Chemnitzer FC

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chemnitzer FC
logo
Full name Chemnitzer Fussball-Club e.V.
Nickname(s) Die Himmelblauen (Sky Blues)
Founded 1920
Ground Stadion an der Gellertstrasse
Capacity 12,680
League Oberliga NOFV Süd (IV)
2005-06 Regionalliga Nord (III), 19th, (relegated)
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

Chemnitzer FC is a German football club based in Chemnitz, Saxony. The origins of the club go back to its establishment as Polizei-Sportverein Chemnitz in 1920.


Contents


[edit] History

After the re-organization of German football into sixteen Gauliga, or top flight divisions, under the Third Reich, PSV Chemnitz played in the Gauliga Sachsen. The club performed well, generally finishing in the upper half of the league table and capturing their division in 1935 and 1936. In 1942 the club was re-named SG Ordnungspolizei Chemnitz. World War II eventually took a toll as the team fell out of first division play after a ninth place finish in 1943 and the country's football descended into chaos as it was overtaken by the war.

In the aftermath of the conflict most organizations in Germany, including sports and football clubs, were dissolved by the Allied occupation authorities. The side was re-established in 1945 as SG Chemnitz Nord and then, as was common in East German football at the time, it underwent a number of name changes: BSG Fewa Chemnitz (1948); BSG Chemie (1951); and BSG Chemie Karl-Marx-Stadt (1953), in step with the change of the city's name under the communist government. In 1956 the football club was attached to the larger centralized sports club SC Motor Karl-Marx-Stadt, which was in turn re-named SC Karl-Marx-Stadt (1963). The football department was once again separated from the sports club as FC Karl-Marx-Stadt in 1966 under a government plan to establish a number of centres throughout the country intended to identify and develop talent in support of a strong national side. When the city re-claimed its original name in 1991 the team followed suit to become Chemnitzer FC.

After joining the DDR-Liga in 1963 the club generally earned uninspiring results, most often finishing in the lower half of the league table. It managed a surprising East German championship win in 1967, and were losing finalists in the East German Cup (FDGB Cup) in 1969, 1983 and 1989. The club enjoyed its best turn internationally in 1989 advancing through two preliminary rounds to the quarter final of the UEFA Cup where it went out 1:2, 0:1 against Juventus. In 1990 the team finished as East German vice-champions, second to Dynamo Dresden on goal differential. After German re-unification in 1990, Chemnitz was seeded into the 2.Bundesliga beginning with the 1992 season and played there until being relegated in 1997. The team advanced to the semi-final round of the German Cup in 1993. It played in the Regionalliga (III), was promoted to the 2.Bundesliga in 1999. Since then the importance of a club has faded. It was relegated back to Regionalliga (III) in 2001 and to IV division in 2006.

[edit] Honours

  • East German champions: 1967
  • East German vice-champions: 1990
  • East German Cup (FDGB Cup) finalists: 1969, 1983, 1989
  • German Cup semi-finalist: 1993
  • Saxon Cup (Sachsenpokal) champions: 1997, 1998, 2006

[edit] Notable players

  • Eberhard Vogel, 74 GDR caps, 1962-76
  • Rico Steinmann, 23 GDR caps, 1986-90
  • Michael Ballack, came up through Chemnitz's junior system and debuted with the 1998 Kaiserslautern side that claimed the Bundesliga title in the same year that it returned from relegation – the only club to ever accomplish the feat

[edit] Team roster

As of January 4, 2006

Goalkeepers
  • Germany Sebastian Klömich
  • Germany Ralf Sommerfeldt
Defenders
  • Germany Tobias Becker
  • Germany Mike Baumann
  • Germany Michael Gasser
  • Czech Republic Frantisek Hrzan
  • Germany Sascha Thönelt
  • Germany Danny Troschke
Midfielders
  • Nigeria Yakubu Adamu
  • Germany Christian Kunert
  • Senegal Gerard Sambou
  • Germany Stefan Schumann
  • Germany David Sieber
  • Macedonia Borislav Tomoski
  • Germany Marco Wölfel
Forwards
  • Germany Felix Bachmann
  • Germany Danilo Hänel
  • Germany Steffen Kellig
  • Germany Marcel Schlosser
  • Mali Bakary Sinaba

[edit] Stadium

Chemnitzer FC plays in the club-owned Stadion an der Gellertstraße which has a capacity of 12,680 spectators (~540 seats). Until 1990 the facility was officially known as "Dr. Kurt-Fischer-Stadion", or locally as the "Fischerwiese". During its 2.Bundesliga seasons the club also made use of the larger Chemnitzer Sportforum, which has a capacity of over 19,000.

[edit] External links


German NOFV-Oberliga Süd (IV) Football Clubs (2006-07)
VfB Auerbach | Budissa Bautzen | Chemnitzer FC | FC Energie Cottbus II | SV Dessau 05 | FV Dresden-Nord | FC Eilenburg | Rot-Weiß Erfurt II | Germania Halberstadt | Hallescher FC | FC Carl Zeiss Jena II | Sachsen Leipzig | ZFC Meuselwitz | VFC Plauen | VfB Pößneck | FSV Zwickau