MTV Eintracht Celle

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MTV Eintracht Celle
MTV LOGO.jpg
Surname Men's gymnastics club Eintracht
Celle from 1847 e. V.
Club colors Blue White
Founded 1847
Place of foundation Celle , Lower Saxony
Association headquarters Nordwall 10, 29221 Celle
Members approx. 2300
Chairman Klaus Rohr
Homepage www.mtveintrachtcelle.de
home
Away

The MTV Eintracht Celle is the largest and oldest club in Celle with approx. 2300 members . The club was created in 2005 from the merger of MTV Celle from 1847 and SV Eintracht Celle from 1910 . MTV Eintracht Celle is one of the sports clubs in Lower Saxony with the largest number of members and is based in the city center of Celle.

With more than five full-time employees and over 100 instructors, coaches and youth group leaders, the sports club looks after 2300 members (as of December 31, 2018). With 100 offers, MTV Eintracht addresses people of all ages across social and cultural boundaries. The association is active in all-day education and support in schools.

The office is located in Saarfeld (Herzog-Ernst-Ring 30, 29221 Celle), one of the largest club-owned multifunctional sports facilities in the region. “We're moving on” is the motto of MTV Eintracht Celle, which can also be read in the club's box.

history

MTV Celle

The MTV Celle is one of three clubs in Lower Saxony that were founded before the revolutionary year 1848. In the course of the gymnastics movement of the 19th century, in its founding years the association also pursued political goals such as the unification of the German fatherland in addition to physical training. The first gymnastics lessons took place on September 24, 1847. The training location was the rifle tent next to the rifle house on the Mühlenmasch. In 1860 the club took on the name of the men's gymnastics club in Celle . In July 1879 the association moved to a new building in the city of Celle on Wallstrasse. Since the municipal hall was also used by schools, club sports were only possible to a limited extent. Long-term efforts to create a club's own hall were ultimately crowned with success with its inauguration in March 1913.

Since 1900 the association has also had women's, girls and boys departments. The greatest successes in team sport were achieved by the MTV volleyball players, who played in the Bundesliga after various German junior championship titles in the 1982/83 and 1985/86 seasons . Well-known individual athletes are the fencer Astrid Berndt , who was successful in the 1950s, as well as Anja von Rekowski , vice world champion in judo from 1997, and the athlete Silke Knoll , who began their careers at MTV. With four German championship titles between 1987 and 1990, MTV is also one of the most successful clubs in women's roller hockey .

SV Eintracht Celle

The 1910 game association Eintracht emerged from various football clubs and associations after a series of confusing amalgamations and dissolutions. First of all, FC Phönix from 1904 (dissolved in 1910), FC Eintracht in 1910 and FC Germania founded in 1905 (dissolved in 1908) should be mentioned here. In the meantime, FC Eintracht 1910 has become the game association Eintracht von 1919, which the same year the players of FC Eiche, which was primarily made up of soldiers during the First World War, join. On December 6, 1919, the SV Eintracht from 1910 came into being. The newly founded club was also joined by the 1919 sports association from 1910, which arose from the student sports association from 1910 and the SSV Hohenzollern from 1908.

Athletics has also been practiced in the club since 1920. In 1926 a hockey department was founded. On June 6, 1926, the soccer field with a 400-meter cinder track, which had been built over several years, was inaugurated. A (field) handball department was established in 1946. The women were particularly successful at the beginning of the 1950s when they won the Lower Saxony championship title. The Eintracht tennis department , which was founded in 1927, should also be mentioned. A year later, two tennis courts were inaugurated. In the 50s they played in Lower Saxony's top division. In 1972 a club house was built. In 1981 and 1988 the facility was expanded to include six more places. In 1985 and 1992 the gentlemen were Lower Saxony champions. In 1997 the 2-field tennis hall was built and inaugurated.

In addition to tennis, the hockey department is one of the most successful in the club. In 1983 the men were promoted to the indoor league . The club's most successful individual athlete is Leslie-Ellen Lanz , multiple German champion and 2004 military world champion in Taekwondo . The hockey player Nadine Ernsting-Krienke , gold and silver medal winner at the Olympic Games in Athens and Barcelona , began her career at Eintracht Celle.

offer

The offer of the MTV Eintracht Celle is in addition to the usual sports such as football, handball, judo, budokan , swimming , taekwondo, running club, athletics, ultimate frisbee , gymnastics, Indiaca , roller art skating , hockey, aerobics , line dance and square dance, darts, sports for kids with disabilities, cheerleading, fencing, karate , chess, tennis, inline skating , children's gymnastics, kickboxing in health sport, among other things, back exercises, functional gymnastics , Nordic walking , heart sports , women gymnastics, yoga covers and conveyor sport represented. For this, MTV Eintracht Celle was awarded the Sport pro Gesundheit and Pluspunkt Gesundheit seal of approval by the German Olympic Sports Association and the German Gymnastics Association. In addition, the association has its own health and exercise center.

Soccer

MTV Eintracht football
Surname MTV Eintracht football
Venue Real Estate Wilharm Arena
Places 1,500
Head coach Hilger von Elmendorff
league Oberliga Lower Saxony
2019/20 7th place

history

After the footballers of SV Eintracht Celle were relegated from the Landesliga Lüneburg in the last season before the merger , MTV Eintracht started in the district league in the 2005/06 season. There the new club started with two third places in a row before the team had to relegate to the Celle district league in 2012. There they were immediately promoted again, before MTV Eintracht 2014 immediately became runner-up behind TV Jahn Schneverdingen . A year later, he was promoted to the national league as champions. A planned merger with TuS Celle FC failed.

In 2017 he was promoted to the Lower Saxony Oberliga , which was followed by direct relegation as the penultimate of the 2017/18 season. In the 2018/19 season he was again promoted to the Lower Saxony Oberliga. A year later, MTV Eintracht won the Lower Saxony Amateurs Cup with a 3-2 victory over MTV Gifhorn and qualified for the DFB Cup for the first time . There the Celler meet in the first round on the Bundesliga club FC Augsburg .

Stadion

The home games are played in the Immobilien-Wilharm-Arena. The stadium has a capacity of 1,500 spectators and was previously known as the Eintracht Sports Park .

successes

Training grounds / sports facilities

The MTV Eintracht Celle has three sports facilities. Two of the sports facilities are located on Nienburger Strasse, with the Oberligaclub's matches being played at the Immobilien-Wilharm-Arena and a small space available for training next to it. There is also another training area on Nienburger Strasse with four large courts, which is mostly used by footballers, and between the two sports facilities there is a training and playground for the hockey division of MTV Eintracht Celle.

Another training area is located on Herzog-Ernst-Ring, which in turn has three large soccer fields and a track for athletics. In addition, the sports facility offers space to enable courses such as functional training or gymnastics.

Personalities - The chairmen of the board from 1847 to 2019

  • 1847-1853: Dr. jur. Lauenstein (MTV Celle)
  • 1853-1860: Peter Schröck (MTV Celle)
  • 1860-1862: Hemmelmann (MTV Celle)
  • 1862-1865: Roeloffs (MTV Celle)
  • 1865-1867: Abenhausen (MTV Celle)
  • 1867-1870: Friedrichs (MTV Celle)  
  • 1870-1872: Gieseke (MTV Celle)
  • 1872-1874: Lottmann (MTV Celle)
  • 1874-1886: Siebrecht (MTV Celle)
  • 1886-1892: Lottmann (MTV Celle)
  • 1892-1899: Hünecke (MTV Celle)
  • 1899: Fitschen (MTV Celle)
  • 1899-1919: Bade, Carl (MTV Celle)
  • 1919-1937: Brockmann, Wilhelm (MTV Celle)
  • 1937-1946: Marheineke, Heinrich (MTV Celle)
  • 1946: Dr Rüggeberg, H. (MTV Celle)
  • 1947-1956: Burggraf (MTV Celle)
  • 1956-1965: Hinsch, Lothar (MTV Celle)
  • 1965-1980: Dr. Lerche, Fr. (MTV Celle)
  • 1980-1985: Prüße, Helmut (MTV Celle)
  • 1985-1987: Dr. Lerche, Fr. (MTV Celle)
  • 1987-2005: Prass, Jan (MTV Celle)
  • 2005-2010: Prass, Jan (MTV Eintracht Celle)
  • 2010-2016: Blidon, Ralf (MTV Eintracht Celle)
  • from 2016: Rohr, Klaus (MTV Eintracht Celle)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Judo: "That was clearly a fraud". In: Spiegel Online . September 19, 2000, accessed June 9, 2018 .
  2. a b c http://www.mtveintrachtcelle.de/index.php?page=296
  3. http://www.mtveintrachtcelle.de/index.php?page=295
  4. http://www.taekwondodata.com/leslie-ellen-lanz.a317.html?lang=de
  5. http://www.nek5.de/2002_04.html
  6. Celle football merger failed. HAZ , accessed on August 23, 2020 .
  7. Felix Krüger shoots Eintracht Celle in the DFB-Pokal. FuPa , accessed on August 23, 2020 .