TuS Haste 01
TuS Haste 01 | ||
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Basic data | ||
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Surname | Gymnastics and Sports Club Osnabrück Haste 1901 eV |
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Seat | Osnabrück - Haste , Lower Saxony | |
founding | 1901 | |
Colours | green - white | |
president | Oliver Klages | |
Website | http://www.tushaste01.de/ | |
First soccer team | ||
Head coach | Ricardo Manzei, Ramon Hafkemeyer | |
Venue | Osterhaus arena | |
Places | 1,000 | |
league | Osnabrück City District League | |
2019/20 | 7th place | |
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The TuS Haste 01 (officially: gymnastics and sports club Osnabrück-Haste 1901 eV ) is a carnival and sports club from the Osnabrück district Haste . The first soccer team played a year in the second-rate Regionalliga Nord . The home arena is the Osterhaus arena . The club colors are green and white.
history
Before World War II
The club goes back to the Roland Haste athletes' club founded in 1901 . In 1906 the SV Arminia Haste was founded. Before the First World War, it merged with Borussia Osnabrück to form Osnabrück FV 06 , which later became the Schinkel 04 club . It was not until 1924 that a local successor club was founded with Spielverein Haste , which merged with VfB Lechtingen to become Arminia Haste in the year it was founded. Eleven years later, Arminia merged with DJK Haste to form SpVgg Haste . On October 7, 1945, the SpVgg, which had since been dissolved, flowed into TuS Haste 01 together with SC Haste .
Post-war period (1945 to 1967)
In the 1945/46 season, TuS Haste surprisingly won the Osnabrück city championship ahead of local rivals Eintracht and VfL . There followed a season in the Oberliga Niedersachsen-Nord, where TuS met Werder Bremen and came in tenth. In 1949 the team qualified for the newly created Lower Saxony- West amateur league . The then highest division in Lower Saxony was a size too big for the Haster, who had to relegate with only three victories this season. Two years later, he was relegated to the district class.
1958 succeeded the rise in the amateur league 8 , which the team let follow the direct march into the amateur league. Here the team was able to acclimatise quickly and qualified in 1964 for the newly created Lower Saxony State League . In the national league, the team first fought against relegation and earned the reputation of a favorite scare in the cup.
With a sensational 2-0 win over VfL Wolfsburg , TuS qualified for the DFB Cup in 1965, where they lost 2-1 to Concordia Hamburg in the first round . Stopper Herbert Fieselmann missed a penalty . A year later, the team won the Lower Saxony Cup with a 4-0 victory over the amateurs of Hannover 96 . In 1967 Haste was third in the regional league and moved into the promotion round to Regionalliga Nord, where after a 3-0 win over VfL Oldesloe the promotion was made perfect.
One regional league and back (1967 to 1975)
In the regional league, the haters were overwhelmed. The highlight of the season was the 3: 3 at local rivals VfL Osnabrück in front of 12,000 spectators on August 27, 1967, in which Theo Menkhaus scored two goals for Haste. At the return match in Haste on February 4, 1968, TuS scored 1-1 in front of 6,000 spectators. Further successes were the 1-0 victories against champions Arminia Hannover and runner-up 1. SC Göttingen 05 , while the game against relegated Altona 93 was lost 5-6, in which Haste gave away a 4-1 lead. The Neue Osnabrücker Zeitung wrote that the fans had seen a “ cabaret performance with a strong humorous touch”.
Back in the regional league, TuS slipped back into mediocrity. In 1971 there was once again the opportunity to take part in the Regionalliga promotion round. The playoff against Eintracht Nordhorn was lost 4-5 on penalties . Three years later, Haste was bottom of the table and only stayed because of the entry of Prussia Hameln , SpVgg Bad Pyrmont and Union Salzgitter into the newly created Oberliga Nord in the class.
The descent was only postponed. A year later the TuS was again last and lost with the amateurs of Eintracht Braunschweig with 0:11 and with Wolfenbütteler SV even with 2:13. Since Eintracht Nordhorn and the Braunschweiger Amateurs rose to the league and no club from Lower Saxony was relegated from above, the TuS remained in the state league. However, the club refrained from moving up.
Difficult years up to the present (since 1975)
After the runner-up in the Association League West in 1978, the TuS missed the newly created Landesliga West a year later . Difficult years began in the early 1980s. After three relegations in a row, the club arrived in the district league Osnabrück-Stadt in 1983 , where the class could only just be held. As a consequence, the work with young people was already intensified back then.
In the following years, the TuS slowly worked its way forward in the district league, before being promoted to the district class in 1991. After two runners-up in 1993 and 1995, the team rose in 1997 to the district league. After a year it went back to the district class. In 2000 and 2001 this game was repeated. Since the reform of the divisions and the associated promotion in 2006, TuS Haste played in the Weser-Ems regional league until the 2012/13 season. In 2013 he was relegated to the Osnabrück-Stadt district league.
In 2015, they were promoted to the district league, they also won the district cup, so they got the double. After only one year, it went back down to the district league, before the direct return to the district league succeeded in the 2016/17 season. Again the direct descent followed.
Personalities
- Uwe Brunn : Former goalkeeper and crowd favorite of VfL Osnabrück
- Karl-Heinz Diehl : Regional league player at VfL Osnabrück
- Heiko Flottmann : Trainer at VfL Osnabrück and SV Meppen
- Lothar Gans : player, managing director and sports director at VfL Osnabrück
- Norbert Placke : Second division player at VfL Osnabrück
- Manfred Recknagel : second division player at SC Herford
- Michael Wirtz : Second division player at VfL Osnabrück
- Markus Wulftange : Second division player at VfB Leipzig
literature
- Hardy Grüne , Christian Karn: The big book of the German football clubs . AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2009, ISBN 978-3-89784-362-2 , p. 219.
- 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. 212.
Web links
Coordinates: 52 ° 18 ′ 19.1 ″ N , 8 ° 3 ′ 0 ″ E