Sport-Excelsior Friedenau

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Sport-Excelsior Friedenau
Full name "Sport Excelsior" association in Friedenau
place Berlin
Founded 1894
Dissolved unknown
Club colors white-burgundy
Stadion Tempelhofer Feld
Top league League of the DFuCB
successes
home
Away

Sport-Excelsior Friedenau was a football and athletics club from Berlin-Friedenau and one of the 86 founding clubs of the German Football Association .

history

In 1894, the "Sport-Excelsior Berlin Association" (later known as Sport-Excelsior Friedenau) emerged from the merger of the Sport Berlin Association and the Excelsior Cricket Club. The club colors were white and burgundy red, and games were regularly played entirely in white with a burgundy cap. The club's footballers were initially organized in the German Football and Cricket Association (DFuCB). Participation in the 2nd class of the DFuCB has been handed down from the seasons 1894–96.

At the founding meeting of the German Football Association on January 28, 1900 in Leipzig , the club was represented by its prominent member Kurt Doerry . Kurt Doerry was German champion in the 200-meter run and took part in the Olympic Games in Athens in 1896 and in Paris in 1900 .

The further history of the association has not been passed down.

Individual evidence

  1. 165 - No. 7 - Games and Sports - Page - Digital Collections - Portal. In: sammlungen.ulb.uni-muenster.de. Retrieved August 21, 2016 .
  2. ^ Fritz Steinmetz : 100 years of athletics in Berlin. 1987, accessed on September 9, 2015 (published in the program for the Berlin Marathon 1987).
  3. 622 - No. 41 - Games and Sports - Page - Digital Collections - Portal. In: sammlungen.ulb.uni-muenster.de. Retrieved August 21, 2016 .
  4. fussball-historie.de: DFuCB 2nd class 1896 ( Memento of the original from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.fussball-historie.de
  5. ^ German Football Association (ed.): German Football Yearbook 1904/05 . Grethlein and Co., Leipzig, p. 28 .