Pritzwalker SV 1911
The Pritzwalker SV 1911 is a German sports club based in the small town of Pritzwalk in the state of Brandenburg .
portrait
Company sports community
1911 is the founding year of Pritzwalker SV, which before the Second World War was one of the largest sports clubs in Prignitz in northern Brandenburg with around 1000 members and a wide range of sports . In 1945, like all clubs in the Soviet Occupation Zone (SBZ) , it was permanently banned by the Soviet occupying power . After a transition period with loosely organized sports communities, the company sports community (BSG) machine rental station (MAS) Pritzwalk was founded with the local MAS as the sponsoring company . Although the company sports associations maintained several sports sections, the BSG MAS was only known through football.
In the 1949/50 season, the BSG was first in the third-class Brandenburg district class in the Northwest / A relay and qualified for the state class Brandenburg 1950/51 via the promotion round . This was also only third class after the introduction of the GDR league . After the BSG was subordinated to the GDR-wide Tractor Sports Association in 1950 , it had to adopt the name "BSG Traktor Pritzwalk". In the national class, the BSG tractor just managed to stay in the league, but had to relegate in the following season 1951/52. In 1952, the states were abolished in the GDR in favor of districts and new leagues were then introduced in sport. After relegation, Tractor Pritzwalk was incorporated into the fourth-class Potsdam district class for the 1952/53 season, from which it immediately made promotion to the Potsdam district league. Since the Pritzwalker did not manage to stay in the league, they played from 1954/55 on again in the district class, which was only the fifth division after the introduction of the new third-class II. GDR league. It was not until 1966 that the BSG tractor returned to the district league. This had meanwhile become third class again after the second GDR league was closed. As early as 1964, the promotion of Pritzwalk as district class relay winner had broken down because there were no promoters for the 1964/65 season due to the reduction of the district league from two to one relay.
The Pritzwalker were able to assert themselves in the district league for nine seasons. On September 15, 1968, BSG Stahl Pritzwalk joined the BSG tractor and the Pritzwalk transmission plant took over the newly formed BSG, henceforth BSG Motor. The placements in the district league deteriorated from season to season. In 1974 the BSG was last, and only the expansion to two squadrons saved them from relegation. This took place in 1976 when Motor Pritzwalk was again last in its squadron. Until 1983 there was an interplay between the district class and the district league, before BSG Motor remained in the district class from the 1983/84 season until the end of the GDR league system in 1990. The season 1989/90 closed the BSG in fourth place.
Registered association
In the course of 1990, due to the changed economic situation after the political change of 1989/90 , the transmission plant stopped promoting the company sports community. Since the formation of registered associations had become possible in the meantime , members of the BSG decided to convert them into such an association in order to use the possibilities of public funding. The club name was taken from the pre-war club, and the BSG was now called Pritzwalker SV 1911. The footballers continued to form the most powerful division, they rose in 1992 to the then seventh-class Brandenburg state class and in 1993 they became the Brandenburg Cup winners. In 1999 he was promoted to the national league before relegating to the national class in 2002. On November 17, 2003, the football and hockey departments left Pritzwalker SV and founded the new Pritzwalker FHV 03 association.Since then, Pritzwalker SV has only offered aerobics, badminton, judo, bowling, weight training and table tennis, almost all of them are in competition mode (as of 2016).
literature
- DFSF (Ed.): DDR Chronicle - DDR Football 1949–1991 (Volumes 1–8). Berlin 2007/11.