Saturday, March 31, 2012

SV Empor Berlin

Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Sportpark Kleines Satdium (Capacity: 5.000)

SV Empor Berlin - Frohnauer SC (3:1) (Berlin-Liga, 31. March 2012)
0:1 N. Przesang (45.), 1:1 O. Gaschekowski (50.), 2:1 P. Kling (71.), 3:1 O. Gaschekowski (77.)

Attendance: 70
Cost: 6 Euro
Programme: Stadionheft (1 Euro)







The home team
 
Teams preparing for play
 
And we have kickoff
 
Frohnauer on the attack in the 1st half
 
The old entry gates
 
View from the old gates
 
The clubhouse and changerooms
 
Frohnauer attacking in the 2nd half
 
It decided to snow in the 2nd half
 
And snow some more
 
The Frohnauer bench braving the elements
 
The big stadium is a stones throw away

Friday, March 30, 2012

RSV Waltersdorf

HDS-Arena (Capacity: 1.500)

RSV Waltersdorf - Stahl Brandenburg (0:0) (Brandenburg-Liga, 30. March 2012)

Attendance: 198
Cost: 6 Euro
Programme: Der Null 9er (Free)




Entry to the ground

The ticket box

Teams entering the pitch

Awaiting kickoff

There were a few banners around from Stahl

View of the pitch

And another one

The clubhouse

Looking across the halfway

Keepers view of the action

Looking from the clubhouse towards the pitch

The food and drinks van stood out nicely

A few trophies in the clubhouse

Press conference after the game


CLUB HISTORY: (wiki)
The RSV Waltersdorf 09 ( Rotberger Sports Club Waltersdorf 09 eV ) is a German football club based in the Schönefeld community in Brandenburg. Here calls Waltersdorf home and also has its historical roots in the village Rotberg.

The club was founded October 1905 and was based in Rotzis, renamed in 1937 to Rotberg. In 1909 the club formed a new men's gymnastics club 'Oak Rotzis 1909', and then in early 1910 a section of a football team. In later years, the football department became independent as 'Concord Rotberg'. This was disbanded after the war ended in 1945 because of the association with the Soviet occupying power. In this place, in 1946 a sporting community based in Rotberg dedicated itself to football training. In 1949 this group was renamed to BSG Traktor Nord Diepensee, because at that time, most independent sports communities had company sports teams (ESR) which were converted under the sponsorship of local businesses and institutions. In 1952 in addition to the BSG Rotberg Tractor Nord, there arose another football club with the name SG Rotberg . This was however closed again in 1956 and incorporated into the BSG Traktor Nord.
Other sports than football were played at the club such as handball, gymnastics and billiards. In 1961, in Rotberg, a new sports field was constructed. In 1970 there was the merger of several regional sports clubs in Diepensee, Rotberg, Kiekebusch and Waltersdorf (DRKW) and as such the BSG Traktor DRKW was formed, with headquarters in Rotberg. A few months later, on 20 June 1970 also the ASG Vorwarts Johannisthal was incorporated. Established as part of the merger was that training and meetings would be held in Waltersdorf, matches of the men in Rotberg, and the youth games to be played in Waltersdorf. With the end of the GDR the club was renamed from BSG Traktor DRKW to Rotberg SV 09 , which references the founding year of the MTV oak Rotzis club.

In 1992, the SV 09 Rotberg had two teams with 43 ​​members. The first team of football played in the first Circle class. Due to unclear ownership, the club had to give up their place at the sportsfields in Rotberg and found temporary accommodation in a not very busy facility in Schoenefeld. The efforts of the club head were directed towards finding a permanent new home ground. In 1994, the municipality Waltersdorf voted to build a new sports facility to which the SV should be located. In 1996, the new sports complex was opened with a club casino. 1997 brought the footballers of RSV Waltersdorf the runners up position in the Kreisliga. This was followed in 1998 by the rise in the Landeklasse. 2006 brought the biggest success so far the club's history came with the rise in the Landesliga. The first season of 2006/07 ended successfully with fifth place This was followed by a 4th and 3rd place. 2011 brought promotion as league champions to the Brandenburg League (VI). While the 2011/12 proved just as succesful with a runners up position gaining promotion to the Oberliga Nord (V)

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

SV Babelsberg 03

Karl-Liebknecht-Stadion (Capacity: 10.499)

SV Babelsberg 03 - Kickers Offenbach (0:1) (3.Liga, 27. March 2012)
0:1 S. Volger (68.)

Attendance: 2578
Cost: 11 Euro
Programme: NullDrei (1 Euro)
0:1 S. Volger (68.)






A nice mural on the way to the ground
 
Entry gates to the stadium
 
Cheap food and beers is always good
 
The teams entering the stadium
 
A nice flag display from M Block
 
The O block fans
 
Ready for kickoff
 
View of the pitch from Block O
 
The main grandstand
 
The pitch wasn't in great condition
 
Full time with victory for the visitors

CLUB HISTORY: (wiki)

SV Babelsberg 03 is a German association football club based in Potsdam-Babelsberg, on the outskirts of Berlin. The team was founded as Sport-Club Jugendkraft 1903 and again as SG Karl-Marx Babelsberg in 1948 as successor to the pre-war side SpVgg Potsdam 03.

Playing as SV Nowawes the team gained promotion in 1935 to the first tier Gauliga Berlin-Brandenburg, one of sixteen top flight divisions formed in the re-organization of German football under the Third Reich. The club was relegated after just three seasons at that level never finishing better than eighth in their ten team division. The club returned to the Gauliga as SpVgg Potsdam in 1943 and earned third and fourth place finishes in the two years before the end of World War II.
Following the war, occupying Allied authorities ordered the dissolution of all organizations in the country, including sports and football associations. The former membership of SpVgg was re-organized as SG Karl Marx Babelsberg in 1948 in the Soviet-occupied eastern half of the country. On 1 August 1949, they merged with the local club SG Drewitz and the following year were re-named BSG Motor Babelsberg.
The side was a perennial second division team in East Germany's DDR-Liga with the exception of short spells in the third tier in 1968–71, 1972–73, and 1980–81. The club's record in league matches and in regular FDGB Pokal (East German Cup) tournament appearances was undistinguished. Just prior to German re-unification the team suffered relegation from the second division.

On 10 December 1991 Motor adopted the name Sportverein Babelsberg 03. They remained a lower division side in the united Germany until breaking through to the Oberliga Nordost-Nord (IV) in 1996. The team's budget increased tenfold in the period from 1996 to 1999. They immediately captured the league title there and won promotion to the Regionalliga Nordost (III). A second place finish in 2001 in what had become the Regionalliga Nord (III) advanced the club to the 2. Bundesliga. SV also played its first DFB-Pokal (German Cup) matches in 2000 and 2001, but was eliminated in the early rounds.

Babelsberg's time in the second division was a short one. They finished at the bottom of the table and by 2003–04 had fallen all the way back to the Oberliga Nordost-Nord (IV). The club declared bankruptcy in 2003 but managed to continue playing through the adoption of a creditor supported bankruptcy plan. SV fielded strong sides and achieved several top three finishes until they were promoted to the Regionalliga Nord (III) for the 2007–08 campaign. In 2009–10 season Babelsberg were promoted back to the 3rd Liga after finishing champions of the Regionalliga Nord.

HONOURS:
* Bezirksliga Potsdam (III) champions: 1973
* Bezirksliga Potsdam-Sud (III) champions: 1981
* Verbandsliga Brandenburg (V) champions: 1996
* NOFV-Oberliga Nord (IV) champions: 1997, 2007
* Regionalliga Nord (III) runners-up: 2001
* Regionalliga Nord (IV) champions: 2010

STADIUM HISTORY:

The Karl-Liebknecht-Stadion is a football stadium in Potsdam-Babelsberg, Germany. It is the home stadium of 1. FFC Turbine Potsdam and SV Babelsberg 03. The stadium has a capacity of 10,499 for 9,027 standing and 1,472 seated guests.
The stadium was opened on 10 July 1976 with a football match between BSG Motor Babelsberg and the Olympic team of the German Democratic Republic. The original capacity of 15,000 was reached only once as the East Germany national football team faced Malta. On 9 July 2001, the SV Babelsberg 03 had its highest attendance in their club history when 14,700 spectators witnessed Babelsberg's win over Fortuna Düsseldorf.

The last renovation was held in 2002, and the stadium now has its current capacity. About one year later, the Women's Bundesliga match between 1. FFC Turbine Potsdam and 1. FFC Frankfurt was seen by 7,900 people. This was the women's Bundesliga match with the highest ever attendance. Turbine's all-time attendance record was 8,677 people who saw the UEFA Women's Cup final second leg against Djurgårdens IF Dam.


Monday, March 26, 2012

1. FC Union Berlin

Stadion An der Alten Försterei (Capacity: 18.432)

1.FC Union Berlin - Eintracht Frankfurt (0:4) (2.Bundesliga, 26. March 2012)
0:1 Idrissou (9.), 0:2 Hoffer (57.), 0:3 Meier (73.), 0:4 Meier (89.)

Attendance: 16.589 (sold out)
Cost: 10.50 EURO
Programme: 1.FC Union (1.50)



Luckily tickets were purchased here and not at the gate

View of the stadium under lights

Once we got to the stadium, it was already sold out

Union fans showing their support

Teams entering the pitch

Ready for kickoff, and note the empty away block!

The stands were full of spectators and flags

Didn't stay empty for long, Frankfurt fans jumped the fence

Even the sitzplatz was completely full

Unioners say F§$K YOU DFB

Full time and an easy away win for Frankfurt


CLUB HISTORY: (wiki)

1. FC Union Berlin is a German association football club based in Berlin. It is one of two sides in the city bearing the name Union that emerged during the Cold War and played in East Germany, while the other played in the west. The club currently plays in the 2. Fußball-Bundesliga.

The name 1. FC Union Berlin was used by two football clubs that shared a common origin as SC Olympia 06 Oberschöneweide, founded in 1906 in the Oberschöneweide district of Berlin. The side took on the name SC Union 06 Oberschöneweide in 1910. Union was one of Berlin's premier clubs in the interwar period, regularly winning local championships and competing at the national level, including an appearance in the 1923 German championship final which they lost 0–3 to Hamburger SV.
Early on the team was nicknamed "Schlosserjungs" (engl: metalworker-boys or locksmith-boys), because of their then all blue kit, reminiscent of the typical work clothing worn in the factories of the industrial Oberschöneweide district. The popular cry of Union-supporters – "Eisern Union!" (Iron Union) – also emerged at this time. Since its foundation the club had a clearly working-class image in contrast to other local clubs with middle-class origins, such as Viktoria 89 Berlin, Blau-Weiß 90 Berlin, BSV 92 Berlin or Tennis Borussia Berlin.

In 1933, German football was reorganized under the Third Reich into 16 top flight divisions known as Gauligen. Oberschöneweide became part of the Gauliga Berlin-Brandenburg where they generally earned middling results. They were relegated in 1935 and returned to first division play in 1936 after only one season's absence. In 1940, the team finished first in Group B of the division and then defeated Blau-Weiss (1–2, 3–0) to win the overall division title. That advanced the club to the national playoffs where they were put out by Rapid Wien in the opening group round (2–3, 1–3). Union resumed its place as an unremarkable side. They were relegated again in 1942 and played the final war-shortened Gauliga season in 1944–45.

After World War II, occupying Allied authorities ordered the dissolution of all organizations in Germany, including sports and football associations. A new Municipal Sports Group called SG Oberschöneweide was formed in late 1945 and it played in the City League organized immediately after the war which had four regional departments. The team did not qualify to the newly created Oberliga Berlin (I) in 1946 after a poor season, but was promoted in 1947, won the division title right away and regained club status as SG Union 06 Oberschöneweide during 1948–49.
The club finished the 1949–50 season in second place in Berlin and qualified to take part in the national final rounds. However, escalating Cold War tensions led Soviet authorities to refuse the team permission to travel to take part. Two Union teams then emerged as most players and coaches fled to the west to form Sport-Club Union 06 Berlin which took part in the scheduled playoff match in Kiel against Hamburger SV, losing 0:7.

The players remaining in the east carried on as Union Oberschöneweide while a number of players who had fled to the west to form SC organized a third side called Berliner Ballspiel-Club Südost. The western team was a strong side until the construction of the Berlin Wall in 1961, drawing huge crowds to matches in the Olympiastadion. The division of the city led to a change of fortunes for the club which plays today in the lower divisions before meager crowds.

The eastern branch of the club went through a number of name changes: Union Oberschöneweide (1950), BSG Motor Oberschöneweide (1951), SC Motor Berlin (1955), TSC Oberschöneweide (1957), TSC Berlin (1963) – finally becoming the football club 1. FC Union Berlin in 1966. They developed a bitter rivalry with Stasi-sponsored Dynamo Berlin. While their arch rivals won 10 titles in a row in highly dubious circumstances, Union yo-yoed between the Oberliga and the DDR-Liga with very little success, largely due to the East German's government policy of favouring 'elite' clubs at the expense of 'civilian' clubs like Union. Union managed to win the East German Cup in 1968 when they defeated FC Carl Zeiss Jena 2:1 although they lost in their second cup appearance in 1986 to 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig by a score of 1:5.

After German reunification in 1990, the team continued to perform well on the field, but almost collapsed financially. They managed to hang on through some tight times and find sponsorship, but only after winning their division in both 1993 and 1994 and each time being denied a license to play in the 2. Bundesliga due to their financial problems. The club had another close brush with financial failure in 1997.
Union again came close to advancing to 2.Bundesliga in 1998–99 and 1999–2000, but were disappointed. They were finally successful in 2000–01, under Bulgarian manager Georgi Vasilev, easily winning the Regionalliga Nord (III) and moving up a division to become the city's most popular side after the Bundesliga's Hertha BSC Berlin. That same year they appeared in the final of the German Cup where they lost 0–2 to FC Schalke 04, and advanced as far as the second round in UEFA Cup before being put out by Bulgarian side PFC Litex Lovech. The club slipped to the Regionalliga Nord (III) in 2004–05 and then to the NOFV-Oberliga Nord (IV) in 2005–06, but has returned to third division play after capturing the Oberliga title. In 2008–09, Union became one of the founding clubs of the new 3rd Liga, and its inaugural champion, securing first place and promotion to the 2. Fußball-Bundesliga on 10 May.


HONOURS:

German championship
Runners-up 1923
FDGB-Pokal: 1
Winners 1968
Runners-up 1986
German Cup:
Runners-up 2001
UEFA Cup:
2nd Round 2001–02
3. Fußball-Liga: 1
Winners 2009
Brandenburg football champions: 2
Winners 1920, 1923
Gauliga Berlin-Brandenburg: 1
Winners 1940
Regionalliga Nord: 1
Winners 2001
Regionalliga Nordost: 1
Winners 2000
NOFV-Oberliga Nord: 1
Winners 2006
Berlin Cup: 5
Winners 1947, 1948, 1994, 2007, 2009


STADIUM HISTORY: (wiki)

Stadion An der Alten Försterei (English Stadium near the old Forester's house) is a football stadium in the German capital Berlin. It has been home to football club 1. FC Union Berlin (and its forerunners) since it was opened on 7 August 1920. The stadium's capacity was approximately 18,100 spectators until its complete redevelopment, which commenced in the summer of 2008. It is now just under 19,000 although some important development aspects (seated main stand and V.I.P areas) have not been carried out yet. The club's management, with the backing of the fans, decided the stadium would now have a capacity of just under 19,000 including 3,014 seats (just over the minimum required for the 2. Bundesliga) whilst the rest of the ground remains terracing.

In 1920 SC Union Oberschöneweide (forerunner of today's 1. FC Union Berlin) had to find a new home ground as its former pitch had been built over by developers with residential buildings. The club moved a little further away from the city to the north-western part of the borough of Köpenick. The new stadium was officially opened in August 1920 with a match between Oberschöneweide and the then German champions 1. FC Nuremberg (1:2). The inaugural match in at the Alte Försterei had already been played on 17 March, when Union challenged Viktoria 89 Berlin- an illustrious club who had won the German Championship three times around the turn of the century - to a friendly.
When Union won promotion to the DDR-Oberliga (the top flight in East Germany) in 1966, the stadium soon needed to be expanded. The ground was first expanded in 1970 when the Gegengerade terrace was raised, whilst further extensions to the terracing at both ends in the late 1970s and early 1980s increased the capacity furthermore to 22,500.
However, the somewhat spartan facilities at Alte Försterei had quickly begun to show their age though, as the club was not able to properly maintain the expansive ground as attendances - in common with the majority of clubs in the East and West - went into a serious decline. Later, after German reunification, when Union were assigned by the German Football Association to play in the 3rd league, the outdated stadium proved only one of a number of factors that hampered the club's push for promotion to higher leagues.

Prior to the redevelopment in 2008, the terracing at the ground was in such a poor state of repair that its continued use was only on condition of the capacity being drastically cut to 18,100 spectators. In the late 1990s, Union were only allowed to continue playing at the Alte Försterei on the basis of special temporary licenses until the DFL (German Football League) stopped continue renewing these in 2006, meaning the stadium would soon no longer be eligible to stage any matches in the top three tiers of German football. The club were therefore forced to make a decision as to whether they would redevelop the Alte Försterei or make a permanent move to a different ground, something that which was unlikely to have been approved by large sections of the fan base who consider the ground to be the club's spiritual home.