TuS Neuhaus Castle

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TuS Neuhaus Castle
Club logo
Full name Gymnastics and sports club 07/10
Schloß Neuhaus eV
place Paderborn - Neuhaus Castle ,
North Rhine-Westphalia
Founded June 8, 1973
Dissolved June 30, 1985
Club colors blue yellow
Stadion Hermann Löns Stadium
Top league 2nd Bundesliga
successes Westphalia Champion 1982
home
Template: Infobox historical football club / maintenance / incomplete home
Template: Infobox historical football club / maintenance / incomplete outward

The TuS Schloss Neuhaus was a sports club from Paderborn . The first soccer team played in the 2nd Bundesliga for a year . The home ground was the Hermann Löns Stadium . The TuS is a predecessor of today's SC Paderborn 07 .

history

The parent clubs

TuS Schloß Neuhaus was founded on June 8, 1973 through the merger of SV 07 Neuhaus with the soccer department of TuS Sennelager . SV 07 Neuhaus was founded on August 14, 1907 as Arminia Neuhaus and was initially called Concordia Neuhaus and, since 1919, SV 07 Neuhaus. In terms of sport, the Neuhäuser played in the first-class Gauliga Westfalen in the 1944/45 season and played in the Landesliga Westfalen in the late 1950s and early 1960s . Later, the club could no longer go beyond regional league football.

TuS Sennelager was founded on September 17, 1910 as VfB Senne and was initially called TuS Senne from 1913 and finally TuS Sennelager from 1945. The team marched through in the late 1960s and early 1970s from the 2nd district class to the third class Verbandsliga Westfalen . The basis for this was provided by the axle manufacturer Josef Peitz, for whom around two thirds of the team worked on the side. Fusion opponents on the Sennelager side founded the TuS Schwarz-Gelb Sennelager .

After the merger (1973 to 1978)

In terms of sport, the “Schloßherren”, as the team was called, stood in the shadow of local rivals 1. FC Paderborn , who also played in the association league, and fought against relegation. The 1975/76 season ended the TuS third last and had to play playoffs against relegation. Here the “castle lords” met the third from bottom of the parallel season TuS Eving-Lindenhorst and were able to prevail after a 3: 1 in the first leg and a 4: 4 in the second leg. Since two Westphalian teams, SpVgg Erkenschwick and DJK Gütersloh, were relegated from the 2nd Bundesliga North, the playoff victory was worthless and TuS had to return to the regional league.

With just one defeat and five points ahead of VfB 03 Bielefeld , the lords of the castle managed to get promoted again immediately and were also the first Paderborn football club to qualify for the DFB Cup . After a 2-0 first round win at Hummelsbütteler SV , the "Schloßherren" met Bundesliga club Eintracht Frankfurt in the second round on August 19, 1977 . In front of 10,000 spectators in the Inselbad Stadium , TuS took a 2-0 lead through goals from Wolfgang Schulte and Helmut Fiege before the Frankfurters could equalize. Since no more goals were scored, four days later there was a replay in the Frankfurt Waldstadion . Here the Eintracht clearly prevailed with 4-0. In the association league season 1977/78 the TuS reached third place with two points behind 1. FC Paderborn and VfB Rheine .

Oberliga and promotion (1978 to 1982)

The “Schloßherren” were thus qualified for the newly created Oberliga Westfalen , where the team immediately became runner-up behind SC Herford . The decisive point was won by the Herford team a week after the last match day with a 0-0 draw at VfB Rheine. Herford originally lost the game 2: 3, but the rating was canceled due to riots among the spectators. If the original result had been included in the rating, Schloss Neuhaus would have become champions because of the better goal difference .

The “castle lords” remained a top team in the Oberliga Westfalen in the following years and reached fifth place in 1980 and third a year later . The role of the "doer" Josef Peitz was viewed critically by the press. In 1980 the specialist magazine Kicker described the TuS as a “ toy of a patron ”, because Peitz had taken full power in the club for his financial contributions. According to the recently dismissed coach Klaus Hilpert, “you can print money , but not a team”. President Peitz would “keep a few good footballers like other people racehorses ”.

The Neuhäuser were in the 1981/82 season under coach Fritz Grösche with nine points of Westphalia champions. In the promotion round to the 2nd Bundesliga , the “Schloßherren” initially lost 3-1 at BV Lüttringhausen and then won 3-2 against SV Arminia Hannover . The decision was made on the last day of the match, when the Neuhäuser separated 1: 1 from Tennis Borussia Berlin in the neutral Wolfsburg VfL Stadium on Elsterweg . Since Arminia Hannover lost 5-1 to Lüttringhausen at the same time, TuS Schloß Neuhaus was promoted to the 2nd Bundesliga.

2nd Bundesliga and relegation (1982 to 1985)

It was not until the 6th match day of the 1982/83 season that the Neuhäuser won their first second division with a 1-0 win against FC Augsburg . Throughout the season, the team remained on a relegation zone and was finally beaten last. The low point was a 7-0 defeat at SV Darmstadt 98 . In addition, the club made headlines due to numerous turbulences away from the pitch. With Fritz Grösche, Jan Liberda and Norbert Wagner, the club wore out three coaches. The sports magazine Kicker wrote that Schloss Neuhaus "lost a lot of credit". "The year in professional football cost the club [...] a lot of reputation".

Back in the Oberliga Westfalen, the “Schloßherren” reached fifth place twice in a row, each with a large lead over their local rivals 1. FC Paderborn. In the 1984/85 season , the club made headlines because of the four-fold use of the ineligible actor Colin Bell . The four games, all of which TuS had won, were rated as lost with 0: 2 for TuS. After the judge's verdict, President Josef Peitz returned his association pin in protest. Without the deduction of points, the team would have become runner-up. Since 1. FC Paderborn also stagnated after the Westphalia Championship in 1981, both clubs merged on June 1, 1985 to form TuS Paderborn-Neuhaus . In 1997 it was renamed SC Paderborn 07. The goal set during the merger, a return to professional football, was not to be achieved until 2005.

Personalities

Squad of the second division season 1982/83

The numbers in brackets refer to the appearances and goals in the 1982/83 season.

goal Defense midfield attack
Ulrich Greifenberg (27/0)
Paul Hesselbach (9/0)
Karsten Lange (2/0)
Werner Gans (19/0)
Wolfgang Grübel (26/0)
Peter Hobday (31/1)
Hermann Hummels (11/0)
Günther Rybarczyk (4/0)
Klaus-Dieter Schmidt (7/1)
Oswald Semlits (37/1)
Jürgen Sobieray (18/0)
Pedro Aguilar (27/2)
Norbert Dölitzsch (36/5)
Werner Drews (3/0)
Hans-Günter Etterich (4/0)
Peter Krobbach (14/1)
Bernd Krumbein (8/0)
Siegfried Maronna (4/0)
Pure polder (24/2)
Berthold Strathaus (14/0)
Albin Wira (15/0)
Jerzy Wyrobek (24/0)
Dieter Dannenberg (35/16)
Helmut Hartmann (5/0)
Johann Kriar (33/6)
Frank Kunkel (15/0)
Werner Schuck (27/7)

Other former players

Trainer

Second team

From 1980 to 1985 there was also a second TuS team. The team that played in the national league consisted of former Afghan national players who had fled to Paderborn in 1979 after the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan .

Individual evidence

  1. a b Wolfgang Hofmann: Great acceptance among the youth. Neue Westfälische , accessed on April 29, 2018 .
  2. ^ The Neuhäuser Line (1907-1985). SC Paderborn 07 , accessed on August 25, 2013 .
  3. Wolfgang Becker: The gate of the authorized representative. Der Spiegel , accessed on August 28, 2013 .
  4. a b c d Hardy Green , Christian Karn: The big book of the German football clubs . AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 2009, ISBN 978-3-89784-362-2 , p. 421.
  5. ^ Carsten Töller (Ed.): Football in Germany since 1945 . Self-published, Mettmann 2009, p. 188 .
  6. a b c Jochem Schulze: How the near-rise of the TuS Schloss Neuhaus was stopped. Neue Westfälische , accessed on February 10, 2019 .
  7. ^ Töller, page 204
  8. ^ Töller, page 224
  9. ^ TuS Schloß Neuhaus - 2nd league 1982/1983. Fussballdaten.de, accessed on August 28, 2013 .
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