SC Neheim

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SC Neheim
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Basic data
Surname Sport-Club Neheim e. V.
Seat Arnsberg - Neheim , North Rhine-Westphalia
founding June 12, 1971
Colours Red White
president Paul Senske
Website sc-neheim.de
First soccer team
Head coach Alex Bruchhage
Venue Binnerfeld Stadium
Places 6000
league Westfalenliga 2
2019/20 7th place
home
Away

The SC Neheim (full name: Sport-Club Neheim eV ) is a football club in the Arnsberg district of Neheim-Hüsten . The club played under the name Sportfreunde Neheim for eight years and as SC Neheim-Hüsten for four years in the highest Westphalian amateur league.

history

Today's SC Neheim goes back to FC Neheim 08 , which was founded on October 28, 1908 . A year later, FC Germania Neheim was founded . Other parent clubs were Preußen Neheim , Victoria Neheim , Spiel und Sport Neheim , Sportvereinigung Neheim and TuS Neheim . These clubs merged after the end of the Second World War to form the Sportfreunde Neheim . At the same time, the DJK Schwarz-Weiß Neheim existed . On June 12, 1971, the Sportfreunde Neheim and the DJK Schwarz-Weiß merged to form SC Neheim-Hüsten . After the town of Neheim-Hüsten was incorporated into the town of Arnsberg on January 1, 1975, the addition of Hüsten was deleted from the club name four years later .

TuS Neheim

TuS Neheim qualified in 1940 for the Tschammer Cup , the forerunner of today's DFB Cup . There, the Neheimers met the Eschweiler sports community in the first round on their own pitch . The game ended with a 3-2 victory for the guests from Eschweiler . From 1943 to 1945, TuS Neheim and the SuS Hüsten 09 association formed the KSG Neheim-Hüsten war gaming community .

Sports fans Neheim

In 1947, the Sportfreunde became champions of their district class relay, but failed in the promotion round to the Landesliga Westfalen to SuS Menden 09 . Sportfreunde lost the decisive game 3: 5. Three years later, they were promoted to the newly created 2nd regional league of Westphalia , before the Neheimers reached the regional league after this division was dissolved in 1952. At the time, it was the highest amateur league in Westphalia. At first, the team always fought against relegation, before the Sportfreunde qualified in 1956 as fifth in the table for the newly created Association League Westphalia .

After an eighth place in the 1956/57 season, relegation followed a year later as bottom of the table. In 1960 the promotion succeeded before the Sportfreunde reached their sporting zenith with seventh place in the 1960/61 season. Also in the West German Cup , the Neheimers made headlines when they beat the first division Borussia Dortmund 2-1 in the first round . In the second round, however, came the end after a 2: 7 defeat against Duisburg SpV . In 1962 it went back to the regional league, where the Neheimers couldn't get beyond mediocrity.

In 1966 the team was relegated to the district class. At the same time, the Neheimer A-Jugend won the Westphalian Cup, which was played for the first time, together with BV Bad Lippspringe . The first men's team managed to get promoted back to the national league. After fourth place in 1970 and fifth place one year later, there was a merger with DJK Schwarz-Weiß to form SC Neheim-Hüsten.

SC Neheim (-Hüsten)

In 1972, in the first season after the merger, he returned to the association league. Two years later, SC Neheim-Hüsten reached fourth place. The upswing ebbed a short time later and in 1977 the club went back to the national league. Two years later, the club's A-youth won the Westphalia Cup again, while the first men's team was promoted to the association league. In the summer of 1979 the club name was shortened to SC Neheim . The early 1980s brought SC Neheim its most successful phase: In 1981 the SCN was third, three points behind the champions Lüner SV . A year later, the Neheim runners-up were eleven points behind the amateurs of VfL Bochum . The climax of the club's history was followed by the crash when SC Neheim was relegated from bottom of the table in 1983.

The Neheimer Helmut Gabriel part of the German squad for the U-16 World Cup 1985 in the People's Republic of China . The German team became runner-up after a 2-0 defeat in the final against Nigeria and Gabriel was used in five of six games. A year later, after a 1-0 win in the decider against Spvg Versmold in Lippstadt , the team from Neheim returned to the association league and was fourth in the 1986/87 promotion season, before the team was relegated from the association league in 1989 and 1993 had to go to the district league. After rising again in 1997, she was promoted to the association league again in 2003. After three years of relegation battle, it went down to the state league in 2006. Ten years later, he was promoted back to the Westphalia League.

Stadion

The club's home venue is the Binnerfeld Stadium , also known as the Binnerfeld sports facility . The stadium has a capacity of 6,000 spectators. The game is played on artificial turf. On the next court, the game is played on natural grass , which is surrounded by the running track.

successes

  • Champion of the Landesliga Westfalen 2 : 1960, 1972, 1979, 2003, 2016
  • Westphalia Cup winners of the A-youth: 1966, 1979

Personalities

Others

Until 1991 SC Neheim also had a handball department, which was spun off into HSK Neheim-Hüsten.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Articles of Association of SC (Sport Club) Neheim e. V. SC Neheim, accessed on July 25, 2014 .
  2. Hardy Greens : Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 1: From the Crown Prince to the Bundesliga. 1890 to 1963. German championship, Gauliga, Oberliga. Numbers, pictures, stories. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-85-1 , p. 198.
  3. ^ Hardy Green, Christian Karn: The big book of the German football clubs . AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2009, ISBN 978-3-89784-362-2 , p. 242.
  4. ^ German Sports Club for Soccer Statistics : Soccer in West Germany 1958 - 1963 . Hövelhof 2013, p. 149 .
  5. Jochen Tittmar: Witeczek: "There were dead dogs hanging around". Spox.com , accessed July 26, 2014 .
  6. ^ SC Neheim. Tables Archive.info, accessed on May 17, 2019 .
  7. FLVW Westphalia Cup winners club teams. Football and Athletics Association Westphalia , accessed on May 11, 2019 .

Web links