VfB Germania Halberstadt

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VfB Germania Halberstadt
Germania-Wappen.svg
society
Template: Infobox football company / maintenance / no picture
Surname Association for popular sports Germania Halberstadt
e. V.
Seat Halberstadt , Saxony-Anhalt
founding September 3, 1997
Colours Black, red, white
president Erik Hartmann
Website vfbgermaniahalberstadt.de
Football company
Template: Infobox football company / maintenance / no picture
Surname Germania Halberstadt GmbH
Shareholder e. V. (main shareholder)
19 other shareholders
Managing directors Marlen cap
Website germaniahalberstadt.de
First team
Head coach Sven Körner
Venue Peace Stadium
Places 5,000
league Regionalliga Northeast
2019/20 15th place
home
Away

The club for popular sports Germania Halberstadt , short VfB Germania Halberstadt or just Germania Halberstadt , is a club for popular sports in the northern Harz district town of Halberstadt ( Saxony-Anhalt ). The first and second men's team are spun off into Germania Halberstadt GmbH , in which 19 other shareholders are involved in addition to the association as the main shareholder.

Club structure

The football department is the club's figurehead, and the athletes are also known beyond the state borders of Saxony-Anhalt. The association, which has more than a thousand members, has a total of nine departments. There are also gymnastics , judo , disabled sports , table tennis , volleyball , women's sports and cheerleading offered.

history

The club's roots lie with FC Germania Halberstadt, which was founded in 1900 . In the city, which was largely bombed during the Second World War, sport was practiced as early as 1947 in the Halberstadt-Altstadt sports club. With the introduction of the system of company sports associations (BSG), the BSG Reichsbahn Halberstadt was founded on October 26, 1949, and its sponsoring company was the Halberstädter Reichsbahnausbesserungswerk. With the founding of the central sports association Lokomotive , the BSG was renamed Lokomotive Halberstadt on June 6, 1950. In the first year of its existence, the BSG had 121 members, and the sports were football, handball, athletics, table tennis, chess and hiking. Between 1971 and 1976 the BSG started under the name “Lokomotive / Vorwärts”. After the political change in 1989 , the BSG joined the Association of German Railway Sports Associations and on June 13, 1990 it became the Railway Sports Association (ESV) Halberstadt eV. In 1991 and 1992, the handball and tennis departments left the club and formed their own clubs. Since in the ESV, with the exception of football and bowling, only 18% of the members or their relatives were railway workers, the Federation of Railway Sports Clubs in 1993 refused to allow the ESV Halberstadt to remain a member for the following year. That is why the club decided to rename it to Verein für Breitensport (VfB) Halberstadt 1994 eV. The year in the club name was later changed to 1949, the year of origin of the predecessor community. Immediately afterwards, the football, swimming and bowling departments were also eliminated from the club. The soccer players founded FC Germania 1900 with reference to the former soccer club. On September 3, 1997, VfB and FC Germania decided to merge the two clubs to form VfB Germania Halberstadt.

The personal career at a glance:

  • 1900: FC Germania Halberstadt
  • 1947: SG Halberstadt-Altstadt
  • 1949: BSG Reichsbahn Halberstadt
  • 1950: BSG locomotive Halberstadt
  • 1971: BSG locomotive / Forward Halberstadt
  • 1976: BSG locomotive Halberstadt
  • 1990: ESV Halberstadt
  • 1994: VfB Halberstadt 1949
  • 1994: VfB Halberstadt 1949 / FC Germania 1900 Halberstadt
  • since October 1, 1997: VfB Germania Halberstadt

Soccer

Logo of FC Germania 1900 Halberstadt .

The FC Germania Halberstadt played from 1909 in the Gauliga Harz , one of the then numerous first divisions of the Association of Central German Ball Game Clubs . The club has dominated this league since 1913, and in total it was able to secure the Gaumeistertitel 15 times and the resulting qualification for the Central German football championship. However , the club could not qualify for the Gauliga Mitte , which was introduced in 1933 , and henceforth played lower class.

The soccer players of SG Halberstadt-Altstadt reached the quarter-finals of the Saxony-Anhalt Championship in 1948 , but were defeated by SG Bernburg-Süd 2: 3. In September 1954, the soccer section of BSG Empor Halberstadt joined the BSG Lok, whose lower-class soccer team took over the place of BSG Empor in the Magdeburg district league, which was third-class at the time . After the 1956 season (calendar year season), the BSG rose to the new third-class 2nd GDR league , and in 1962 the BSG locomotive qualified for the second-class 1st GDR league . After the immediate relegation, the team tackled the promotion again, but failed in the promotion round. It was not until 1966 that the BSG was second class again, but was immediately relegated again. By 1980, Halberstadt could qualify three times for the GDR league, including from 1971 to 1975 for four seasons; thereafter, the team remained in the third-class district league until the end of the GDR football operation. After the introduction of the DFB game operations, the ESV was incorporated into the Association League Saxony-Anhalt in 1990. After two seasons, the gang had to be relinquished to the regional league, in 2000 the return to the association league and in 2003 the promotion to the now only fifth-class Oberliga Nordost , after the DFB introduced the third division for the 2008/09 season . In 2011 Germania became champions of the southern season with a clear lead and thus rose to the regional league . After the 2015/16 season, VfB rose as table-17. back to the Oberliga Nordost. The following season ended Halberstadt in second place in the Oberliga Nordost, Staffel Süd, which Germania was allowed to take part in the promotion games against FSV Optik Rathenow . After a draw in Rathenow, Halberstadt managed to get back up straight away with a 3-1 win in the home stadium. In the 2017/18 season, the club competed in the DFB Cup for the first time , one of the greatest sporting successes in the club's history. There they were eliminated in the first round with a 1: 2 defeat against Bundesliga club SC Freiburg . Striker Kay Michel scored the first goal for Halberstadt in this competition in the 87th minute. The club is again qualified for the DFB Cup 2019/20 .

The leagues at a glance:

  • District League Magdeburg: 1954–1957, 1963/66, 1967/70, 1975/76, 1977/78, 1980/90
  • II. GDR League: 1958–1962
  • I. GDR League: 1962/63, 1966/67, 1971/75, 1976/77, 1979/80
  • Association League Saxony-Anhalt: 1990–1992, 2000–2003
  • State League Saxony-Anhalt: 1992-2000
  • Oberliga Nordost: 2003-2011, 2016/17
  • Regionalliga: 2011–2016, since 2017

First team

Squad 2018/19

As of August 7, 2018

No. nation Surname birthday in the team since Last club
goal
01 GermanyGermany Paul Niehs July 31, 2000 2007 own youth
30th GermanyGermany Till Brinkmann November 1, 1995 2018 SC Paderborn 07
32 GermanyGermany Fabian Guderitz February 7, 1997 2002 own youth
Defense
05 GermanyGermany Philipp Blume May 18, 1993 2017 Wacker Nordhausen
17th GermanyGermany Dustin brass May 12, 1997 2016 Energy Cottbus II
18th GermanyGermany Leon Heynke November 27, 1999 2018 1. FC Magdeburg
20th GermanyGermany Lucas Surek March 3, 1997 2018 1. FC Cologne II
21st GermanyGermany Hendrik Kuhnhold March 29, 1999 2018 1. FC Magdeburg U19
24 GermanyGermany Tino Schulze September 10, 1992 2016 KSV Hessen Kassel
34 BrazilBrazil Alysson Vargas December 28, 1994 2016 VfB Germania Halberstadt II
midfield
04th GermanyGermany Hendrik Hofgärtner January 17, 1996 2017 SC Freiburg II
08th GermanyGermany Dean Justin Müller February 10, 1999 2018 1. FC Magdeburg U19
09 GermanyGermany Nico Huebner 4th October 1994 2016 Lueneburg SK Hansa
10 GermanyGermany MontenegroMontenegro Nedim Pepic December 23, 1997 2018 without a club
14th GermanyGermany Marcel Goslar April 26, 1996 2017 TSV Havelse
16 GermanyGermany Niclas married life December 26, 1999 2006 own youth
22nd GermanyGermany Hans Oeftger July 8, 1999 2018 FC Rot-Weiß Erfurt U19
23 GermanyGermany Jan Huebner October 1, 1999 2018 1. FC Magdeburg U19
26th GermanyGermany Benjamin Boltze (C)Captain of the crew June 24, 1986 2016 ZFC Meuselwitz
27 GermanyGermany Alexander Schmitt September 16, 1995 2018 Tennis Borussia Berlin
Storm
07th GermanyGermany Dennis Rothenstein July 19, 1995 2018 SV Waldhof Mannheim
11 GermanyGermany Stefan Korsch January 22, 1999 2018 1. FC Magdeburg U19
13 GermanyGermany Kay Michel January 19, 1996 2017 Kickers Offenbach
28 GermanyGermany Cedrik State April 9, 1999 2006 own youth

Trainer and function team (selection)

As of August 7, 2018

Nat. Surname function
Coaching staff
GermanyGermany Maximilian Dentz Head coach
GermanyGermany Enrico Gerlach Assistant coach
GermanyGermany Marcel Goslar Assistant coach
GermanyGermany Sebastian Kischel Goalkeeping coach
GermanyGermany Steffen Fricke Fitness trainer
Medical department
GermanyGermany Sabine Wiedemann Physiotherapist
Sports management and more
GermanyGermany Andreas Petersen Sports director
GermanyGermany Thomas Waldow Head of the youth department
GermanyGermany Uwe Grüttner supervisor

people

For several football players, Halberstadt was the springboard to a successful career in the GDR Oberliga, the DFL-Bundesliga or in various selection teams:

  • Manfred Eitz (* 1943), joined Stahl Riesa in 1968, played 57 league games
  • Ingolf Ruhloff (* 1943), from 1964 with 1. FC Magdeburg, 21 league games
  • Ulrich Schulze (* 1947), went to 1. FC Lok Leipzig in 1964, later to 1. FC Magdeburg, 152 league games, European Cup winner, 1 international match
  • Jürgen Sparwasser (* 1948), went to 1. FC Magdeburg in 1965, 271 league games, European Cup winner, 53 A international games, Olympic bronze in 1972
  • Lutz Lindemann (* 1949), from 1971 with Rot-Weiß Erfurt, later Carl Zeiss Jena, 205 league games, 21 international caps
  • Detlef Raugust (* 1954), went to 1. FC Magdeburg in 1972, played 226 league games, 3 international A matches
  • Frank Lindemann (* 1961), from 1980 with Vorwärts Frankfurt, later Energie Cottbus and Stahl Eisenhüttenstadt, 48 league games
  • Frank Lieberam (* 1962), came from 1. FC Magdeburg in 1981, then went back to Magdeburg, then to Stahl Riesa and Dynamo Dresden, 158 league games, 5 Bundesliga games, 1 international match
  • Jens Ramme (* 1963), from 1985 with Dynamo Dresden, later progress in Bischofswerda, 17 league games
  • Maik Franz (* 1981) moved to 1. FC Magdeburg in 1999, to VfL Wolfsburg in 2001, to Karlsruher SC in 2006, to Eintracht Frankfurt in 2009 and to Hertha BSC in 2011, 19 U-21 internationals
  • Kevin Schlitte (* 1981), after 18 months in Germania (19 goals in the Oberliga), went to FC Carl Zeiss Jena in 2005, later to SC Freiburg, Hansa Rostock, later to Erzgebirge Aue and again to VfB Germania Halberstadt for the 2014/15 season
  • Nils Petersen (* 1988), youth player with Germania, from 2005 with FC Carl Zeiss Jena, later Energie Cottbus, FC Bayern Munich, Werder Bremen and currently SC Freiburg, Olympic silver in 2016.
Trainer from 1980
  • 1980–1982: Heinz Karbach
  • 1982–1985: Wolfgang Mohnhaupt
  • 1985–1986: Wolfgang Juhrsch
  • 1986–1989: Werner Friese
  • 1989–1990: Klaus Huch and Heinz Weile
  • 1990–1991: Heinz Weile and Peter Reim
  • 1991–1992: Peter Reim
  • 1992–1994: Wolfgang Mohr
  • 1994–1995: Thomas Schmeißer and Roland Voigt
  • 1995–1997: Herbert Reulecke
  • 1997–1998: Thomas Schmeißer and Frank Nothnagel
  • 1998–1999: Frank Lindemann
  • 1999-2004: Frank Lieberam
  • 2004–2007: Thomas Pfannkuch
  • 2007–2012: Andreas Petersen
  • 2012–2014: Willi Kronhardt
  • 2014 -0000: Achim Hollerieth
  • 2014 -0000: Enrico Gerlach (interim)
  • 2015 -0000: Henri Fuchs
  • 2015 -0000: Thomas Waldow (Interim)
  • 2016–2018: Andreas Petersen
  • 2018–2019: Maximilian Dentz
  • 2019– -000: Sven Körner

Stadion

Friedensstadion Halberstadt, venue of the regional league team VfB Germania Halberstadt

The venue of VfB Germania Halberstadt is the Friedensstadion in the south of the city. The stadium has a capacity of 5,000 seats. A modern tartan track leads around the main square, including a long jump facility and opportunities for high jump, javelin throw, etc. Large parts of the field are surrounded by a green earth wall. There are small standing stands on the back straight. A fenced-in guest area was built there in the summer of 2006. There are three more soccer fields behind the main square.

The dilapidated main grandstand from 1927 had to be demolished after the hard winter of 2010. In 2012 the new grandstand with 500 covered seats was officially opened. In addition, the main square was equipped with floodlights for Friday evening games and a side square with artificial turf.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. See Germania Halberstadt GmbH on firmenwissen.de, accessed on June 11, 2017.
  2. Petersen annoys his father: Freiburg is sure to move on , match report on kicker.de, accessed on August 14, 2017.
  3. vfbgermaniahalberstadt.de: Executive Germania Halberstadt
  4. ^ Transfermarkt.de: Kader Germania Halberstadt