SV Stockerau

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SV Stockerau
Template: Infobox Football Club / Maintenance / No picture
Basic data
Surname Sports club Stockerau
Seat Stockerau
founding May 7, 1907
Colours Red White
president Othmar Holzer
Board Members
Doris Eder
Manfred Voitasek
Karl Zeman
Website svstockerau.at
First soccer team
Head coach Kristian Fitzbauer
Venue Alte Au stadium
Places 2500
league 2nd regional league east
2018/19 11th place
home
Away

The sports club Stockerau is an Austrian sports and football club from the Lower Austrian town of Stockerau and plays in the fourth level in the 2009/10 season. The club with the club colors black and red had its highlights in the early 1990s with victory in the ÖFB Cup , participation in the Supercup final and participation in the European Cup .

history

History of the previous clubs (1907–1958)

Stockerauer SV 07

The confused founding history of the Stockerau sports club officially begins today with the establishment of the Stockerau Sports Association 07 on May 7, 1907. The SV Heid Stockerau and ASV clubs, which are important for the development of today's club, existed earlier. Today nothing is known about their origin.

Before the Second World War , the Stockerauer SV 07 (also: SV Stockerau 07) dominated football in the Lower Austrian municipality. In 1913, the football club played its way into the final of the first ever regional championship of Lower Austria, where it met the 1st Wiener Neustädter SC . However, there are no more records of the outcome of the final game, and the (official) Lower Austrian provincial champions until 1922 are considered to be the champions of the former Vienna League , as the city of Vienna was still politically united with Lower Austria until 1922.

In the 1937/38 season, the Stockerauer SV 07 finished 12th in the Niederdonau league . The following season 1938/39 the club finished in tenth place in the first national league, renamed in "District Class East". During the war years, TuS Stockerau, which had not appeared until then, took over the place in the highest Lower Austrian league (Gauklasse Niederdonau). It is not known whether there was a connection between these clubs (renaming, merger).

ASV Stockerau

After TuS Stockerau, which in the war season 1944/45 , which was no longer finished, took fifth place in the Gauklasse Nord Niederdonau, the workers' sports club Stockerau followed in the first year of the game in liberated Austria in 1945/46 , which won the final group for North the final round for the Lower Austrian provincial championship title qualified and ultimately only beaten by two points by the 1. Wiener Neustädter SC, took second place. In the following years the ASV slipped continuously downwards in the tables and mostly occupied a place in the last third of the table. In 1948 and 1949 the Stockerauer reached the semifinals in the Lower Austrian State Cup, but failed both times at SC Siebenhirten . In the game year 1949/50 it was enough for the ASV finally only to the last place in the table. Since four clubs in the national league were allowed to qualify for the newly founded national leagues A and B , ASV Stockerau was spared relegation for the time being. In the league, which was no longer so strong due to the promoted clubs, the Stockerau grew again to become a real title contender and took third in 1950/51, second in 1951/52 and fifth in 1952/53. In the years up to 1957, the ASV finally established itself in the midfield of the league. In the championship 1957/58 the club finished without a win and with only three points far behind the last place in the table and had to relegate to the 2nd national league. It was particularly painful that the city derbies could not be won against the surprisingly strong promoted SV Heid.

SV Heid Stockerau

While the ASV was successfully in the third-class regional league at the beginning of the 1950s, the later merger partner Heid Stockerau, as the company team of the Heid machine factory, was still in the 2nd division with the Union Stockerau , where ex-international Robert Pavlicek was playing at the time . Class north-east again. After winning the championship title in this class in 1951, the company athletes played their way up to the national league until 1957 and in the game year 1957/58 secured the runner-up title straight away, just one point behind KSV Ortmann .

Fusion and descent (1958–1970)

In the summer 1958, came to join forces in Stockerauer football events and fusion of the runner-SV Heid with the relegated ASV, under the name of Sport Association Heid Stockerau . However, this merger did not have the desired effect and so Heid Stockerau found himself at the bottom of the table at the end of the 1958/59 season. In 1960/61, the now unified Stockerau football club was also relegated from the 2nd division north-west and was only able to rise again to the 2nd national division with the championship title in the minor division north / north-west in 1964.

Between second and third division (1971–1988)

After the promotion to the regional league followed with the championship title 1970/71 the promotion to the then still second class Regionalliga Ost . There Heid Stockerau reached ninth place in the table as a newcomer, but established himself in the following years as a title contender exclusively in the first four places. In the 1973/74 season Stockerau was crowned champions of the Regionalliga Ost with a ten-point lead over 1. Wiener Neustädter SC. Due to the major reform of the Bundesliga, combined with the reduction of the first level to ten clubs and the introduction of the national league as the second level in Austria, this year there was no permanent promoter to the future Bundesliga (at the time still called the national league) . Stockerau had to fight for promotion to the first division in two qualifying games against the champions of the Regionalliga Mitte ( Kapfenberg ) and the first division club Linzer ASK . The Lower Austrians won their duel against Kapfenberger SV 1-0 away and 6-1 in Stockerau, but lost against LASK after a 3-1 win at home in Linz with 1: 6 and remained in second place. Nevertheless, the qualification for the Austria-wide second division was the club's greatest success to date.

After being renamed in 1974, the Stockerau appeared in the National League in the 1974/75 season as SV Telwolle Heid Stockerau and achieved relegation with ninth place. In 1978 the Lower Austrians were relegated to the bottom of the table in the regional league, but immediately celebrated their promotion the following year. After only one season, the sports club returned to the third division in 1980 and spent the years up to 1988 in the state and regional league. In 1988 the Stockerauer were allowed to move up to the 2nd Bundesliga as runner-up in the Eastern League, as the champions Slovan / HAC Vienna were refused promotion by the Bundesliga due to the fact that the club only had one artificial turf pitch.

Second Bundesliga and the miracle year 1991

In the next two years, the club, renamed SV Sparkasse Stockerau , did not get beyond the relegation play-off in the second division. In both game years they escaped relegation only due to the halving of points after the autumn championship, which despite fewer points actually won against FC Salzburg and LUV Graz ensured that Stockerau could remain in the second division.

Under coach Willi Kreuz , the team developed with strong players such as the former European Cup hero of Rapid and later St. Pölten routinier Rudi Weinhofer, Peter Pospisil , who came from FK Austria Wien , and former Austria Salzburg goalkeeper Peter Zajicek in the 1990/91 season visibly to a title contender. In the autumn championship, the Stockerau team qualified as the third-placed club, only two points behind autumn champions Vaillant VfB Mödling and VOEST Linz, for the promotion play-off to the first Bundesliga in the spring. There, however, the consistently young team paid tuition against the established first division clubs Krems , St. Pölten and Vienna and only finished in seventh and penultimate place.

ÖFB Cup victory in 1991

For the missed promotion to the 1st division, the sports association held itself harmless in the ÖFB-Pokal and celebrated the biggest triumph in the long history of the club with the sensational cup victory over the Austrian record champions Rapid Wien .

Stockerau entered the competition as a second division in the 2nd main round and finished the 1st Wiener Neustädter SC away with 8: 2. From the third round, only Bundesliga clubs were drawn to the Stockerau, but the sports association also prevailed in the Lower Austrian duels with VSE St. Pölten (2: 0) and FC Admira Wacker (3: 2). After a 3-1 win against VOEST Linz in the quarter-finals, the Wiener Sport-Club was defeated 1-0 in the semifinals . Stockerau was in the final of the ÖFB Cup for the first time in the club's history. Against the top club Rapid, however, the team seemed to have no chance in all likelihood, so the media only discussed the height of the Rapid victory before the final.

The final took place on May 30, 1991 in Vienna's Prater Stadium. As expected, Rapid took the lead with a goal by Stefan Reiter in the 8th minute of the game, which seemed to open the Hütteldorfer "price shooting" predicted in the media. The Stockerauer, however, adjusted better and better to the opponent after the early deficit and came through Wenzel in the 30th minute to the deserved equalizer. Rapid continued to determine the game, but the stockers were immensely dangerous in the counterattack and scored the surprising opening goal to 2-1 through Pospisil in the 52nd minute. Despite their superiority in the field, the Viennese were unable to break Stockerau's defensive bar that had been built up afterwards and the Stockerau sports association created the big surprise by winning the cup.

The cup final teams 1991

SV Stockerau
Trainer: Willi Kreuz
Peter Zajicek - Michael Keller - Josef Mazura , Michael Wenzel - Andreas Wacek , Walter Binder , Peter Pospisil , Marek Ostrowski , Rudolf Weinhofer - Alfred Augustin , Josef Marko (90th Roman Wiktora ).

Rapid Vienna
coach: Hans Krankl
Michael Konsel - Peter Schöttel - Michael Hatz (55th Andreas Poiger ), Heimo Pfeifenberger - Stefan Reiter , Christian Keglevits , Helmut Hauptmann , Andreas Herzog , Franz Resch (60th Andreas Reisinger ) - Hernán Medford , Jan Åge Fjørtoft .

Supercup and European Cup games

As a cup winner, SV Stockerau played for the Supercup against Austria Wien at the beginning of the season in 1991/92, but clearly lost the match 3-0 in front of 6,000 spectators in the Alte Au stadium. In the 1992 ÖFB Cup, the Lower Austrians were brought back to reality in the second round with their defeat against the Rohrbach sports club from Burgenland (3: 3; 5: 6 n.E.). Wacker beat the Stockerauer for it in the first round in the European Cup. Against Tottenham Hotspur , both games in the European Cup Winners' Cup were kept open for a long time. Ultimately, both matches were only just lost 0: 1 and Stockerau was attested in the media to have represented Austria well and dignified.

The way to fourth and fifth class 1995-2006

The Alte Au stadium in Stockerau

In the next few years, the football club, which was renamed the Stockerau sports club in the spring, was no longer able to stage itself . In the championship they only played in the relegation play-off and in 1995 the specter of relegation became reality with 15th place. In 1996, with the championship title in the regional league, he was immediately promoted to the 2nd division and the club was renamed SV Moudry Brot Stockerau .

In 1997 the sports club Stockerau had to register the compensation due to financial problems . Nevertheless, the club, now with a new main sponsor (Gerhard de Witt Ges.mbH), stayed in the second level until 1999. After two years in the Regionalliga Ost, SV de Witt Möbel Stockerau was relegated to the 1st regional league in 2001 due to financial bottlenecks and personnel problems, and a year later even to the 2nd regional league. In the 2002/03 season, the traditional club managed to immediately regain promotion and has since played in the fourth level again. The climax in these financially difficult years was the autumn championship 2005/06. After the end of this game year things went downhill more and more.

Two strange years and a slight upward trend

The 2006/07 game year was only finished on 14th place, which in this season would actually have been a relegation place, but due to the statutes of the NÖFV this could be fended off (Admira was relegated from the Red Zac League at that time to the RLO, the Admira Amateurs therefore had to go from the RLO to the 2nd LL East according to the regulations). The 2007/08 season was extremely negative, although it was possible to secure the services of Christian Keglevits as a coach for a short time . Stockerau finished the season bottom of the table. Due to the financially conditioned departure of Sturm 19 St. Pölten, the league could be held again.

Since they only found out about the non-relegation shortly before the end of the transfer for the new 2008/09 season, the club secured the services of ex-internationals Marcus Pürk and Klaus Dietrich at short notice . Since the rest of the team was only put together for the 2nd regional league, the Stockerau team did not get past last place in autumn with only 11 points. A real feat of strength was carried out in the winter transition period and other well-known players, u. a. Jürgen Leitner were obliged to keep the league. But only with the return of the Stockerau veteran Ewald Jenisch as coach a few laps before the end of the championship did the necessary success return. When they lost 3-2 shortly after their engagement with their direct competitor, the Kremser SC, the relegation seemed sealed. But after two unexpected home wins against ASK Kottingbrunn and FC Mistelbach, they achieved 14th place in the last round away with a 1-1 draw in Leobendorf, which was enough to keep them up.

The club got off to an ambitious start in the 2009/2010 season, with 6th place they achieved a good placement at half-time of the season and won the indoor cup in the "Alte Au" sports center. However, the team fell back in the spring and only reached 8th place - they were even briefly involved in the relegation battle, as four teams had to move down the aisle this year. However, the 2012/13 season went differently than expected, because it started badly and at the end of the season also got relegated to the sixth division.

titles and achievements

title

successes

  • 1 × Cup Winners' Cup participation: 1992
  • 1 × Supercup finalist: 1991
  • 1 × finalist Lower Austria provincial championship : 1913 (SSV 07)
  • 1 × vice national champion : 1946 (ASV)
  • 3 × Champion Regionalliga Ost : 1974, 1979 (Heid), 1996 (SVS)
  • 1 × runner-up RL Ost (promotion): 1988 (SVS)
  • 3 × national league champions: 1970, 1981, 1986 (Heid)
  • 1 × Champion 2nd regional league: 2003 (SVS)
  • 1 × Master 2nd class northeast: 1951 (Heid)
  • 1 × Champion Lower League North / Northeast: 1964 (Heid)
  • 1 × champion district class northwest: 1963
  • 1 × Meister Group Wagram: 1962
  • 2 × winner of Lower Austria Hallenmaster 1983, 2009

Well-known players and coaches

Women's soccer

On January 25, 2000, a women's football section was founded in the club . The women of SV de Witt Möbel Stockerau won numerous small grass and indoor tournaments, won the championship title of the UKJ diocesan championship several times and also played their way into the national final of the Street Soccer Cup. In the year it was founded, the women's soccer section joined the NÖN women's league (regional league), but in the years of its existence it only reached places in the lower third of the table. On August 1, 2002 the USV Leitzersdorf / Stockerau syndicate was founded . On July 1, 2004 this finally joined the USV Leitzersdorf as a separate women's football section. The women's section at SV Stockerau was thus dissolved.

Placements in the NÖN women's league

  • 2002: 7th place
  • 2003: 6th place
  • 2004: 8th place (SpG)

Well-known player

Others

In publications and in (online) results lists, club names are often found that were no longer valid at the time shown. The club is often referred to as ASV Stockerau until the 1980s, although the official club name from the merger in 1958 was Heid Stockerau.

Web links

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