SuS 09 Dinslaken

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SuS 09 Dinslaken
Template: Infobox Football Club / Maintenance / No picture
Basic data
Surname Play and sports club 09
e. V. Dinslaken
Seat Dinslaken , North Rhine-Westphalia
founding 1909
Colours Blue White
Website sus09.de
First soccer team
Head coach Thorsten Schramm
Venue District
sports facility on Voerder Strasse
Places approx. 3,000
league District League Niederrhein 5
20119/20 14th place
home
Away

The game and sports club 09 e. V. Dinslaken is a German sports club from Dinslaken in North Rhine-Westphalia . The association was founded in 1909 . In addition to football , the club also has departments in basketball , volleyball , athletics and popular sports ( aerobics and Nordic walking ).

The plaza

The district sports facility on Voerder Strasse is not far from the city center of Dinslaken. It is a municipal sports facility, there are two football fields and a mini-pitch on the site. A main lawn with a running track in the front part, an ash area in the rear part of the site. In addition, there is a small artificial turf pitch (DFB mini pitch), which is intended for school sports (football club) of the GGS on Gartenstrasse.

The artificial turf pitch was inaugurated in June 2008 as part of the DFB “1000 mini-playing fields” campaign. The grass pitch is used by all teams, but has no floodlights, so evening games and most of the training sessions take place on the ash pitch. The sports field was the venue for a game of the 2006 World Cup for people with disabilities . Adjacent to the district sports facility there is a municipal sports hall, the Hans-Efing-Halle, which is used for school and club sports.

Soccer

In 1903, the first “wild soccer clubs” came into being in Dinslaken. Since it was very difficult for the Dinslaken football pioneers to keep up with the surrounding clubs, in 1909 the members of several "wild clubs" decided to merge to form the "Dinslakener Spiel-Verein". In the same year, an application was made to join the football association. The club was registered under the name "Spiel- und Sportverein 09 eV Dinslaken".

So you could take part in championship games. After the First World War , the football department was able to record its first successes. In 1922 the team played in the highest West German league.

After many ascents and descents and the forced interruption due to the Second World War , they played again in the top amateur class in 1953/54 . In 1955 the descent followed, which only ended with the descent into the 2nd district class. In 1964 he was promoted to the 1st district class. Seven years later (1972) one rose to the district class and 1975 followed the promotion to the national league.

But after further promotions and relegations between the state and district league, you could never hold the class for more than two years. But in the 1989/90 season they made the leap into the Niederrhein Association League , today's Oberliga Niederrhein , which was the fourth-highest division at the time. Four years later, under coach Günter Tinnefeld, he was promoted to the Oberliga Nordrhein as third in the table, which was made possible by the introduction of the Regionalliga West / Südwest . From 1994 to 1999 the soccer team belonged to the Oberliga Nordrhein. In the first season , the team finished sixth of sixteen teams, their best placement in the league. Several midfield positions followed, but in 1999 they had to accept relegation under coach "Ferry" Schmidt with only 8 points.

After relegation in 1999, two more followed up to the district league. In the 2006/07 season he was promoted to the national league . After two relegations in a row, the club has been back in the district league A of district 9 (Duisburg / Mülheim / Dinslaken) after 39 years since the 2011/12 season.

The association attaches great importance to its youth work. It currently has 25 youth soccer teams, both girls and boys teams, that take part in the game. Most youth teams play in the performance classes of the Duisburg / Mülheim / Dinslaken district. These form the substructure of the Lower Rhine League, the second highest division in junior football. There is a cooperation agreement with Borussia Mönchengladbach , which promotes youth education as a partner club.

Well-known former players and coaches

basketball

In 1980 the basketball department was established. The men became district champions in 1988 and 2001 and played in the district league for many years. The women achieved more: in 1987, 1989 and 1997 they became district champions, in 1989 and 1997 they were district cup winners. For a long time they also played the district league and even the state league, during which time they also won the Niederrhein Cup in 1990. In recent years there has been a sharp decline in the number of members. It was not until the 2015/16 season that a men's team was reported in the 1st district league, where they finished the season in 5th place. The development of the youth area is also not neglected, so that the department is growing again here as well.

athletics

In the 1950s, several German champions and Olympic participants came from Dinslaken, including the all-rounder and sprinter Maria Sander , who won eleven German championships between 1951 and 1955 in the SuS 09 jersey and won a silver and a bronze medal at the 1952 Olympic Games in Helsinki . The long-distance runner Rolf Lamers also started in Helsinki, finishing sixth there over 1500 meters . Furthermore, a runner-up and a third place in German championships are available for his time at SuS 09. He won his two championship titles as a member of other clubs. The third Dinslaken Olympian in Helsinki was the long-distance and obstacle runner Günter Heßelmann , who came sixth in the 3000 meter obstacle course there. At German championships he won two runner-up championships and a third place during his time in Dinslaken. Another top athlete from Dinslaken is the pole vaulter Christine Adams , who competed for the SuS 09 until 1996 and during this time was German champion and runner-up at the European Indoor Championships three times.

Web links