1. Suhler SV

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1. Suhler SV
Logo of the 1st Suhler SV 06
Surname 1. Suhler SV
Founded 1906
Association headquarters Suhl
Departments 3
Chairman Stefan Hess
Homepage www.suhlersv06.de

The first Suhler SV 06 is a German sports club , which is based in the city of Suhl ( Thuringia has). In addition to his main field of activity, soccer , he also offers athletics , fistball and table tennis . He uses the municipal Auenstadion with space for 12,000 spectators. The club colors are red and white.

history

Club development

Logo 1969–1990

In 1906 the sports clubs SC Germania Suhl and VfB Suhl were founded in Suhl . Both clubs merged in 1924 to form VfB Germania Suhl . At a general meeting on January 17, 1926, it was decided to rename the club in 1. Suhler Sportverein 06 . Until the end of the Second World War, his soccer team played only in the lower class, in the 1930s in the Thuringian district class , the 2nd division under the Gauliga Mitte . After the end of the war, the club, like all sports clubs in the Soviet occupation zone, was dissolved in 1945 on the orders of the occupying power.

Until 1949 there was a sports community in Suhl , which was initially allowed to hold sports competitions in a narrow regional area and later within Thuringia. As part of the formation of company sports associations (BSG) in East Germany, SG was initially taken over in 1949 by BSG Progress Suhl , which was merged into ZSG Suhl a year later after several company sports associations were merged . After another change in the carrier company, BSG Motor Mitte Suhl was created in 1952 , later renamed BSG Motor Suhl . In the meantime, this BSG, in contrast to BSG Motor Simson Suhl, was called BSG Motor Ernst Thälmann Suhl . In 1969, both company sports associations merged and took on the name BSG Motor again.

When the financial and logistical support of the sponsoring companies ceased to exist in 1990 due to the economic changes caused by German reunification, the 1. Suhler SV 06 was re-established as a registered association by members of the BSG.

Football career

In 1948 the SG Suhl became district champion, in 1949 third in the Thuringian regional class, season 3. In 1950, the ZSG Suhl had to relegate from the regional class. When the third-rate football district league Suhl started playing in 1952, BSG Motor was one of the founding teams. She won the district championship in 1957 and thus qualified for the now introduced and new third-class II. GDR League. When the Second GDR League was dissolved in 1963, Motor Suhl was downgraded back to the District League. In 1966 the BSG lost the fight for the district championship of the BSG activist Kali Werra Tiefenort in two games with 1: 2 and 0: 1. After relegation from the district league in 1968, the team had to spend two seasons in the district class, but was immediately district champion after promotion in 1971 and rose to the second-rate GDR league. However, the class could not be held, but the return within a year.

Then the BSG Motor Suhl established itself in the GDR league and achieved second places in its season several times. In 1976, the team first attempted promotion to the GDR league . As runner-up behind the second team of FC Carl Zeiss Jena, who are not eligible for promotion, Suhl took part in the promotion round, but failed in fourth. In the 1978/79 season, the team was the first season winner, which again entitled to participate in the promotion round to the GDR Oberliga. There she failed only because of the poorer goal difference to Chemie Leipzig . In 1981 the Suhler took part again in the promotion round of the five league season winners, but was knocked off last. Finally, in the fourth attempt after the 1983/84 season, together with BSG Stahl Brandenburg, they made the leap into the elite class. The league season 1984/85 was sobering for the Suhler. In the first 16 point games only two draws were made, against Wismut Aue they landed their only victory 3-1, all away games were lost, and in the end, after 22 defeats in 26 games, they were relegated back to the now two-part GDR league. An average of 5,923 spectators attended the 13 home games in the Sports Park of Friendship, which at the time had a capacity of 15,000. In the league season, coach Ernst Kurth relied on the following regular formation, which had an average age of 26.4 years:

Klaus Müller
(31 years / 25 games)

Erhard Mosert (33/24)
Uwe Jertschewski (21/26), Andreas Schneider (27/19), Andreas Böhm (22/21)
Roman Seyfarth (21/25), Dieter Kurth (22/20), Klaus Schröder (29 / 20)
Harald Fritz (29/13), Henry Lesser (21/22), Gerd Schellhase (34/16)

Also in the FDGB-Pokal came the end early this season - as the only first division club, the Suhler did not jump the hurdle first main round. After relegation to the league, BSG Motor Suhl played in the GDR league for a few years, but was only able to take third place in the B league season once (1988/89). The end of the GDR football game operation concluded Motor Suhl in the 1989/90 season with a ninth place in the southern relay of the GDR league.

In the competition for the GDR soccer cup, BSG Motor reached the quarter-finals as the best result in 1977 and 1979.

League overview 1952–1990

  • 1952 / 53–1957: District League Suhl (3rd / 4th league)
  • 1958–1962 / 63: II. GDR League (3rd)
  • 1963 / 64–1967 / 68: District League Suhl (3rd)
  • 1968 / 69–1969 / 70: District class Suhl (4th)
  • 1970/71: District League Suhl (3rd)
  • 1971/72: GDR League (2nd)
  • 1972/73: District League Suhl (3rd)
  • 1973 / 74–1983 / 84 GDR League (2nd)
  • 1984/85: Oberliga (1st)
  • 1985 / 86–1989 / 90: GDR League (2nd)

League overview from 1990

  • 1990/91: NOFV League (2nd)
  • 1991/92: Oberliga Nordost (3rd)
  • 1992/93: Association League Thuringia (4th)
  • 1993/94: Oberliga Nordost (3rd)
  • 1994 / 95–1999 / 2000: Oberliga Nordost (4th)
  • 2000 / 01-04 / 05: Thuringia League (5th)
  • 2005 / 06-07 / 08: State class Thuringia (6th)
  • 2007 / 08-17 / 18: State class Thuringia (7th)
  • 2018/19: District Oberliga

In the 1990/91 game year, the state of Thuringia joined the Federal Republic of Germany ; the DFB and NOFV games were then merged in the summer of 1991. In the summer of 1994 the regional league was introduced above the major league and the 3rd league was introduced above the regional league in summer 2008, so that the SV 06 divisions were each downgraded by one level.

successes

  • Participation in the GDR Oberliga 1984/85

Nationally known players

useful information

Web links

Commons : BSG Motor Suhl  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

swell

  • Andreas Baingo, Michael Horn: The History of the GDR Oberliga. Verlag Die Werkstatt, Göttingen 2003, ISBN 3-89533-428-6 .
  • Football informative . Sportverlag Berlin, Berlin 1986, ISBN 3-328-00130-1
  • Uwe Nuttelmann (Ed.): GDR Oberliga. 1962-1991. Self-published, Jade 2007, ISBN 978-3-930814-33-6 .

Individual evidence

  1. The history of the 1st Suhler SV. Retrieved July 27, 2018 .