TSV 1860 Rosenheim
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TSV 1860 Rosenheim | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Full name | Turn- und Sportverein 1860
Rosenheim e.V. |
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Founded | 1860 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ground | TSV-Stadion - Sportanlage an der Jahnstraße (Capacity 6000) |
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Chairman | Adolf Dinglreiter | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Manager | Manfred Burghartswieser | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
League | Landesliga Bayern-Süd (V) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2007-08 | 8th | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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TSV 1860 Rosenheim is a German football club from the town of Rosenheim, Bavaria. The roots of the association are in the establishment on 20 October 1860 of the gymnastics club and community fire brigade Freiwillige Turnerfeuerwehr Rosenheim.
Apart from football, the club offers eleven different sports, from basketball to triathlon.
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[edit] History
[edit] From 1860 to 1914
The history of TSV goes back to before 1860 when young men trained in gymnastics in the courtyard of Weinwirt Fortner, then a popular wine bar in Rosenheim. On 20 October 1860 the local gymnasts organized themselves as Freiwillige Turnerfeuerwehr Rosenheim, a sports association and volunteer fire brigade. In 1865, the club took up sports education at the local primary school until 1868 when the city of Rosenheim provided a designated area on the Kaiser-Ellmaierstraße for the club's gymnasts to train. In 1870, the club had 35 members, of whom 24 served in the Franco-Prussian War (1870-71). Four club members lost their lives in the conflict.
In 1873, the voluntary fire brigade and the gymnastics club split into two separate entities with the gymnasts becoming the Turnverein Rosenheim. The 40 member strong club became a registered sporting association in 1893. In 1895, they purchased a property on Wittelsbacherstraße to built a sports hall and sports ground. By the turn of the century in 1900, the TV Rosenheim had over 200 members.
[edit] From 1914 to 1945
During World War I, club members again served in the armed forces with 40 of their number not returning from the battlefield. Despite these loses, the club formed a football department in 1919, with Georg Bayer as its first chairman. In these first years, the footballers moved home ground regularly until, in 1923, the ground at Jahnstraße became their permanent home.
Apart from the footballers, the club saw enlargement in many fields in those post-war years, forming a track & field and a swimming department as well.
In 1924, a separation of gymnastics and football clubs took place in across of Germany, as ordered by the Deutscher Turnerbund (German Gymnastics Federation). The footballers of the TVR became independent under the name of Spiel und Sportvereinigung Rosenheim. The TVR continued to grow and in 1933 the footballers re-joind their parent club. A new sports centrum was built, the Sportanlage an der Jahnstraße, at the footballers home ground. The new homeground was inaugurated in a match versus the club's name sake, TSV 1860 München, which ended in a surprising 4-3 victory for the locals in front of 3,000 spectators.
The Second World War again saw many of the club's members called to military service. Of the 170 that went, 60 did not return. The club suffered further when a 1944 air strike on Rosenheim virtually destroyed the sports ground and club house. Another air strike in April 1945 destroyed the tennis courts. Rosenheim was regarded as part of the Alpenfestung (Alpine Fortress) by the Allies and was also located on a major rail and road intersection.
[edit] After 1945
The American occupation forces in Bavaria dissolved all sports clubs after the end of the war in 1945 and Rosenheim was no exception. A local sports club however quickly formed, uniting all of Rosenheims associations in the ASV Rosenheim in 1945. The ASV quickly initiated a rebuilding program and in 1946 and 1947 the sports grounds on Jahnstraße and the tennis grounds on Wittelsbacherstraße were rebuilt under the direction of August Rothmann and Hannes Heinritzi. The ASV spent two seasons in the Landesliga Bayern, then the second tier of the German league system. A second place in 1946-47 was followed by a ninth the seson after and relegation due to the reduction of the number of Landesligas. The installations on Jahnstraße were finally reopened in 1948. With the liberalization of laws by the occupying forces, the ASV was permitted to return to its original name and the TSV 1860 Rosenheim was reborn in 1950.
The club formed a basketball department in 1960 and constructed a designated sports field for its players in the same year. Also, the clubs home at Jahnstraße was overhauled that year. In the year of the one hundreds anniversary, the football department archived its greatest success so far, promotion to the Amateurliga Bayern (III), the highest football league in the state. The club however only lasted one season in this league, finishing 14th and being relegated back to the 2nd Amateurliga. From 1963, the club spend most of its time in the Landesliga Bayern-Süd (IV), where it became something of a fixture, having spent more seasons on this level then any other club in any of the three Bavarian Landesligas. As of 2007, the club leads the all time table for the Landesliga Süd by an incredible 400 points, ahead of second placed FC Gundelfingen[1].
The club itself meanwhile formed a bobsleigh department, reflecting the fact of Rosenheims geographical position between the lowlands and the mountains.
The club renovated its stadium and reopened it on 8 September 1969 with a game against FC Bayern München who just won its second German championship this year. By 1970, the club had almost 1200 members but the football department found itself dropping to the Bezirksliga for two seasons, returning to the Landesliga in 1972. A new club home was built in 1972 and the town also saw the Olympic flame carried through Rosenheim by the clubs athletes for the 1972 Summer Olympics. Six members of the club took part in the 1976 Winter Olympics in Innsbruck, all in the bobsled competition. The 1980 Winter Olympics saw two members of the TSV compete.
In 1976, the TSV managed for a second time to win promotion to the Bayernliga, this time holding out for six seasons in the highest Bavarian league. A tenth place in 1979 remains the best ever result for the club. A grandstand was built on the northern side of the stadium in 1978, on the strength of Bayernliga membership.
In 1982, the football team was relegated back to the Landesliga. A year later, the under-19's side of the club gained promotion to the Bayernliga, competing with clubs like Bayern München and TSV 1860 München in this league. The clubs basketball department archived similar success in 1994, gaining entry in the Oberliga Bayern.
The year 1995 saw the third promotion of the clubs senior football team to the Bayernliga. again, they only lasted one year, bounced back straight away to find themselves relegated from the league once more in 1998. Since then, the TSV 1860 has remained in its, almost, permanent home Landesliga. Relegation pain was eased by the fact that the team reached the second round of the German cup (DFB Pokal) in 1999-2000, going out to FC St. Pauli 1-2 at home, after the club won the Bavarian cup and once more qualified for the national cup competition, financially a major success for a small amateur site like the TSV 1860.
In 1999, a merger with local rival SB/DJK Rosenheim was discussed but failed. Instead, the stadium at Jahnstraße was once more renovated and in 2001 an astro turf field was installed next to the ice hockey stadium.
As of 2007-08, the clubs footballers still play in the Landesliga and the TSV 1860 Rosenheim offers eleven different sports, as diverse as fencing and triathlon.
The club is part of a youth development program with the FC Bayern München, one of eleven clubs to currently do so. Bastian Schweinsteiger is currently the most well known player from the club, playing for the FC Bayern and the German national team. Both its under-19 and under-17 side play in the Bayernliga in the 2007-08 season.
The reserve side of the football team plays in the Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Ost, which it was promoted to in 2002.
Since 1994, the club's main sponsor is the local company Kathrein, with a sponsorship contract until 2010[2].
[edit] Honours
- Bayerischer Toto-Pokal winner: 1999
- Landesliga Bayern-Süd (IV-V) champions: 1976, 1995, 1997
- Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Ost (V) champions: 1972
[edit] TSV 1860 Rosenheim seasons (from 1963)
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- Source: Das deutsche Fussball-Archiv Tables of the Bayernliga and Landesliga
- The Oberliga Bayern was called Amateurliga Bayern until 1978, then Amateur Oberliga Bayern till 1994.
[edit] Local rivals
There is currently eight different football clubs in Rosenheim[3], however, only one other then the TSV 1860 has competed on the highest Bavarian level, this being the SB/DJK Rosenheim, who played in the Bayernliga for one season in 1978-79, alongside the TSV. The two clubs have only played one season in the same league after that, 1982-83 in the Landesliga. After 24 years, the Sportbund returned to the Landesliga in 2007 and once more a derby was played. Both clubs lingered in mid table of the Landesliga all season, with no real promotion or relegation issues to worry about. The two games in the league against each other happened to be staged within five days in November 2007, each side winning their home game 2-1. In the final table of the Landesliga in 2007-08, the TSV finished one spot above the SB.
The league derbys between TSV and SB since 1971:
Season | League | Teams | Home | Away |
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1971-72 | Bezirksliga | TSV 1860 Rosenheim - SB/DJK Rosenheim | 3-0 | 3-0 |
1978-79 | Bayernliga | TSV 1860 Rosenheim - SB/DJK Rosenheim | 0-0 | 3-0 |
1982-83 | Landesliga | TSV 1860 Rosenheim - SB/DJK Rosenheim | 0-1 | 1-1 |
2007-08 | Landesliga | TSV 1860 Rosenheim - SB/DJK Rosenheim | 2-1 | 1-2 |
Source:Tables and results of the Bavarian football leagues. Manfred Herzing. Retrieved on 2008-04-18.
[edit] Local competition
While the TSV 1860 overshadows the Sportbund in football, it in turn is no match to the other clubs ice hockey department. Three German titles and three more lost final series are the SB's (which now stands for Star Bulls) record on national level. Like many of the small southern Bavarian towns, hockey far dominates football in popularity and success. the SB Rosenheim currently competes in the Oberliga Süd (III), having avoided relegation in the 2007-08 season and being a far cry from its former glory. In its better days in the 1980's, the club provided at times a third of the German national ice hockey team. Still, ice hockey attracts far more spectators, and passion, then football in Rosenheim.
[edit] Basketball department
The TSV's basketball team won its league, the Bezirksliga Bayern-Ost (VII), in 2006-07, winning all 18 games. The team was promoted to the Oberliga Bayern-Süd (VI) on the strength of this, where they finished in mid-table in 2007-08.
The most recent seasons of the men's senior team:
Year | Division | Position |
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2004 | Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Ost | 5th |
2005 | Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Ost | 2nd |
2006 | Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Ost | 5th |
2007 | Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Ost | 1st ↑ |
2008 | Oberliga Bayern-Süd |
[edit] Club members at the Olympics
Six members of the club took part in the 1976 Winter Olympics in Innsbruck, those were[4]:
- Georg Heibl, 2-men bobsled, finished 5th in the competition
- Fritz Ohlwärter, 2-men bobsled, finished 5th in the competition
- Richard Horner, 4-men bobsled, finished 5th in the competition
- Hans Morant, 4-men bobsled, finished 5th in the competition
- Hans Wagner, 4-men bobsled, finished 5th in the competition
- Siegi Radandt, 4-men bobsled, finished 5th in the competition
Two members of the club took part in the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, those were:
- Hans Wagner, bobsled, finished 7th in the competition
- Walter Barfuß, 4-men bobsled, finished 7th in the competition
[edit] Sources
- Vereinschronik - History of the TSV 1860 Rosenheim (in German)
- Das deutsche Fußball-Archiv historical German domestic league tables (in German)
[edit] External links
- Official homepage of the football club TSV 1860 Rosenheim
- Website of the sports club TSV 1860 Rosenheim
[edit] References
- ^ Overall table of the Landesliga Süd 1963-2007, source: FC Gundelfingen accessed: 2008-04-17
- ^ Kathrein website
- ^ Official DFB website with all senior results, clubs and tables
- ^ German bobsled associationretrieved: 19 April 2008