SC Concordia Hamburg

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SC Concordia Hamburg
Club crest
Full name SC Concordia from 1907 e. V.
place Hamburg
Founded May 9, 1907
Dissolved June 30, 2013 (merger)
Club colors Red Black
Stadion Bekkamp sports complex
Top league Oberliga Nord
successes 6th place Oberliga Nord 1949/50
quarter-finals in the DFB-Pokal 1952/53
home
Away
Template: Infobox historical football club / maintenance / incomplete home

The SC Concordia from 1907 e. V. - known as SC Concordia Hamburg , Concordia Hamburg or SC Concordia - was a sports club in Hamburg . He offered the sports of soccer , karate , jiu jitsu , gymnastics , tennis , table tennis , darts , chess , judo and disabled sports . In 2013 the club merged with TSV Wandsbek-Jenfeld to form Wandsbeker TSV Concordia .

History of the football department

Concordia or "Cordi", as it was nicknamed, was founded on May 9, 1907. In the 1918/19 season they temporarily helped one of the forerunners of HSV , SC Germania 87, in a syndicate, which they did not forget. In the seasons 1919/20 and from 1921/22 to 1926/27, the club played in the top division. After relegation in 1927, the youth work began to be promoted, which has made the club from Wandsbek famous to this day . In 1939 the leap into the top division was made again, and the Gauliga Nordmark was held until 1941.

In 1947, as third in the table of the Hamburg City League, you were a founding member of the Oberliga Nord . The 1947/48 season saw the highest average attendance ever of 13,545, but in the (old) Millerntor stadium, as there was not enough space. In 1950 they achieved the highest ranking of all time: sixth place in the Oberliga Nord. In the next few seasons they were in danger of relegation, but since 1951 they were able to play on their own pitch again.

In 1952/53 , the SC started a triumphant advance in the cup, beating Borussia Dortmund and VfB Mühlburg 4: 3 in front of their own audience, before they were eliminated in the quarter-finals against SV Waldhof Mannheim . In the same season they were relegated. In the next two years you failed each in the promotion round. 1956 Concordia was again a member of the league and had an average of 6400 spectators per home game.

The number of spectators fell noticeably from 1961 , which was due to the unfortunate fact that the stadium was suddenly cut off from the main traffic routes by road construction work. B. the bus no longer went to the stadium.

With the end of the Oberliga, they played in the Regionalliga from 1963 , but did not get beyond midfield. After relegation in 1970, the club threatened to disappear into oblivion, but returned again in the last season of the Regionalliga, but did not qualify for the new 2nd Bundesliga .

Now a thing of the past: well-filled stands in the Marienthal Stadium in the semi-finals of the Oddset Cup against FC St. Pauli on May 14, 2006

In the following 17 years they played mostly unspectacularly in midfield in the only third-class Oberliga Nord. One of the highlights was the qualification for the German Amateur Championship in 1976, in which the team took third place. Just in time for the reintroduction of the Regionalliga in 1994, they returned for an intermezzo of three years.

In 2000, due to financial bottlenecks, the club was threatened with dissolution, but this could be prevented. In the association league, the 5th league, they caught up again. Under coach Marc Fascher the return to the league succeeded. When they topped the table for weeks in the Oberliga in 2004, SC Concordia was even given the chance to move up to the Regionalliga Nord, but they turned it down because the stadium would have had to be rebuilt, which would have exceeded the budget.

In 2005 they were relegated from the new Oberliga Nord and after three years they found themselves in the association league, but just missed promotion. In 2009, the club qualified for the first main round of the DFB Cup with a win in the Hamburg Association Cup for the first time since 1987 , in which it was defeated 0: 4 (0: 3) against the second division club TuS Koblenz in the Hoheluft stadium . After a weak 2009/10 season, the club barely escaped relegation as table fourteenth, but this overtook the team in the following season. For the first time in its history, Concordia's first team played only sixth class in the Hamburg State League (season Hansa) from the 2011/12 season. The second team played in 2011/12 also in the national league (season Hammonia), but rose there as penultimate.

League affiliation of the football department in the overview

1910 to 1945
Period League name Division
1910 / 11-1911 / 12 NFV District III 1c class third class
1912/1913 NFV District III 1b class second rate
1913/1914 NFV District III 1b class third class
1914 / 15-1918 / 19 NFV District III B class second rate
1919/1920 League (also: A-Klasse) Hamburg / Altona top notch
1920/1921 A class Hamburg / Altona second rate
1921 / 22–1926 / 27 North German League Alsterkreis top notch
1927/1928 A class Hamburg class A 3 second rate
1928/1929 no championship held (inactive) second rate
1929/1930 District league Hamburg, Alster relay second rate
1930/1931 A class Hamburg class A 4 third class
1931 / 32-1932 / 33 District league Hamburg Alster relay second rate
1933 / 34-1935 / 36 District class Hamburg Hansa relay second rate
1936/1937 District class Hamburg Hammonia relay second rate
1937 / 38-1938 / 39 District class Hamburg Germania relay second rate
1939/1940 Gauliga Nordmark Relay A top notch
1940/1941 Area class Nordmark top notch
1941/1942 1st class Hamburg Hammonia relay second rate
1942/1943 1st class Hamburg Germania relay second rate
1943/1944 1st class Hamburg Hammonia relay second rate / eliminated
1944/1945 Game operation stopped -
1945 to 2013
Period League name Division
1945-1947 City League Hamburg top notch
1947-1953 Oberliga Nord top notch
1953-1956 Amateur League Hamburg second rate
1956-1963 Oberliga Nord top notch
1963-1970 Regionalliga North second rate
1970-1973 State League Hamburg third class
1973/1974 Regionalliga North second rate
1974-1991 Amateur Oberliga Nord third class
1991-1994 Association League Hamburg fourth class
1994-1997 Regionalliga North third class
1997-2000 Oberliga Hamburg / Schleswig-Holstein fourth class
2000/2001 Association League Hamburg fifth class
2001-2004 Oberliga Hamburg / Schleswig-Holstein fourth class
2004/2005 Oberliga Nord fourth class
2005-2008 Association League Hamburg fifth class
2008-2011 Oberliga Hamburg fifth class
2011-2013 State League Hamburg sixth grade

2nd team

While the first team had established itself in the Oberliga Nord, the second team rose as SC Concordia II in 1960 in the third-class Hamburg amateur league. The team finished the first season in a good fourth place. The following season they ended with a completely even balance (10 wins, draws and losses), but were involved in the relegation battle from the following season. From 1963/64 the amateur team was only one division under the 1st team, which was now playing in the Regionalliga Nord. But with the relegation of the amateurs in 1964/64, the presence of the 2nd team in the highest Hamburg league ended.

Known players

Stadion

Main stand of the Marienthal Stadium (May 14, 2006)

Until the end of the 2008/09 season, SC Concordia played its home games mainly on Friday evening in the Marienthal stadium . The stadium, located in the middle of the residential area, was opened in 1924. In its current form, the stadium was completed in 1952 right before the cup game against Borussia Dortmund. The standing wall was not built until the night before the game. The 14,000 visitors to the league game between SC Concordia and Hamburger SV on January 20, 1952 set a record attendance. This was achieved through a specially constructed additional grandstand. For the 1957/58 season the stadium was equipped with a floodlight system. The stadium recently offered space for around 6,500 spectators. The facility also has a grandstand with space for 800 people.

On June 30, 2009 the Marienthal stadium was closed for economic reasons. From the 2009/10 season, the club played its home games at Sportpark Hinschenfelde, before moving to the Bekkamp sports field in Hamburg-Jenfeld in 2012.

Chess department

The chess department of the SC Concordia was founded in 1952 and merged in 1967 with the SK Palamedes , which took part in the finals of the German team championship four times between 1961 and 1965. In the final round of the German team championship in chess in 1970 , the German team championship was won, after the introduction of the (four-track) Bundesliga, SC Concordia belonged to this in the 1974/75 season and from 1977 to 1980. Due to the introduction of the single-track chess Bundesliga , SC Concordia had to relegate to the 2nd Bundesliga in 1980 as fifth in the 1st Bundesliga North and played in this class until 1982 and in the 1984/85 season. In 2013 the chess department of SC Concordia played in the Hamburg City League (fifth level of the league pyramid), since then the chess department of Wandsbeker TSV Concordia has been its successor in this class.

In the autumn of 1977, the youth coaches at the time and almost all of the youth players in the Palamedes chess department founded their own club, SC Diogenes , which in 1995 reached the 2nd Bundesliga North for one season .

literature

  • Axel Juckenack, Werner Platthoff, Jens-Peter Schneider: Concordia Hamburg from 1907 e. V. Erfurt 2004 (Sutton) ISBN 3-89702-724-0
  • Hardy Greens : Where no bus can go. In: Hardy Greens: Legendary football clubs. Northern Germany. Between TSV Achim, Hamburger SV and TuS Zeven. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2004, ISBN 3-89784-223-8 .

Web links

Commons : SC Concordia 1907  - Collection of Images, Videos and Audio Files

swell

  1. The North German League was dissolved in 1922, the championship was again a matter for the districts, but Greater Hamburg retained the dual track (Alster / Elbe relay) and the clubs involved remained first class. More on the complicated development of the league structure at Jankowski / Pistorius / Prüß , Fußball im Norden , Bremen and Barsinghausen 2005, page 41 f.
  2. ^ Hardy Greens : SC Concordia Hamburg Amateure. In: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 7: Club Lexicon . AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2001, ISBN 3-89784-147-9 , p. 198.
  3. Cordi Fan Club: Marienthal Stadium (July 9, 2006) ( Memento from July 17, 2006 in the Internet Archive )
  4. Engelhardt's Schach-Taschen-Jahrbuch 1968, Siegfried Engelhardt Verlag, Berlin 1968, page 121
  5. ^ History of SC Diogenes from 1977 e. V. In: www.scdiogenes.de. Retrieved January 2, 2017 .