SC Dynamo Berlin

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Logo of the SC Dynamo Berlin

The SC Dynamo Berlin was a GDR sports club that existed 1954-1991. It was a center of competitive sports promotion of the Dynamo Sports Association (sports association of the Ministry of the Interior / Police and the Ministry of State Security ).

Sports spectrum

The 4 x 100 meter relay after winning the GDR championship in 1958 from left to right: Mayer , Birkemeyer , Stubnick , Lehmann

Especially in the 1950s and 1960s, the range of sports was subject to changes driven by sporting policy. In the 1980s, the SC Dynamo Berlin had the sections handball , athletics , swimming , gymnastics , cycling , speed skating , figure skating , ice hockey , fencing , rowing , boxing and volleyball . The judo section was incorporated into the SC Dynamo Hoppegarten in 1966 . The football section was spun off in 1966 and the Berliner FC Dynamo football club was created .

Settlement

The SC Dynamo Berlin used a spacious, still existing sports complex in Berlin-Alt-Hohenschönhausen , the so-called Sportforum (also Dynamo-Sportforum) with athletics stadium, gyms, swimming pool, roller skating rink, ice hockey rink, figure skating rink, speed skating rink and cycle racing track.

successes

The SC Dynamo has produced numerous well-known athletes, such as Christoph Höhne (athletics - Olympic champion in walking ), Ilona Slupianek-Briesenick (athletics - Olympic champion in the shot put ), Karin Janz (Olympic champion in gymnastics), Axel Peschel (cycling - winner of the peace ride ), the ice hockey players Joachim Ziesche and Dietmar Peters , the Olympic champion in speed skating Helga Haase , the Olympic champion in swimming, Barbara Krause , the volleyball world selection player Günther Thomae and the volleyball national players Christine Mummhardt , Maike Arlt , Monika Beu , Susanne Lahme , Ute Langenau , Grit Jensen-Naumann , Ines Pianka and Ariane Radfan .

badge

The badge of the SC Dynamo Berlin, which also occurred in embroidered form for the tracksuit, shows the logo of the SV Dynamo on red grained ground with the winding D . This is flanked on both sides by a laurel branch. At the lower tip of the badge, the word Sportclub can be read on a black background . The back of the badge is smooth and shows a horizontally soldered brooch pin.

After the GDR

With the beginning of the change in the GDR in 1989 and the dissolution of the MfS, the main support for Dynamo also ceased. Therefore, the SC Dynamo Berlin was renamed the 1st Police Sports Club (PSC) Berlin on March 21, 1990 , which includes the twelve sections boxing, figure skating, speed skating, fencing, handball, judo, athletics, cycling, rowing, swimming, gymnastics, Volleyball took over. At the same time, the former ice hockey section of SC Dynamo became self-employed as EHC Dynamo Berlin . The Ministry of Internal Affairs was the sponsor of both clubs, and Harold Dimke acted as club chairman of the PSC .

The PSC was subsequently renamed 1. SC Berlin on April 23, 1990 , from which SC Berlin emerged as legal successor in December 1990 and January 1991, respectively . Some of the sections that were taken over subsequently became self-employed: the handball players founded the HC Preußen Berlin , judoka and budo athletes founded the Budoverein SC Dynamo Hoppegarten eV in 1996 , the volleyball men switched to SCC Berlin , the volleyball women to the CJD Berlin .

Individual evidence

  1. Klaus H. Feder, Uta Feder: Awards in the Ministry for State Security of the GDR: 1950 to 1990 . 1st edition. Feder Verlag, Rosenheim 1996, ISBN 3-9805114-0-5 , page 90.
  2. ^ Fischer: First police sports club. In: New Germany . March 22, 1990, accessed February 14, 2013 .
  3. ^ Jürgen Holz: Trustee decision and job search . Nothing is being sold from the Berlin Sportforum / 20 million deficit. In: New Germany . January 4, 1991, p. 12 , col. 3 .
  4. ^ Sven Webers: The 24 clubs of the single-track GDR Oberliga men 1964–1991. In: bundesligainfo.de. Retrieved February 11, 2013 .
  5. ^ Jurij Robel: Excursion into history: Sportclub Berlin. (No longer available online.) In: home.arcor.de. Archived from the original on January 10, 2010 ; Retrieved February 11, 2013 . 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 / home.arcor.de
  6. Jürgen Bertko, Gerd Bertko: Association history. In: eiskunstlauf-scberlin.de. SC Berlin, accessed on February 11, 2013 .

Web links

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