SG Düren 99

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SG Düren 99
Full name Sportgemeinschaft Düren
1899 eV
place Düren , North Rhine-Westphalia
Founded August 8, 1935
Dissolved April 1, 2011
Club colors Red Black
Stadion West arena
Top league Gauliga Middle Rhine
successes Middle Rhine champions
1946, 1950, 1963, 1966, 1983
Middle Rhine Cup winners
1988
home
Template: Infobox historical football club / maintenance / NurHeim
Template: Infobox historical football club / maintenance / incomplete home

The SG Düren 99 (officially: Sportgemeinschaft Düren von 1899 eV ) was a sports club in Düren , North Rhine-Westphalia . The club was founded on August 8, 1935 through a merger of the previous clubs FC Germania Düren and Dürener Sportclub 03 . Düren 99 played his games on the Westkampfbahn . The club colors were the city colors of Düren, black and red.

history

On July 1, 1899, the oldest parent club, FC Germania Düren, was founded, which was renamed SC Germania Düren on January 18, 1913 . The reason for this was success in other sports. In the meantime, Dürener FC 03 was founded in 1903 and Dürener SC in 1912 . These two clubs merged on December 17, 1924 to form the Düren sports club 03 . On August 8, 1935, SC Germania merged with the sports club to form SG Düren 99 . The SG Düren 99 offered a variety of sports. In addition to soccer, these were z. B. Athletics , pool , tennis , gymnastics , sailing and American football .

On June 29, 2001, SG Düren 99 merged with the Schwarz-Weiß Düren association to form the new SG Schwarz-Weiß Düren 99 association . However, the merger was reversed after a few years and both clubs were given back their independence in 2007. On April 1, 2011, the SG Düren 99 merged with GFC Düren 09 to form the Gürzenicher Football Club Düren 1899 (short: SG GFC Düren 99). Its football department joined 1. FC Düren with effect from June 15, 2018 .

Soccer

history

The predecessor club Dürener FC 03 won the championship in the season 1909/10 in the South Rhine district . In the subsequent championship of the West German Game Association , the Dürener won 4-2 in the quarterfinals against Union Düsseldorf , before the team lost 3-1 in the semifinals against the Casseler FV 95 and was eliminated. In the further 1910s and 1920s the predecessor clubs of SG Düren 99 were in the shadow of local rivals Jugend Düren . Only in 1927 was the Dürener SC 03 runner-up in season 1 in the southern district of the Rhine. When the Gauliga Mittelrhein was introduced in 1933 , no Düren club was there. It was not until 1939 that SG Düren 99 achieved promotion to the top division, with the better goal quotient compared to the Bonn FV being the deciding factor for the 99ers in the promotion round . The Second World War ensured that the Gauliga Mittelrhein was split up in 1941 into the Gauligen Cologne-Aachen and Moselland . Here the Düren team were runner-up in the 1943/44 season behind the war game community of the Cologne clubs VfL 1899 and SpVgg Sülz .

After the end of the war, the Düren team won the Middle Rhine Championship. The 99s finished the final round of the six district champions tied with SSV Troisdorf 05 . When the score was 2: 2 in extra time , Troisdorf broke off the game and Düren was declared champion. In 1950 the Dürener were again Middle Rhine champions and were runner-up behind TSV Detmold at the following West German amateur championship . Nevertheless, the Düren rose to the second-class II Division West . There the team achieved the best placement in Group 2 in the 1951/52 season with seventh place. At the same time, the 99ers qualified for the single-track II. Division West, which in common parlance was called 2nd League West or 2nd Oberliga West. During the season Georg Stollenwerk made his debut in the German national team , but left Düren in 1953 for 1. FC Cologne . In terms of sport, the 99ers in the now single-track II Division rarely got beyond the relegation battle. The Düren qualified for the first time in the 1954/55 season for the DFB Cup , where the club lost on August 15, 1954 against 1. FC Kaiserslautern 2-5. In 1958, the Düren team provided Karl-Heinz Schnellinger, the second and to this day last German national player. Schnellinger also took part in the 1958 World Cup in Sweden , where the DFB-Elf took fourth place.

Karl-Heinz Schnellinger (1968)

After the tournament Schnellinger also moved to 1. FC Cologne, while the Dürener had to relegate to the Mittelrhein Association League at the end of the 1958/59 season . In 1963 , the Düren team secured their third Middle Rhine championship. At the West German amateur championship, the Düren failed after a 0-1 home defeat at Lüner SV and missed promotion to the Regionalliga West . The fourth Middle Rhine Championship then followed in the 1965/66 season . However, the club waived a possible promotion to the regional league, whereby runner-up Bonner SC took part in the promotion round. Düren 99 took part in the German amateur championship , where the team failed in the first round at TSV Amicitia Viernheim . In the 1960s, the 99ers regularly caused cup surprises. What is remarkable is the performance in the West German Cup in the 1964/65 season, when two regional league clubs, Borussia Mönchengladbach and Herbert Lektiven and Fortuna Düsseldorf, failed on the Westkampfbahn. The association league, trained by Leo Engels, only failed at the regional league and later cup finalists Alemannia Aachen . On December 27, 1964, SG Düren 99 lost 4-0 on the snow-covered Westkampfbahn in front of 9,000 spectators after they had held the draw for almost an hour.

After the cup flight in the 1960s, the 99s slipped back into mediocrity and had to relegate in 1974 as bottom of the table. However, the team succeeded in direct promotion to the association league before qualifying for the newly created Oberliga Nordrhein in 1978 was missed. In 1983 the 99ers won their fifth Middle Rhine Championship and were promoted to the then third-class Oberliga Nordrhein. After a 13th place in the 1984/85 season , relegation to the Association League followed a year later . It was more successful in the Middle Rhine Cup, which SG Düren won in 1988. In the resulting second participation in the DFB Cup in the 1988/89 season , Düren lost 3-1 to Kickers Offenbach . After years in the midfield of the association league, the Dürener went down to the state league in 1993 .

SG black and white and SG GFC

Through the merger with Schwarz-Weiß Düren in 2001, the new team played in the district league and in 2005 made it to the state league. However, the direct relegation followed before the club withdrew the team from the game during the 2006/07 district league season. The again independent 99ers slipped down to the district league B. Through the merger with GFC Düren 09 in 2011, the newly formed team entered the district league. In 2015 he was promoted to the national league. Three years later, the SG GFC secured the championship of the state league and thus secured the newly founded 1. FC Düren a place in the Middle Rhine League.

Personalities

Some famous athletes emerged from the club or belonged to the club as players or coaches.

Stadion

The SG Düren 99 played their home games since 1946 in the Westkampfbahn. The stadium was opened on August 9, 1914 by the predecessor club SC Germania Düren and until the 1970s had space for around 15,000 spectators. After modernization, the capacity is currently approved for 6,000 spectators. The attendance record was set at the DFB Cup game against 1. FC Kaiserslautern when 15,000 spectators saw the game. Before 1946, SG Düren 99 played in the stadium at Obertor .

Other departments

Handball

On November 22, 1922, a handball department was founded in Dürener FC 03 . The SC Germania Düren followed in the spring of 1924 . The handball players of SG Düren 99 rose in 1977 as champions of the Oberliga Mittelrhein in the third-class Regionalliga West . In the 1979/80 and 1981/82 seasons , the Düren team reached fifth place. In 1990 , the 99s were relegated from bottom of the table. During the 1981/82 season, the Dürener qualified for the first and only time for the DHB Cup , where the team was defeated by THW Kiel 18:27 in the first round . Between 2000 and 2011, the Dürener formed a syndicate with Gürzenich TV . In 2018, the Düren rose to the state league.

athletics

Edda Trocha was German long jump champion in 1973 and 1974 . In addition, she became German indoor champion in the long jump in 1973. Walter Ufer was German runner-up in the 1,500 meter run in 1921 . Two years later Heinrich Mattonet became German runner-up in the 100-meter run . Ufer and Mattonet competed for Germania Düren .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hardy Green , Christian Karn: The big book of the German football clubs . AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2009, ISBN 978-3-89784-362-2 , p. 133.
  2. Updates 2001. SG GFC Düren, accessed on April 7, 2019 .
  3. a b c story. SG GFC Düren 99 Handball, accessed on April 7, 2019 .
  4. Merger successfully completed. FuPa , accessed May 4, 2018 .
  5. ^ German Sports Club for Football Statistics (Ed.): Football in West Germany 1902/03 - 1932/33 . 2009, DNB  997617357 , p. 43-46, 130-141 .
  6. Hardy Greens : Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 1: From the Crown Prince to the Bundesliga. 1890 to 1963. AGON-Sportverlag, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-85-1 , page 181.
  7. cf. Greens (1996), page 219
  8. cf. Greens (1996), page 271
  9. ^ German Sports Club for Football Statistics (Ed.): Football in West Germany 1945 - 1952 . 2011, p. 161, 166 .
  10. cf. Greens (1996), page 350
  11. ^ German Sports Club for Football Statistics (ed.): Football in West Germany 1958–1963 . 2013, p. 185, 241, 250 .
  12. 1. FC Düren starts mostly with proven forces. FuPa, accessed June 3, 2018 .
  13. Sven Webers: DHB-Pokal main round 1981/82. Bundesligainfo.de, accessed on April 9, 2019 .