SC Charlottenburg

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SCC Berlin
Club logo
Surname Sport-Club Charlottenburg e. V.
Club colors White black
Founded September 15, 1902
Association headquarters Germany
Members 7,292 (January 1, 2019)
Departments 25th
Chairman Andreas Statzkowski
Homepage scc-berlin.de
Historical club coat of arms

The SC Charlottenburg (officially: Sport-Club Charlottenburg eV ) is a Berlin sports club from the Westend part of the Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf district . The club, founded on September 15, 1902 in the then still independent city of Charlottenburg , offers 25 different sports. The best-known departments include the athletes who initiated many of Berlin's major running events (including the Berlin Marathon ), the volleyball team, which plays as Berlin Recycling Volleys in the Bundesliga volleyball , and the American football team Berlin Rebels , which plays in the German Football League , and the soccer team, which played in the 2nd Bundesliga for one year in the 1983/84 season .

Club history

The club was founded in 1902 as the Charlottenburger Sport Club in 1902 ( ChSC 02 for short ) in "Eckmanns Tanzinstitut" in what was then Scharrenstrasse 13 (today Schustehrusstrasse ), which is now the oldest surviving town house in Charlottenburg . At first, the bar running game was operated, where the ChSC 02 was Berlin champion from 1905 to 1907. But athletics soon established itself as the main sport, so that the club gave up the bar running game again in 1908. In the same year they also started playing football. On June 10, 1911, the Charlottenburger SC and the West 05 sports club merged to form SC Charlottenburg . The club colors changed from blue and yellow (based on the colors of the city of Charlottenburg) to black and white.

The club's first venue was from 1910 to 1926 opposite the Witzleben train station on the site of today's ICC Berlin . After that, the company initially moved to a location next to AVUS , before finally moving into the SCC stadium , today Mommsenstadion , in 1930 due to the expanding exhibition grounds .

After the end of the Second World War , the SCC was initially dissolved and re-approved as the Eichkamp municipal sports group in 1946 . On October 10, 1949, the association finally got its old and present name back.

ice Hockey

Results of the SCC at German ice hockey championships
Teams from the Berlin Ice Skating Club and the Charlottenburg Sports Club from the 2018/19 season

The SC Charlottenburg was one of the pioneer clubs in German ice hockey at the beginning of the 20th century . At the first international tournament in Germany in 1908 , the SCC faced the Berlin ice skating club in the preliminary round and lost 0:13. The same game was also the final pairing of the first final of the German ice hockey championship in 1912 ; Here too, the SCC lost 1: 2 a. V. Overall, SC Charlottenburg reached the championship final four times, but lost all games.

Ice hockey has been practiced again in the SCC since 1987. The SCC plays in the Landesliga Berlin, the lowest division. The greatest successes during this time were winning the Berlin championship in 1998, 2000 to 2003 and 2009. The home arena has been the P9 ice rink at the bell tower since 2012 with a capacity of 1,000 spectators.

Soccer

Soccer
Venue Mommsen Stadium
Places 15,005 places
( limited to 11,500 by the DFB )
league Landesliga Berlin
2018/19 17th place ( Berlin League )  

home
Away

history

The footballers started playing in 1908. After the end of the First World War , they joined forces with FC Union Halensee in 1898 to form FC Union-SC Charlottenburg and then played successfully in the VBB's top division . The greatest success was reaching the final of the Berlin soccer championship against SV Norden-Nordwest (which was lost 0: 1 and 2: 4). After the connection was dissolved again in 1926, the SCC could no longer hold itself permanently in the top division and changed regularly between the 1st and 2nd league.

With the introduction of the Gauliga Berlin-Brandenburg , the Charlottenburgs remained inferior until 1945. After the end of the war, the teams from Tennis Borussia Berlin and the SCC joined forces in the SG Charlottenburg , whereby TeBe should have a significant share in the success of the sports group in the following years up to 1949. As a result, Tennis Borussia remained after the clubs were re-admitted to the Berlin City League , while the SCC continued to play under-class.

For a long time the SCC played in the lower leagues of West Berlin in the A and B class. But in 1978 the Charlottenburg team began an impressive series of successes that brought the club into the 2nd Bundesliga within five years . Initially, in 1979, the company was promoted from the B to the A class, followed by promotion to the regional league in 1980 and again a year later to the Berlin league . In its premier season 1981/82 the club surprisingly finished third. But the SCC remained successful in the following season , secured both the Berlin Cup and the Berlin Football Championship and also prevailed in the subsequent round of promotion to the 2nd Bundesliga . It was strange that Charlottenburg changed coach four times in the five promotion seasons.

The team could not hold up in the 2nd Bundesliga and was relegated after only one season ; after 38 games, the gap to the saving 16th place, which Rot-Weiß Oberhausen occupied, was two points. Ultimately, the decisive factor was the poor record on foreign pitches: only on matchday 23, a 2-1 win at VfL Osnabrück was possible . The team included u. a. later national goalkeeper Andreas Köpke ; other top performers were Jörg Gaedke , the SCC's top scorer with 15 goals, as well as Jürgen Schulz , Peter Aping , Edmund Malura , Thorsten Schlumberger and Rainer Sprangowski . Coach Bernd Erdmann was replaced during the season by Slobodan Čendić , who could not prevent relegation. In the 1984/85 season , the club missed direct resurgence, finished second behind Tennis Borussia and thus only qualified for the 1985 German amateur soccer championship . A year later , the SCC took first place again, but failed in the promotion round at FC St. Pauli and Rot-Weiss Essen . After that, many top performers left the club, so that in 1986/87 Charlottenburg was the reigning Berlin champion and cup winner, last in the league and relegated.

After the resurrection, the Charlottenburg were able to assert themselves again in the league and qualified at the end of the 1990/91 season for the newly created Oberliga Nordost , where they held the class for the first two years. At the end of the 1993/94 season , the SCC missed the qualification for the newly founded Regionalliga Nordost and remained in the fourth-class league. It was not until the 1995/96 season that the leap into the regional league succeeded, where the SCC was relegated again after only one season . Two years later, the SCC then rose from the Oberliga in the Association League Berlin .

Charlottenburg played for many years in the midfield of the association league, but with no prospect of promotion. Instead, he was relegated to the seventh-class national league in 2009. In the 2014/15 season, he was promoted again to the Association League , now known as the Berlin League , from which, however, one had to relegate directly. The goal of resurgence in Berlin's top division was achieved in the 2017/18 season with 1st place in the Landesliga Season 2. In the 2018/19 season, the 1st men of SCC Berlin played again in the Berlin League, but were relegated again directly for the 2019/20 season.

successes

statistics

season class league space Remarks
2008/09 0VI Berlin League 16. descent
2009/10 0VII Landesliga Berlin - Season 2 07th
2010/11 0VII Landesliga Berlin - Season 2 10.
2011/12 0VII Landesliga Berlin - Season 1 03.
2012/13 0VII Landesliga Berlin - Season 1 03.
2013/14 0VII Landesliga Berlin - Season 1 04th
2014/15 0VII Landesliga Berlin - Season 2 02. Ascent
2015/16 0VI Berlin League 17th descent
2016/17 0VII Landesliga Berlin - Season 2 03.
2017/18 0VII Landesliga Berlin - Season 2 01. Ascent
2018/19 0VI Berlin League 17th descent

athletics

Anniversary logo on the occasion of the centenary

Athletics has been practiced in the SCC since 1904 at the latest , the athletics department was founded in 1919/20. In 1908 the club won the first street relay race Berlin-Potsdam. Over the years, SCC athletes have regularly participated in national and international competitions and set numerous records in the process. The first world record holder of the SCC was Georg Mickler in the 1000-meter run in 1911 , the first Olympic participant in 1908 was Paul Nettelbeck in the 5-mile run, who became the first German SCC champion in the 1500-meter run that same year . In addition to numerous world records, the following SCC athletes won Olympic medals:

The athletics department of the SCC was the most successful Berlin athletics club in 2007 and 2008, taking into account international assignments. In 2007 Robert Harting won next to his first German championship the silver medal at the world championships in Osaka in the discus throw . But also André Höhne , who was able to win three German championships in 2007 and 2008 and was deprived of his work at the world championships due to a mistake by the officials, as well as Julia Fischer , who was U18 world champion in 2007 and U20 vice world champion in discus throwing in 2008, are the figureheads of the department.

The 400-meter sprinter Florian Seitz has been racing for the SCC since 2008 . At the Olympic Games in Beijing in 2008, four SCC players competed. Robert Harting was fourth in the discus throw, André Höhne started over 20 km and 50 km walking and was 12th over the long distance and Florian Seitz was qualified for the 4 x 400 meter relay. At the German championships in 2008 (open air) in Nuremberg there were three gold medals (Robert Harting, André Höhne and the 4 x 400 meter relay with Florian Seitz, Sven Buggel, Frederic Zweigner and Julian Kwius). At the German youth championships Christoph Roschinsky (10,000 m walking) and Julia Fischer (discus) won two more titles for the SCC. In the junior area, the SCC also provides two German champions with Julia Fischer (discus) and Jill Richards (400 m hurdles).

Since 2009, a large number of other talents have strengthened the athletics team at SCC Berlin (Maik Berger, Antje Bormann, Sebastian Goltz, Marius Haniske, Nils Hermann, Robert Krebs, Robin Kresinsky, Olaf Pusch, Carsten Schmidt ).

hockey

The SCC's hockey department was formed with the first team in 1910.

The 1st men's team plays in the field in the 2nd Bundesliga, the women in the Regionalliga Ost. In the hall, the men are currently members of the 2nd Bundesliga, after they were relegated from the 1st Bundesliga in 2017 after two seasons. The women also play in the second highest division, but there this is the Regionalliga Ost.

The hockey department is characterized by a successful youth work. From this emerged the national players Oliver Hentschel ( World Champion 2006 ) and Tobias Hentschel ( European Champion 1999 ), sons of Steffi Hentschel (née Drescher; World Champion 1976 ) and Ferdinand Weinke ( Indoor European Champion 2016 ).

Inline skating and speed skating

The department for inline skating and speed skating was founded in 1998 as "SCC XSpeed ​​Team Berlin". Since 2011 it has been called "SCC Skating".

Today the department has over 200 members and is therefore one of the largest in terms of members, despite being one of the younger speed skating clubs in Germany. SCC Skating offers regular, year-round training in various groups, organizes skate courses and, in summer, the radioeins runway on Tempelhofer Feld. Particular emphasis is placed on working with youngsters - therefore extensive training for children and young people is part of the range of sports on offer.

From recreational skaters to competitive skaters, all performance classes are represented in the club. Notable athletes of the club are the multiple Olympic champion Claudia Pechstein (who competes in speed skating for SCC skating), the world and multiple European champion Jana opponent and the multiple German champion Andre Unterdörfel .

SCC Skating is a member of the Inline- und Rollsportverband Berlin eV and the German Speed ​​Skating Association - DESG .

rugby

The rugby division was established in December 1920 with 22 members. It soon became the origin of other rugby teams in other Berlin sports clubs. Ten SCCers left the club and helped set up rugby departments at SV Siemens (1923), BFC Prussia (1923), Berliner RC (1926) and FC Tennis-Borussia (1928). The SCC won several championship titles: Brandenburg-Mitteldeutscher Meister 1925 and 1929, Berliner Meister 1926. After World War II, the SCC team did not resume playing, but existed as a member of the Berlin Rugby Association until the early 1970s.

Table tennis

The table tennis department was launched in 1953. The founder Holger Ryll led the association as chairman for 20 years. After the first men's team played temporarily in the Oberliga Nord in the 1960s and 1970s, without being able to stay there in the long term, SC Charlottenburg has now established itself nationwide. The first men's team (out of five) plays in the Regionalliga Nord, while the women play in the Oberliga Ost.

The greatest success in the club's history has been the third place for the men's team in the Oberliga Nord in the 1965/66 season, with which the Charlottenburg team reached the qualifying round for the newly created table tennis Bundesliga . There they only achieved third and last place in their group behind TuSA Düsseldorf and Eintracht Frankfurt and thus (like Frankfurt) missed the qualification for the new elite league.

literature
  • Michael Schäfer: The SCC. In: DTS . 1977/10 edition Süd-West, p. 43.

tennis

The tennis department, the SCC tennis club , was founded in 1911 and has been its own registered club since 1968, but is still affiliated with the main club. The facility is located opposite the Mommsenstadion in Waldschulallee.

The tennis department has 700 members and 13 tennis courts.

volleyball

lacrosse

Personalities

literature

  • Fritz Steinmetz : 80 years of athletics at SCC Berlin 1904–1984. Berlin 1984.
  • 100 years of the Sport-Club Charlottenburg. The black C festival edition, Berlin 2002.

Web links

Commons : SCC Berlin  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. scc-berlin.de: About us
  2. The oldest surviving residential building in Charlottenburg on berlin.de.
  3. tebe.de: Mommsenstadion
  4. 92 years of hockey in the SCC (2002). (PDF; 86 kB) (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on March 10, 2016 ; Retrieved April 13, 2013 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.scc-hockey.de