TuS Wörrstadt

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TuS Wörrstadt
Club coat of arms of TuS Wörrstadt
Basic data
Surname Gymnastics and Sports Club
1847 Wörrstadt e. V.
Seat Wörrstadt , Rhineland-Palatinate
founding 1847
Colours Red White
Website tus-woerrstadt.de
First soccer team
Venue Sports field on the Neuborn
Places 5000
league Regionalliga southwest
2018/19 9th place
home
Away

The TuS Wörrstadt (officially Turn- und Sportverein Wörrstadt eV ) is a sports club from Wörrstadt in the Rhineland-Palatinate district of Alzey-Worms . The club was founded in 1847 and offers football , handball , gymnastics , gymnastics , carnival , badminton and athletics . The club became famous for its women's soccer team , which became German champions in 1974 . The Wörrstadt-based women played in the Bundesliga for three years . Since relegation in 2014, the team has played in the third-class Regionalliga Südwest .

history

Early years and the championship (1969 to 1974)

In 1969, despite the still existing ban by the German Football Association, the women's football department was founded. The first game was played on August 2, 1969 against a team from Dorn-Dürkheim . Since no nationwide championship has been played after the women's football ban was lifted, Wörrstadt's manager Philip “Fips” Scheidt organized a competition with all the champions of the regional associations. This should originally be called the Germany Cup, which the DFB did not want to recognize. It was only after Scheidt threatened to turn to the press that a compromise was reached. The competition was held as a gold cup . TuS Wörrstadt prevailed 3-1 in the final in Rüsselsheim against FC Bayern Munich and won the trophy donated by Heinrich Bauer Verlag .

A year later , a German championship was officially played out. By a 3: 0 victory over the Bonner SC TuS Wörrstadt moved into the final, where the team Mainz Bruchwegstadion the DJK Eintracht Erle from Gelsenkirchen 4: 0 beat and secured their first league title. The then 15-year-old Regine Israel scored three times, while Bärbel Wohlleben's goal was voted goal of the month by viewers of the ARD - Sportschau . Anne Trabant-Haarbach missed a penalty in the game . The championship title from 1974 should remain the only national success for the Wörrstadt women.

Match dates for the 1974 championship finals

The pre-Bundesliga period (1974 to 1990)

After the season, Anne Trabant-Haarbach and Karin Pätzold, two top performers, left the club for Bonner SC and also successful coach Erwin Hartmann left the club in October 1974. Nevertheless, the qualification for the German championship succeeded in 1975 . After a 0: 4 semi-final defeat against Bonner SC, TuS also lost the game for third place with 2: 3 against Tennis Borussia Berlin . In the second half of the 1970s, the Wörrstadt women received a strong competitor in TuS Niederkirchen . In the 1980s, a further competitor came with the SC Siegelbach .

At the federal level, the TuS was only able to report successes again in 1981. Via FC Schalke 04 and Sportfreunde Düsseldorf-Süd , the team reached the semi-finals of the German championship and failed there at Tennis Borussia Berlin. In the DFB Cup , which was played for the first time , the Wörrstadt women even reached the final , where TuS had no chance against SSG 09 Bergisch Gladbach in the Stuttgart Neckar Stadium . Bergisch Gladbach, where Anne Trabant-Haarbach was now player -coach , decided the game 5-0 for themselves.

Match dates for the Cup finals 1981

In the following years TuS Niederkirchen took over the sporting supremacy in the southwest and in 1990 finally qualified as national champion directly for the newly created Bundesliga. TuS Wörrstadt was runner-up and had the chance to qualify for the Bundesliga in a promotion round. But the additional chance was not used and Wörrstadt was only third in the group, while the table first SG Praunheim moved into the new elite class.

Bundesliga and sporting downturn (1990 to 2009)

In the now second-class Association League Southwest , the TuS first had to give way to SC Siegelbach twice before the Wörrstadt women could win the championship in 1993. In the subsequent round of promotion, TuS made the leap into the Bundesliga with a 1-1 draw against direct rivals SC Freiburg on the last match day . In the upper house, which was still two-pronged at the time, the Wörrstadt women fought against relegation from the start and suffered some bitter defeats against the top teams. In the 1993/94 promotion season, TuS lost 9-0 at TuS Niederkirchen, and a year later the team even lost 0-11 at FSV Frankfurt .

After a total of three years, TuS Wörrstadt's membership in the Bundesliga came to an end when the team was relegated to the newly created Oberliga Südwest as penultimate . There, the Wörrstadt women were initially runner-up behind SC 07 Bad Neuenahr , a long way behind , before the team sank in the middle of the league. In 2002 the club's history reached its low point when the TuS had to relegate to the third-class Association League Southwest . After only one year the direct ascent was achieved. In terms of sport, the club increasingly focused on its own youth. In 2008 , the B-Juniors qualified for the German championship , where they failed in the preliminary round as third in the group. A year later , the first team rose to the 2nd Bundesliga as champions of the Regionalliga Südwest.

Present (since 2009)

With the first promotion to the 2nd Bundesliga, TuS became an elevator team . As the bottom of the table in the 2009/10 season , the team promptly rose again to the regional league. After two years of mediocrity, he was promoted back to the 2nd Bundesliga in the 2012/13 season . At the second attempt in the 2013/14 season , however, the Wörrstadt women had no chance and had to relegate again without a win with a goal difference of 5:97. TuS even lost 0:12 at home against champions SC Sand .

successes

Personalities

statistics

season league space S. U N Gates Points DFB Cup
1993/94 Bundesliga South 08th. 03 02 13 15:61 08:28 not qualified
1994/95 Bundesliga South 08th. 03 06th 09 10:38 12:24 2nd round
1995/96 Bundesliga South 09. 03 02 13 17:61 14th Round of 16
1996/97 Oberliga Südwest 02. 11 01 04th 36:21 34 2nd round
1997/98 Oberliga Südwest 06th 08th 03 09 25:37 27 not qualified
1998/99 Oberliga Südwest 10. 07th 06th 09 31:42 27 not qualified
1999/00 Oberliga Südwest 04th 13 01 10 43:31 40 not qualified
2000/01 Oberliga Südwest 07th 08th 04th 10 28:27 28 not qualified
2001/02 Regionalliga southwest 11. 02 05 15th 24:71 11 not qualified
2002/03 Association League Southwest 01. not known not qualified
2003/04 Regionalliga southwest 07th 08th 03 11 44:64 27 not qualified
2004/05 Regionalliga southwest 05. 08th 02 10 34:57 26th not qualified
2005/06 Regionalliga southwest 07th 08th 02 12 47:49 26th not qualified
2006/07 Regionalliga southwest 06th 08th 03 09 43:46 27 not qualified
2007/08 Regionalliga southwest 05. 11 05 06th 46:35 38 not qualified
2008/09 Regionalliga southwest 01. 18th 03 01 89:25 57 not qualified
2009/10 2nd Bundesliga 12. 02 06th 14th 21:58 12 2nd round
2010/11 Regionalliga southwest 06th 10 05 07th 47:42 35 1 round
2011/12 Regionalliga southwest 06th 09 04th 07th 41:36 31 not qualified
2012/13 Regionalliga southwest 1. 15th 00 03 47:22 45 not qualified
2013/14 2nd Bundesliga 12. 00 02 20th 05:97 02 1 round
2014/15 Regionalliga southwest 09. 05 03 14th 26:49 18th 1 round
2015/16 Regionalliga southwest 08th. 08th 03 11 36:49 27 not qualified
2016/17 Regionalliga southwest 07th 09 04th 09 45:38 31 not qualified
2017/18 Regionalliga southwest 03. 13 00 09 40:34 39 not qualified
2018/19 Regionalliga southwest 09. 10 02 14th 59:66 32 n / A
2019/20 Regionalliga southwest n / A n / A n / A n / A n / A n / A n / A
Note: Placements highlighted in green indicate promotion, seasons highlighted in red indicate relegation.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ronny Galczynski: Women's football from AZ . Humboldt, Hannover 2010, ISBN 978-3-86910-169-9 , pp. 296 .
  2. cf. Galczynski, page 121
  3. a b c TuS Wörrstadt: "Pioneers" of women's football in Germany. German Football Association , accessed on August 30, 2014 .
  4. cf. Galczynski, page 135
  5. Carsten Töller (ed.): Women's football in Germany . Self-published, Mettmann 2010, p. 14 .
  6. Hardy Greens : Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 2: Bundesliga & Co. 1963 to today. 1st division, 2nd division, GDR Oberliga. Numbers, pictures, stories. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1997, ISBN 3-89609-113-1 , p. 232.
  7. cf. Töller, page 37
  8. Udo Künster: Sand can cool champagne. Baden Online , accessed August 30, 2014 .
  9. Winner of the Association Cup since 1978. Southwest German Football Association , accessed on August 30, 2014 .