SV Wiesbaden

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SV Wiesbaden 1899
Template: Infobox Football Club / Maintenance / No picture
Basic data
Surname Sports club Wiesbaden 1899 eV
founding August 18, 1899
Website svwiesbaden1899.de
First soccer team
Venue Helmut Schön Sports Park
Places 11,500
league Group league Wiesbaden
2018/19 1st place (regional league)
home
Away

The SV Wiesbaden 1899 is a soccer club from the Hessian state capital Wiesbaden , whose first team was dissolved in 1994 after several decades in high-class amateur soccer due to major financial problems and insolvency proceedings of the club. After a lengthy rebuilding of the lowest division, the team played in the fifth division Hessenliga from 2013 . In 2016, after the sponsor's exit from the Hessen League, the team withdrew to the seventh-class group league and, after being relegated in the meantime, will play in the group league again from 2019.

SV Wiesbaden plays its home games in the Helmut-Schön-Sportpark .

history

On August 18, 1899, a football team was formed in the Wiesbaden gymnastics society on the initiative of gymnastics teacher Fritz Sauer. However, their activities soon met with resistance and when the gymnastics society refused the footballers to join the southern German football association, they decided to leave and founded SV Wiesbaden 1899 on November 23, 1904. Already in the 1905/06 game year, the ones in the traditional Nassau colors were counted Orange-blue accruing team to the strongest regional clubs, won the city championship against the local competition of FC 01, the Kickers and Germania and took second place behind Hanau 93 in the finals of the northern group of the southern German association .

In the following years the SVW established itself among the top clubs in the Rhine-Main area. In 1909, the club's defender Otto Nicodemus was even appointed to the national team. In 1910/11 , the Northern District title was secured for the first time, but the Orange-Blue only rarely played a role nationally. By 1933, SV Wiesbaden only appeared three times in the southern German finals. From the newly founded Gauliga Südwest , the team rose after the first year in 1934, but came back in 1936 for a total of six more seasons.

Stadium on Berliner Strasse

After the Second World War , the SVW came into its own late. From 1950 on he played in the 2nd League South, the substructure of the Oberliga Süd, where he was mostly placed in the midfield. In the 1951/52 season, the later world champion coach Helmut Schön started his glorious coaching career at the Wiesbaden sports club. Born in Dresden, he remained loyal to the city of Wiesbaden until his death in 1996. In August 2009 the entire stadium area on Berliner Strasse was renamed Helmut-Schön-Park in honor of the “man in the hat”.

In 1962 the Wiesbadeners relegated to the amateur league Hessen, which they left only twice for one season each time until the league was dissolved in 1978: in 1967 in the Regionalliga Süd, in 1970 after major financial problems in the Landesliga Südhessen.

In 1964 and 1965, the SVW was twice in a row in the final of the German amateur championship . SVW Hannover lost 96 amateurs (0: 2 and 1: 2) in both finals in the Ischeland Stadium in Hagen (1964) and in the Siegener Leimbach Stadium (1965), each of which was attended by over 4,000 SVW fans . Nevertheless, these finals are still considered to be the greatest national successes of the club.

In 1978, despite major investments in the team, the Hessians not only missed the qualification for the amateur league, but even almost relegated to the district class. Only in 1982 did the SVW reach the Oberliga Hessen, only to be relegated again in the 1984/85 season.

The crash into the national league lasted only a year this time. Especially in the 1986/87 season, in which the SVW reached sixth place and had a four-figure average attendance for the first time in years, the turn for the better seemed finally achieved. The sports club stayed in the major league until the 1993/94 season.

The entry of an investor who did not fulfill his obligations towards the club brought SV Wiesbaden unpayable debts in the early 1990s, which in 1994 almost led to bankruptcy and the dissolution of the first team. Games could only be continued in the youth sector. The bankruptcy could be averted, however, the SVW started again in the lowest division.

In 2004, the newly established SVW first team crowned the 10-year promotion process from the lowest division with promotion to the Landesliga Hessen Mitte. While the SVW finished the first year after promotion to the regional league with 6th place very promising, the team fought against relegation the following season. In the 2006/07 season came the sporting financial problems, which led to the fact that the club had to part with two of its most important players during the winter break because it could no longer pay their salaries. In 2008 the team finally relegated to the Wiesbaden group league. After three more years, he was promoted to the sixth class Association League Hessen in the summer of 2011 . In the summer of 2013, he was promoted to the Hessen League, from which the SVW voluntarily withdrew in 2016 due to the departure of its main sponsor. From 2016 the SVW played again in the group league Wiesbaden, from which he was relegated to the district upper league in 2018. In 2019 the direct rise was achieved.

rivalry

The biggest rivalry on the part of the fans is probably with the former SV Wehen Taunusstein 1926, today's SV Wehen Wiesbaden . The current second division team played for a long time with the SVW in the Oberliga Hessen . A planned alliance between the two clubs with the aim of merging the two clubs has now been put on hold.

Greatest successes

  • 1955/56 - 2nd League South - 8th place
  • 1963/64 - German vice amateur champion
  • 1964/65 - German vice amateur champion
  • 1970/71 - Promotion to the Oberliga Hessen
  • 1971/72 - Oberliga Hessen - 4th place
  • 1975/76 - Oberliga Hessen - 4th place
  • 1981/82 - Promotion to the Oberliga Hessen
  • 1985/86 - Promotion to the Oberliga Hessen
  • 2003/04 - Promotion to the Landesliga Hessen Mitte
  • 2010/11 - Promotion to the Association League Hessen Center
  • 2012/13 - Promotion to the Oberliga Hessen (Hessenliga)

Well-known trainers

Known players

Great games of the past

  • 1906 - SVW: Cercle Atlétique Paris 2-0
  • 1909 - SVW: Quick the Hague 2: 1
  • 1910 - SVW: FC Zurich 7-1
  • 1923 - SVW: Vitesse Arnheim 3-2
  • 1924 - SVW: Wacker Innsbruck 5-2
  • 1924 - SVW: Viktoria Ciskov Prague 5-1
  • 1925 - SVW: Bayern Munich 1-1
  • 1926 - SVW: Société Athlétique Paris 3-1
  • 1927 - SVW: Schalke 04 3: 3
  • 1927 - SVW: Spvgg. Fürth 6: 4
  • 1927 - SVW: Blouw-Wit Amsterdam 5-2
  • 1929 - SVW: Offenbacher Kickers 6-2
  • 1930 - SVW: 1. FC Nürnberg 2-2
  • 1932 - SVW: Austria Wien 3-1
  • 1933 - SVW: FSV Frankfurt 1-0
  • 1964 - SVW: Hannover 96 amateurs 0-2 (final of the German amateur championship)
  • 1965 - SVW: Hannover 96 Amateurs 1: 2 (final of the German amateur championship)
  • 1977 - SVW: Schalke 04 1-3 (DFB-Pokal 1st round)
  • 1986 - SVW: Kickers Offenbach 0-0 OL Hessen in front of 6000 spectators (inauguration of new floodlights)
  • 1989 - SVW: VfL Bochum 0-2 (DFB-Pokal 1st round)

Trainer

  • July 2009 - June 2012 Dietmar Assmann
  • June 2012 - October 2013 Sascha Amstätter
  • October 2013 - June 2016 Djuradj Vasic
  • July 2016 - June 2018 Yildirim Sari
  • since July 2018 Daniel Löbelt

Table tennis

In the 1940s and 1950s, the men's team of SV Wiesbaden was represented in the table tennis upper league, the top German division at the time. In 1949 she was third in the German championships (Scheer, Kurt Seifert , Rehak, Dierks, Werner Roller, Feser). From 1950 to 1953 she reached the final four times in a row, in which she was defeated three times by MTV Munich 1879 and once by TSV Milbertshofen . In 1954 the table tennis department joined the Germania Wiesbaden association.

Individual evidence

  1. Manfred Schäfer: A game for life. 75 years of DTTB. (1925-2000) . Published by the German Table Tennis Association DTTB , Frankfurt am Main 2000, ISBN 3-00-005890-7 , p. 146.
  2. Zeitschrift dts , 1954/5 p. 11.

Web links