TSV Havelse

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
TSV Havelse
Club logo
Basic data
Surname Gymnastics and Sports Club
Havelse 1912 e. V.
Seat Garbsen - Havelse , Lower Saxony
founding August 5, 1912
Colours Red White
president Manfred Hörnschemeyer
Website tsvhavelse.de
First soccer team
Head coach Jan Zimmermann
Venue Wilhelm Langrehr Stadium
Places 3,500
league Regionalliga North
2019/20 9th place
home
Away

The TSV Havelse (officially . Gymnastics and sports club Havelse 1912 eV) is a sports club from Garbsen in the Hanover region . The club was founded in 1912 and (as of February 18, 2011) has 871 members in the football , tennis , table tennis , ballet and gymnastics departments . The club colors are red and white.

The TSV became known through its football department. The first men's team has been playing in the fourth-tier Regionalliga Nord since it was promoted in 2010 . In the 1990/91 season , TSV Havelse played in the 2nd Bundesliga . In addition, the team won the Lower Saxony Cup in 2012 and 2020 .

The first women's team has played in the third- tier Regionalliga Nord since it was promoted in 2008 . The home ground of TSV Havelse is the Wilhelm Langrehr Stadium with a capacity of 3,500 seats.

history

Foundation and early years

Since November 1911, a group of young men met to play football in the village of Havelse, which then had 250 inhabitants . On August 5, 1912, they founded FC Pelikan Havelse . However, it was not named after the bird of the same name , but rather the club's first play equipment , which the members purchased for 7.50 marks in the Hanoverian sports store Stoffregen .

During the First World War , gaming operations could be maintained until 1916. As a result of hyperinflation in Germany, FC Pelikan had to be dissolved in 1923. Six years later, a successor club was founded with TV Havelse , which in 1933 re-established a football department. A few years later, TV Havelse became TSV Havelse. Until the end of the Second World War , TSV Havelse only played at the district level.

In 1947 the TSV was renamed TSG Havelse-Marienwerder . The background to the renaming was the club's wish to continue to play with the more powerful clubs from Hanover. At the time, Havelse belonged to the district of Neustadt am Rübenberge , whose football clubs were of no sporting importance. Havel's neighbor Marienwerder , however, belonged to Hanover. One year later, Heinz Göing took over the chairmanship of the association. The director of the Lower Saxony soccer team modernized the club and laid the foundations for the sporting boom.

The era of the Toto Elf (1951 to 1975)

In 1951, the Havelsern succeeded for the first time in promotion to the district league. Just two years later, TSV won the championship there and, after a 5-4 victory over SpVg Laatzen, made it into the third-class Amateur League 3 . There the TSV secured the championship with a 2-0 win in front of 3,000 spectators against TuS Seelze . Also in the following round of promotion, the team prevailed and rose to the Amateur Oberliga West . In addition, the Havelsers caused a sensation with a 3-1 cup victory over the top division Werder Bremen .

The team, denigrated by envious people as "Toto-Elf from Totohausen", continued its triumphant advance in the amateur league. With three points behind Eintracht Nordhorn , TSV was runner-up and thus moved into the promotion round to the Oberliga Nord. There the team only achieved three points and finished third behind Nordhorn and Concordia Hamburg . The only victory was achieved at the Green Table because VfB Lübeck had used an ineligible player.

During the 1955/56 season, the TSV chairman Göing was charged with disguised professionalism . Because of the violation of the amateur statute, the club was sentenced to relegation to the amateur league. Göing lost his post with the Lower Saxony Toto and resigned as club chairman. Back in the amateur league, the new board struggled for a long time against a high debt burden. In 1958 and 1960 the Havelser were runner-up behind Sportfreunde Ricklingen and Springe respectively . With two points behind SpVgg Wunstorf , TSV missed the newly created Association League South in 1964 .

Supported by the successful youth work, the Havelser stayed in the fifth class district league 3 from 1964 . While the class could only just barely be held in 1966, the club experienced a sporting boom in the second half of the 1960s. In 1972 the runner-up championship could be celebrated, with the Havelser ten points behind the master police sports club Hanover . Nevertheless, the football department suffered from the fact that it no longer played a major role in the club. Only when the footballers threatened to leave in 1974 did the situation improve.

The way to the 2nd Bundesliga (1975 to 1990)

In 1975, department head Wilhelm Langrehr signed the former national player Hans Siemensmeyer as a new coach. One year later, TSV secured the district league championship with a team consisting almost exclusively of their own. The decisive factor was a 3-0 win in front of 4,000 spectators at competitor TSV Burgdorf , where the future professional Frank Pagelsdorf met twice. Two years later, the Havelser were one point behind TuS Hessisch Oldendorf runner-up in the Association League South . In 1979 TSV was runner-up again and won the Hanover District Cup with a 3-0 win against TuS Hessisch Oldendorf.

Frank Pagelsdorf

A year later, the Havelser secured the championship of the Landesliga West and rose to the Lower Saxony Association League . With a 10: 3 win at VfL Germania Leer , TSV surprisingly secured third place and moved into the promotion round to the Oberliga Nord . On the last day of the match, the Havels team made it through a 3-1 win over Eutin 08 , because table leaders Urania Hamburg lost 5-8 at TuS Celle .

The club, referred to by the media as TSV Siemensmeyer , quickly established itself in the north German amateur upper house. As early as the 1982/83 season , the team passed Arminia Hannover and became the sporting number two in the Hanover area . A year later , TSV was even the best team in Lower Saxony. Coach Siemensmeyer resigned at the end of the season. Under his successor Günter Blume, TSV caused a sensation in the DFB Cup when he won 2-2 after extra time against Bundesliga club VfL Bochum . In the replay, the Bochum team then won 4-0.

In the league, the team fought against relegation, which could still be avoided despite a series of 14 games without a win in the second half of the season. After disputes between trainer Blume and department head Langrehr, Volker Finke took over as trainer in February 1986. Finke led the team out of the table basement before a 3-2 win over 1. SC Göttingen 05 on the last day of the match ensured they were not relegated. In the period that followed, Finke built numerous of its own young players into the team.

In 1989 TSV Havelse became champions of the Oberliga Nord and moved into the promotion round . Against well-known teams such as MSV Duisburg and Preußen Münster , the Havelsers had no chance and took last place. A year later the team was more successful. As runner-up behind VfB Oldenburg , TSV secured promotion on the penultimate matchday with a 3-2 win over Wuppertaler SV . Lars-Peter Beike scored the winning goal in front of 6,000 spectators with a directly converted free kick .

Decline after the second division year (1990 to 2005)

The rise to the professional level turned out to be too big a hurdle for the club. The stadium had to be expanded within a few weeks, well-known players could not be financially affordable and most of the players continued to pursue their main occupation. In addition, there was unrest in the club, as Hanover 96 tried for weeks to coach Volker Finke. Although the first three home games could be won, the team remained in the table cellar due to the serious injury of playmaker Lars-Peter Beike. On October 5, 1990, Finke dissolved his contract and was replaced by Karl-Heinz Mrosko . At the end of the season there were six wins, seven draws and 25 defeats and TSV was relegated as the penultimate.

By participating in the 2nd Bundesliga, TSV Havelse was allowed to take part in the DFB Cup in the 1991/92 season . In the first round match against 1. FC Nürnberg , the Havelsern achieved a sensation with a 4-2 on penalties . In the third round they failed 4-0 at SC 08 Bamberg . In the Oberliga TSV reached the promotion round to the 2nd Bundesliga due to the better goal difference compared to 1. SC Norderstedt . There the Havelser were against the third-bottom of the two second division seasons, Fortuna Cologne and TSV 1860 Munich , but without a chance.

Volker Finke

Numerous top performers then left the club, which was relegated from bottom of the table in the 1992/93 season under coach Ronald Worm . In the DFB Cup , TSV reached the second round, in which it met Karlsruher SC . KSC, for which the later national players Jens Nowotny and Oliver Kahn played , won the game 3-0. As fourth in the league season 1993/94, the Havels qualified for the Oberliga Niedersachsen / Bremen .

In third place, the team just missed the relegation games to Regionalliga Nord, two points behind SV Atlas Delmenhorst . Apart from 10th place in the 1996/97 season , the Havelser were always in the upper third of the table, but without getting close to the promotion ranks. When the department head Langrehr died in February 2000, the association was in danger of bankruptcy . In the following season 2000/01 the team crashed to 15th place. Since Lüneburger SK and SV Wilhelmshaven were relegated from the regional league and 1. SC Göttingen 05 missed promotion to the regional league, this meant relegation to the Lower Saxony league West .

The attempt to regain promotion with the help of a sports marketing company failed. The team was passed in the 2001/02 season in the sixth-class state league Hanover . By selling two tennis courts, the club was able to excuse itself at the end of 2004. A year later, the TSV caused a sensation when he ran up with pants advertising, which is not allowed according to the DFB statutes. In terms of sport, TSV managed to return to the Lower Saxony league in 2005 as runner-up behind SV Bockenem .

Present (since 2005)

After the rise, the TSV quickly established itself again in the Upper House of Lower Saxony. In the 2005/06 season, the team just missed the march into the top division. The gap to master SV Ramlingen-Ehlershausen was three points . A year later, the Havelser qualified again for the DFB-Pokal, when the team defeated the two leagues higher playing reserves of VfL Wolfsburg 3-1 in the qualifying game . But already the first round at federal level meant the end with a 3-0 defeat against the second division club TuS Koblenz .

André Breitenreiter

In the 2009/10 season, the team reinforced with ex-professionals such as Michael Habryka , Babacar N'Diaye and André Breitenreiter secured the championship of the Lower Saxony-West Oberliga . Since only the second team from Holstein Kiel had applied for a place in the regional league from the upper leagues of Hamburg , Schleswig-Holstein and Bremen , but they were not allowed to rise due to the relegation of the first team to the regional league, TSV Havelse was able to rise automatically.

The team trained by Jürgen Stoffregen was in danger of relegation early on. On January 2, 2011, André Breitenreiter became his successor; he led the team in 15th place, which meant the sporting descent. However, when the DFB still granted TuS Koblenz the regional league license and Sportfreunde Lotte did not have to move from the west to the north group, a place in the north group became available again, to which the TSV moved up. A year later , Breitenreiter led his team to fifth place and into the final of the Lower Saxony Cup , in which SV Wilhelmshaven was defeated 2-1.

In the DFB-Pokal 2012/13 the Havelser beat 1. FC Nürnberg 3-2 after extra time in the first round . In the second round they were drawn to VfL Bochum and lost at home with 1: 3. In the regional league season 2012/13 , TSV secured the runner-up behind Holstein Kiel . At the end of the season, coach Breitenreiter announced his move to the second division club SC Paderborn . His successor Christian Benbennek was officially presented on May 29, 2013. Despite the departure of top performers such as Marc Vucinovic , Tom Christian Merkens or Saliou Sané , Benbennek managed to lead the Havels team into the upper midfield of the table. The TSV finished the 2013/14 season in 7th place in the table. The following season 2014/15 ended the TSV despite another personnel change in the summer break with 55 points, which meant 4th place in the table. The TSV provided the best defense in the league with 35 goals conceded. Head coach Christian Benbennek left the club at the end of the season for Alemannia Aachen , the previous U19 coach Stefan Gehrke was presented as his successor on May 21, 2015. The start of the season was mixed. After two major away defeats against VfL Wolfsburg II (1: 6) and ETSV Weiche Flensburg (1: 5), Gehrke was finally relieved of his duties on September 23, 2015. He then took over again the U19 of TSV in the A-Junioren-Bundesliga. As his successor, Alexander Kiene was presented by league competitor BSV Rehden on October 7, 2015 , who finally led TSV to 6th place in the table. The team under Kiene took this place in the following year. The club could not agree on a contract extension with Alexander Kiene, so that from the 2017/18 season Christian Benbennek took over the team again.

successes

Current squad ( 2019/20 season )

No. player Nat. Date of birth in the team since Last club
goalkeeper
01 Alexander Rehberg GermanyGermany 05/03/1996 2017 Hanover 96 II
13 Antonio Brandt GermanyGermany 04/08/2000 2019 VfL Wolfsburg U19
22nd Sascha Quast GermanyGermany 03/10/1998 2017 own youth
35 Alexander Dlugaiczyk GermanyGermany 02/17/1983 2018 Hannoverscher SC
Defense
26th Niklas Tasky GermanyGermany 02/11/1991 2019 without a club
03 Marco Schleef GermanyGermany 01/15/1999 2018 Eintracht Braunschweig U19
05 Jonas Sonnenberg GermanyGermany 06/23/1993 2016 SSV Jahn Regensburg II
20th Tobias Foelster GermanyGermany 01/30/1994 2015 Hanover 96 II
06th Robin Benecke GermanyGermany 03/10/2000 2019 own youth
07th Niklas pond graves GermanyGermany 02/07/1996 2019 1. FC Germania Egestorf / Langreder
21st Denis Kina GermanyGermany 11/08/1992 2018 FC Gütersloh
02 Max Radowski GermanyGermany 01/11/1998 2017 VfL Wolfsburg U19
midfield
24 Noah Plume GermanyGermany 08/18/1996 2019 FC Gütersloh
27 Torge Bremer GermanyGermany 09/06/1994 2018 TSV Steinbach
04th Fynn sheet maker GermanyGermany 05/10/2000 2019 own youth
15th Tim Stiller GermanyGermany 11/18/1999 2018 own youth
23 Tim-Alexander Meier GermanyGermany 11/03/1998 2017 own youth
10 Deniz Cicek GermanyGermany TurkeyTurkey October 19, 1992 2015 Sports fanatic Lotte
Storm
18th Maurice Maletzki GermanyGermany 09/08/1991 2018 SV Arminia Hanover
30th David Lucic GermanyGermany 05/11/1999 2018 own youth
16 Torben Engelking GermanyGermany 02/28/1996 2019 1. FC Germania Egestorf / Langreder
08th Julius Langfeld GermanyGermany 02/18/1995 2018 SC Rot-Weiß Maaslingen
17th Leon Damer GermanyGermany January 31, 2000 2019 Hannover 96 U19
11 Yannik Jaeschke GermanyGermany 10/20/1993 2017 TuS Erndtebrück
09 Utku Kani GermanyGermany 01/11/1999 2017 own youth
  • As of August 19, 2019

Personalities

Squad of the second division season 1990/91

The numbers in brackets refer to the appearances and goals in the 1990/91 season.

goal Defense midfield attack
Stefan Beneking (6/0)
Ralf Krause (2/0)
Holm Mauritz (33/0)
Karl Eggestein (36/0)
Stefan Gähle (10/0)
Willi Kronhardt (32/2)
Michael Köpper (16/0)
Joachim Trautmann (30/0)
Ulrich Wilke (22/2)
Andreas Zindler (31/0)
Nenad Bankovic (25/1)
Lars-Peter Beike (15/6)
Dieter Frommelt (17/0)
Joachim Gehrmann (34/2)
Gerald Knauer (5/0)
Andreas Mueller (16/3)
Jürgen Prange (9/1)
Andjelko Urosević (13/0)
Thomas Vogel (22/2)
Berardino Capocchiano (35/14)
Christian Meier (4/0)
Dirk Spannuth (31/4)
Stefan Tiedgen (21/2)
Jens Todt (28/3)

Former players

Trainer

Term of office Nat. Trainer
1975-1984 GermanyGermany Hans Siemensmeyer
1984-1985 GermanyGermany Günter Blume
1985-1986 GermanyGermany Gerd Behrens
1986-1990 GermanyGermany Volker Finke
1990-1991 GermanyGermany Karl-Heinz Mrosko
1991-1993 GermanyGermany Jürgen Stoffregen
1992-1993 GermanyGermany Ronald Worm
1993 GermanyGermany Uwe Kliemann
1993-1995 PolandPoland Roman Wójcicki
- - -
1997-1998 GermanyGermany Karl Eggestein
1998-2000 GermanyGermany Frank Hartmann
2000-2001 GermanyGermany Ronald Worm
2001-2004 GermanyGermany Bernd Krajewski
2004-2010 GermanyGermany Jürgen Stoffregen
2011-2013 GermanyGermany André Breitenreiter
2013-2015 GermanyGermany Christian Benbennek
2015 GermanyGermany Stefan Gehrke
2015-2017 GermanyGermany Alexander Kiene
2017-2018 GermanyGermany Christian Benbennek
Since 2018 GermanyGermany Jan Zimmermann

Wilhelm Langrehr Stadium

In the Wilhelm Langrehr Stadium at the DFB Cup match TSV Havelse - VfL Bochum

TSV Havelse has been using the Wilhelm Langrehr Stadium as its home ground since 1933. Until March 2000, the stadium was called TSV Kampfbahn on Hannoversche Strasse , before it was renamed. The name giver is the longtime head of the football department Wilhelm Langrehr, who died a month before the name was changed. The stadium has a capacity of 3,500 seats, 350 of which are covered. In the second division season 1990/91, the club evaded a few games in the Lower Saxony Stadium in Hanover. The Eilenriedestadion in Hanover was also used for home games.

The highest number of spectators in the Wilhelm Langrehr Stadium was reached on June 14, 1990, when 6,000 spectators were counted in the promotion round match against Wuppertaler SV. The highest number of spectators at a TSV home game was reached on September 14, 1990, when 28,000 spectators saw the derby against Hannover 96 in the Lower Saxony Stadium.

Audience numbers

season Average audience
2005/06 443
2006/07 431
2007/08 351
2008/09 322
2009/10 573
2010/11 498
2011/12 466
2012/13 447
2013/14 419
2014/15 595
2015/16 525
2016/17 647
2017/18 496
2018/19 544
2019/20 678

More soccer teams

Second and third team

The second men's team of TSV Havelse had its most successful time in the mid-1990s. In 1992 he was promoted to the Hanover regional league , which was renamed the Hanover regional league in 1994 . After relegation in 1996, it went down to the district league in two-year steps. Since no second team was reported for the 2002/03 season, the new team had to start over in 2003 in the 4th district class. After several promotions, the second team of TSV Havelse played from 2009 in the district league Hannover 2. For the 2012/13 season, a third team was also reported, which competes in the 4th district class Hannover-Land, group 5.

Youth teams

In the 2012/13 season, TSV Havelse reported 15 youth teams, including two girls' teams. The male A-youth took part in the German championship in 1984 and was eliminated in the quarter-finals against Concordia Hamburg . Four years later, the B-youth reached the final round of the German championship , where they were eliminated against Bayer 04 Leverkusen in the first round . The C-Juniors of TSV Havelse won the DFB-Futsal-Cup in 2011 with a 2-0 victory over Karlsruher SC. The A-Juniors reached the final of the Lower Saxony Cup in the 2014/15 season and were defeated there by just 0: 1 to the youngsters in the Bundesliga from Hannover 96. In the same season, this team won the championship in the A-Jugend-Regionalliga Nord and thus promoted to the U-19 Bundesliga. There you came last and got off again straight away. In 2016/17 the Havelser failed after the runner-up in the promotion games against the representative of the Regionalliga Nordost, Chemnitzer FC . In the following season 2017/18, TSV was prematurely champion and was thus determined prematurely as a promoter to the A-Juniors-Bundesliga.

Women's soccer

The women's soccer department of TSV Havelse consists of two women's and four girls' teams. The first women's team made it to the Regionalliga Nord in 2008 and took seventh place in the 2008/09 season. In 2011 the team lost 1: 3 in the final of the Lower Saxony Cup of TSG Burg Gretesch . The second team competes in the national league.

With Tuğba Tekkal from Hamburger SV and 1. FC Köln and youth national player Kristin Demann from 1. FFC Turbine Potsdam , TSV Havelse also produced well-known players. Filiz Koç , a former Turkish national player who also works as an actress and model, also plays at TSV Havelse . After the season, TSV Havelse withdrew its women's team for financial reasons. The players joined TSV Limmer .

tennis

The greatest success of the tennis department was achieved in 1994 when the men's team won the Lower Saxony indoor championship. Currently, the first women's team in the Northern League and the first men's team in the Lower Saxony State League.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g h i j k Hardy Greens : Legendary football clubs. Northern Germany. Between TSV Achim, Hamburger SV and TuS Zeven. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2004, ISBN 3-89784-223-8 , pp. 313-315.
  2. tsvhavelse.de: The history
  3. Hardy Greens : Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 1: From the Crown Prince to the Bundesliga. 1890 to 1963. German championship, Gauliga, Oberliga. Numbers, pictures, stories. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-85-1 , p. 347.
  4. In a similar procedure in 2008, Arminia Hannover was granted the right to advertise with pants.
  5. Havelse remains a regional league team. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on July 4, 2011 ; Retrieved July 1, 2011 . 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.lzsport.de
  6. TSV Havelse gets the Lower Saxony Cup for the first time ( Memento of the original from September 2, 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.ligamo.de
  7. fussballdaten.de: TSV Havelse 2nd League 1990/91
  8. fussballdaten.de: The game statistics TSV Havelse - Hannover 96
  9. http://www.sportbuzzer.de/artikel/frauen-des-tsv-havelse-wechsel-zum-tsv-limmer/