SG Adenstedt

Last updated

SG Adenstedt
SG Adenstedt.png
Full nameSportgemeinschaft von 1894 e.V. Adenstedt
Founded1894/1914
GroundAm Odishain
Capacity3,000
League2. Kreisklasse Peine-Süd (X)
2014–154th

SG Adenstedt is a German football club from the city of Adenstedt, Lower Saxony. The club has its roots in the establishment of the gymnastics club Turnverein Adenstedt in 1894. A football department was formed within the association in 1914; today the sports club also has departments for handball and tennis.

Contents

History

The footballers went their own way as the independent club Eiche Adenstedt in 1918, which was renamed Spielvereinigung Adenstedt in 1926. SV was reunited with parent club TV in 1935 to become Turn- und Spielevereinigung 1894 Adenstedt. They resumed their identity as SG in 1945. [1]

The club spent a single season as a third division side in the Amateurliga Niedersachsen-Ost in 1959–60 and was sent down after a 17th-place finish. They currently play in the 2. Kreisklasse Peine (X).

Related Research Articles

FC Erzgebirge Aue Association football club in Aue-Bad Schlema, Germany

Fußball Club Erzgebirge Aue e.V., commonly known as simply FC Erzgebirge Aue or Erzgebirge Aue, is a German football club based in Aue-Bad Schlema, Saxony. The former East German side was a founding member of the 3. Liga in 2008–09, after being relegated from the 2. Bundesliga in 2007–08. The city of Aue-Bad Schlema has a population of about 20,800, making it one of the smallest cities to ever host a club playing at the second highest level of German football. However, the team attracts supporters from a larger urban area that includes Chemnitz and Zwickau, whose own football sides are among Aue's traditional rivals.

Dresdner SC Football club

Dresdner Sportclub 1898 e.V., known simply as Dresdner SC, is a German multisport club playing in Dresden, Saxony. Founded on 30 April 1898, the club was a founding member of the German Football Association in 1900. The origins of the club go back still further to the predecessor side Dresden English Football Club formed in 1874 by expatriate Englishmen as Germany's first football club and possibly the earliest in continental Europe: Dresdener SC was organized by one-time German members of the EFC.

Hallescher FC Football club

Hallescher FC, sometimes still called by its former popular name Chemie Halle, is a German association football club based in Halle an der Saale, Saxony-Anhalt. The club currently plays in the 3. Liga, the third highest level in the German football league system. For many years, Halle had been in East Germany's highest league, the DDR-Oberliga, up-until the German reunification. However, like many other teams from the former East, it then suffered the effects of economic and demographic decline in the region in the 1990s and fell down to amateur leagues. Since 2000, Hallescher FC has ended its downward trend and in the 2011–2012 season, they finally returned to a professional football league after 20 years of absence.

SSV Jahn Regensburg German association football club from Regensburg, Bavaria

Sport- und Schwimmverein Jahn Regensburg e. V., commonly known as SSV Jahn Regensburg, Jahn Regensburg, SSV Jahn or simply Jahn is a German football club based in Regensburg, Bavaria. The club is based on a gymnastics club founded in 1886 as Turnerbund Jahn Regensburg which took its name from Friedrich Ludwig Jahn, whose ideas of gymnastics greatly influenced German sport in the 19th century. The football department was created in 1907.

Spandauer SV German football club

Spandauer SV was a German football club from Berlin.

[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1990-0602-009, 1. FC Dynamo Dresden - PSV Schwerin 2-1.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Dynamo Dresden celebrates their victory in the final game against PSV Schwerin in June 1990.] The FDGB-Pokal was an elimination football tournament held annually in East Germany. It was the second most important national title in East German football after the DDR-Oberliga championship. The founder of the competition was East Germany's major trade union.

SC Waldgirmes German football club

SC Waldgirmes is a German association football club from Waldgirmes, Hesse. The 700 member club is best known for its football team, but also has departments for table tennis, women's gymnastics, alpine gymnastics, and cycling.

TSG Neustrelitz German football club

TSG Neustrelitz is a German association football club from Neustrelitz, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. The football side is part of a sports club that also has departments for gymnastics and chess.

Adenstedt Ortsteil of Sibbesse in Lower Saxony, Germany

Adenstedt is a village and a former municipality in the district of Hildesheim in Lower Saxony, Germany. Since 1 November 2016 it has been part of the municipality of Sibbesse.

Füchse Berlin Reinickendorf are a German sports club based in Reinickendorf, a western district of Berlin. The football side is part of a larger sports association that has departments for basketball, bowling, boxing, gymnastics, team handball, ice hockey, swimming, tennis, table tennis, and volleyball. In January 2007 the Metropol Cricket Team Berlin joined the club as its cricket department.

SG Sonnenhof Großaspach German football club

SG Sonnenhof Großaspach, commonly known as Sonnenhof Großaspach, is a German professional football club based in Aspach, Baden-Württemberg. The club play in the Regionalliga Südwest, which is the fourth tier of football in the country.

SG Post/Süd Regensburg German football club

The SG Post/Süd Regensburg was a German association football club from the city of Regensburg, Bavaria. The club is still active in many sports, having twenty-two separate departments, but no longer fields a football side since that department left to merge with Jahn Regensburg in 2002.

SG Dynamo Hohenschönhausen East German sports club

SG Dynamo Hohenschönhausen was an East German sports community from Berlin, affiliated to the SV Dynamo. The sport community offered a wide rang of sports. Its football departement was active from 1953 and until 1966.

FFC Flaesheim-Hillen was a short-lived women's football club from the Flaesheim district of Haltern am See in the Ruhr area. The club was founded in 1999 as a merger of the women's football departments of SG Rot-Weiß Hillen and Concordia Flaesheim. As Rot-Weiß had achieved promotion for the Bundesliga the team was qualified for Germany's premier football league in their first season. Flaesheim finished eighth in 1999–2000 and improved their performance to a fifth place in 2000–01. They reached the final of the cup as well, but nevertheless had to declare bankruptcy at the end of the season.

SG Bergmann-Borsig Football club

SG Bergmann-Borsig is a German sports club from borough of Pankow, in Berlin. The sports club has departments in several sports, such as tennis, tabletennis, gymnastics, volleyball, kyudo and ninjutsu.

FC Mecklenburg Schwerin German football club

FC Mecklenburg Schwerin is a German football club based in Schwerin in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. The club was formed from a merger in 2013 and competes in the sixth tier Verbandsliga Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. The club plays its home matches at the Sportpark Lankow. FC Mecklenburg Schwerin also has gymnastics squads and an Esports department.

FC Sachsen Leipzig Football club

FC Sachsen Leipzig was a German football club from the Leutzsch district of Leipzig, Saxony. The club continued the traditions of BSG Chemie Leipzig. The club officially dissolved in 2011. Although several successor sides were established, only one survived, the BSG Chemie Leipzig. The name Sachsen Leipzig was revived in 2014 by amateur football club LFV Sachsen Leipzig.

SG Heidelberg-Kirchheim German football club

SG Heidelberg-Kirchheim is a German association football club from the Kirchheim district of the city of Heidelberg, Baden-Württemberg. The club's greatest success has been promotion to the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg on three occasions, in 1984, 1996 and 1998. It last played at this level in the 2000–01 season.

References

  1. Grüne, Hardy (2001). Vereinslexikon. Kassel: AGON Sportverlag ISBN   3-89784-147-9