Full name | Sport Verein Türkgücü-Ataspor München e.V. | ||
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Founded | 1975 | ||
Ground | Bezirksportanlage am Krehlebogen (Capacity: 1,000) |
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Chairman | Taşkın Akkay | ||
Manager | Bernd Weiß | ||
League | Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Nord (VIII) | ||
2010–11 | 10th | ||
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The SV Türkgücü-Ataspor München is a German association football club from the city of Munich, Bavaria.
The club, which is based in the Turkish community of Munich, was fomed in 2009 in a merger of Türkischer SV 1975 München and ATA Spor München.[1] Türkischer SV 1975, in turn, succeded SV Türk Gücü München in 2001 when the later became insolvent. Türk Gücü was a successful third-division side in the second half of the 1980s and the early 1990s, when the club aimed as high as the German second division, without quite getting there. Satellite television, in the form of live football broadcasts from Turkey and a loss of identity within the Turkish community in Munich however led to the eventual demise of the club.[2]
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The club was formed in 1975 by a handful of Turkish migrant workers in Munich, then under the name of SV Türk Gücü München (English: Turkish Power Munich). Originally, the football team played in the lowest tiers of Munich amateur football, something that changed from 1983 onwards, when a number of wealthy Turkish businessmen took over the running of the club. The club found the Bezirksportanlage am Krehlebogen as a permanent home ground and was able to establish a youth department.[2]
Türk Gücü, as the club was commonly referred to, earned a number of promotions, culminating in a 3-1 promotion decider victory over VfR Neuburg, played in front of 3,000 spectators, which earned the club entry to the fourth division Landesliga Bayern-Süd. One of the driving forces behind this success was former FC Bayern Munich and Standard Liege player Erhan Önal.[2]
After its promotion to the Landesliga, Türk Gücü strengthened its team with non-Turkish players and, under coach Peter Grosser, the club won promotion to the Fußball-Bayernliga in 1988, with future professionals like Gerry Hillringhaus and Thomas Kristl in the team. Türk Gücü was an instant success in Bavaria's highest football league, coming sixth in its first season,[3] where it attracted as many as 12,000 spectators in the games against TSV 1860 Munich. The club was able to draw on up to 1,000 fans to travel with the team to away games.[2] Hillringhaus, a goally, scored Germany's goal of the month for September 1989 in a Bayernliga game against MTV Ingolstadt.[4]
The club under chairman Ergun Berksoy, rivaled in its success in the German Turkish community only by Türkiyemspor Berlin, begun to aim even for professional football, hoping to earn promotion to the 2nd Bundesliga.[2] But the club was not able to live up to its ambitions. It finished seventh in the league in the following year, followed by a twelfth place in 1991 and relegation in 1992 after a bitter 4-3 defeat on penalties in the relegation decider against SC 08 Bamberg.[5]
Türk Gücü only spent two seasons in the Landesliga, returning to the Bayernliga in 1994, but fundamental changes started to affect the club. Support for the team had steadily declined, one reason being the large number of non-Turkish players in the club which affected the identification of the local Turkish population with the club. The other was the rise of Satellite television. Being able to watch Turkish giants Beşiktaş, Galatasaray and Fenerbahçe live on TV greatly reduced the number of Turkish people interested in seeing a third- or fourth-division side on the field and, consequently, the clubs financial means.[2]
Back in the Bayernliga, the side nevertheless showed another good performances, coming sixth once more, but now in a league much weakened with the departure of its top clubs to the new Regionalliga Süd the previous year.[6] The clubs significance in Bavarian football was also demonstrated in the fact that the Bavarian Football Associations fiftieth anniversary book had its own two-page article on Türk Gücü, something only awarded to Bavarian giants FC Bayern, TSV 1860, 1. FC Nuremberg and rising star SpVgg Unterhaching.[7]
The clubs second Bayernliga era however ended abruptly in the 1995-96 season, when Türk Gücü came second-last and was relegated once more.[8] Back in the Landesliga, the club came close to Bayernliga promotion once more in 1998, when it finished second in its league but lost to 1. FC Nuremberg Amateure in the first round of the promotion round.[9]
The glory days of Türk Gücü were definitely over now and, in 2001, having become insolvent, the football department left to form Türkischer SV 1975 München.[10]
The new team was uncompetitive in the Landesliga in 2001-02, finishing second last, with only SV Lohhof behind it, another club who had only recently played at much higher level.[11] The team spend three seasons in the tier six Bezirksoberliga Oberbayern before another relegation in 2005 took it down to Bezirksliga level.[12]
The side played in the eastern division of this league, the Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Ost, but again as a lower table side and another relegation followed in 2008, the season ATA Spor München entered the league and finished fifth.[13]
Türkischer SV spend its last season before the merger, 2008-09, in the tier-nine Kreisliga 3 Schmid, where it achieved its only single-digit league finish in its eight season existence.[14]
ATA Spor München was formed in 1981.[1]
Unlike Türk Gücü, ATA Spor had never climbed the heights of Bavarian amateur football and promotion from the tier-eight Kreisliga followed by two seasons in the Bezirksliga just before the merger were the clubs most successful era.
On 19 May 2009, ATA Spor and Türkischer SV merged to form SV Türkgücü-Ataspor in an effort to combine the strength of the two clubs and form a strong side in the eastern suburbs of Munich. The new club had a membership of approximately 500 people.[1]
The new club took up ATA Spor's place in the Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Nord, where it came eighth in 2010 and tenth in 2011, a long way from the glory days of the old Türk Gücü club.[15]
The club's honours:
The recent season-by-season performance of the club and its predecessors:[16][17]
Season | Division | Tier | Position |
1999–2000 | Landesliga Bayern-Süd | V | 11th |
2000–01 | Landesliga Bayern-Süd | 13th |
Season | Division | Tier | Position |
2001–02 | Landesliga Bayern-Süd | V | 19th ↓ |
2002–03 | Bezirksoberliga Oberbayern | VI | 13th |
2003–04 | Bezirksoberliga Oberbayern | 9th | |
2004–05 | Bezirksoberliga Oberbayern | 15th ↓ | |
2005-06 | Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Ost | VII | 11th |
2006–07 | Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Ost | 10th | |
2007–08 | Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Ost | 15th ↓ | |
2008–09 | Kreisliga 3 Schmid | IX | 5th |
Season | Division | Tier | Position |
2004-05 | Kreisliga 2 Moossmann | VIII | 4th |
2005-06 | Kreisliga 2 Moossmann | 8th | |
2006–07 | Kreisliga 3 Schmid | 2nd | |
2007–08 | Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Ost | VII | 5th |
2008–09 | Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Nord | VIII | 6th |
Season | Division | Tier | Position |
2009–10 | Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Nord | VIII | 8th |
2010–11 | Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Nord | 10th | |
2011–12 | Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Nord |
Türk Gücü was instrumental in developing quite few future professionals, and not just of Turkish origins, among those İlhan Mansız, Cacau, Erdal Önal, Savas Koc, Volkan Yaman, Thomas Kristl, Engin Özdemir, Gerald Hillringhaus and Bernhard Winkler.[1]
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