SV 07 Neuhaus
SV 07 Neuhaus | |||
Full name | Sports club 07 Neuhaus eV | ||
place |
Paderborn - Neuhaus Castle , North Rhine-Westphalia |
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Founded | August 14, 1907 (as Arminia Neuhaus ) |
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Dissolved | June 8, 1973 | ||
Club colors | blue White | ||
Stadion | Hermann Löns Stadium | ||
Top league | Gauliga Westphalia | ||
successes | no | ||
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The SV 07 Neuhaus was a sports club from the Paderborn district of Schloß Neuhaus . The first soccer team played for a year in what was then the first-class Gauliga Westfalen . The SV is a predecessor of today's SC Paderborn 07 .
history
On August 14, 1907, 20 football fans founded the Arminia Neuheus club as the first and therefore oldest football club in what is now the Paderborn district. The Arminia was called Concordia Neuhaus from 1910 and finally SV 07 Neuhaus from 1919. Shortly after the end of the Second World War , TV Westfalia Neuhaus joined SV 07 as a gymnastics department. In 1957 the club was finally renamed SV 07 Schloß Neuhaus after the former Neuhaus office was given the addition of a castle.
On June 8, 1973, SV 07 Neuhaus finally merged with the soccer department of TuS Sennelager to form TuS Schloß Neuhaus . This merged on July 1, 1985 with 1. FC Paderborn to form TuS Paderborn-Neuhaus , which has been called SC Paderborn 07 since 1997. The handball , gymnastics and athletics departments of TuS Schloß Neuhaus, on the other hand, founded TSV Schloß Neuhaus on June 4, 1985 .
Soccer
In 1931 he was promoted to the then second-class 1st district class Westphalia, group south . After the introduction of the Gauligen as the top division, the Neuhausers slipped down into the third division in 1933. Four years later, he was promoted to the second-class district class East Westphalia , which had to be left down again after a year. For the 1944/45 season , SV Neuhaus was accepted into the Gauliga without any athletic qualifications. There, the team lost their only game against Sportfreunde Rot-Weiß Paderborn , a war game community from VfJ and SV Paderborn with 0: 5 before the game operation due to the war be stopped had.
After the end of the war, the team first established itself in the Paderborn district class and was runner-up in 1953 behind VfL Geseke . Five years later, the Neuhäuser were again runner-up, this time behind VfJ 08 Paderborn. In the meantime, the Hermann Löns Stadium was opened on September 8, 1957 . In 1959, they were promoted to the then fourth-class Landesliga Westfalen and SV 07 Neuhaus took over the leading sporting role in the city for a few years. The sporting highlight was the 1962/63 season, when the Neuhausen state league third behind SuS Lage and SV Brackwede . Only two years later, the team rose with 7:53 points and 27:136 goals in the district league. The Neuhäuser lost twice with 0:10 during the season; at home against SV Löhne-Obernbeck and away at Union Herford .
In the following season 1965/66 the team was passed into the district class. The Neuhäuser managed to get back up straight away, but after a third place in the 1967/68 promotion season slipped back into the relegation battle. Four times in a row, the Neuhäuser took 13th place, the last non-relegation place. In the early 1970s, the neighboring club TuS Sennelager passed SV 07 Neuhaus and rose from the district class to the third-class association league Westphalia within a few years .
Individual evidence
- ^ A b The Neuhauser Line (1907–1985). SC Paderborn 07 , accessed on August 25, 2013 .
- ↑ a b TSV 1887 Neuhaus Castle. TSV 1887 Neuhaus Castle, accessed on July 20, 2020 .
- ↑ Wolfgang Hofmann: Great acceptance among the youth. Neue Westfälische , accessed on April 29, 2018 .
- ^ German Sports Club for Football Statistics : Football in West Germany 1902/03 - 1932/33 . Berlin 2009, p. 151 .
- ↑ Hardy Greens : From the Crown Prince to the Bundesliga. 1890 to 1963. Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 1 . AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-85-1 , p. 262 .
- ^ German Sports Club for Soccer Statistics: Soccer in West Germany 1958–1963 . Hövelhof 2013, p. 29 .
- ^ German sports club for soccer statistics: Soccer in West Germany 1963 / 64–1966 / 67 . Kerpen 2018, p. 175 .
- ^ SV Neuhaus. Archive of tables, accessed February 9, 2019 .