SV Sandhausen

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
SV Sandhausen
logo
society
Template: Infobox football company / maintenance / no picture
Surname Sports club 1916
Sandhausen e. V.
Seat Sandhausen , Baden-Wuerttemberg
founding August 1, 1916
Colours Black-and-white
Members 918 (July 11, 2020)
Board Jürgen Machmeier (Chairman)
Jürgen Rohm
Frank Balles
Website svs1916.de
Template: Infobox football company / maintenance / no picture
First team
Head coach Uwe Koschinat
Venue Hardtwald Stadium
Places 15,414
league 2nd Bundesliga
2019/20 10th place
home
Away
Alternatively

The sports club 1916 Sandhausen e. V. , or SV Sandhausen for short , is a football club with 918 members (as of July 11, 2020) from Sandhausen in Baden-Württemberg in the Electoral Palatinate . The club's first team has played in the 2nd Bundesliga since the 2012/13 season , the club colors are black and white.

history

First successes

SV Sandhausen, founded on August 1, 1916, achieved its first major success in the 1930/31 season with promotion to the Rhein / Saar district league , at that time one of the highest German football classes. In this class, the SV had tough games against well-known teams like SV Waldhof , VfL Neckarau , VfR Mannheim , Phönix Ludwigshafen and the like. a. to dispute. Belonging to this strong class did not last long. After a year the descent took place. In the final phase of World War II , the SV played one season in the Gauliga Nordbaden as part of the War Sports Association (KSG) Walldorf-Wiesloch , but rose again without winning points.

Time after World War II

After the Second World War, SV Sandhausen first established itself in the state or 2nd amateur league, before being promoted to the 1st amateur league in North Baden in the 1956/57 season . This class was held until qualification for the newly founded Oberliga Baden-Württemberg in 1978. As a result, the club was almost always able to assert itself in the top tier of the league. In the 1977/78 and 1992/93 seasons, SV Sandhausen celebrated its greatest successes by winning the German amateur championship . SV Sandhausen was able to record another success in the 1985/86 DFB Cup when it only lost 3-1 to Bundesliga club Borussia Dortmund in the quarter-finals in the Hardtwald Stadium at home. In 1994, SV Sandhausen qualified as 9th in the league, not for the newly established Regionalliga Süd . In 1995 they became champions of the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg and rose to the Regionalliga Süd, but rose again straight away. In the same season, SV Sandhausen managed a surprise in the DFB Cup against VfB Stuttgart . The game went down in history as the longest penalty shootout (13:12) in the competition. In 2000, the SVS failed as a master in relegation to SSV Jahn Regensburg , who was promoted to the regional league. With a total of 28 years of league membership in the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg, SV clearly leads the league's "eternal table" .

Time after the turn of the millennium

In 2005/06 Dietmar Hopp planned to merge the regional division TSG Hoffenheim with the upper division SV Sandhausen and the association division FC-Astoria Walldorf in order to build up a strong club in his home region that should be promoted to the Bundesliga. The German Football Association welcomed these merger plans and gave their consent. The merger club should therefore operate as either FC Kurpfalz Heidelberg or HSW Heidelberg 06 . Ultimately, however, this merger failed (not least because of reservations by SV Sandhausen) and the cooperation was terminated. At the end of the 2006/07 season, the first team of SV Sandhausen rose to the Regionalliga Süd . In 2007/08 , SV Sandhausen took part in the first main round of the DFB Cup, where it lost 4-0 to the second division Kickers Offenbach . In the 2007/08 regional league season the team missed promotion to the 2nd Bundesliga with 5th place , but was qualified for the new 3rd league . The first season 2008/09 , the first in professional football, finished the SV Sandhausen with a balanced balance in 8th place. In February 2010, SV Sandhausen parted ways with coach Gerd Dais after four and a half successful years . Dais's successor was Frank Leicht , who had previously trained Eintracht Frankfurt II .

On May 11, 2010, the second team of SV Sandhausen won the final for the Badischer Fußball-Verband trophy against FC Nöttingen on penalties 7: 6. The club was thus qualified for the first round of the 2010/11 DFB Cup , in which it lost the game against FC Augsburg on penalties.

After a mixed start to the 2010/11 season , coach Frank Leicht was on leave on September 12, 2010. His successor was Pavel Dotchev , who was also on leave on February 14, 2011 due to unsuccessfulness and was immediately replaced by his predecessor Gerd Dais .

Promotion to the 2nd Bundesliga

In the first round of the 2011/12 DFB Cup, SVS lost 3-0 to the then German champions and later cup winners Borussia Dortmund . In the third division season 2011/12 , SV Sandhausen became champions and rose to the 2nd Bundesliga . In November 2012, SV Sandhausen separated from coach Gerd Dais as the bottom of the table in the 2nd division . He was succeeded by Hans-Jürgen Boysen . The SV ended the season in penultimate place, which would have meant a direct relegation to the third division after only one year of being second class , but the class was still held: The license revocation on May 29, 2013 against MSV Duisburg by the DFL for the 2. Bundesliga became final on June 19, 2013 through an arbitration decision. Since Dynamo Dresden also prevailed as third from bottom in the relegation, SV Sandhausen entered the 2nd Bundesliga in the 2013/14 season .

Alois Schwartz has been a coach at SVS since the 2013/14 season . The club reached the second round of the DFB Cup with a 4-3 win on penalties against Bundesliga club 1. FC Nürnberg . There was another success there; They won 3-1 against SC Wiedenbrück in 2000, making SV Sandhausen the second time in the club's history to reach the second round of the DFB Cup. But in the round of 16, the sand houses had to admit defeat to Bundesliga club Eintracht Frankfurt 2: 4. The club received 500,000 euros as a bonus for reaching the round of 16. At the end of the season he reached 12th place in the league table.

On the 32nd matchday of the 2014/15 season , SVS allegedly celebrated premature relegation in their 100th second division game with a 4-0 away win at RB Leipzig. On May 12, 2015, however , the DFL announced that three points would be deducted from the club for violating the licensing regulations, making relegation questionable again. On the last day of the game, however, the class was finally held. As in the previous season, they finally finished 12th.

On the 31st matchday of the 2015/16 season , early relegation was secured with a 1-0 win against FSV Frankfurt, after the last matchday they were in 13th place in the table.

On July 3, 2016, Kenan Kocak was presented as the new coach - he came from the regional league team SV Waldhof Mannheim and succeeded Alois Schwartz , who moved to 1. FC Nürnberg . In the 2016/17 season , an away win in Würzburg on the 33rd match day celebrated the premature relegation, finishing in 10th place in the table.

After a strong first half of the season, they were in 5th place at the winter break of the 2017/18 season . On matchday 33, despite a 2-0 home defeat against 1. FC Nürnberg, which also celebrated promotion to the Bundesliga, relegation was secured. The season ended in 11th place in the table, which means that SVS 2018/19 started its seventh second division season.

In October 2018, SV Sandhausen parted ways with Kenan Kocak after a bad start to the season on matchday 9 with just one win . Uwe Koschinat took over from third division SC Fortuna Köln as the new coach . The team was relegated for much of the season. Thanks to eight unbeaten games in a row, Sandhausen finished 15th on matchday 26, which they did not leave until the end of the season. On the last day of the match, SVS secured direct relegation with a 2-2 draw in Regensburg with a simultaneous defeat by competitor FC Ingolstadt 04 .

In the 2019/20 season , the club was mostly in the middle of the table. After eight consecutive games without a win in the second half of the season, they increasingly approached the relegation ranks, but escaped the relegation battle after seven points from three games during an English week. Relegation was mathematically determined on the 32nd matchday. On the last day of the season, the SVS drew attention to itself with a surprising 5-1 away win over Hamburger SV , which consequently missed out on the relegation to the Bundesliga. SV Sandhausen finished the season in 10th place and was able to equalize the best result of the season from the 2016/17 season. For the 2020/21 season, the club is aiming for a single-digit position in the table.

Athletic course

successes

championship

Cup

* SV Sandhausen II

Seasonal balances since 1957

season Level league space Gates Points
1957/58 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 13. 51:72 26:34
1958/59 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 05. 54:53 33:27
1959/60 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 12. 42:65 26:34
1960/61 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 01. 71:41 44:16
1961/62 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 10. 42:57 28:32
1962/63 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 10. 40:53 30:30
1963/64 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 03. 54:40 38:22
1964/65 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 09. 45:50 29:31
1965/66 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 11. 43:50 26:34
1966/67 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 03. 61:41 39:21
1967/68 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 03. 57:38 36:24
1968/69 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 03. 46:45 37:23
1969/70 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 03. 57:38 36:24
1970/71 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 06th 31:28 34:26
1971/72 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 03. 71:39 45:19
1972/73 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 04th 55:55 33:27
1973/74 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 04th 69:37 38:22
1974/75 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 03. 60:34 40:20
1975/76 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 02. 53:29 42:18
1976/77 III 1st Amateur League North Baden 02. 78:43 45:15
1977/78 III Amateur League North Baden 02. 68:42 40:20
1978/79 III Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 11. 60:61 39:37
1979/80 III Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 08th. 52:58 33:35
1980/81 III Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 01. 83:36 49:19
1981/82 III Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 07th 59:34 41:27
1982/83 III Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 03. 87:45 49:23
1983/84 III Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 03. 75:47 44:24
1984/85 III Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 01. 67:35 47:21
1985/86 III Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 04th 67:48 41:31
1986/87 III Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 01. 56:36 44:24
1987/88 III Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 03. 60:38 41:27
1988/89 III Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 04th 55:41 40:28
1989/90 III Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 06th 66:52 41:27
1990/91 III Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 05. 53:44 40:28
1991/92 III Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 11. 45:46 32:36
1992/93 III Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 02. 57:35 45:23
1993/94 III Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 09. 52:39 33:35
1994/95 IV Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 01. 72:30 50:14
1995/96 III Regional league south 16. 42:59 34
1996/97 IV Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 04th 58:31 54
1997/98 IV Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 07th 52:45 44
1998/99 IV Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 02. 44:23 59
1999/2000 IV Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 01. 68:24 70
2000/01 IV Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 04th 69:44 57
2001/02 IV Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 02. 63:32 68
2002/03 IV Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 04th 59:46 56
2003/04 IV Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 07th 51:42 54
2004/05 IV Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 07th 64:39 50
2005/06 IV Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 05. 65:34 60
2006/07 IV Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 01. 91:36 77
2007/08 III Regional league south 05. 48:38 57
2008/09 III 3rd league 08th. 58:52 50
2009/10 III 3rd league 14th 54:63 47
2010/11 III 3rd league 12. 43:46 46
2011/12 III 3rd league 01. 57:42 66
2012/13 II 2nd Bundesliga 17th 38:66 26th
2013/14 II 2nd Bundesliga 12. 29:35 44
2014/15 II 2nd Bundesliga 12. 32:37 39
2015/16 II 2nd Bundesliga 13. 40:50 40
2016/17 II 2nd Bundesliga 10. 41:36 42
2017/18 II 2nd Bundesliga 11. 35:33 43
2018/19 II 2nd Bundesliga 15th 45:52 38
2019/20 II 2nd Bundesliga 10. 43:45 43
  • Ascent
  • descent
  • Stadion

    SV Sandhausen plays its home games in the Hardtwaldstadion , which is located on the southern outskirts of the village, directly by the forest ( officially BWT-Stadion am Hardtwald since March 2017 due to name sponsorship ). For the 2008/09 season it was rebuilt due to qualification for the 3rd division and the seating capacity increased. The stadium had 10,231 seats, 2,954 of which were covered. In summer 2012, after being promoted to the second division, the stadium was expanded to around 12,000 seats. The stadium was expanded again for the 2014/15 season and now has a capacity of 15,300 seats.

    Personalities

    Well-known former players

    Trainer

    Term of office Trainer
    1974-1977 Emil Kühnle
    1977-08 / 1979 Klaus Sinn
    08 / 1979-09 / 1979 Harald Meichelbeck (Interim)
    09 / 1979-1980 Heinz Baas
    1980-1981 Werner Ludwig
    1981-03 / 1982 Rudi Dielmann
    03 / 1982-05 / 1983 Werner Ludwig
    05 / 1983-06 / 1983 Raimund Lietzau (Interim)
    1983-1987 Slobodan Jovanić
    1987-11 / 1987 Harry Griesbeck
    11 / 1987-12 / 1987 Wolfgang Reinhardt (Interim)
    12 / 1987–01 / 1989 Heiner Ueberle
    Term of office Trainer
    09 / 1989-05 / 1991 Stephan Gross
    05 / 1991-06 / 1991 Wolfgang Reinhardt (Interim)
    1991-1994 Slobodan Jovanić
    1994-1996 Hans-Jürgen Boysen
    1996-1998 Rüdiger Menges
    1998-1999 Günther Birkle
    1999-2000 Willi Entenmann
    07 / 2000-11 / 2000 Werner Habiger
    11 / 2000-04 / 2001 Ralf Köhnlein
    04 / 2001-2002 Hans-Jürgen Boysen
    07 / 2002-10 / 2002 Willi Entenmann
    10 / 2002-09 / 2003 Rainer Scharinger
    Term of office Trainer
    09/2003-09/2005 Günter Sebert
    09 / 2005-02 / 2010 Gerd Dais
    02/2010-09/2010 Frank Leicht
    09/2010–02/2011 Pavel Dotchev
    02/2011–11/2012 Gerd Dais
    11 / 2012–2013 Hans-Jürgen Boysen
    2013-2016 Alois Schwartz
    2016-10 / 2018 Kenan Kocak
    Since 10/2018 Uwe Koschinat

    Professional team

    Current squad 2020/21

    As of: August 18, 2020
    For older team lineups, see names and numbers

    No. Nat. player birthday in the team since Contract until
    goalkeeper
    01 AustriaAustria Martin Fraisl 05/10/1993 07/01/2019 06/30/2022
    13 GermanyGermany Rick Wulle 06/04/1994 07/01/2015 06/30/2021
    15th GermanyGermany Philipp Heerwagen 04/13/1983 July 16, 2019 06/30/2021
    GermanyGermany Benedikt Grawe 02/21/2000 07/01/2016
    Defense
    02 RussiaRussia Alexander Shirov 01/24/1991 07/01/2018 06/30/2023
    03 GermanyGermany Alexander Rossipal 06/06/1996 07/01/2018 06/30/2021
    14th GermanyGermany Tim Kister 12/30/1986 07/01/2013 06/30/2021
    18th GermanyGermany Dennis Diekmeier (C)Captain of the crew 10/20/1989 03/01/2019 06/30/2022
    22nd GermanyGermany Gerrit Nauber 04/13/1992 07/10/2019 06/30/2021
    23 GermanyGermany Markus Karl 02/14/1986 07/01/2016 06/30/2020
    24 GermanyGermany Philipp Klingmann 04/22/1988 07/01/2015 06/30/2021
    30th GermanyGermany Soeren Dieckmann 01/16/1996 08/01/2019 06/30/2021
    GermanyGermany Diego Contento 05/01/1990 07/01/2020
    GermanyGermany Nils Röseler 02/10/2002 07/01/2020 06/30/2022
    midfield
    05 GermanyGermany Marlon Frey 03/24/1996 07/01/2019 06/30/2021
    06th GermanyGermany Denis Linsmayer 09/19/1991 07/01/2013 06/30/2022
    07th GermanyGermany Philip Türpitz 08/23/1991 07/01/2019 06/30/2021
    17th GermanyGermany Erik Zenga 01/18/1993 07/01/2015 06/30/2021
    20th GermanyGermany Emanuel Taffertshofer 02/24/1995 07/01/2018 06/30/2021
    21st VenezuelaVenezuela Enrique Peña Zauner 03/04/2000 07/01/2019 06/30/2022
    26th KosovoKosovo Besar Halimi 12/12/1994 02.09.2019 06/30/2021
    27 GermanyGermany Robin shy 02/16/1995 07/01/2019 06/30/2021
    29 CroatiaCroatia Ivan Paurević 07/01/1991 07/01/2019 06/30/2021
    DenmarkDenmark Nikolas Nartey 02/22/2000 07/31/2020 06/30/2021
    GermanyGermany Anas Ouahim 09/23/1997 08/18/2020
    attack
    08th GermanyGermany Mario Engels 10/22/1993 07/01/2019 06/30/2021
    10 GermanyGermany Julius Biada 11/03/1992 07/01/2019 06/30/2022
    11 MoroccoMorocco Aziz Bouhaddouz 03/30/1987 07/01/2019 06/30/2021
    16 GermanyGermany Kevin Behrens 02/03/1991 07/01/2018 06/30/2021
    GermanyGermany Daniel Keita-Ruel 09/21/1989 07/31/2020 06/30/2022

    Current coaching staff

    Surname function
    Uwe Koschinat Head coach
    Gerhard Kleppinger Assistant coach
    Stefan Kulovits Assistant coach
    Daniel Ishdonat Goalkeeping coach

    Change of season 2020/21

    As of August 18, 2020

    Accesses Departures
    Summer 2020

    Second team

    The second team is integrated into the youth performance center and, as an U23 team with amateur status, forms the transition from the performance area (U16 to U19) to the professional team. Since 2003, the team has mainly been active in the sixth class association league North Baden and the regional league Rhein-Neckar (7th league). Between 2015/16 and 2017/18 , the U23 belonged to the fifth-class Oberliga Baden-Württemberg , in which they were promoted again after relegation in spring 2019.

    SV Sandhausen II was trained between 2013 and 2019 by former Sandhausen professional Kristjan Glibo , who was subsequently replaced by Frank Löning , who himself had played 112 league games for the club.

    Web links

    Commons : SV Sandhausen  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

    Individual evidence

    1. a b SVS1916.de: Current membership status
    2. Hopp, Hopp in the Bundesliga. In: Spiegel Online . October 28, 2005, accessed November 5, 2019 .
    3. DFB approves Hoffenheim football merger. In: Spiegel Online. November 30, 2005, accessed November 5, 2019 .
    4. Oliver Trust: Out of Hopp's shadow into the second division. In: Der Tagesspiegel . April 21, 2012, accessed November 5, 2019 .
    5. Dotschew inherits Leicht as a coach in Sandhausen. In: Focus Online . September 13, 2010, accessed November 5, 2019 .
    6. Sandhausen separates from coach Dotschew. In: spox.com . February 14, 2011, accessed November 5, 2019 .
    7. MSV Duisburg has to go to the 3rd soccer league. In: n-tv . June 19, 2013, accessed November 5, 2019 .
    8. kicker.de : Schwartz should lead the SVS back up . Retrieved November 5, 2019.
    9. kicker.de : Henry sees Leipzig embarrassment . Retrieved November 5, 2019.
    10. Violations of licensing regulations: Points deduction for SV Sandhausen. In: dfl.de. DFL Deutsche Fußball Liga GmbH, May 12, 2015, accessed on November 5, 2019 .
    11. kicker.de : "Ideal solution" Kocak takes over Sandhausen . Retrieved November 5, 2019.
    12. SV Sandhausen annoys ex-coach Kocak - home win against Hannover 96 on heidelberg24.de May 31, 2020, accessed on July 5, 2020.
    13. "We are of course relieved that we managed to stay in the league" on the SV Sandhausen website. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
    14. Desolate HSV remains second class on sport1.de. June 28, 2020, accessed July 5, 2020.
    15. ^ Transfer ticker SV Sandhausen: Zenga and Klingmann extend. In: Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung . July 3, 2020, accessed July 5, 2020.
    16. Squad. In: svs1916.de. SV Sandhausen 1916 e. V., accessed on November 5, 2019 .
    17. ^ SV Sandhausen in the database of transfermarkt.de . Retrieved November 5, 2019.
    18. ^ Transition area (U23) , svs1916.de, accessed on November 18, 2019
    19. Club information , fupa.net, accessed on November 18, 2019
    20. Frank Löning replaces Kristjan Glibo as U23 coach , rnz.de, accessed on November 18, 2019