TuS Bad Salzuflen

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TuS Bad Salzuflen
Club crest
Full name Gymnastics and sports club from 1945
Bad Salzuflen
place Bad Salzuflen , North Rhine-Westphalia
Founded October 10, 1918
(as VfL Bad Salzuflen )
Dissolved June 12, 1978
Club colors
Stadion Flachsheide Stadium
Top league Regional League Westphalia
successes Promotion to the Landesliga
Westfalen 1950, 1968
Template: Infobox historical football club / maintenance / incomplete home
Template: Infobox historical football club / maintenance / incomplete outward

The TuS Bad Salzuflen (full name: Turn- und Sportverein von 1945 eV Bad Salzuflen ) was a sports club from Bad Salzuflen . The association was founded on October 10, 1918. The first soccer team played for three years in the Landesliga Westfalen , which was the highest amateur league at the time. The club went on in 1978 in SC Bad Salzuflen.

history

On October 10, 1918, VfL Bad Salzuflen was the city's first football club. After the Second World War , VfL merged with Union Bad Salzuflen to form SuS Bad Salzuflen . This association later changed its name to TuS Bad Salzuflen .

In 1946, the Salzufler rose to the district class and secured the championship three years later. In the promotion round to the regional league , at the time the highest amateur league in Westphalia, the team only narrowly failed. The playoff against TSV Letmathe with equal points in neutral Hamm was lost with 0: 1. A year later, the team defended the district class title and rose to the newly created 2nd regional league . TuS took eighth place in the promotion season. The game against SVA Gütersloh was watched by 6,000 spectators; a record attendance for the club to this day. In the second leg in Gütersloh, however, the Salzufler came under the wheels with 0:10.

In 1952 there was a league reform in which the three-track 2nd regional league was abolished and the TuS was included in the now five-track regional league. The only year in the then highest Westphalian amateur league brought the club no luck and the TuS rose from bottom of the table with 9:43 points. The club played in the district class with variable success and was runner-up in 1963 behind VfL Schlangen . Five years later, he was promoted to the state league, which was only fourth class due to the interim introduction of the Westphalia Association in 1956.

As a knocked-down bottom of the table, the Salzufler went straight back down to the district class, where only midfield places for the team jumped out. In 1978, with the descent to the district league A, the club's low point followed, which was also the end of the club.

Successor club SC Bad Salzuflen

SC Bad Salzuflen
Surname SC Bad Salzuflen
Venue Waldstrasse sports facility
Places 3,000
Head coach Martin Wilkens
league District league A Lemgo
2019/20 3rd place
Website sc-badsalzuflen.de
home
Away

On 12 June 1978 merged the TuS Bad Salzuflen with the Gymnastics Federation German oak Schötmar . The TuS Bad Salzuflen was dissolved and the Turnerbund Deutsche Eiche Schötmar was renamed Sportclub Bad Salzuflen . The Schötmarer played from 1948 to 1951, from 1953 to 1961 and from 1953 to 1966 in the district class. With Thomas Helmer and Thomas Stratos, SC Bad Salzuflen produced two future Bundesliga players and, in addition to football, also offers table tennis , gymnastics and volleyball , while the athletics department is part of LG Lage-Detmold-Bad Salzuflen .

In the first season after the merger, the SC rose to the district league and two years later made it to the state league. The Salzufler reached their sporting zenith in the 1982/83 season, when the team finished third, three points behind FC Stukenbrock and Hövelhofer SV . Then the team fell back into mediocrity and after two relegations in a row in 1987 slipped back into the district league A. In 1990 they were promoted back to the district league, where the team became runner-up behind SuS Wulferdingsen two years later . Things went downhill again in the mid-1990s.

In 1996, the Salzufler descended into the district league A and two years later reached the low point with the descent into the district league B. It took until 2003 before SC Bad Salzuflen returned to the Lemgo District League A. After two ascents in a row, the club was back in the national league in 2009 and reached sixth place two years later. In 2014, he was relegated to the district league again. There the team was runner-up in 2017 behind VfL Holsen , before the Salzufler had to relegate to the district league A two years later.

The 2019/20 season was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic . At the time of the termination, the Salzufler led the table. Since a quota regulation was applied to the ascent, the TBV Lemgo and the TuS Lippereihe were allowed to rise. SC Bad Salzuflen initially wanted to appeal the decision, but withdrew it.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ German Sports Club for Soccer Statistics : Soccer in West Germany 1945-1952 . Hövelhof 2011, p. 15, 111, 153, 191 .
  2. ^ German Sports Club for Soccer Statistics : Soccer in West Germany 1952-1958 . Hövelhof 2012, p. 23 .
  3. a b TuS Bad Salzuflen. Table archive, accessed February 1, 2019 .
  4. ^ Articles of Association. SC Bad Salzuflen, accessed on February 2, 2019 .
  5. DE Schötmar. Table archive, accessed February 2, 2019 .
  6. Member associations. TG Schörmar, accessed on March 28, 2020 .
  7. ^ SC Bad Salzuflen. Archive of tables, accessed on February 3, 2019 .
  8. SC Bad Salzuflen withdraws objection. FuPa , accessed July 2, 2020 .

Web links

Coordinates: 52 ° 5 ′ 13.2 ″  N , 8 ° 45 ′ 35.1 ″  E