Full name | Turn- und Sportverein München von 1860 | ||
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Nickname(s) | Die Löwen (The Lions), Die Sechzger ("Sixties" in Bavarian) |
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Founded | 17 May 1860 | ||
Ground | Sechzgerstadion (Capacity: 10,240) |
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Chairman | Rainer Beeck | ||
Manager | Bernhard Winkler | ||
League | Regionalliga Süd (IV) | ||
2010-11 | 8th | ||
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The TSV 1860 München II (English: TSV 1860 Munich II) is the reserve team of German football club TSV 1860 München, from the city of Munich, Bavaria.
Until 2005, the team played under the name of TSV 1860 München Amateure. In the 2009-10 season, the team plays in the tier-four Regionalliga Süd.
Within the club, it operates as an under-23 side, designated to develop players from the youth- to the first-team stage.
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1860's amateur team first won promotion to Bavarias highest football league, then the tier-three Amateurliga Südbayern, in 1959, when it took out the title in the 2nd Amateurliga Oberbayern and then won the Oberbayern final against FSV Pfaffenhofen.[1] The Amateurliga Südbayern was then one of two leagues at this level in Bavaria, covering the southern half of the state while the Amateurliga Nordbayern existed in parallel in the north.
TSV 1860 München Amateure, as the team was then known as, was the third reserve side to reach this level in Bavaria, pre-dated only by 1. FC Nuremberg II and FC Bayern Munich II.
The team finished an excellent second in its first year in the third division, five points behind TSV Schwaben Augsburg.[2] The following season, 1960–61, the team won its league, with Bayern Munichs reserve side coming second. 1860's amateur side was however ineligible for promotion as reserve teams could not rise above third division level. The team also declined participation in the Bavarian championship finals against northern champions 1. FC Haßfurt as nine players had left the side already to join other clubs.[3]
With this loss, the team was uncompetitive the following season, finishing fourteenth in the league and narrowly avoiding relegation.[4] With the reorganisation of the German football league system in 1963, it became part of the new tier-four Landesliga Bayern-Süd after finishing fifteenth in the league when a top-seven finish was needed.[5]
In its first season in the Landesliga, 1860 narrowly avoided relegation to the Bezirksliga, finishing twelfth in the league.[6] It turned fortunes around the following season, coming second behind SpVgg Kaufbeuren, but only the champion of the league was promoted in this era.[7] Another runners-up finish followed in 1967, this time to FC Bayern Munich II.[8]
The team finished in mid-field in the following years but suffered another relegation in 1971, now to the tier-five Bezirksliga.[9] The teams decline went in line with the clubs first teams relegation from the Fußball-Bundesliga in 1970.
1860 Amateure returned to the Landesliga in 1973 and earned another runners-up finish in its first year back.[10] In 1976, the team once more was relegated to the Bezirksliga.[11]
The team once more returned from the Bezirksliga in 1980 and finished as runners-up in the Landesliga in 1981-82. Since 1981, the Landesliga runners-up were entitled to participate in a Bayernliga promotion round, but the 1860 club itself was struck by disaster and its reserve team was withdrawn instead.[12] What happened was that TSV 1860 had its 2nd Bundesliga licence revoked and was forcefully relegated to the tier-three Amateur Oberliga Bayern, the Bayernliga.
The team started its road to recovery when it won the tier-six Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Süd in 1990, to earn promotion to the Bezirksoberliga Oberbayern.[13] The team missed out on another promotion the following year, when it came equal second in the Bezirksoberliga but lost a decider to FC Miesbach.[14] It took until 1995 for the side to return for another attempt at promotion, when a second-place finish meant a return to the Landesliga.[15]
Back in the Landesliga, the team won another promotion on first try, winning the league and moving up to the Bayernliga for the first time since 1963.[16]
There, 1860 won its fourth promotion in four years, taking out another league title and moving up to the tier-three Regionalliga Süd.[17] The team spend the next four seasons in the Regionalliga, earning mid-table results in its first three seasons, but suffering relegation in 2001.
Three years in the Bayernliga followed, in which the team finished runners-up twice before taking out the title once more in 2004.[18]
Back in the Regionalliga, the side became a struggler against relegation. In 2005, the team, like all reserve sides of Bundesliga and 2nd Bundesliga teams, changed its name permanently from Amateure to Second team, becoming TSV 1860 München II. In case of 1860 the team had already carried that name during the first teams time in the Bayernliga.
With the establishment of the 3rd Liga in 2008, the Regionalliga slipped to fourth tier, but also lost most of its top teams to the new league. In 2008-09, the team performed much better, finishing sixth in the league.[19]
The club's honours:
League
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Cup
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Recent managers of the club:[20]
Manager | Start | Finish |
Florian Hinterberger | 1 July 2001 | 30 June 2003 |
Reiner Maurer | 1 July 2003 | 30 June 2004 |
Alfons Higl | 1 July 2004 | 30 June 2006 |
Marco Kurz | 1 July 2006 | 17 March 2007 |
Klaus Koschlick | 18 March 2007 | 30 June 2007 |
Uwe Wolf | 1 July 2007 | 30 June 2008 |
Dieter Märkle | 1 July 2008 | 30 June 2010 |
Bernhard Winkler | 1 July 2010 | Present |
The recent season-by-season performance of the club:[21][22]
Season | Division | Tier | Position |
1999–2000 | Regionalliga Süd | III | 7th |
2000-01 | Regionalliga Süd | 16th ↓ | |
2001-02 | Oberliga Bayern | IV | 2nd |
2002-03 | Oberliga Bayern | 2nd | |
2003-04 | Oberliga Bayern | 1st ↑ | |
2004-05 | Regionalliga Süd | III | 15th |
2005-06 | Regionalliga Süd | 15th | |
2006-07 | Regionalliga Süd | 13th | |
2007-08 | Regionalliga Süd | 13th | |
2008-09 | Regionalliga Süd | IV | 6th |
2009-10 | Regionalliga Süd | 7th | |
2010–11 | Regionalliga Süd | 8th | |
2011–12 | Regionalliga Süd |
As of 23 July 2011[update] Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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