Prussia Hamelin

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Prussia Hamelin
Club logo
Full name Spielvereinigung Preußen 07 Hameln eV
place Hameln , Lower Saxony
Founded April 21, 1949
Dissolved 2010
Club colors blue White Red
Stadion Weser Uplands Stadium
Top league Oberliga Nord
successes Lower Saxony Cup winner 1959
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Template: Infobox historical football club / maintenance / incomplete outward

Preußen Hameln (officially: Spielvereinigung Preußen 07 Hameln eV ) was a sports club from Hameln , Lower Saxony , which was in bankruptcy . His football league team belonged to the Lower Saxony football league until 2009/10 , but was withdrawn from the regional league in autumn 2010 "because of financial problems that could not be overcome". The game operations in the junior area will be maintained and carried out by the newly founded club FC Preussen Hameln 07 , which will ensure the continuation of the tradition of Hamelin football in the future.

history

Structural development

The association was the product of numerous mergers. FC Saxonia Hameln was founded on May 27, 1907 . This merged in 1928 with the Hamelin SpVgg to form the Hamelin sports association Saxonia . Hamelner SpVgg was created in 1925 through the merger of FC Olympia Hameln, founded in 1910, with SC Borussia Hameln, founded in 1913 . Finally, in June 1946, the sports association merged with FC Olympia Hameln, which was re-established in 1945, to form SpVgg Hameln 07 .

In the meantime, VfB Hameln was founded in 1912 , which in 1921 merged with SC Preußen Hameln , which had been founded the year before, to form VfB Preußen Hameln . On March 29, 1928, this club merged with SC Grün-Weiß Hameln , which was formed in 1926 as a spin-off from FC Saxonia Hameln, to form VfB Prussia Grün-Weiß Hameln . This became the SC Preußen Hameln on July 8, 1933 , which merged with SpVgg Hameln 07 on April 21, 1949 to form SpVgg Preußen 07 Hameln.

The parent clubs

From a sporting point of view, only the so-called “Prussian strand” was of importance before the Second World War . In 1928 the team rose to the first-class district league Südhannover / Braunschweig . There, however, the team only appeared twice before the season was canceled by the football revolution . After the subsequent league reform, the Prussians had to go back to the second division. After the Second World War, the later top scorer in the league, Günter Schlegel, played for the Prussians.

The SpVgg 07 never got beyond the lower divisions, but produced two players who were able to win the German championship with other clubs. In 1926 Gustav Hörgreen became German champions with SpVgg Fürth and in 1938 Ludwig Pöhler with Hanover 96 . In 1949 the SpVgg won the championship in the Hildesheim relay of the Lower Saxony state league with the later national player Bernhard Termath . In the promotion round to the Oberliga Nord , the merged from Prussia and SpVgg, but trained by Karl Willnecker and co-supervised by Georg Knöpfle team failed prematurely. In the previous season, the former national player Ernst Willimowski had temporarily belonged to the club; at least one mission is occupied.

After the merger (1949 to 1974)

From 1949 to 1964, the Hameliners belonged to the second-rate amateur league of Lower Saxony . The greatest success of this era was the runner-up in the western group behind Eintracht Osnabrück in the 1949/50 season. Otherwise, the team mostly reached midfield positions and had to switch back and forth between the western and eastern seasons several times over the years. In 1964, the team rose from bottom of the table in the newly created Association League South . Under coach Werner Müller , who won the German championship with Hannover 96 in 1954, the Prussians secured the association league championship in 1970. In the promotion round, however, the team failed because of the sports fans Salzgitter and Kickers Emden .

A year later, after a 2-0 play-off win over Hannoversche SC in front of 5,000 spectators in Stadthagen , the Prussians again secured the association league championship and this time prevailed in the promotion round. With the aid of financially strong sponsors the team has been considerably reinforced so that the Prussians in 1972 as a division of third parties in the promotion round to Regionalliga Nord moved in. Here the team failed due to the poor goal difference against VfB Oldenburg . A year later you failed in the promotion round at VfL Pinneberg .

Finally, the Hameliners were Lower Saxony champions in 1974 and were promoted to the newly created Oberliga Nord . The team also took part in the German amateur championship , but failed in the first round with 0: 0 and 0: 1 against the Westphalian representative TuS Neuenrade .

Elevator Years (1974 to 1999)

In the 1976/77 season , the Prussians were fourth and took part in the qualification for promotion to the 2nd Bundesliga . Here you met the Westphalian runner-up SVA Gütersloh . After a 1-0 home win, they lost 4-1 in Gütersloh . Modest years in midfield followed, before being relegated to the Lower Saxony Association League in 1981 . There the team was passed straight through to the regional league. Only in 1986 succeeded in returning to the association league, where the promotion round to the league was missed only due to the poorer goal difference compared to VfR Osterode 08 .

After the Prussians were only able to save themselves from relegation in 1992 because of the better goal difference compared to TSV Verden , they were promoted to the Oberliga Nord a year later. In the decisive game against Heider SV , Hamelin were able to convert a 0-2 deficit into a 2-2. In the league, however, the team had no chance. Despite five hastily signed players from Kazakhstan , the Prussians were last and missed the newly created Regionalliga Nord. A year later, the Hamelin team were also relegated from the Lower Saxony / Bremen Oberliga .

There followed four years of relegation battle before the Prussians had to relegate in 1999 as the penultimate from the Lower Saxony League. The club was in debt with 700,000 marks . In addition, there was a trade tax demand of 220,000 marks. In a member survey, 70 percent voted for a voluntary withdrawal into the district league Hameln / Pyrmont in order to consolidate themselves financially.

Rebuilding and bankruptcy (1999 to 2010)

After two runner-up championships, he was finally promoted to the district class in 2002, which was followed by the march through to the district league. In 2005 he was promoted to the Hanover regional league as runner-up behind TV Badenstedt . With one point ahead of 1. FC Germania Egestorf / Langreder , the Prussians secured the state league championship in 2008 and were promoted to the Lower Saxony upper league .

During the 2009/10 season, the club ran into financial problems again. At the end of the season, the team was relegated to the Hanover regional league before the first team was withdrawn from play on September 8, 2010. A short time later the association went into bankruptcy proceedings.

Successor club FC Preußen (since 2010)

FC Preußen Hameln 07
Surname FC Preußen Hameln 07
Venue Weser Uplands Stadium
Places 14,000
Head coach Uwe Klose
league District league Hameln / Pyrmont
2019/20 13th place
Website fcpreussen07.de

On October 6, 2010, a new club called the Preussen Hameln 07 eV football club was founded. The first team immediately became champions of the 3rd district class and played in the 2nd district class from 2011. In May 2015 he was promoted to the 1st district class, which was followed a year later by promotion to the Hameln-Pyrmont district league. There the Hameliners immediately became runner-up behind Eintracht Afferde . In the subsequent relegation games against TSV Lenne and Blau-Weiß Neuhof , they were promoted to the district league. It was the third climb in a row.

As the bottom of the table in the 2017/18 season, the Prussians had to relegate directly back to the Hameln / Pyrmont district league. In the 2018/19 season, the remaining in the district league was secured.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Sport (Munich) of March 3, 1948