FC Teutonia Ottensen

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FC Teutonia Altona-Ottensen
FC Teutonia 05 Ottensen Logo.svg
Full nameFC Teutonia Ottensen von 1905 e.V.
Founded1905
StadiumStadion Hoheluft
ChairmanKevin Weidlich
ManagerNabil Toumi
League Regionalliga Nord (IV)
2023–24 9th
Website https://www.fcteutonia05.de

FC Teutonia Ottensen or FC Teutonia Altona-Ottensen is a German association football club from the city of Hamburg founded in July 1905. The club's original ten members were joined by one-time members of FC Hammonia Hamburg which was a short-lived side notable as one of the 86 founding clubs of the Deutscher Fussball Bund (German Football Association) in Leipzig in 1900. [1]

Contents

History

Hammonia shared a common origin with FC St. Georg Hamburg as both sides arose out of the student's group Seminarvereinigung Frisch-Auf; St. Georg was formed first on the left bank of the Alster River, and Hammonia appeared later on the right bank. Hammonia played out its short existence from 1896 to 1904 in the top-flight city league known as the Hamburg/Altonaer Fussball Bund, founded in 1896.

Teutonia joined the NDFV (Norddeutscher Fussball Verband or North German Football Federation) in 1907 and by 1910 had constructed their own ground at Hogenfeldweg. Within another four years the club had captured three local championships. Like many other clubs in the country, it was decimated by World War I and fell to lower league play. They competed in the senior city circuit, the Kreisliga Groß-Hamburg, from 1921 to 1924 and again from 1926 to 1928 before disappearing into lower level play.

Ottensen remained in lower tier ball in the interwar period and through World War II. During the conflict, the team was briefly united with neighbouring association Sportverein Ottensen 07 to play as a combined wartime side known as a Kriegspielgemeinschaft. Disbanded and then later reorganized after the war, the team won promotion to the Verbandsliga Hamburg, Elbestaffel (II) in 1947. The Verbandsliga became the Amateurliga Hamburg where they played until relegated at the end of the 1951–52 season. The previous year the club had captured the Altona Cup, named for the westernmost district of the city of Hamburg.

Teutonia remained a lower-tier club over the next decades until improving somewhat in the early 1990s with a climb into the Landesliga Hamburg-Hansa (V) in 1993. The club was promoted to the Oberliga Hamburg (V) in 2017 and to the expanded Regionalliga Nord (IV) in 2020.

The club participated in the first round of the 2022–23 DFB-Pokal, losing 8–0 to RB Leipzig. [2]

Players

Current squad

As of 12 September 2024 [3]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
1 GK Flag of Germany.svg  GER Jan Niemann
3 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Ole Wagner
4 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Emmanuel Ntsiakoh
5 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Marcus Coffie
6 MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Tom Kankowski
7 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Kevin Weidlich
8 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Manasse Fionouke
9 FW Flag of Germany.svg  GER Christian Stark
10 MF Flag of Kosovo.svg  KOS Dren Feka
11 FW Flag of Germany.svg  GER Simon Sigfried
16 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Arian Khodabakhshian
17 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Davidson Eden
18 MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Namrud Embaye
No.Pos.NationPlayer
19 MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Luis Sendzik
20 MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Mohamed Abd El Aal Ali
21 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Noel Denis
22 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Marvin Ajani
23 FW Flag of Germany.svg  GER Jason Ejesieme
27 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Abdul-Malik Yago
29 FW Flag of Germany.svg  GER Michael Kobert
30 MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Nick Gutmann
32 GK Flag of Germany.svg  GER Lars Huxsohl
33 MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Feritali Erdem
34 GK Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg  BIH Semir Svraka
37 FW Flag of the United States.svg  USA Remmy Kruse
77 FW Flag of Portugal.svg  POR Dominik Akyol

Honours

Naming

References

  1. Grüne, Hardy (2001). Vereinslexikon. Kassel: AGON Sportverlag ISBN   3-89784-147-9
  2. "Leipzig crush Teutonia Ottensen to advance in German Cup". Xinhua. 31 August 2022. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
  3. "Kader 2023/2024". Kicker . Retrieved 17 August 2023.