SpVg Marl

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SpVg Marl
SpVg Marl.svg
Full name Spielvereinigung Marl
1919/22 eV
place Marl
Founded May 5, 1919
Dissolved 2011 (merger)
Club colors black yellow
Stadion Volkspark
Top league Oberliga Westfalen
successes Promotion to the
Oberliga Westfalen in 1987

The SpVg Marl (full name: Spielvereinigung Marl 1919/22 eV ) was a football club from Marl in the Recklinghausen district . The first team played between 1987 and 1994 in the then third-class Oberliga Westfalen .

history

Structural development

On May 5, 1919, SpVg Marl was founded with the 19 Marl ball game club. Three years later there were two spin-offs. First of all, in 1922, the Arbeiter-TV Unity Marl was replaced. This was banned as a workers' sports club in 1933 . In 1945 it was re-established as TuS Einigkeit Marl , which was renamed SC Brassert Marl five years later . Also in 1922 the DJK Saxonia Marl was founded , which dissolved around 1935 and was re-established in 1945.

The remaining Ballspielverein changed in the meantime, the exact date is not known, its name in Sportvereinigung 19 Marl . In 1954, the SC Brassert Marl returned to the sports association. Two years later the sports association merged with the DJK Saxonia to form SpVg Saxonia Marl , which changed its name to SpVg Marl in 1965. The association was based in the Alt-Marl district .

Sporting development

In 1952 the sports association rose to the state league , which at the time was the highest Westphalian amateur league. In the very first season the team was runner-up behind TSV Hüls . Three years later, the Marler missed the qualification for the newly introduced association league . After the SpVg became runner-up in 1957 and failed in the promotion round to Teutonia Lippstadt , the leap into the association league succeeded a year later. After relegation in 1964, the team needed two years to rise again. In the 1966/67 season, the SpVg immediately took third place as a newcomer. But as early as 1969, the Marler had to relegate as the knocked-down bottom of the table. Three years later, he crashed into the district league.

In 1975 Reinhold Wosab , a 1963 German champion with Borussia Dortmund , returned to Marl. A year later, the SpVg rose to the national league after the Marler won the decider for promotion against SC Hassel in Dorsten 7: 4. 1978 succeeded after a successful promotion round of the national league, the return to the association league. The club owed the sporting renaissance to a support group around the building contractor Hans-Dieter Onnebrink and the lawyer Benneken. The descent in 1980 was followed three years later by the rise. In 1987 the SpVg became champions of the northern relay of the Association League and rose to the Oberliga Westfalen.

The team was able to establish itself in the top Westphalian league, but also had to put up with bitter hours such as an 8-0 defeat at Arminia Bielefeld . The planned merger with local rivals TSV Marl-Hüls was rejected twice by Marl-Hüls, whereupon SpVg moved to the Jahnstadion . In the 1992/93 season , the SpVg reached sixth place, their best placement of their Oberliga era. Internal quarrels and declining audience numbers led to relegation a year later . Until 2003, the team was still able to hold the association league, but did not get beyond the relegation battle there. Three relegations in a row brought the Marler in 2006 to the district league A.

Successor club FC Marl

FC Marl
Surname FC Marl
Venue Sports facility Hagenstrasse
Places 3,000
league District League Westphalia 14
2019/20 2nd place

On July 1, 2011, SpVg merged with SG Marl and VfL Drewer to form FC Marl 2011 . While SG Marl never got beyond the district level, VfL Drewer reached the state league in the 1996/97 season. The FC Marl took over the place of the VfL Drewer in the district league and two years later rose from the district league. With the engagement of the former Bundesliga keeper Mathias Schober , the club then caused a stir. In 2015 they were promoted back to the district league, where the Marlers were runner-up behind VfB Hüls three years later . In 2020, the Marler were again runner-up, this time behind the Erler SV 08 .

Personalities

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c Hardy Green , Christian Karn: The big book of German football clubs . AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2009, ISBN 978-3-89784-362-2 , p. 323.
  2. a b c d Ralf Piorr (Hrsg.): The pot is round - The lexicon of Revier football: The clubs . Klartext Verlag, Essen 2006, ISBN 3-89861-356-9 , p. 163-165 .
  3. ^ SpVgg Marl. Tables Archive.info, accessed on May 12, 2019 .
  4. Turowski becomes the coordinator of "FC Marl 2011". RevierSport , accessed January 6, 2016 .
  5. ^ VfL Drewer. Tables Archive.info, accessed on May 12, 2019 .
  6. ^ FC Marl. Tables Archive.info, accessed on May 12, 2019 .