TV 1864 Salzkotten

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The Turnverein 1864 Salzkotten eV is a sports club from the Westphalian Salzkotten . The club's basketball department , whose men's team played in the 2nd Bundesliga from 1995 to 2000 , achieved the greatest importance . In addition, with Inga Leiwesmeier and Klaus Isekenmeier, two athletes began their careers at TV 1864, which later led them to the top of the national team.

history

The gymnasts, who met after 1860 to practice sport together, officially founded an association in 1864, which was initially limited to gymnastics. In 1922 there was an interim union with VfB Salzkotten , so that various departments were added and the municipality was called Turngemeinde in 1864 . After the re-establishment after the Second World War in 1946, the club remained separate from VfB and has now founded other sports departments, including the marching band from Salzkotten.

basketball

TV 1864 Salzkotten
Founded 1976
Hall Hederauenhalle
Homepage http://www.tvs-basketball.de/
Chairman
Manager Raimund Heggemann
Trainer Stefan Schettke
league 1. Regionalliga West
2012/13: 3rd place
Colours Blue White
Jersey colors
Jersey colors
Kit shorts.svg
home
Jersey colors
Jersey colors
Kit shorts.svg
Away
successes
Reached the relegation round in 1997
for promotion to the first Bundesliga

The basketball department in TV 1864 Salzkotten was founded in 1976. The first men's team also operated under sponsor names in the past . For a long time the name Benslips Baskets was worn . Currently the name of the first men's team is Accent Baskets .

By the early 1990s, the men's team reached the top divisions of the WBV . In the next step into the national league, the team benefited from a changed personnel policy of the neighboring second division Paderborn Baskets . He had previously relied on players from its own offspring, but then signed players from all over Germany, with whom this club achieved promotion to the first basketball league in 1994. The first men's team of TV 1864 now benefited from the fact that talented young players from the Baskets could be signed for their own team, and in 1995 they were promoted to the 2nd Basketball Bundesliga Group North. Due to the immediate relegation of Paderborn from the first division, both teams played in this division from 1995 onwards and faced each other in sometimes bitterly conducted " local derbies ". After relegation in the first year, in the second year they reached the relegation round with the worst first division teams for promotion to the first basketball league with the former Hagen first division players Ralf Risse and Dieter Klein . After two wins you could leave two other second division teams behind in a direct comparison , but otherwise had no chance of reaching a promotion place. While the local derbies were mostly even and at eye level, they were able to leave their local rivals Paderborn Baskets behind in the table in the 2nd Bundesliga 1997/98 alone . After five seasons, the club was no longer ready to bear the financial risks from financing the second division team and withdrew the team to the then third-highest division.

After the withdrawal from the second division in 2000, the rivalry with the Paderborn second division team subsided and gave way to a cooperation that resulted , among other things, in the OWL talent offensive . Trainers like Martin Krüger and later Artur Gazaev and Thomas Glasauer were also head coach in Salzkotten and junior coach in Paderborn. After players like Marius Nolte and Daniel Lieneke , players like Robert Oehle and Ole Wendt later took advantage of the double license to play in both the Salzkotten regional league team and the Paderborn men's team and their youth teams. Conversely, experienced Paderborn players also repeatedly supported the first men's team of TV 1864. Most recently Stefano Garris was in action here, who as a former World Cup bronze medalist was probably the most important player in the Salzkotten team.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Talent offensive. Paderborn Baskets , accessed April 2, 2013 .
  2. Elmar Neumann: Nino and his new life. Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung , April 6, 2012, accessed on April 2, 2013 .