacket potato meal” or the “bad boys ball” and the commitment to be a “phoenix”.

Athletics (since 1906)

Tennis (from 1908)

The tennis department of the Lübeck Ballspiel Club was founded in 1908. They built four tennis courts on Luisenstrasse not far from Travemünder Allee. Until the outbreak of the First World War, there was a lot of activity every summer. The number of members grew to 120. Sporty traffic was maintained in particular with Hamburg and Kiel. Development was suddenly interrupted by the First World War; In addition, the Hanseatic City of Lübeck canceled the lease to make room for residential construction.

In 1920 a tennis department was created again in the newly founded Lübeck Ballspiel-Verein. The game was played on the courts of the Lübeck-Travemünder tennis club on the Burgfeld. The tennis players took part in competitions together with the Lübeck-Travemünder tennis club. In 1924, the tennis department of the Lübeck Ballspiel-Verein was replaced by the Lübeck-Travemünder Tennis Club, which was renamed the Lübeck Tennis Club. In 1934 the Lübeck tennis club (“in front of the Burgtor”) and the tennis club “in front of the Mühlentor” merged and, on the initiative of the district court president Günther Rischau, became part of the Lübeck ball game club Phönix. The central tennis facility with 9 courts was built on today's club premises on Falkenwiese. The rubble of the old main station served as the foundation of these squares . The number of members soon exceeded the 200 mark. Tournaments and friendlies alternated in colorful order. Tennis in Lübeck experienced a sustained upswing. The game operation was able to be maintained during the Second World War .

After the war, the English confiscated the facility. It was not until 1952 that the last tennis court was released from the confiscation and handed over to the LBV Phönix. In that year, a new tennis house with a terrace and lounge was also built. In the following years the number of tennis members rose to 350.

At the beginning of the 1970s the court capacity was so exhausted that 4 more tennis courts had to be built. Since the clubhouse was no longer able to cope with the rush, a clubhouse with an integrated (3-court tennis) sports hall was built on the Falkenwiese, where sports operations began in October 1974.

Currently (as of January 2017) the tennis department of the LBV Phönix consists of around 500 members.

Hockey (since 1909)

Hockey 1909-1918

The hockey department of the Lübeck Ballspiel Club was founded in 1909. When the German Hockey Association was founded on December 31, 1909 , the department joined the association and is therefore one of its oldest members. The nucleus of the hockey sport in Lübeck was the Pension Dr. Caye on Koenigstrasse. Young merchants lived there, including Germans, several English, Portuguese and Danes. The British CBP Rider, a Mr. Morell from Kiel, the Dane Frederiksen from the sports club "Orient Copenhagen" and the druggist Schulz and Richard Thrams are the fathers of the department. Richard Thrams worked as an export merchant for the Nordic Erzkontor Possehl before the First World War in London. He learned there hockey, soccer and rugby. In 1920 he was one of the founding members of the Lübeck Ballspielverein after he had returned to Lübeck from being a prisoner of war in England. As chairman of the LBV he led the merger talks with the sports club Phönix in 1923 and in 1924 also became the first chairman of today's LBV Phönix. In 1913, hockey was introduced in the sports department of the Lübeck gymnastics club , the forerunner of the Phoenix sports club. In 1914 the Lübeck gymnastics association already had a men's team that could compete with the hockey players of the LBC on an equal footing. With the outbreak of World War I , however, both the LBC and the LT had to stop hockey operations.

Hockey 1918-1945

Soon after the end of the First World War, the hockey players of the Lübeck Ball Game Club and the Lübeck Gymnastics Association got together again. In 1920, the training business got going again. Hockey in Lübeck experienced a real boom in the years to come. It was introduced in the Katharineum in Lübeck , in the Johanneum in Lübeck and in the Oberschule zum Dom . In addition to youth teams, the Lübeck Ballspielverein also formed senior, women's and senior women's teams. When it came to the clean divorce in 1923 , the hockey players did not stay with the LT either, but founded the Phoenix sports club with the other members of the LT sports department. Six months later, the Lübeck Ballspielverein and the Phönix sports club merged. This made it possible for Lübeck's hockey players to build a hockey field on Travemünder Allee for the first time.

The women's team with Auguste "Guschi" Hargus managed to play a leading role in northern Germany as early as 1925. Only the Harvestehuder THC from Hamburg was superior. In the 1937 season, the gentlemen of the LBV Phönix took part in the elimination games for the Gauliga Nordmark, to which Hamburg, Schleswig-Holstein and Mecklenburg belonged. It managed to successfully pass the elimination games, so that the club could play a leading role in this until the Gauliga was interrupted by the Second World War . The results of the last games before the Second World War against the Gaumeister from Silesia and Hesse are not recorded.

Hockey 1945-1960

After the Second World War, the sites laid out in Gothmund in 1935 were confiscated by the British occupation. Therefore, training had to be started on the sports field on Burgfeld in 1945. At tournaments in 1946 in Goslar, 1947 at Club Raffelberg , 1948 in Braunschweig and 1949 in Soest, victories were won against such well-known clubs as Braunschweiger THC or Eintracht Braunschweig and draws were achieved against Rot-Weiß Oberhausen and Schwarz-Weiß Essen .

In 1951, the junior team won the Hamburg championship. Also in 1951 the first hockey rink was built on the Falkenwiese, where the LBV Phönix club is located today. After Auguste "Guschi" Hargus (1933-1938) and Ilse Goering (1958), Michael Hollensteiner (1958/59) succeeded in being appointed to a national team of the German Hockey Association as the third hockey player of the LBV Phoenix. Between 1960 and 2000 there were further nominations from hockey players who were trained at LBV Phoenix.

Hockey from 1960

In the 1962/63 season, the first men took part in the German indoor hockey championships and took 8th place. From then on, they became regional champions in Schleswig-Holstein seven times in a row. In 1965 they earned a 7th place at the German indoor hockey championships. The first women of the LBV Phönix occupy 11th place at the German Indoor Hockey Championships in 1965 and 7th place at the German Field Hockey Championships in 1966. However, the focus of the hockey department since the late 1960s has been on promoting its youth hockey.

In the 1970s and 1980s, the LBV Phönix in Schleswig-Holstein dominated youth hockey on the field and especially in the hall in both male and female areas in all age groups. His youth teams often took part not only in North German championships, but also in German championship finals. In 1971, girls A took 7th place at the German indoor hockey championships and in 1972 8th place after each runner-up at the North German championships. The female youth achieved 5th place at the German indoor hockey championships in 1975. The boys A were North German field hockey champions in 1976 and achieved a 3rd place at the German championships. In the same year, the female youth in the hall achieved 6th place at the German championship in the hall. In 1978 the female youth became German runner-up on the field in Munich under coach Winfried “Willi” Lange, who was also the top performer of the first men's hockey team at LBV Phoenix.

In 1980, the boys A from 1976 as male youth A in Bremen North German indoor hockey runners-up and took 7th place in the German championship. In the spring of the same year, Michael Hollensteiner, who had meanwhile returned from Harvestehuder THC, was promoted from the Oberliga to the Regionalliga Nord and thus became a member of the second highest German division for the first time in the hall . In a balanced promotion round, a 4: 4 against MTV Braunschweig, a 9:11 against the THK Rissen from Hamburg and a 14: 2 against Club zur Vahr from Bremen, which was believed to be impossible, were enough in the final game with a 10- Goal difference had to be beaten in order to successfully pass the promotion round behind him as second. On the field , the 1st men in 1980 qualified as a loss point-free winner of the Oberliga also for the promotion round to the Regionalliga Nord. In their own place they won against Altona-Bahrenfeld 5-0. HC Delmenhorst was also beaten 5-0 before the double promotion to the second highest German league was made perfect with a 2-1 win over Hannover 78 in a neutral position at the Club an der Alster .

In 1981 the first women also rose to the second highest German division (hall). Both the 1st men and the 1st women were relegated to the upper league after only one year of membership in the indoor regional league north. The membership of the 1st men in the second highest German division on the field lasted 2 seasons. After relegation in the hall, top performers switched to the club on the Alster in the Bundesliga or left Lübeck for reasons of study. The youth team around Kai Hollensteiner , who have played together since the C days, achieved 4th place on the field at the German championships in Krefeld in 1985, 7th place in the hall in 1987 in Mannheim, and 4th place in the hall in Lübeck in 1988. Place - after the North German championship in Braunschweig could be won -, 1989 in Mülheim in the hall 3 and 1990 again in Lübeck place 4 in the hall. In addition, a large part of the team with the Johanneum in Lübeck reached the national finals at "Jugend trained for Olympia" in Berlin in 1985, where they lost 3: 4 after extra time against the Dreikönigsgymnasium Cologne.

In order to strengthen the competitiveness of the structurally weaker Schleswig-Holstein clubs vis-à-vis the Hamburg competitors, at the end of the 1980s, on the initiative of Wolfgang Hollensteiner and Ingo Heidebrecht, today's President of the Hamburg Hockey Association, a joint game operation of the SHHV and the HHV in the youth club was established. and decided in the adult area. Due to a lack of players, the women's team had to be withdrawn from play in 1994. It was not until four years later that the re-establishment succeeded after the return of female students a. a. by Dorothee Roitzsch (also active for Harvestehuder THC and Kieler HTC). From 1999 to 2001 the women in the hall celebrate three consecutive promotions from 4th to 1st league. In 2008 the first women rose to the top division on the field and stayed there until 2011. With the introduction of the second division in the hall, the first men surprisingly succeeded in advancing to the regional league, which they won after only one season in 1996 / 97 had to leave again immediately. 1998 Qualification for the main round of the DHB Cup. 2: 5 defeat against the Bundesliga club The club on the Alster in front of almost 400 spectators on the Falkenwiese, 2001 upper division champions and promotion to the regional league field (5: 2 win at Eintracht Braunschweig), 2002/03 upper division champions and promotion to the regional league hall (9 : 8 n.V. against HC Göttingen), 2003/04 relegation from the Regionalliga Feld, 2004/05 relegation from the Regionalliga Halle, 2006: The male youth A (in syndicate with the Travemünder THC ) surprisingly takes 3rd place in the Hamburg championships and qualifies for the north-east German championship in Berlin, where a 7th place is achieved.

On September 1, 2007, the club's own artificial turf pitch on the Falkenwiese was inaugurated with a festive ceremony and a game between LBV All-Stars and the German over 45 national team.

On February 6th and 7th, 2016, the LBV Phönix organized the 55th German indoor hockey championships for women and men in the Bundesliga in Lübeck's Hansehalle together with the German Hockey Association; three weeks later the German indoor hockey championship for boys A (U14).

Golf (since 2008)

The golf department was founded by members of the tennis and hockey departments. Both departments recorded painful membership losses at external golf clubs due to social change. The cooperation of the LBV Phönix with the Maritim Golfpark Ostsee AG in Warnsdorf, entered into in 2008, guarantees the members the practice of golf in addition to tennis or hockey in the LBV Phönix under interesting conditions. Such a cooperation between a sports club and a golf park operator is unique in Schleswig-Holstein.

Ultimate Frisbee (since 2013)

Children's gymnastics

Sportsmen of the LBV Phönix

  • Otto Carlsson , football league player 1934–1942, Swedish national player
  • Ilse Goering, goalkeeper of the women's national hockey team in 1958
  • Frank Gunschera, National Youth B hockey team 1978
  • Guschi Hargus , German javelin throwing champion 1926, 1927, 1930; three times world record holder in javelin throwing 1927/28; 14-time national hockey player (also playing for Harvestehuder THC)
  • Kai Hollensteiner , youth player of the LBV 1975–1989, 52-time national hockey player, multiple German champion hall and field with the Harvestehuder THC
  • Michael Hollensteiner, middle runner of the German junior national team 1958/59 (also playing for Harvestehuder THC)
  • Hans Krämer , football league player 1959–1960
  • Maren Lange-Bubner, Women's National Hockey Team 1977 (also playing for the Großflottbeker THGC )
  • Winfried "Winni" Maier, 32-time national hockey player 1969–1973 (also playing for Klipper THC )
  • Bärbel Meier, goalkeeper of the national hockey junior team in 1976
  • Erich Neupert, football league player 1957–1960
  • Lutz Philipp , Olympic participant in 1964 in the 5,000 m run, 24-time German champion (starting in 1966 for the ASC Darmstadt )
  • Peter Nogly , football league player 1967–1969
  • Christopher Nörskau, C-team of the German Hockey Federation 1992
  • Evelyn Piper, goalkeeper of the youth B hockey national team in 1982
  • Malte Schierenberg, member of the German national team at the Ultimate Frisbee World Championships in Dubai 2015
  • Astrid Schierenberg, European champion with the German Masters national team in Ultimate Frisbee 2015
  • Marlies Schuh, goalkeeper of the women's national hockey team in 1967

Chairperson

LBC
  • Walter Pfohe - Jan / July 1903
  • Carl Timmermann - July / December 1903
  • Hans Stephan - 1904
  • August Kroß - 1905
  • Paul Levin - Jan / July 1906
  • Otto Schröder - July / December 1906
  • Hans Greiff - 1907 / July 1909
  • Adolf Martens - July 1909/1910
  • Otto Grüneberger - July 1910 to 1915

First World War

LBV
  • Walter Södring - 1920/1922
  • Richard Thrams - 1922/1923
LBV Phoenix
  • Richard Thrams - 1924/1926
  • Johs. Steffen - 1926/1933
  • Bernhard Sommer - 1933/1935
  • Kurt Beuthin - 1935/1936
  • Paul Kruse - 1936/1945
  • Berthold Grant - 1945/1948
  • Paul Kruse - 1948/1950
  • Kurt Beuthin - 1950/1952
  • Wolfg. Hollensteiner - 1952/1955
  • Helmut Lange - 1955/1957
  • Wolfg. Hollensteiner - 1957/1961
  • Erich Baumann - 1961/1965
  • Klaus Zimmer - 1966/1968
  • Rudolf Fuchs - 1969/1978
  • Horst Houdelet - 1979/1982
  • Manfred Hinzmann - 1983/1986
  • Uwe Becher - 1987/1995
  • Fritz Wittenburg - 1995/2001
  • Uwe Radeke - 2001/2005
  • Dieter Dummler - 2005/2008
  • Gerd Pingel - 2008/2014
  • Steffen Kohl - since March 31, 2014

Individual evidence

  1. ^ "Ajax" Stender in Festschrift to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the LBV Phönix from 1903 e. V., publisher: Lübeck Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1953, p. 21.
  2. a b 25 years of Lübeck Ballspiel Verein-Phönix, publisher: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1928, p. 5.
  3. 25 years of Lübeck Ballspiel Verein-Phönix, publisher: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1928, p. 6.
  4. 25 years of Lübeck Ballspiel Verein-Phönix, Ed .: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1928, p. 10.
  5. Jochen Heß and Pit Kluth in a commemorative publication for the 75th anniversary of the LBV Phönix from 1903 eV, Ed .: LBV Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1978.
  6. Jöns in 60 Years of Lübeck Ballspielverein from 1903 eV, Ed .: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix von 1903 eV, Lübeck 1963, p. 35.
  7. ^ Walter Mielke in Festschrift for the 75th anniversary of the LBV Phönix from 1903 eV, Ed .: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1978.
  8. 25 years of Lübeck Ballspiel Verein-Phönix, Ed .: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1928, p. 15.
  9. 25 years Lübeck Ballspiel Verein-Phönix, publisher: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1928, p. 16.
  10. a b 25 years Lübeck Ballspiel Verein-Phönix, Ed .: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1928, p. 21.
  11. 25 years Lübeck Ballspiel Verein-Phönix, publisher: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1928, p. 22.
  12. 25 years of Lübeck Ballspiel Verein-Phönix, publisher: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1928, p. 24.
  13. Rudolf Fuchs in Festschrift for the 75th anniversary of the LBV Phönix from 1903 eV, Ed .: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1978.
  14. ^ Festschrift to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the founding day of the LBV Phönix from 1903 e. V., Ed .: Lübeck Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1953, p. 78.
  15. 25 years of Lübeck Ballspiel Verein-Phönix, publisher: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1928, p. 9.
  16. ^ Festschrift to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the founding day of the LBV Phönix from 1903 e. V., Ed .: Lübeck Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1953, p. 80.
  17. ^ Festschrift to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the founding day of the LBV Phönix from 1903 e. V., Ed .: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1953, p. 83.
  18. Gerhard Hohnsbein in a commemorative publication for the 75th anniversary of the LBV Phönix from 1903 eV, Ed .: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1978.
  19. 100 years LBV Phönix - Festschrift 2003, publisher: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 2003, p. 15.
  20. ^ Festschrift to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the founding day of the LBV Phönix from 1903 e. V., Ed .: Lübeck Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1953, p. 73.
  21. a b Festschrift to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the founding day of the LBV Phönix from 1903 e. V., publisher: Lübeck Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1953, p. 74.
  22. ^ Festschrift to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the founding day of the LBV Phönix from 1903 e. V., publisher: Lübeck Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1953, p. 76.
  23. ^ Festschrift to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the founding day of the LBV Phönix from 1903 e. V., publisher: Lübeck Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1953, p. 77.
  24. a b 100 Years LBV Phönix - Festschrift 2003, Ed .: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 2003, p. 50.
  25. a b Peter Moldenhauer in a commemorative publication for the 75th anniversary of the LBV Phönix from 1903 eV, publisher: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 1978.
  26. a b c d 100 years LBV Phönix - Festschrift 2003, Ed .: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 2003, p. 51.
  27. ^ German indoor hockey championships for young people 2006. Accessed on June 20, 2017 .
  28. 100 years LBV Phönix - Festschrift 2003, publisher: Lübecker Ballspielverein Phönix from 1903, Lübeck 2003, p. 58/59.