SSV Ulm 1846

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SSV Ulm 1846
Club logo of SSV Ulm 1846 football
Basic data
Surname SSV Ulm 1846 football e. V.
Seat Ulm , Baden-Wuerttemberg
founding May 5, 1970 ( SSV Ulm 1846 e.V. )
March 9, 2009 (spin-off)
Colours Black-and-white
Members 928 (July 16, 2018)
Board Anton Gugelfuß (Sports)
Thomas Oelmayer (Public Relations & Marketing)
Alexander Schöllhorn (Administration & Finance)
Website ssvulm1846-fussball.de
First soccer team
Head coach Holger Bachthaler
Venue Danube Stadium
Places 19,500
league Regionalliga southwest
2019/20 7th place
home
Away
Alternatively

The SSV Ulm 1846 football e. V. , SSV Ulm 1846 football for short and still generally known as SSV Ulm 1846 , is a football club from the Swabian city of Ulm . It was created in 2009 when the football department split off from the entire SSV Ulm 1846 club . The club colors of the club popularly known as “the sparrows” (after the Ulm sparrow ) are black and white, like the city colors of Ulm. The club, which played as the soccer division of the parent club from 1999 to 2000 in the Bundesliga and after the third insolvency in 2014 entered the fifth-class soccer league Baden-Wuerttemberg , is now back in the Regionalliga Südwest .

history

Predecessor clubs

The SSV Ulm 1846, to which today's club belonged as a football department until 2009, was created in 1970 through the merger of the two clubs TSG Ulm 1846 and 1. SSV Ulm 1928 . More information on the history and the other predecessor clubs can be found in the article on SSV Ulm 1846 .

TSG Ulm 1846

Club emblem of TSG Ulm 1846

At the beginning of 1893, a high school teacher from Ulm demonstrated the football game to the people of Ulm. In November 1894, a football department was created in the private gymnastics club in Ulm . Initially, until joining the Association of South German Football Associations in 1904, only private games were played. On May 15, 1909, the footballers split from the private gymnastics club and founded the Ulm FV in 1894 . From 1912 the club, which was already wearing black and white uniforms, played in the A-class. Opponents were mostly Bavarian clubs. Later the Ulmer FV became known nationwide for a few years in the Gauliga and participation in the Tschammer Cup . In its ranks, among others, the inside forward played Erwin Schadler , of the 1937 and 1938 a total of four denied caps for the German national team, as well as from the South German Football Association to tryouts as part of the Federal Cup used Walter Vollweiler or Georg Wurzer . The Ulm FV 1894 , which was merged in 1939 with the TB 1846 Ulm and the SpVgg Ulm 1889 to form TSG Ulm 1846 , and then the successor club played in the Gauliga from 1934 to 1936 and after the direct rise in 1938 until the championship was broken off in March 1945 .

After the war, most of the sports facilities were destroyed or confiscated by the occupying forces. In 1946 TSG Ulm became champions of the state league and rose to the Oberliga Süd, which had been newly created the year before . The club played from 1946 to 1949, in the 1952/53 season, from 1958 to 1961 and 1962/63 in the league and relegated several times to the II. Division . In the last league season before the introduction of the Bundesliga , the Ulm team took 8th place. They qualified for the regional league, which was set up as a substructure for the Bundesliga . The second division in the regional league from 1963 was followed two years later by relegation to the first amateur league . In 1967 TSG Ulm, which now turned to popular sport instead of football, even had to relegate to the 2nd amateur league before being promoted again in 1969.

1. SSV Ulm 1928

Club emblem of the 1st SSV Ulm 1928
Württemberg champion 1955

The SV Schwaben Ulm, founded in 1924, had previously advanced from the B-class to the highest German football class and played there against teams like 1. FC Nürnberg or FC Bayern Munich in front of several thousand spectators. After the merger to form 1. SSV Ulm, the regional league championship was won in 1930, and in 1931 they were promoted to the top division, the Bavarian regional league. In 1933 they qualified for the newly created Gauliga Württemberg , which they belonged to until 1942 and during which time they were twice runners-up. In the last season before the end of the war, SSV Ulm played again in the Gauliga, but only played four games due to the war before the game was stopped in March 1945.

After the end of the war, the 1. SSV Ulm started quite successfully and became runner-up in the regional league in 1946. Due to numerous players leaving in 1949, they moved into the district class, which was later renamed the 2nd amateur league. After being promoted back to the 1st amateur league in 1954, they became Wuerttemberg champion, which allowed them to participate in the promotion games to the 2nd division. After the missed promotion they won the runner-up in 1956. In 1957 the 1st SSV Ulm became the Württemberg Cup winner.

Foundation and first years of SSV Ulm in 1846

Club emblem of the SSV Ulm 1846
Placements in the 1970s

Playtime league space
1970/71 1. Amateur League North Württemberg 3.
1971/72 1. Amateur League North Württemberg 1.
1972/73 1. Amateur League North Württemberg 1.
1973/74 1. Amateur League North Württemberg 2.
1974/75 1. Amateur League North Württemberg 4th
1975/76 1. Amateur League North Württemberg 5.
1976/77 1. Amateur League North Württemberg 1.
1977/78 1. Amateur League North Württemberg 1.
1978/79 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 1.
1979/80 2nd Bundesliga South 16.
Legend
Promotion at the end of the season Relegation at the end of the season

The SSV Ulm 1846 resulted from the amalgamation of the two largest sports clubs in Ulm, the gymnastics and sports community Ulm 1846 and the 1st swimming and sports club Ulm on May 5, 1970. With over 8,300 members, the largest sports club in Germany at that time was created .

With the merger of the major clubs, the environment expected a rapid rise. In the first season 1970/71 the team finished 3rd in the 1st amateur league. In the following two seasons, the championship was won, but the promotion was missed. The next few years brought the second, fourth and fifth place. In 1976/77 and 1977/78 they were again champions, but did not make it up again.

For the 1978/79 season , the amateur leagues were introduced across Germany as a substructure for the 2nd South League . The Oberliga Baden-Württemberg was founded as a merger of the previously existing four amateur leagues, North Württemberg, Black Forest-Lake Constance, South Baden and North Baden. As a result, the promotion round necessary up to then to determine the promoter in the 2nd League South was omitted. The five best-placed teams from the four Baden-Württemberg amateur leagues qualified for the newly founded league, including SSV Ulm 1846 as last year's champions of the 1st amateur league in Northern Württemberg. With a four point lead over the runner-up SV Göppingen , Ulm became champions of the league in the first season and was promoted to the 2nd Bundesliga for the first time.

Between second and third class

SSV Ulm 1846 started its first second division season on July 28, 1979 with a 3-0 defeat at the Stuttgarter Kickers . However, the team found their way around the new league very quickly, they were not once more on a relegation zone in the further course of the season; at the end of the season they finished 16th. In 1981, the single-track 2nd Bundesliga was introduced with 20 clubs. In addition to the relegated teams from the Bundesliga, the four first-placed teams in the north and south seasons were directly qualified for this. The remaining participants were determined using a so-called "place number". This was calculated from the positions in the table achieved over the past three years. Since Ulm still played in the league in the 1978/79 season and only finished 16th in 1979/80 , qualification for the single-track 2. Bundesliga was practically only possible by reaching fourth place in the table in the 1980/81 season . Under coach Jörg Berger , the team settled in the top third of the table in the second half of the season. At the end of the season, 4th place was even within reach, as Ulm could have overtaken them with a win on the last match day against ESV Ingolstadt-Ringsee , with simultaneous defeat of the fourth-placed, but already qualified for the single-track 2nd division Stuttgarter Kickers . The Ulm team won their last game 1-0. Due to the 4-1 kickers at SpVgg Bayreuth , SSV Ulm 1846 remained in 5th place, missed qualifying for the single-track 2nd Bundesliga and had to return to the top division.

Placements in the 80s

Playtime league space
1980/81 2nd Bundesliga South 5.
1981/82 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 1.
1982/83 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 1.
1983/84 2nd Bundesliga 13.
1984/85 2nd Bundesliga 20th
1985/86 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 1.
1986/87 2nd Bundesliga 13.
1987/88 2nd Bundesliga 19th
1988/89 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 7th
1989/90 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 13.

In the following season, the Spatzen were five points ahead of second-placed SpVgg 07 Ludwigsburg champions of the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg. Since only four promotion places were available for the champions of the eight upper leagues due to the newly introduced single-track 2. Bundesliga, the second division promoters had to be determined again via a promotion round . As third in the southern group, the Ulm team only narrowly failed at FSV Frankfurt and FC Augsburg tied on points . After successfully defending their title, SSV Ulm qualified again for the promotion round in 1846. Ulm met 1. FC Saarbrücken , VfR Oli Bürstadt and SpVgg Unterhaching . The decisive game against Unterhaching at the Danube Stadium in Ulm was won 1-0 by a goal by Dieter Kohnle , so that Ulm was second class again in the 1983/84 season .

In the first year after the promotion they finished 13th. 1984/85 the SSV started the season quite well and was in the middle of the table. The 3-2 win against the later Bundesliga promoted 1. FC Nürnberg in November was followed by 23 games without a win, so that the Ulm team were relegated at the end of the season with only 22:54 points as the bottom of the table.

Just one year later, the sparrows managed to rise again directly. After two years in the 2nd division, they rose again in 1988 to the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg. There they finished only 7th in the 1988/89 season. In 1990, the club even threatened to slip into the fourth class Verbandsliga Württemberg , but at the end of the season reached a relegation rank of four points ahead of 13th place. After a seventh place in the next and the runner-up in the next but one In the year 1992/93 the SSV Ulm succeeded again in the league championship in 1846 . In the promotion round it was once again not enough to make it to the 2nd Bundesliga. Right at the beginning, 20,000 spectators saw a 2-0 draw against TSV 1860 Munich , which was something of a preliminary decision. This was followed by victories in Norderstedt (2: 0) and Offenbach (2: 1), but at home only a draw (0: 0 against Offenbach and 2: 2 against Norderstedt). In the end, a winning goal was missing in the 1-1 draw in Munich against the 60s to actually move up.

The 1993/94 season was similar to the previous one. After the league championship - Marc Arnold from Ulm was the top scorer with 24 goals - they only finished second in the promotion round after defeats against Eintracht Trier , Kickers Emden and at FSV Frankfurt .

March through to the Bundesliga and deep fall

Placements in the 1990s

Playtime league space
1990/91 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 7th
1991/92 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 2.
1992/93 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 1.
1993/94 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 1.
1994/95 Regional league south 4th
1995/96 Regional league south 3.
1996/97 Regional league south 6th
1997/98 Regional league south 1.
1998/99 2nd Bundesliga 3.
1999/2000 1st National League 16.

After failing in the promotion round, they played from 1994 onwards in the Regionalliga Süd, which was founded as a new substructure for the 2nd Bundesliga, and always occupied top places in the next four seasons. In 1996, SSV Ulm won the German amateur championship in 1846 with a 2-1 win against VfR Mannheim in the Danube Stadium at home .

In 1997/98, the team, under the leadership of coach Ralf Rangnick, became champions of the Regionalliga Süd and then managed to march straight through to the Bundesliga via the second division. The club started in the second division season 1998/99 in the role of relegation candidate, but the Ulm "Spatzen" not only managed the given season goal, relegation, they managed the impossible promotion as third in the table behind Arminia Bielefeld and SpVgg Unterhaching . This was the first time in its history that the club was able to move into the upper house.

However, after only one year of membership, the club had to leave the Bundesliga in 2000 - albeit unhappy in the end. Ten game days before the end, the “Spatzen” seemed to have escaped the relegation zone after a surprising 2-1 away win at third-placed Hamburger SV . Ulm had 30 points after 24 matchdays as twelfth in the table and was thus closer to the UEFA Cup zone than the relegation ranks. The table-16. Eintracht Frankfurt (22 points) in the first relegation place was eight points behind at this point.

But it was followed on March 18, 2000 by a 1: 9 home defeat against Bayer 04 Leverkusen , second in the table , and the decline began. In the last ten games of the season the black and whites managed in the home game against VfL Wolfsburg with 2: 0 in the penultimate round only one win and two draws (1: 1 against VfB Stuttgart 0: 0 at FC Schalke 04 ). Eintracht Frankfurt under coach Felix Magath had caught up and left SSV 1846 behind. On the last day of the match, Ulm had to compete with their direct rivals Eintracht Frankfurt, where they would only have had a chance of staying up through a win and only because the Frankfurt team had previously been punished with a point deduction by the DFB. Although they had equalized in the meantime, Ulm lost 2-1 to a penalty shot by Horst Heldt in the 90th minute. With 35 points after 34 match days, SSV Ulm had to relegate in 1846 in tenth place in the table.

The SSV 1846 sold around 15,000 season tickets to its fans in the Bundesliga season, which ensured an average of 21,500 visitors in the Danube Stadium, which was expanded to 23,500 seats during the Bundesliga time with the help of additional mobile stands.

Since the Ulm team missed relegation in the 2nd Bundesliga in the following 2000/01 season and the license for the regional league was refused, the crash in the fourth division followed in 2001. As the first team in accordance with the statutes of the club going bankrupt because of the association as an automatic relegated the league would have stood firm, entered only the second team - which henceforth served as the first team - in the Verbandsliga Württemberg on.

Consolidation and renewed bankruptcy

Placements from 2000 to 2011

Playtime league space
2000/01 2nd Bundesliga 16.
2001/02 Association League Württemberg 2.
2002/03 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 2.
2003/04 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 6th
2004/05 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 2.
2005/06 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 3.
2006/07 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 2.
2007/08 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 2.
2008/09 Regional league south 7th
2009/10 Regional league south 6th
2010/11 Regional league south 17th
Ulm's coach Brobeil celebrates promotion to the league in 2002 with the fans

In the following season, SSV Ulm 1846 was the fifth division, the lowest-class club that could ever win a game in the DFB Cup - even against a first division team. After relegation to the Württemberg Association League in 2001, relegated players from the 2nd Bundesliga were still eligible to play in the DFB Cup. With a 2-1 win against Bundesliga club 1. FC Nürnberg on August 26, 2001, the club created the sensation and made it into the second round of the cup, in which they defeated the then second division 1. FC Union Berlin with 0: 3 retired.

After falling into the Württemberg Association League, Harry Brobeil's team managed to return to the Baden-Württemberg Oberliga. The young team was confidently second in the table, also thanks to the experienced Dragan Trkulja and Janusz Góra , who were supported by the young 21-time goal scorer Ünal Demirkiran . In direct comparison with the Baden association league club SV Linx, the Ulm team finally managed to get promoted to the Baden-Württemberg Oberliga through the relegation game.

After the immediate return to the league, the promotion to the third-class Regionalliga Süd was missed every year. In 2008, the second of four teams made it into the newly designed, only fourth-class, three-track regional league. As early as three game days before the end of the season, the Ulm team qualified as the first team in the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg for the newly organized Regionalliga Süd; they finished second behind SC Freiburg II .

In 2006 and 2007, SSV Ulm 1846 reached the final of the Württemberg Association Cup twice in a row , the winner of which automatically qualifies for the first round of the DFB Cup . In the 2005/06 season, the team lost 6: 7 on penalties against the higher-class regional league team Stuttgarter Kickers and in the following 2006/07 season against the major league rivals 1. FC Normannia Gmünd 1: 2.

On June 3, 2008, coach Paul Sauter was sacked despite promotion to the regional league. The reason for this were different expectations with regard to the table targets for the new 2008/09 season. His successor was Markus Gisdol , who had coached former league competitor SG Sonnenhof Großaspach until November 2007 .

On June 12, 2008, the office was searched by the public prosecutor's office together with officials from the main customs office and the tax authorities. The reason was the suspicion of fraud, the withholding of wages and tax evasion. There was also a suspicion that football players had been registered as unemployed or only marginally employed in previous years, although they were employed full-time as football players. The investigations were directed against former officials and employees as well as players of the club. As of December 2010, 16 of the 32 individual proceedings were discontinued. Ten proceedings have not yet been completed. Charges have been brought against two former players and penalties have been issued against four players.

In the 2008/09 regional league season , SSV 1846 was the only undefeated team to make it to the top of the table for the first time on the 8th matchday, which, however , had to be given up again on the 9th matchday with a defeat against SC Pfullendorf . In the remaining games of the first half of the season, the Ulm team managed only one victory, with six draws and one defeat, so that at the end of the semi-series, they reached 7th place in the table. In the second half of the season, the team won 26 points, one less than in the first half of the season, so that at the end of the series, 7th place was achieved. During the season, the football department of SSV Ulm separated from the sports club in March 2009 and founded their own football club, SSV Ulm 1846 Football. After just one season, Markus Gisdol announced that he would take over the second team of TSG 1899 Hoffenheim in the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg in the following season . The new coach was Manfred Paula , who had previously coached the Bayern division TSV Aindling . Due to the lack of success, he gave up his post after eight match days and was replaced by Ralf Becker , who took up his first head coach.

Four SSV 1846 games in the final stages of the 2008/09 regional league season are suspected of being tampered with. On November 27, 2009, in connection with the betting scandal , the club announced the resignation of the Croatian players Davor Kraljevic, Marijo Marinovic and Dinko Radojevic.

The SSV Ulm 1846 relied on a rejuvenation of the team in the summer of 2010 due to the tense financial situation that accompanied the newly founded club. Since the number of spectators did not develop as desired and no partner could be won from the region for greater support, the club had to file for bankruptcy at the end of November that year. Shortly afterwards, coach Becker announced his resignation and agreed with the insolvency administrator to terminate the coaching contract at the end of the year. Thereupon the previous assistant coach Janusz Góra took over the office.

At the beginning of 2011, insolvency proceedings against the association were opened before the Ulm District Court. Thus, the SSV Ulm was prematurely determined in 1846 as relegated from the Regionalliga Süd.

Rebuild and third bankruptcy

Placements 2012–14

Playtime league space
2011/12 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 1.
2012/13 Regionalliga southwest 10.
2013/14 Regionalliga southwest 15th

On June 16, 2011, the creditors voted unanimously in favor of the bankruptcy plan. With total claims of over one million euros, a symbolic total amount of 1,846 euros was paid out, which corresponds to a disbursement rate of 0.16%. This paved the way for the club to start the 2011/12 season free of debt. At the general meeting on June 28, 2011, Paul Sauter, who had previously been appointed by the insolvency administrator Martin Hörmann, was elected president without dissenting votes. Sauter was a former player and had coached the club three times. He informed the members about the renewed structures, such as the abolition of the supervisory board, and called for a “radical austerity course” for the future. In addition to his office as president, Sauter was also the team's fourth coach for the 2011/12 season.

On February 2, 2012, Paul Sauter, President of SSV Ulm 1846 Fußball and Wilhelm Götz, President of SSV Ulm 1846, announced at a press conference in Ulm that they had found a solution to the previous year-long dispute over the footballers' logo. This dispute arose in the course of the insolvency of SSV Ulm 1846 football after some members and department heads of the sports club had demanded a clear distinction between SSV Ulm 1846 and SSV Ulm 1846 football with regard to the logo. A compromise was reached by agreeing to integrate the word “FUSSBALL” into the logo for the footballers and thus only make a tiny change.

SSV Ulm started the 2011/12 league season in 1846 with a small budget and great uncertainty, after all a new team had been built - all under the premise of radical austerity after the second bankruptcy. The club lost only three games that season. As the only one of the 17 upper league teams, the "Spatzen", who took the lead in the standings for the first time on the 29th matchday after the 3-1 home win against SpVgg Neckarelz , remained unbeaten in their own stadium, so that at the end of the season they took first place in the pool -Wuerttemberg Oberhaus was nine points ahead of the strong promoted VfR Mannheim . After the league championship, President Sauter resigned from his position as head coach and handed it over to his previous assistant coach Stephan Baierl.

After a successful start to the 2012/13 season and a place in the top group of the regional league, the team slipped to 10th place in October and November 2012, with only two points from six games. Then coach Baierl was released, and his predecessor Sauter took over the post as head coach again.

Mainly due to high player salaries, the financial liabilities amounted to 420,000 euros in May 2014, and the club filed for bankruptcy for the third time. The club played the season in the regional league out of competition to the end and thus secured participation in the following league season 2014/15.

Another new start in the Oberliga and promotion to the Regionalliga Südwest

Placements from 2014

Playtime league space
2014/15 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 5.
2015/16 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 1.
2016/17 Regionalliga southwest 9.
2017/18 Regionalliga southwest 9.
2018/19 Regionalliga southwest 6th
2019/20 Regionalliga southwest 7th

Since the second team of 1. FC Heidenheim was canceled for the 2014/15 season, SSV Ulm 1846 benefited from numerous newcomers. Later top performers such as Bastian Heidecker and Burak Coban joined the club. A mixed start to the season was followed by a solid remaining season, which the SSV completed in the front midfield.

The team was further strengthened in the 2015/16 season; so came about Alper Bagceci from the second division 1. FC Heidenheim or Florian Krebs from the 3. Liga ( Chemnitzer FC ). A duel with FC Nöttingen quickly emerged , which the SSV won: they took the league lead on matchday 29, did not give them up until the end of the season and won the league for the eighth time. SSV Ulm 1846 also provided the most successful goal scorer with David Braig (26 goals).

A balanced regional league season followed; 14 wins were compared to 13 defeats and nine draws. Despite six relegated teams from the regional league, four game days before the end of the season it was clear that the league would be preserved. The following season 2017/18 started with three defeats, which meant that coach Stephan Baierl resigned on August 15, 2017. The team was then looked after by the previous assistant coach Tobias Flitsch, who has the A license, and Sven Ackermann, who was previously employed as the U19 coach. Despite the change of coach, it took until match day 10 to win the first season. By now eleven games without defeat, they worked their way into the middle of the table. After four defeats from the last five games in the 2017 calendar year, SSV Ulm 1846 was in eleventh place in the table at the winter break, three points before the first possible relegation place in the league . The sparrows were able to make the second half of the season similarly successful and so in the catch-up game on April 17, 2018 against TSV Steinbach, they were able to celebrate their relegation early on. In the last game of the season against SV Waldhof Mannheim , Holger Betz, "Germany's most loyal professional footballer", said goodbye to his playing days as a footballer. Betz, who had played for SSV since 1993, took over as goalkeeping coach for the 2018/19 season.

For the 2018/2019 season, Holger Bachthaler, a former SSV player, was introduced as the new head coach. Bachthaler was previously the U19 coach at FC Red Bull Salzburg . Among other things, the win of the WFV Cup from the 2017/18 season was repeated in the following two seasons 2018/19 and 2019/20.

Names and numbers

Championship successes

Cup successes

Eternal tables

Football Bundesliga
Pl. society year Sp. S. U N T. T + / T- Pt.
50. SSV Ulm 1846 1 34 9 8th 17th 36:62 −26 35
2. Bundesliga soccer
Pl. society Years Sp. S. U N T. T + / T- Pt.
47. SSV Ulm 1846 8th 298 96 77 125 427: 492 −65 365
Football regional league
Pl. society Years Sp. S. U N T. T + / T- Pt.
59. SSV Ulm 1846 13+ 400 173 98 129 643: 520 +123 617
Football league Baden-Württemberg since 1978
Pl. society Years Sp. S. U N T. T + / T- Pt.
03. SSV Ulm 1846 19th 652 361 161 130 1289: 709 +580 1244

Squad of the 2018/19 season

As of November 7, 2018

No. Nat. Surname birthday At SSV 1846 since Last club
goal
01 GermanyGermany David Hundred Marks August 6, 1997 2018 SV Grödig
12 GermanyGermany Jerome wisdom May 3, 1999 2018 VfB Stuttgart U19
39 GermanyGermany Christian Ortag January 14, 1995 2018 Stuttgart Kickers
Defense
02 CroatiaCroatia Tino Bradara December 12, 1997 2016 SV Sandhausen II
03 GermanyGermany Michael Schindele January 27, 1994 2017 1. FC Kaiserslautern II
04th GermanyGermany Florian Krebs (C)Captain of the crew November 15, 1988 2015 Hallescher FC
05 GermanyGermany Johannes Reichert 2nd July 1991 2016 1. FC Kaiserslautern II
24 GreeceGreece Georgios Manolakis May 28, 1999 2018 VfR Aalen U19
25th GermanyGermany Lukas Hoffmann April 13, 1997 2018 SG Sonnenhof Großaspach
30th GermanyGermany David Kammerbauer February 11, 1997 2017 Sports fans victories
midfield
06th ItalyItaly Luigi Campagna December 12, 1989 2018 VfB Germania Halberstadt
07th GermanyGermany Albano Gashi January 14, 1995 2018 without a club
10 GermanyGermany Ardian Morina November 23, 1993 2017 VfB Stuttgart II
13 GermanyGermany Felix Nierichlo May 14, 1993 2016 FV Illertissen
15th GermanyGermany Marcel Schmidts June 29, 1994 2017 SV Goeppingen
16 GermanyGermany Lennart Stoll May 3, 1996 2018 Prussia Munster
18th GermanyGermany Adrian Beck June 9, 1997 2018 Neckarsulm Sport Union
20th GermanyGermany Alper Bagceci April 16, 1984 2015 1. FC Heidenheim
21st GermanyGermany Nicolas Jann March 21, 1992 2018 FV Illertissen
22nd CroatiaCroatia Vinko Sapina June 29, 1995 2016 FC Memmingen
27 GermanyGermany Marcel Schmitt January 18, 1998 2018 SC Freiburg II
31 GermanyGermany Nico Gutjahr May 15, 1993 2018 SG Sonnenhof Großaspach
attack
08th GermanyGermany Aron Viventi May 8, 1997 2018 TSG 1899 Hoffenheim II
09 GermanyGermany Thomas Rathgeber April 30, 1985 2016 FC Schalke 04 II
11 GermanyGermany David Braig July 22, 1991 2006 TSG Ehingen
17th GermanyGermany Kai Luibrand April 24, 1994 2018 Karlsruher SC
23 GermanyGermany Steffen Kienle January 18, 1995 2017 VfR Aalen
29 KyrgyzstanKyrgyzstan Vitaly Lux February 27, 1989 2018 SpVgg Unterhaching

Trainer

  • 2007–2008 Paul Sauter
  • 2008–2009 Markus Gisdol
  • 2009 Manfred Paula0000
  • 2009–2010 Ralf Becker
  • 2010–2011 Janusz Góra
  • 2011–2012 Paul Sauter
  • 2012 0000Stephan Baierl
  • 2012–2013 Paul Sauter
  • 2013–2014 Oliver Unsöld, Herbert Zanker
  • 2014–2017 Stephan Baierl
  • 2017–2018 Tobias Flitsch
  • since 07/2018 Holger Bachthaler

Well-known former players

The following list contains former top performers and record holders of the club as well as players who began their careers with Ulmer FV, SSV Ulm, TSG Ulm 1846 or SSV Ulm 1846 and who later celebrated significant successes. The players are sorted chronologically according to their club membership.

Uli Hoeneß played for TSG Ulm 1846 from 1967 to 1970
Sascha Rösler played for SSV Ulm 1846 from 1992 to 2001
player nationality time special services
Walter Vollweiler German 1924-1933 the striker played for Ulm FV 1894 and scored 75 goals as a 17-year-old in the year of promotion to the top division; was excluded from the association in 1933 because of his Jewish descent
Alfred Picard German 1930-1940 National football player of the 1. SSV Ulm
Erwin Schädler German 1934-1949
1948-1949
National football player of the Ulm FV 1894
Hans Eberle German 1946-1953 TSG Ulm 1846; Soccer player, Olympic participant 1952
Anton "Toni" Turek German 1947-1950 Goalkeeper of TSG Ulm 1846; National player, world champion 1954
Wolfgang Fahrian German 1960-1963 Goalkeeper of TSG Ulm 1846; National player, 10 international matches, World Cup goalkeeper 1962
Dieter Hoeneß German 1967-1973 TSG Ulm 1846; National player, vice world champion 1986
Uli Hoeneß German 1967-1970 TSG Ulm 1846; National player, world champion 1974
Walter Kubanczyk German 1970-1985 Amateur soccer player
Sascha Rösler German 1992-2001
Dragan Trkulja Serb 1992-2002 Regionalliga top scorer in 1996
Janusz Góra Pole 1997-2002
2003-2007
11 international matches for Poland; later assistant coach, interim coach and head coach of the second team
Thomas Tuchel German 1994-1998 later Bundesliga coach of Mainz 05 and Borussia Dortmund
Joe Zinnbauer German 1994 2014–2015 coach of Hamburger SV in the 1st Bundesliga
Hans van de Haar Dutch 1999-2001 best Bundesliga shooter of the club
Mario Gomez German 2000-2001 In his youth he played for SSV Ulm in 1846 and at the age of 16 moved to VfB Stuttgart , where he became a national soccer player and German champion
Loris Karius German 2001-2005 played in the youth team of SSV Ulm in 1846 and moved to VfB Stuttgart in 2005 at the age of twelve; Goalkeeper at Liverpool FC since 2016
Sebastian Griesbeck German 2010-2013 joined SSV Ulm 1846 II at the age of 20; convinced through training performances and short assignments and received a contract for the 1st team; moved to 1. FC Heidenheim in 2013, with whom he was promoted to the second division
Sandro Sirigu German 2005-2009 From the youth of the SSV, came via SC Freiburg II, 1. FC Heidenheim to the later Bundesliga promoted SV Darmstadt 98

Placements of the SSV Ulm 1846


season league space  Gates  Points Cup
1970/71 1. Amateur League North Württemberg 03/16 65:28 45-15
1971/72 1. Amateur League North Württemberg 01/16 73:20 48-12
1972/73 1. Amateur League North Württemberg 01/16 45:17 44-16
1973/74 1. Amateur League North Württemberg 02/17 65:18 49-15
1974/75 1. Amateur League North Württemberg 04/16 52:29 38-22
1975/76 1. Amateur League North Württemberg 05/16 47:35 36-28 Finalist WFV Cup
1976/77 1. Amateur League North Württemberg 01/16 56:24 47-13 DFB Cup 1st round
1977/78 1. Amateur League North Württemberg 01/16 60:21 47-13
1978/79 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 01/20 71:37 51-25 DFB-Pokal round of 16
1979/80 2nd Bundesliga South 16/21 51:57 36-44
1980/81 2nd Bundesliga South 05/20 1 59:39 47-29 DFB Cup, 3rd round
1981/82 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 01/18 2 63:23 49-19 DFB-Pokal quarter-finals, WFV-Pokal winner
1982/83 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 01/19 87:36 53-19 DFB-Pokal 1st round, WFV-Pokal winner
1983/84 2nd Bundesliga 13/20 58:68 32-44 DFB Cup 1st round
1984/85 2nd Bundesliga 20/20 48:81 22-54 DFB Cup 1st round
1985/86 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 01/19 81:41 49-23 DFB-Pokal round of 16
1986/87 2nd Bundesliga 13/20 55:63 35-41
1987/88 2nd Bundesliga 19/20 51:75 29-47 DFB Cup 2nd round
1988/89 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 07/18 65:52 36-32 DFB Cup 1st round
1989/90 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 13/18 58:55 31-37
1990/91 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 07/18 40:33 39-29
1991/92 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 02/18 55:34 46-22 WFV Cup winner
1992/93 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 01/18 2 67:30 45-23 DFB Cup 3rd round
1993/94 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 01/18 2 68:36 46-22 WFV Cup winner
1994/95 Regional league south 04/18 69:45 45-23 DFB-Pokal 2nd round, WFV-Pokal winner
1995/96 Regional league south 03/18 56:40 60 DFB-Pokal 1st round, German amateur champion
1996/97 Regional league south 06/18 71:50 54 DFB-Pokal 1st round, WFV-Pokal winner
1997/98 Regional league south 01/18 63:36 60 DFB-Pokal round of 16
1998/99 2nd Bundesliga 03/18 63:51 58 DFB Cup 1st round
1999/2000 Bundesliga 16/18 36:62 35 DFB-Pokal round of 16
2000/01 2nd Bundesliga 16/18 3 42:58 34 DFB-Pokal round of 16
2001/02 Association League Württemberg 02/17 65:23 71 DFB Cup 2nd round
2002/03 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 02/18 72:24 69 3rd round of the WFV Cup
2003/04 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 06/19 60:55 55 3rd round of the WFV Cup
2004/05 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 02/18 70:45 72 Quarter finals WFV Cup
2005/06 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 03/18 89:32 75 Finalist WFV Cup
2006/07 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 02/18 84:29 76 Finalist WFV Cup
2007/08 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 02/18 61:25 71 3rd round of the WFV Cup
2008/09 Regional league south 07/18 55:35 53 2nd round of the WFV Cup
2009/10 Regional league south 06/18 52:45 51 Round of 16 WFV Cup
2010/11 Regional league south 17/18 4 0-0 0 3rd round of the WFV Cup
2011/12 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 01/18 60:27 71 3rd round of the WFV Cup
2012/13 Regionalliga southwest 10/19 46:46 51 Semi-final WFV Cup
2013/14 Regionalliga southwest 15/18 39:56 32 Semi-final WFV Cup
2014/15 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 05/18 61:43 56 Quarter finals WFV Cup
2015/16 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 01/18 78:32 75 Quarter finals WFV Cup
2016/17 Regionalliga southwest 09/19 48:46 51 Round of 16 WFV Cup
2017/18 Regionalliga southwest 09/19 56:54 48 WFV Cup winner
2018/19 Regionalliga southwest 06/18 50:43 57 DFB-Pokal 2nd round, WFV-Pokal winner
2019/20 Regionalliga southwest 07/18 38:24 35 DFB-Pokal 1st round, WFV-Pokal winner

1 Missed qualification for single-track 2nd Bundesliga
2 failed in the promotion round to 2nd Bundesliga
3 License for regional league denied, then insolvency of the club
4 Insolvency proceedings during the season, all season games out of valuation

Outstanding point game results

the highest victories

the greatest defeats

Second soccer team

In 2004, the Spatzen footballers again founded an official second team alongside their "first" team, which was already playing in the Baden-Württemberg Oberliga. Due to the re-establishment, you had to start in the lowest class in the Württemberg football district Donau / Iller, the district league B. After three ascents in a row, the SSV Ulm 1846 II played in the 2007/08 season in the Württemberg state league, season 2, where they reached an 11th place after a 4th place in the first 2008/09 season and long to fight for relegation had to. In 2011, however, the team rose from the Württemberg regional league, season 2, in the district league Donau / Iller. At the end of the 2012/13 season, SSV Ulm 1846 II managed to return to the state league, season 2, within the Württemberg Football Association (WFV). With 96:28 goals and 73 points, the "little sparrows" were the titleholders of the Donau / Iller district league, ahead of second-placed runners-up and city neighbor SV Grimmelfingen, who had a goal difference of 89:40. In 2014 you had to relegate from the state to the district league.

For the 2017/18 season, the second team was canceled from active play.

Fans

Since the end of the 1990s there has been an official friendship between Spatzen fans and fans of Rot-Weiß Oberhausen . The biggest rival of Ulm is SSV Reutlingen , but fans of VfB Stuttgart are also extremely reluctant to see Ulm. The relationship to the fan scene of the Stuttgarter Kickers and 1. FC Heidenheim is also explosive .

Stadion

The Danube Stadium has a capacity of 19,500 spectators and is owned by the city of Ulm. The fan block of SSV Ulm 1846 was up until the 2000/01 season on the uncovered standing room of the D-block to the right of the main stand in the corner of the south curve, which is adjacent to the club's own swimming pool. With the start of the 2001/02 association league season, this traditional Ulm fan area was relocated to the far corner of the covered opposite stand (3000 seats, the structure, which was only completed in 1999, is adjacent to the Gänswiese, where football and hockey is trained and played). to give the loyal crowd a better hearing than in the standing room, where most of the acoustics are lost due to the lack of a roof. But with the start of the 2008/09 regional league season, the organized fans of SSV 1846 returned to the D-block of the south curve at the swimming pool at Stadionstrasse and thus to the uncovered standing stands to the right of the main grandstand. Safety regulations in the opposite stand were given as the reason for this. In addition, the back straight of the Danube Stadium has been closed for cost reasons at home games of SSV Ulm 1846 since spring 2011. Exceptions are football games, where a large audience can be expected. For the 2014/15 season, the opposite stand was reopened for spectators. This was also retained for the following seasons.

Main grandstand and D-block Opposite stand E block
Main grandstand and D-block Opposite stand E block

Club songs

In August 1997 the SSV Ulm published the official anthem "Forever SSV" in 1846, which is sung by the singer Jennifer Engels (formerly Nunes).

The "anthem" accompanied SSV Ulm in 1846 up to the 1st Bundesliga and is still sung live in the stadium at all important games and major sporting events.

In March 2013, the SSV Ulm 1846 presented the song The sparrows again as another club song as part of the "Spatzentalks" of the Südwest Presse .

literature

  • Markus Ebner, Helmut Schneider: Fight Ulmer fight. A year in football heaven . MEBV publishing house. Ulm 2000, ISBN 3-00-006199-1 .
  • Günter Geyer: Commemorative publication of SSV Ulm 1846 for the 150th anniversary . Ulm 1996.
  • Alexander Guber (author), Reinhold Eberhardt: SSV Ulm 1846 - football tradition in black and white . Publishing house Mediagroup le Roux, Erbach 2008.
  • Werner Raupp : Toni Turek - "football god". A biography. Hildesheim: Arete Verlag 2019 (1st, reviewed edition) ( ISBN 978-3-96423-008-9 ), pp. 35–37 (1. SSV Ulm 1928), pp. 59–72 (TSG Ulm 1846) and . ö.

Web links

Commons : SSV Ulm 1846 Fußball  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. SSV.de: Membership SSV Ulm
  2. Gerold Knehr: A new highlight in cup history. kicker , August 26, 2001, accessed February 8, 2012 .
  3. ^ Search of those responsible and players of the SSV Ulm 1846 e. V. for fraud, withholding wages and tax evasion. Ulm Public Prosecutor's Office, June 12, 2008, accessed February 8, 2012 .
  4. ^ Hans-Uli Mayer: SSV footballer offside. Südwest Presse , December 16, 2010, archived from the original on December 18, 2010 ; Retrieved February 8, 2012 .
  5. DFB referee in the sights of the investigators. Focus , November 21, 2009, accessed February 8, 2012 .
  6. SSV Ulm 1846 dismisses three players ( Memento from February 12, 2013 in the Internet Archive )
  7. SSV 46 files for bankruptcy. SSV Ulm 1846 football, November 25, 2010, accessed on February 8, 2012 .
  8. ^ Contract with Ralf Becker is terminated. SSV Ulm 1846 football, December 1, 2010, accessed on February 8, 2012 .
  9. ^ Rüdiger Bergmann: SSV Ulm 1846: The Sparrows' insolvency plan approved. Südwest Presse , June 17, 2011, archived from the original on June 22, 2011 ; Retrieved February 8, 2012 .
  10. Radiance after the elections: No votes against ( memento from September 11, 2012 in the Internet Archive )
  11. Rüdiger Bergmann: Sparrow President Paul Sauter: Double role is not permanent. Südwest Presse , June 29, 2011, archived from the original on July 2, 2011 ; Retrieved February 8, 2012 .
  12. New club logo. SSV Ulm 1846 football, February 2, 2012, accessed on February 8, 2012 .
  13. ^ Rüdiger Bergmann, Winfried Vogler: Sauter pulls the emergency brake. In: Südwest Presse , November 14, 2012.
  14. Rudi Kübler: appointed insolvency administrator for SSV Ulm 1846 football. In: Südwest Presse, May 26, 2014.
  15. Stephan Baierl resigns as trainer of the sparrows. In: fupa.net. Retrieved August 15, 2017 .
  16. "I am and will remain Ulm" - This is the most loyal professional in Germany. In: Sportbuzzer. January 18, 2018, accessed May 17, 2018 .
  17. Kader , ssvulm1846-fussball.de
  18. transfermarkt.de: SSV Ulm squad 1846
  19. SSV Ulm1846: Jennifer "Jenny" Nunes sings the new Sparrow anthem. In: chaosconvoyulm.net. August 23, 1997, accessed May 10, 2013 .
  20. SSV Ulm1846: The championship celebration in the Danube Stadium. In: ssvulm1846-fussball.de. May 18, 2016, Retrieved May 28, 2016 .
  21. ^ SSV Ulm 1846: The new sparrow song. In: ssvulm1846-fussball.de. SSV Ulm 1846, March 16, 2013, accessed on May 28, 2016 .

Coordinates: 48 ° 24 ′ 11.3 "  N , 10 ° 0 ′ 39"  E