TuS ground pond

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
TuS ground pond
Club logo
Basic data
Surname Gymnastics and sports club
Bodenteich from 1911 eV
Seat Bad Bodenteich ,
Lower Saxony
founding 1911
Colours blue White
1. Chairman Friedhelm Schulz
Website tus-bodenteich.de
First soccer team
Head coach Volker Dollase
Venue Forest stadium
Places 2,000
league District League Lüneburg 1
2019/20 12th place

The TuS Bodenteich (official: Turn- und Sportverein Bodenteich von 1911 eV ) is a sports club from Bad Bodenteich in the district of Uelzen . The first soccer team played for five years in the highest amateur league in Lower Saxony.

history

The club was founded in 1911 as MTV Bodenteich . The sporting upswing began in 1960 when the home ground got a lawn . The first team rose from the 2nd district class to the district class within a few years. In 1970 TuS defeated the amateurs of 1. SC Göttingen 05 in the final of the Lower Saxony Cup 6-1. A few months later, the Bodenteicher received the regional league team FC St. Pauli in the first round of the DFB Cup , who won the game 8-1.

In 1971 the Bodenteicher rose to the Association League East and were instant champions. In the subsequent round of promotion, the TuS was able to prevail together with the Hannoversche SC and thus managed to march through to the Upper House of Lower Saxony. After a year, the team had to relegate as bottom of the table. In 1976 TuS was again champion, but failed in the promotion round.

After the league reform of 1979 they played in the Landesliga Ost and from 1994 in the Lower Saxony League East , before two relegations in a row in 1996 promoted the club to the district league. After the direct resurgence, the TuS marched through to the Lower Saxony League East in 1997/98 . The team has been competing in the Lüneburg 1 district league since 2010 and played in the regional league for one year in the 2016/17 season.

literature

  • Hardy Greens : Legendary football clubs. Northern Germany. Between TSV Achim, Hamburger SV and TuS Zeven. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2004, ISBN 3-89784-223-8 , p. 259.

Web links