Weinviertel Lower Austria

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Logo of the former SVS Lower Austria

Weinviertel Niederösterreich was a table tennis club from Wolkersdorf in the Weinviertel , Lower Austria . He was represented with a team in the super league and also played in the European Champions League .

history

In 1998 the SVS Niederösterreich emerged from the SV Schwechat and Union Wolkersdorf clubs . The aim was to found a strong team to present both cities as well as the federal state of Lower Austria nationally and internationally. The new association is financed by funding from the state of Lower Austria, the city of Schwechat and well-known sponsors. The home of the SVS are alternately the cities of Wolkersdorf and Schwechat. At the moment the players in the Austrian national team are almost identical to the players in the SVS. From the 2006/07 season the clubs SV Schwechat and SVS NÖ were merged (in 1998 only the professional players switched from Schwechat to Lower Austria). In the 2007/08 season, SVS Niederösterreich won the Champions League for the first time in the fifth final. In the 2008/09 Champions League season, they were already certain as group winners ahead of time and were thus in the quarter-finals. There they played against GV Hennebont TT, where they were eliminated with a total score of 3: 6.

At the end of the 2014/15 season, SV Schwechat got out of the cooperation and the club was renamed Weinviertel Niederösterreich . Since then, the venue has been the Wolkersdorfer Schlossparkhalle instead of the Werner Schlager Academy in Schwechat. In 2016 the team won the ETTU Cup . At the end of the 2015/16 season, the club disbanded.

Team 2015/16

successes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b history ( memento of December 16, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) (accessed on December 29, 2015)
  2. EChL: SVS group winners despite defeat (January 31, 2009)
  3. EChL: End of the quarter-finals for the SVS article from March 29, 2009 (accessed on January 24, 2018)
  4. Final Rounds ( Memento of April 14, 2009 in the Internet Archive ) (accessed October 8, 2012)
  5. After 16 years, SVS NÖ became Weinviertel NÖ ( Memento from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Kleine Zeitung, June 22, 2014.
  6. tischtennis magazine , 2016/5 page 6
  7. ^ Report and results: DTS magazine , 2000/4 pages 26–27 + 30