SC Schiltigheim
Full name | Sporting Club de Schiltigheim | ||
---|---|---|---|
Founded | 1914 | ||
Ground | Stade de l'Aar | ||
Capacity | 2,500 | ||
Chairman | Pierre Schlienger | ||
Manager | José Carlos Abreu Guerra | ||
League | Championnat de France amateur 2 Group E | ||
2013-14 | Group C, 7th | ||
|
Sporting Club de Schiltigheim is a French association football club from Schiltigheim, Alsace. The team are currently playing in the Championnat de France amateur 2 Group E. They play at the Stade de l'Aar in Schiltigheim, which has a capacity of 2,500.
The club was established on 1 March 1914 as Sports-Abteilung des Evangelischen Jugendbundes Schiltigheim, an ethnically-German church-based youth club in what was at the time Elsass in the German Empire. They adopted they name Fussball-Klub Schiltigheim in 1915. Following the end of World War I and the return of Alsace to France, the club was renamed Sporting Club de Schiltigheim in 1919.
History
Between France and Germany
During the interwar period SC was a competitive local side that claimed the championship of the Alsace Champion Division d'Honneur in 1937, as well a regional cup title and a clutch of junior division titles in the mid-1930s. The club's rise was interrupted when Alsace came under German control after the Nazi invasion early in World War II. Like many other clubs in occupied territories, the Schiltigheim side became part of German football competition and played four seasons (1940–44) as Sport-Club Schiltigheim in what was initially called the Gauliga Unterelass (I) - later the Gauliga Elsass - one of several top-flight regional divisions. They earned a second place result there in 1940-41 before slipping to become a lower table side.[1] SC returned to French competition following the return of Alsace to France in 1945.
Postwar play
Following the war, SC was part of the Division d’Honneur Alsace until a title win advanced them to Division 4 play. Another title in 1993 that advanced the club to the Championnat de France amateur 2 level play where they spent four seasons until being sent down in 1997. Schiltigheim won its way to the Championnat de France Gr. B (IV) after a championship in the Championnat de France amateur 2 Gr. C (V) in 2003. The team then struggled, narrowly missing relegation in 2006 before suffering consecutive demotions in the following two seasons. SC finished in second place in the Division d’Honneur Alsace (VI) in 2009.
References
- ↑ Grüne, Hardy (2001). Vereinslexikon. Kassel: AGON Sportverlag ISBN 3-89784-147-9
External links
|