FSV 63 Luckenwalde

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FSV 63 Luckenwalde
Logo FSV 63 Luckenwalde.gif
Basic data
Surname Football club 63 Luckenwalde e. V.
Seat Luckenwalde , Brandenburg
founding 1963
president Dirk Heinze
Website fsv63-luckenwalde.de
First soccer team
Head coach Jan box maker
Venue Werner Seelenbinder Stadium
Places 3000
league Regionalliga Northeast
2019/20 1st place
home
Away

The FSV 63 Luckenwalde is a German football club based in Luckenwalde in Teltow-Fläming . The club was created in 1963 from a merger of the football departments of Motor Luckenwalde and progress Luckenwalde under the name TSV Luckenwalde . The home of the 300-member club is the Werner-Seelenbinder-Stadion .

history

BV Luckenwalde / SG Luckenwalde-Süd / BSG Motor Luckenwalde

Historical logo of BV Luckenwalde

The predecessor association of BSG Motor Luckenwalde was founded in 1906 as BV 06 Luckenwalde . The club was mainly represented in the Berlin football league until 1945. The greatest success was the promotion to the Gauliga Berlin-Brandenburg in 1933 , in which BV 06 was only able to assert itself for one season. BV Luckenwalde was also successful in the Berlin Football Cup , where the club reached the final against Hertha BSC in 1924 and 1928. In 1945 the club was dissolved and re-established as SG Luckenwalde-Süd . Briefly starting as ZSG Luckenwalde , further name changes followed: 1949 in Tewa and from March 17, 1951 in Motor Luckenwalde .

The SG Süd participated in the Brandenburg soccer championship as early as 1946/47 , where it made it to the semi-finals. When the Brandenburg state class was founded in 1948 , Luckenwalde-Süd was also represented and came third in the West season. After Luckenwalde four seasons in the state class, this was divided into the third-class district leagues after the GDR districts were founded for the 1952/53 season , with Motor Luckenwalde being assigned to the Potsdam district league. As early as 1954, the BSG progress had to relegate from the district league, and until the merger with local rival progress Luckenwalde in 1963, there was no return.

Luckenwalde was also successful in handball in the period after World War II . In 1948 the men of the SG Süd became national champions in field handball and took part in the handball east zone championship (semifinals). The women's team was field champions in 1949 and qualified for the finals of the Eastern Zone Championship . There they played no role in the awarding of the title and were subject to the SG Kleinzschocher-West with 0:11. In indoor handball , the men's team of BSG Motor also became Brandenburg champions in 1952 and reached the final in the final round of the GDR championship. There the SV DVP Halle lost 1: 3. For the 1952/53 season, the men's team was incorporated into the second-rate GDR field handball league and, as a season winner, made it to the top division . Then the handball section of BSG Motor changed to BSG Lokomotive Luckenwalde.

Luckenwalder TS / SG Luckenwalde-Nord / BSG Progress Luckenwalde

The merger partner Progress Luckenwalde was also founded in 1906 under the name Luckenwalder Turnerschaft . The workers' club played in the championship of the ATSB until 1933 . From 1929 to 1931 he was regional champion three times in a row and took part in the finals of the ATSB championship with varying successes. In 1929 the Luckenwalder TS won the semifinals of the East German Association Championship at the FT Stettin-Nemitz with 5: 1 and then lost 2: 4 in the East German final of the FT Döbern in Berlin . In the following year Luckenwalde was defeated in the semifinals of the East German Association Championship on its own place of the FTSV Kostebrau with 0: 6. 1931 was the most successful year of the Luckenwalder TS. After a 1-0 win at BSC Stettin, the club won the East German ATSB championship with a 7-1 final win at FT Danzig-Langfuhr. As East German champion, Luckenwalde reached the final round of the four regional ATSB champions and was defeated 1: 2 in the semifinals against Lorbeer 06 Hamburg in the Hamburg Hoheluft stadium .

When the National Socialists came to power, the association was dissolved in 1933 and re-established as the 1st Luckenwalder SV in 1934 . The club played no sporting role until 1945. Similar to BV 06, the LSV was dissolved in 1945 and re-established as SG Luckenwalde-Nord . At Luckenwalde-Nord, too, further renaming followed in 1953 to Consumption , Industry and Progress Luckenwalde . The BSG played from 1955 in the Potsdam district league, which they could hold until 1963.

TSV Luckenwalde / FSV 63 Luckenwalde

Historical logo of TSV Luckenwalde

In 1963 both company sports associations merged to form TSV Luckenwalde , but in 1964 had to accept the descent into the district class area. From 1968 to 1990 the TSV was then again predominantly represented in the district league, but had no realistic chances of a possible promotion to the GDR league . In the Potsdam District Cup, the club reached the final twice, losing to Chemie Velten and Motor Hennigsdorf in the final . In 1990 the club was renamed again to FSV 63 Luckenwalde .

In 2000 the FSV rose for the first time from the state class area to the Association League Brandenburg , which was held with mostly secured midfield places. In the 2008/09 season, the FSV was surprisingly champions of the Brandenburgliga and has been taking part in the Oberliga Nordost since 2009/10 . On May 16, 2006, the FSV was given the opportunity to compete against the German national soccer team as part of the preparations for the 2006 World Cup through a competition . The game ended 7-0. In 2015/16 the FSV played for the first time in the Regionalliga Nordost .

Football statistics

  • Participation in Gauliga Berlin-Brandenburg : 1933/34
  • Berlin Cup finalist: 1924, 1928
  • Final round of the ATSB Federal Championship: 1930/31 (HF)
  • Participation in Regionalliga Nordost: 2015/16, 2016/17, 2017/18, 2020/21

Balance sheet since 1994/95

season league level space Gates Points
1994/95 Brandenburg State League 6th 03. 64:47 39:21
1995/96 Brandenburg State League 6th 02. 91:24 69
1996/97 Brandenburg State League 6th 04th 63:34 55
1997/98 Brandenburg State League 6th 02. 61:32 57
1998/99 Brandenburg State League 6th 02. 65:26 58
1999/00 Brandenburg State League 6th 01. 69:31 65
2000/01 Association League Brandenburg 5. 13. 44:55 30th
2001/02 Association League Brandenburg 5. 12. 39:79 28
2002/03 Association League Brandenburg 5. 07th 49:58 40
2003/04 Association League Brandenburg 5. 08th. 43:66 35
2004/05 Association League Brandenburg 5. 14th 37:74 28
2005/06 Association League Brandenburg 5. 13. 55:58 39
2006/07 Association League Brandenburg 5. 05. 47:32 48
2007/08 Brandenburg League 5. 06th 55:45 46
2008/09 Brandenburg League 6th 01. 61:29 57
2009/10 Football Oberliga Nordost 5. 04th 56:43 53
2010/11 Football Oberliga Nordost 5. 06th 53:55 41
2011/12 Football Oberliga Nordost 5. 11. 38:55 24
2012/13 Football Oberliga Nordost 5. 04th 64:49 52
2013/14 Football Oberliga Nordost 5. 08th. 50:45 40
2014/15 Football Oberliga Nordost 5. 03. 65:32 61
2015/16 Regionalliga Northeast 4th 16. 33:80 29
2016/17 Regionalliga Northeast 4th 16. 35:75 24
2017/18 Regionalliga Northeast 4th 18th 25:93 09
2018/19 Football Oberliga Nordost 5. 2. 83:29 68
2019/20 Football Oberliga Nordost 5. 1. 54:19 41
2020/21 Regionalliga Northeast 4th nb nb nb

people

Web links

literature

  • Hardy Greens : BV Luckenwalde / Luckenwalder TS. In: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 7: Club Lexicon . AGON-Sportverlag, Kassel 2001, ISBN 3-89784-147-9 .
  • DSFS (ed.): GDR Chronicle - GDR Football 1949–1991 , Berlin 2011.

Individual evidence

  1. Hardy Greens : Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 1: From the Crown Prince to the Bundesliga. 1890 to 1963. German championship, Gauliga, Oberliga. Numbers, pictures, stories. AGON-Sportverlag, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-85-1 , p. 102.
  2. ^ Christian Wolter : Workers' football in Berlin and Brandenburg 1910-1933 . Arete Verlag, Hildesheim 2015, ISBN 978-3-942468-49-7 (results of the ATSB championship games from 1919 to 1933).
  3. A relaxed gallop for the DFB-Elf. In: Kicker-Online. May 16, 2006, accessed October 10, 2016 .
  4. ^ Resolutions of the extraordinary meeting of the Presidium , accessed on June 6, 2020