FSV Budissa Bautzen

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FSV Budissa Bautzen
logo
Basic data
Surname Football Association
Budissa Bautzen eV
Seat Bautzen , Saxony
founding May 21, 1904
Members 712 (as of 2001)
president Enrico Gaens
Website budissa-bautzen.de
First soccer team
Head coach Thomas Hentschel
Venue Müllerwiese Stadium
Places 5000
league Sachsenliga (6th league)
2019/20 5th place
home
Away

The Football Association (FSV) Budissa Bautzen is a football club from Bautzen in Saxony . In 2001 the association had 712 members. He uses the municipal stadium Müllerwiese with a capacity of 5000 spectators . His predecessor BSG Motor Bautzen played for many years in the second-rate GDR league .

Club history

Logo of SV Budissa Bautzen

Twelve athletes founded the Budissa Bautzen football club on May 24, 1904. The club colors blue and yellow were borrowed from the city ​​arms . The Latin name “Budissa” is derived from the Wendish-Sorbian name “Budissin” for Bautzen. After taking up other sports, the club gave itself the new name Sportverein Budissa 04 in 1907 with initially 130 members. This club existed until the end of the Second World War, in 1945 it was dissolved at the instigation of the Soviet occupying forces. As its successor, the loosely organized southern division resumed sports traffic, which was initially restricted to a local area. The division was taken over in 1950 by the company sports association (BSG) of Waggonbau Bautzen called Motor Bautzen. This existed with numerous sports sections until 1990. After the funding by the wagon construction was discontinued as a result of the economic changes after the political change in 1989 , the football section of the company sports community was converted into the registered football game association Budissa Bautzen at the instigation of an initiative group football .

Sporting development

Logo of BSG Motor

Between 1912 and 1932, SV Budissa was eight times champion of the Oberlausitz football district . After the Second World War, the Budissa footballers initially continued to play as SG Bautzen-Süd. a. 1948/49 at the championship of the soccer district East Saxony and reached seventh place. As BSG Motor, the Bautzener were among the founding teams of the newly established third-class district league in Dresden in 1952 . In 1954 he was promoted to the first GDR league for one season , followed by two seasons in the now third-class II GDR league . From 1958 to 1960, BSG Motor was again represented in the first GDR league. Apart from one more year in the 2nd GDR League (1961/62), the BSG Motor played in the 1st GDR League until 1968 (called the GDR League from 1963) and achieved its best placement in 1965 with a 9th place. This was followed by six seasons in the now third-class district league. From 1974 to 1976 Bautzen was able to return to the GDR league again, after which they were at home in the Dresden district league, relegations to the district class in 1980 and 1984 were followed by immediate promotion. BSG Motor Bautzen ended GDR football operations in 1990 with a 13th place in the Dresden District League. The BSG was represented 16 times in the competition for the GDR soccer cup ( FDGB cup ), but never made it into the last sixteen.

League overview 1952–1990:

  • 1952 / 53–1953 / 54 District League Dresden (League 3)
  • 1954/55 GDR League (2)
  • 1956–1957 2nd GDR League (3)
  • 1958–1960 I. GDR League (2)
  • 1961/62 Second GDR League
  • 1962 / 63–1967 / 68 I. GDR League
  • 1968 / 69–1973 / 74 District League Dresden (3)
  • 1974 / 75–1975 / 76 GDR League
  • 1976 / 77–1979 / 80 District League Dresden
  • 1980/81 district class Dresden (4)
  • 1981 / 82–1982 / 84 District League Dresden
  • 1984/85 district class Dresden
  • 1985 / 86–1989 / 90 District League Dresden 1990: 13.

The game operations under the direction of the DFB began the FSV Budissa 1990 also in the district league Dresden, initially 4th, from 1991 5th division. In 1992 he was promoted to the State League of Saxony for two years. This was followed by another seven years in the now sixth class district league. In 2002 Bautzen rose again to the regional league, in which they made it to the Oberliga Nordost in 2005, which has been the 5th division since 2008.

League overview from 1990:

  • 1990 / 91–1991 / 92 District League Dresden (League 3/4)
  • 1992 / 93–1993 / 94 State League Saxony (4)
  • 1994 / 95–2001 / 02 District League Dresden (6)
  • 2002 / 03–2004 / 05 State League Saxony (5)
  • 2005 / 06–2013 / 14 Oberliga Nordost (4, since 2008 5th division)
  • 2014 / 15–2018 / 19 Regionalliga Nordost (4)
  • since 2019/20 Landesliga Sachsen (6)

On September 27, 2011, Budissa Bautzen announced the separation of head coach Thomas Baron and assistant coach André Müller. After an unsatisfactory course of the season, a 4-0 home defeat was the decisive factor for dismissal. The coach of the U23 team, Dirk Rettig, took over the post. The previous goalkeeping coach René Katzwinkel was at his side as assistant coach. At the beginning of 2012, Damian Halata was signed as the new head coach. In 2013 Thomas Hentschel became head of sport and trained the team until April 2016. In 2014, the championship was celebrated in the southern season of the Oberliga Nordost and rose to the fourth-class regional league Nordost . Reimund Linkert was replaced as coach by Torsten Gütschow on March 7, 2017 . After the club was in danger of relegation in February 2019, Gütschow was replaced by Petrik Sander . But even Sander could not prevent the descent. Although Budissa could have started in the league after relegation , the board decided to play one league lower in the Sachsenliga in the 2019/20 season .

People of particular importance

  • Gert Heidler , GDR national player, was a junior player at BSG Motor
  • Hartmut Hoffmann , top division player in Zwickau, previously with BSG Motor
  • Sven Kmetsch , youth player at BSG Motor, then GDR upper league and Bundesliga player
  • Claus Rüdrich , top division player in Karl-Marx-Stadt, previously with BSG Motor
  • Heinz Satrapa , top division player in Zwickau and Aue, coach from 1968 to 1970

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. structure. FSV Budissa Bautzen, accessed on July 7, 2020 .
  2. Torsten Gütschow takes over at Budissa Bautzen. In: FuPa . March 6, 2017, accessed July 7, 2020 .
  3. Former Cottbus trainer: Sander replaces Gütschow as trainer from Budissa Bautzen. In: transfermarkt.de . February 28, 2019, accessed July 7, 2020 .
  4. Bautzen goes down one league voluntarily. In: kicker.de . May 22, 2019, accessed July 7, 2020 .