TSC Eintracht Dortmund

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Gymnastics and Sport Club Eintracht from 1848/95, Corporation of Dortmund
(TSC Eintracht Dortmund)
logo
founding 1848/95
Seat Victor-Toyka-Strasse 6
44139 Dortmund
main emphasis Sports club
Chair Alexander Kiel
Members 7,000 (as of 2019)
Website tsc-eintracht-dortmund.de

The TSC Eintracht 1848/1895 corporation in Dortmund is with 7,000 members the largest sports club of active members in the city of Dortmund . It emerged from a merger of the TuS Eintracht Dortmund and Dortmunder SC 95 clubs in 1969. The extensive club area with two triple sports halls, several gymnastics halls, a large artificial turf field for hockey and lacrosse, a small hockey field, a running track, a Finn track, two long jump facilities, a shot put facility, an outdoor fitness area, an artificial turf football field, two small artificial turf side courts and two beach volleyball courts are not far from the Westfalenhalle and the Westfalenstadion on Victor-Toyka-Straße. The club colors are royal blue and white, the club crest shows a stylized dynamic small e for unity.

The club has 28 departments, with gymnastics , fitness , football , hockey and children's / youth sports being the largest divisions. There are also offers in badminton , basketball , fencing , judo , canoe , karate , aikido , arnis (martial arts) , yawara , athletics , rhythmic gymnastics , table tennis , diving , rock 'n' roll (dance) , lacrosse and Volleyball .

Well-known members are the 1972 Olympic champions in hockey Michael Krause and Werner Kaessmann , the 1975 world champion in rhythmic gymnastics Carmen Rischer and the multiple German figure skating champion Marina Kielmann . Willi Daume began his functionary work at TSC Eintracht as a youth and handball warden.

history

TSC sports center

On June 15, 1848, TV Eintracht was founded as the first Dortmund sports club by twenty young gymnasts. On August 25, 1876, the state granted the association the rights of a legal person in the form of a corporation . This legal status still exists today. On October 30, 1921, the club's own facility on Eintrachtstrasse was inaugurated. The project could only be realized through a generous donation from the Dortmund manufacturer Victor Toyka . The current location bears his name.

The Eintrachthalle served as a collection point for the deportation of Dortmund's Jews during National Socialism. A memorial stone at the location of the former hall today commemorates the atrocities. During the Second World War , the Eintrachthaus was destroyed by two bomb attacks in May and October 1944. In particular, thanks to the work of Willi Daumes, who was an active member of the athletics department, sports activities were quickly resumed after the end of the war. At the same time, TV Eintracht became TuS Eintracht Dortmund .

The destroyed facility will also be rebuilt. In 1969 there was a merger with the then Dortmund SC 95. Since then, the club has had its current name. The change of location from Eintrachtstraße - where the Continentale took over the site - to Flora took place in 1983. From the decision in March 1979 it took only two years to the first groundbreaking and two more to the inauguration in September 1983. In a second construction phase the Entire building completed and inaugurated in March 1986. The last structural project in 1995 included an extension with a fitness studio, sauna, gymnastics halls and physiotherapy.

TSC Eintracht is managed by the board and the presidium. The chairman of the executive committee is hockey Olympic champion Michael Krause . Alexander Kiel has been the club's full-time chairman of the board since January 2012, previously he was managing director of the TSC.

Soccer

TSC Eintracht Dortmund football
Surname TSC Eintracht Dortmund football
Venue TSC stadium at the Flora
Places 3,000
Head coach Mark Elbracht
league District league A1 Dortmund
2018/19 3rd place

history

The football department of TSC Eintracht continues the tradition of the Dortmund SC 95, which is considered to be the oldest football club in Dortmund. In 1933 the DSC 95 merged with the Sportfreunde 06 to form Sportfreunde 95 Dortmund . The connection only came about so that the Westphalian metropolis was represented with a supposedly high-performance club in the new top division, the Gauliga Westfalen . After just one year, Sportfreunde 95 was relegated from the Gauliga, and Dortmund was without a first division club for two years. The relegation was followed by the separation of the two clubs. After the Second World War, the DSC played from 1956 to 1963 in the second-rate II Division West .

Eintracht started in the 1969/70 season in the then fourth-class Landesliga Westfalen and had to relegate to the district league in its first season after internal squabbles. In 1971 he was finally promoted to the national league. Two years later, Eintracht was runner-up, four points behind SV Holzwickede . It should be the sporting climax of the club's history, because the successful team disintegrated and as early as 1977 Eintracht descended again into the district class. Three years later, the team even slipped into the district league. After a short district league comeback in the 1982/83 season, the team played in the district league for years before being promoted to the district league again in 2013. After five years, he was relegated to the district league A.

Youth work

Lars Ricken

The soccer department is known for its youth work. Players like Karl-Heinz Granitza , Lars Ricken and Stefan Klos played for the Eintracht youth. The B-youth of Eintracht became Westphalia champion in 1988 and took part in the German championship , where Eintracht failed after victories over Fortuna Düsseldorf and Bayer 04 Leverkusen only in the semi-finals to Hertha Zehlendorf .

The A-youth of TSC Eintracht has been playing in the second-class Westfalenliga since the 2014/15 season. The B and C youth compete in the national league. In the 2008/09 season , Eintracht's B-youth played for one year in the U-17 Bundesliga . The C-youth rose in 2011 after a 4-3 victory over Rot Weiss Ahlen in the first-class Regionalliga West, from which they had to relegate a year later. In 2013, after a 3-0 win over SV Lippstadt 08 , they were promoted again, which was followed by immediate relegation.

successes

  • B-Youth Westphalia Champion: 1988, 2008
  • B-Youth Westphalia Cup winner: 1988
  • C-Youth Westphalia Champion: 1986, 2011, 2013
  • D-Youth Westphalia Champion: 1988

Personalities

Stadion

The home ground of the football department of TSC Eintracht Dortmund is the TSC stadium on the Flora. The stadium was opened in 1954 and was called the DSC Stadium on the Flora until the merger . It has a capacity of 3,000 seats.

Handball

The handball department of TSC Eintracht started after the merger in 1969 in the then second-class Regionalliga West and failed in the first season in the semi-finals of the play-off round at Alemannia Aachen . A year later, Eintracht rose and was passed in the following league season with 2:30 points as bottom of the table. In 1985 the TSC handball players returned to the Oberliga Westfalen and immediately became runner-up behind HSG Haltern-Sythen . Three years later, Eintracht rose to the regional league after the team finished the season tied with TSG Altenhagen-Heepen from Bielefeld .

From 1991 the handball players of TSC Eintracht together with the former Bundesliga club OSC Dortmund formed the HSG Dortmund , which later disintegrated. In the 2015/16 season, TSC Eintracht did not provide a handball team.

hockey

Placements men’s field
season league Item
1979/80 Oberliga 1.
1980/81 Regional league 4th
1981/82 Regional league 1.
1983 Regional league 2.
1984 Regional league 3.
1985 Regional league 7th
1986 Regional league ?
1987 Oberliga 3.
1988 Oberliga 1.
1989 Regional league 5.
1990 Regional league 5.
1991 Regional league 3.
1992 Regional league 2.
1993 Regional league 5.
1994 Regional league 5.
1995 Regional league 8th.
1996 Oberliga 1.
1997 Regional league 5.
1998 Regional league 5.
1999 Regional league ?
2000 Regional league 3.
2001 Regional league 5.
2002 Regional league 8th.
2003/04 Oberliga 1.
2004/05 Regional league 7th
2005/06 Regional league 8th.
2006/07 Oberliga 2.
2007/08 Oberliga 3.
2008/09 Oberliga 3.
2009/10 Oberliga 3.
2010/11 Oberliga 4th
2010/11 Oberliga 3.

The history of Dortmund hockey goes back to 1921. Wilhelm Schulz from Dortmund Sport-Club 95 (one of the two clubs that merged to form TSC Eintracht in 1969) thought about what kind of recreational sport could be offered to athletes during the cold season. Just as the club was the first to introduce football in Dortmund 26 years earlier, the founding of the hockey department on April 23, 1921 was also the first this time.

Due to the lack of a suitable facility, the hockey players of the DSC united after the end of the 1922/23 season with the hockey department of the Dortmund Tennis Club from 1898, which was now called the Dortmund Tennis and Hockey Club (today Dortmunder TK Rot-Weiß 98). But the hockey game had no future here either. In 1926, the hockey department at Turnverein Eintracht, today's TSC Eintracht 1848/95, was founded. In 1954, the Dortmund Hockey Club joined the Eintracht because of the better training opportunities.

The hockey department has a number of talents, including national youth players like the brothers Benjamin and Maximilian Schröter.

Plaza

Hockey pitch on Ardeystraße

The approximately 300 members used the municipal hockey center on Ardeystraße around 300 m south of the club area. The facility with one of the first artificial turf pitches in Germany, which was built in the early 1980s, is shared by TSC Eintracht with the Dortmund Hockey Society . Previously, they played on the Ardeyblick natural grass pitch next to the Eintracht tennis club, which had left the main club. Until the construction of the natural turf next to the artificial turf on Ardeystraße in the early 1990s, the Ardeyblick was still used for training purposes. Then Borussia Dortmund took over the facility as a training ground for the Bundesliga team.

The new multi-outdoor sports facility was inaugurated in 2017. It is located by the main building on Victor Toyka Street. The department can now access a blue large field that meets the highest requirements, as well as an extra quarter. A running track and a Finn track are also available.

Men's

2nd Bundesliga 2006 TSC-SW Cologne

The 1st team plays in the hall in the Oberliga B in the 2016/17 season, and is currently fighting against relegation. The second team in the 1st association league D and the 3rd team in the 4th association league. (As of December 2016)

On the field, the 1st team plays in the Oberliga, and ends the 2009/10 season in 3rd place in the table. The 2nd men's team was withdrawn from the 1st Association League Westphalia during the season. A third men's team does not currently exist on the field either. (As of 2010)

Greatest successes

  • 1956 first Westphalia champion (Halle)
  • 1957 West German final
  • 2004–2006 2nd Bundesliga hall

In 1971 (against Klipper Hamburg , Harvestehuder THC and Eintracht Duisburg ) and 1982 (against Großflottbeker THGC , Eintracht Braunschweig and Cologne's HTC Blau-Weiss ) the first men reached the promotion round to the field Bundesliga , and in 1984 to the indoor league . From 2004 to 2006 the men's team played in the 2nd Bundesliga hall for three years , with the team remaining unbeaten in 13 games at home and losing only two home games. After relegation, the team broke up, so that further relegations both on the field and in the hall from the regional league to the upper league followed. In the indoor season 2008/09 then succeeded in promotion to the regional league.

Ladies

TSC women 2003 in Oelde

In the indoor season 2009/10 the team plays in the 1st Association League Gr. C, where you became first in the table and rose to the top division. The 2nd women's team also plays in the first association league (group D) and took 3rd place. In the 2009/10 field season, the women's team was able to finish second in the league.

Greatest successes

The women achieved their greatest success with the West German championship title played for the first time by the WHV in the hall in 1961 with a 1-0 win over the Barmer TV , but they were unlucky that German championships were only introduced in 1962. A year later the team reached the final again but had to admit defeat to the same opponent 0: 3. In 2001 the women rose from the league to the second highest division, the regional league, but had to leave it a year later.

youth

In the 2015 field season, the A girls (born in 2001/2002) were able to win the West German championship (Oberliga) again after more than 20 years. The A-girls now compete in the regional league, the highest German division, in the following indoor season and play for the qualification places for the German championship. Seven players of the team play in the selection of the Westphalia district, six of them were spotted for NRW selection of the U14 girls.

Honorary members

Honorary members of TSC Eintracht Dortmund (highest award of the club for special services to the club or sport):

  • 1862 Auerbach
  • 1864 Eduard von Mayer
  • 1864 Karl Zahn
  • 1864 vd Heyden-Rynsch
  • 1871 rank
  • 1877 Brückmann
  • 1877 W. Overbeck
  • 1879 Fritz Winterkamp
  • 1907–1938 Hans Nebelung
  • 1919 Paul Rulf
  • 1924-1942 Victor Toyka
  • 1924–1943 Wilhelm Backhaus
  • 1924–1951 Heinrich Regener
  • 1924–1952 Carl Willikens
  • 1948–1956 Ernst Halbach
  • 1950–1960 Karl Bartels
  • 1953–1996 Willi Daume
  • 1953–1954 Paul Thon
  • 1955–1966 Karl Kramer
  • 1955–1964 Robert Georg
  • 1955–1964 Walter Schmitt
  • 1955–1972 Ferdinand Schmidt
  • 1964–1972 Franz Bussmann
  • 1964–1967 Eugen Klöpper
  • 1976–1986 Ernst Götte
  • 1977–1985 Hans Brinkmann
  • 1977–1993 Otto Kaessmann
  • 1988–1988 Gustav Schulz
  • 1998–2003 Walter Schiffmann
  • 2003–2014 Oskar Reinecke
  • 2006 Heinz Becker

Web links

Commons : TSC Eintracht Dortmund  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b tsc-eintracht-dortmund.de: Membership
  2. a b 100 years on the ball in Dortmund ... the 95s. (PDF) TSC Eintracht Dortmund, accessed on November 29, 2015 .
  3. TSC Eintracht 48/95 Dortmund. Tables Archive.info, accessed on May 11, 2019 .
  4. a b c FLVW Westphalia champion. (PDF) FLVW , accessed on May 17, 2019 .
  5. FLVW Westphalia Cup winner. (PDF) FLVW, accessed on May 17, 2019 .
  6. ^ Sven Webers: Regionalliga West 1969/70. Bundesligainfo.de, accessed on November 29, 2015 .
  7. ^ Sven Webers: Oberliga Westfalen 1985/86. Bundesligainfo.de, accessed on November 29, 2015 .
  8. ^ Sven Webers: Oberliga Westfalen 1988/89. Bundesligainfo.de, accessed on November 29, 2015 .
  9. ^ WHV hockey. In: http://www.hockey.de/ . Retrieved December 14, 2016 .

Coordinates: 51 ° 30 '  N , 7 ° 28'  E