Wacker Nordhausen

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Wacker Nordhausen
Logo of the FSV Wacker 90 Nordhausen
Basic data
Surname Soccer club Wacker 90 Nordhausen eV
Seat Nordhausen , Thuringia
founding March 31, 1990
Colours Blue White
president Torsten Klaus
Website wacker90.de
First soccer team
Head coach Philipp Seeland
Venue Albert Kuntz Sports Park (AKS)
Places 8088
league Oberliga Nordost
2019/20 13th place (Regionalliga Nordost)  
home
Away

The football club Wacker 90 Nordhausen e. V. ( FSV Wacker 90 Nordhausen ), commonly known as Wacker Nordhausen , is a football club from the northern Thuringian city ​​of Nordhausen .

history

Club development

The FSV Wacker 90 Nordhausen goes back to the FC Wacker Nordhausen, which was founded on November 1st, 1905 by members of the Protestant youth club Nordhausen. At the general meeting of July 14th, 1906, a youth department was founded and it was unanimously decided to “do other physical strength exercises besides soccer.” FC Wacker 05 was therefore renamed SV Wacker 05 Nordhausen. On July 11, 1908, in the restaurant “Am Schlachthof”, the clubs SV Wacker 05 Nordhausen and BSC Mars Nordhausen merged to form SV Wacker-Mars Nordhausen. In July 1918 the members decided to change the club name. The game association SV Wacker-Mars became the sports club 1. SV Wacker 05 Nordhausen.

After the dissolution of all sports clubs in 1945, SG Nordhausen was founded. Before the 1948/49 season, the soccer division of SG Nordhausen was initially connected to the existing BSG Lok Nordhausen, which was renamed BSG KWU Nordhausen after a change of carrier operation. On September 1, 1949, the largest sports community in the region, BSG Motor Nordhausen, was founded, which emerged from BSG IFA-ABUS. The football section of KWU Nordhausen was incorporated into the existing BSG Motor Nordhausen at the end of 1950 in order to increase the performance of this section. For the 1951/52 season, the Nordhäuser started as BSG Motor Nordhausen-West and carried this name until the end of the 1975/76 season. Then the addition "West" was deleted and the team played until 1990 as BSG Motor Nordhausen. After the political change in the GDR, the registered association FSV Wacker 90 Nordhausen was founded on March 31, 1990, and had around 270 members at the beginning of 2013.

Football sport

SV Wacker in the German Empire and the German Empire (1906–1945)

After the club was founded, Wacker Nordhausen initially only played lower class. Overall, the club took part in the final round of the Central German Championship seven times , but only reached the second round twice. He did not want to qualify for the newly founded Gauliga Mitte until 1944.

BSG Motor in the GDR (1949–1990)

After the Second World War, the BSG KWU took part in the Thuringian soccer championship for the first time in 1949/50, and came second in the regional class relay 1. This meant that the BSG, now competing as Motor Nordhausen, had qualified for the second-class GDR league. In their first season, the north houses were ninth in the southern season and had to compete in the relegation against the north-ninth unit Wismar. Nordhausen secured relegation with a 7-0 win and barely missed promotion to first class in 1950/51 with second place. Until the 1956 season, Nordhausen played without interruption in the first GDR league, after relegation from 1955 to 1962 in the third-class II. GDR league. As second in the table in Season 3, Motor West rose again in 1961/62 in the I. GDR League, only to be relegated immediately. Since the II. GDR League had been dissolved, Nordhausen had to compete in the now third-rate district league Erfurt in 1963/64. In 1964/65 Motor West was district champion, but failed without a win in the promotion round to the GDR league. A year later, he was promoted to the GDR league, but Nordhausen rose again the next year. It was not until 1969 that Motor Nordhausen was able to establish itself permanently in the GDR league. In the 1981/82 season, the team took part as the winner of the league season E in the promotion round to the league, but three draws and five defeats from eight games were not enough for promotion. After the 1988/89 season, Nordhausen had to compete in the district league again; The club qualified however in 1990 as district champion Erfurt in the game operation of the DFB for the Oberliga Nordost. In the all-time table of the GDR league, Motor Nordhausen is 10th.

League overview 1950 to 1990
  • 1950 / 51–1955 GDR League (2nd division)
  • 1955–1961 / 62 II. GDR League (3rd)
  • 1962/63 1st GDR League (2nd)
  • 1963 / 64–1965 / 66 District League (3rd)
  • 1966/67 GDR League
  • 1967 / 68–1968 / 69 District League
  • 1969 / 70–1988 / 89 GDR League
  • 1989/90 district league

Motor Nordhausen and its predecessor communities took part in competitions for the GDR soccer cup a total of 35 times between 1949 and 1990 . The greatest successes were reaching the quarter-finals in 1954 and 1986.

FSV Wacker in Germany (1990–)

From the 1991/92 season, the club played in the Oberliga Nordost , was there in the 1994/95 season champions and rose to the Regionalliga Nordost. There, the north houses reached relegation in the first two seasons with an eleventh and a twelfth place, before they were ranked 17. relegated to the league again In 2001 the club rose from the league and had to file for bankruptcy. In the meantime, Wacker even played in the sixth class national class. In 2005, the club rose again to the Thuringian League and finished there in the first season a respectable fourth place in the table. In 2012, as champions of the league, after eleven years, he returned to the now only fifth-class Oberliga Nordost. A year later, even the “march through” into the fourth-class Regionalliga Nordost was perfect.

The club was particularly successful in the Thuringian State Cup , which the Nordhäuser won four times. In 1992 Wismut Gera was defeated in the final , in 1996 and 1997 Wacker won the finals against FC Rot-Weiß Erfurt . In May 2019 the trophy was brought back to Nordhausen after 22 years. In the Steigerwald Stadium in Erfurt, FSV Preußen Bad Langensalza was beaten 5-0. With the cup wins at the association level, the Nordhäuser played in the main round of the DFB Cup several times . There, however, was against 1. FC Köln (0: 8), TSV 1860 Munich (1: 5), Hamburger SV (1: 3) and most recently Erzgebirge Aue (1: 4) always in the first round.

In December 2019, Spielbetriebs-GmbH filed for insolvency due to insolvency; the club is said to have amassed 9.6 million euros in debt. A little later, the insolvency administrator Peter Staufenbiel announced that the previously communicated 9.6 million euros in debts were far too high. However, an exact amount was not given. In the course of this, the first team of the club, which had previously played for promotion, was deducted nine points by the organizing NOFV , which is why they slipped into the lower third of the table. Many players left the club on a free transfer, and several players from the league team had to be appointed to the squad to maintain regional league operations.

First team

Current squad 2018/19

(As of July 17, 2018)

No. Nat. player Date of birth in the team since
goalkeeper
22nd GermanyGermany Ruben Aulig 01/31/1997 2017
30th GermanyGermany Jan Glinker 01/18/1984 2018
Defense
03 GermanyGermany Florian Esdorf 02/21/1995 2017
04th GermanyGermany TunisiaTunisia Mounir Chaftar 01/29/1986 2016
05 GermanyGermany Jerome prophet 06/04/1990 2017
17th GermanyGermany Tim Häussler 07/21/1997 2017
23 GermanyGermany Felix Müller 06/07/1997 2018
26th SlovakiaSlovakia Vladimir Kovac 04/29/1991 2017
31 GermanyGermany Christoph Göbel 03/23/1989 2018
32 GermanyGermany Maurice Pluntke 01/23/1994 2018
midfield
06th GermanyGermany Tobias Becker 04/30/1986 2016
07th GermanyGermany Benjamin Kauffmann 07/14/1988 2016
14th GermanyGermany Lucas Scholl 07/05/1996 2016
16 GermanyGermany Matthias Pessolat March 26, 1985 2014
29 GermanyGermany Robin River 05/07/1996 2017
39 GermanyGermany Mateo Andačić 11/16/1997 2018
61 TurkeyTurkey Cihan Uçar 07/06/1994 2017
attack
08th AustriaAustria Dino Medjedovic 06/13/1989 2017
09 GermanyGermany Pierre Merkel 04/25/1989 2012
11 GermanyGermany Joy-Lance Mickels 03/29/1994 2017
13 GermanyGermany Oliver Exactly 06/01/1991 2017
15th GermanyGermany Ilyas Bircan 10/10/1999 2018
18th GermanyGermany Nils Pichinot 08/29/1989 2014
24 GermanyGermany Florian Beil 01/19/1989 2018
27 GermanyGermany Carsten Kammlott 02/28/1990 2018
44 GermanyGermany Marcell Sobotta 02/07/1997 2018

Coaching team

Surname birthday in the team since function
Tino Berbig 07.10.1980 2015 Interim trainer
Matthias Pessolat March 26, 1985 2014 Interim trainer
Rudiger Hoppe 06/20/1969 2019 Assistant coach
Tomislav Piplica 04/05/1969 2015 Goalkeeping coach (twice interim coach between 2016 and 2017)

Functional team

Surname birthday in the team since function
Michael Ernst 10/21/1961 2012 Team leader
Razvan Lupescu 03/17/1984 2012 Team doctor
Philipp Hoinkis 2018 Physiotherapist
Victor Rachieru 07/15/1988 2018 Physiotherapist

Stadium and fans

Main square in the Albert-Kuntz-Sportpark (AKS)

The Wacker Sportpark , which opened on August 26, 1923, has 8,088 seats, 1,088 covered seats and 1,500 covered standing places. In September 1951 the place was named Albert-Kuntz-Sportpark after the KPD politician Albert Kuntz . Most of the spectators came with 10,000 each in 1953 against Dynamo Dresden and 1967 against FC Rot-Weiß Erfurt .

During the regional league, an average of between 1,300 and 1,700 spectators came to Wacker Nordhausen's games. In the Thuringian League, an average of less than 400 spectators came to the games. The biggest rival of the Nordhäuser is BSV Eintracht Sondershausen , who also played in the Thuringian League. In addition, there was also a rivalry with FC Rot-Weiß Erfurt, which no longer played a role in recent years due to the different league affiliations of the clubs.

Sponsors

The main sponsors of FSV Wacker 90 Nordhausen are mostly local companies:

Personalities

Honorary members

literature

Web links

Commons : FSV Wacker 90 Nordhausen  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. https://www.mdr.de/thueringen/nord-thueringen/nordhausen/seeland-neuer-trainer-wacker-100~amp.html
  2. https://www.mdr.de/sport/fussball_rl/wacker-nordhausen- stellen-insolvenzmeldung- 100.html
  3. https://www.mdr.de/sport/fussball_rl/nofv-bestaetigt-punktabzug-bei-wacker-nordhausen-100.html
  4. NOFV confirms point deduction for Wacker Nordhausen , mdr.de, accessed on February 7, 2020
  5. 14 players gone: What's next in Nordhausen? , kicker.de, accessed on February 7, 2020
  6. Congratulations to Wacker Honorary Member Harald Dressler. In: Thuringian General. November 3, 2015, accessed May 4, 2018 .