Schinkel 04

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Schinkel 04
Club logo
Full name Sports club Schinkel 04 eV
place Osnabrück - Schinkel , Lower Saxony
Founded June 19, 1904
Dissolved June 30, 2005
Club colors blue White
Stadion Schinkelberg sports field
Top league Gauliga Lower Saxony
or Weser-Ems
successes no
home
Away

Schinkel 04 (officially: Sportverein Schinkel 04 eV ) was a sports club from the Osnabrück district of Schinkel . The first soccer team played for six years in the first-class Gauliga Niedersachsen and Weser-Ems .

history

The association was founded on June 19, 1904 as TV Friesen Schinkel . In 1936, TV Friesen had to merge with TV 1919 Schinkel , DJK Blau-Weiß 1920 Born and VfB Schinkel to form SG Schinkel 04 . Two years later there was a merger with the Osnabrück FV 06 to form TuSG Schinkel 04 , which was dissolved after the Second World War . SV Fortuna Osnabrück was founded as the successor . In 1946 there was a split into SV Schinkel 04 and VfB Schinkel . On July 1, 2005, the Schinkel 04 association was dissolved as part of a merger . The members joined TSG Burg Gretesch .

Osnabrück FV 06

In terms of sport, the Osnabrück FV 06 was the most successful club that played in the top Westphalian league in the 1920/21 season as well as from 1922 and 1929 . The 06er achieved their greatest success in the 1926/27 season , when the team took third place in Group West behind Borussia Rheine and Preußen Münster . Two years later, the team missed the qualification for the single-track Westphalia League and remained second class. The home ground of the Osnabrück FV 06 was the stadium on Buerschen Strasse with 15,000 seats.

TuSG Schinkel 04

After the merger to form TuSG Schinkel 04 , the new club took over the stadium on Buerschen Straße as a venue as well as most of the VfB Schinkel players who were currently on a sporting high. In the first season of 1938/39 he was promoted to the Lower Saxony Gauliga. In the promotion round, the Schinkeler were able to prevail against the Bremer SV and Teutonia Uelzen . In the Gauliga, the team mostly finished midfield, but always caused surprises. In the 1939/40 season, Schinkel beat Werder Bremen 1-0. In the 1941/42 season there was a 6: 6 against Werder Bremen and a 4: 3 victory over VfL Osnabrück . But there were also big defeats like a 1:10 against Wilhelmshaven 05 in the 1942/43 season . In the period up to the end of the Second World War, the TuSG Schinkel 04 was considered the "secret darling" of the Osnabrück residents. Nevertheless, at the end of the war, the club faced an uncertain future. 60 percent of Schinkel was destroyed, while the stadium had to make way for an expansion of the Klöckner works .

SV Schinkel 04

In 1947 the Schinkeler were one of the founding members of the Landesliga Weser / Ems and qualified two years later for the amateur league Lower Saxony- West. In 1952 , the team rose from this and had to relegate two years later from the amateur league 2 . In 1957 Schinkel 04 was able to rise again to the Amateur League 8 , which had been newly created a year earlier . With the relegation in 1963, the club disappeared in the district class. In 1970 the Schinkeler rose to the district league and returned after two years. In 1977 the team was relegated to the district league. Between 1980 and 1986 and from 1989 to 1995 the Schinkelers played again in the district class and in 1996 had to start the 1st district class. The 1997 resurgence was followed by direct relegation. The last season 2004/05 as an independent club finished the Schinkeler in the 1st district class Osnabrück-Stadt in tenth place.

Personalities

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Hardy Greens : Legendary football clubs. Northern Germany. Between TSV Achim, Hamburger SV and TuS Zeven. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2004, ISBN 3-89784-223-8 , p. 246.
  2. ^ Articles of Association. TSG Burg Gretesch , accessed on May 20, 2018 .
  3. ^ German Sports Club for Football Statistics (Ed.): Football in West Germany 1902/03 - 1932/33 . 2009, DNB  997617357 , p. 130-141 .
  4. Hardy Greens: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 1: From the Crown Prince to the Bundesliga. 1890 to 1963. German championship, Gauliga, Oberliga. Numbers, pictures, stories. Agon-Sportverlag, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-85-1 , pp. 180, 192, 216, 231.
  5. ^ German Sports Club for Football Statistics (Ed.): District classes Lower Saxony 1964-1979 . Lehrte 2015, p. 127, 176, 308 .
  6. ^ German sports club for soccer statistics (ed.): Soccer in the Weser-Ems district 1979-2006 . Taught 2018, p. 272, 294 407 .