VfB Lübeck

VfB Lübeck
Full name Verein für Bewegungsspiele Lübeck
von 1919 e. V.
Founded 1 June 1919
Ground PokerStars.de – Stadion an der Lohmühle
Ground Capacity 17,849
Chairman Holger Leu
Manager Denny Skwierczynski
League Regionalliga Nord (IV)
2014–15 7th
Website Club home page

VfB Lübeck is a German association football club playing in Lübeck, Schleswig-Holstein in the country's north. In addition to its football side the 1,000 member sports club also has departments for badminton, women's gymnastics, handball, and table tennis.

History

Foundation to WW II

The earliest origins of the club go back to a pair of predecessor sides; Ballsportverein Vorwärts Lübeck established on 1 April 1919 and Sportvereinigung Polizei Lübeck founded in 1921.[1]

Logo of predecessor side VfR Lübeck ca 1931.

SV Polizei Lübeck was the local police sports club. In 1931 it was merged with Verein für Rasensport Lübeck, which was the product of the 1923 union of Fußball Club Alemannia 1905 Lübeck and Lübecker Fußball Club Germania 1913. SVP played well enough to earn appearances in the playoff rounds of the senior north German circuit, but did not enjoy any success. VfR made only a single such appearance, in 1924.

BSV Vorwärts Lübeck played as an unheralded local side until 1933 when it was dismantled by the Nazi regime, which regarded workers sports clubs of the sort as politically undesirable. The club's membership became part of SVP and the expanded association joined the Gauliga Nordmark, one of sixteen top flight divisions formed in the 1933 reorganization of German football under the Third Reich.

The club was renamed Polizei Sportverein Lübeck in 1935 and played in the Gauliga Nordmark until 1942, with its best results coming as third-place finishes.[2] PSV made unsuccessful qualification round appearances in play for the Tschammerpokal, predecessor of today's DFB-Pokal (German Cup) in 1936–38. In 1942 the club was again renamed, becoming Sportgemeinschaft der Ordnungspolizei Lübeck, and moved to the Gauliga Schleswig-Holstein when wartime conditions forced the breakup of the Gauliga Nordmark into three more local divisions.

Post-war era to present

Original logo of VfB Lübeck ca. 1945.

Following World War II organizations throughout Germany, including sports and football clubs, were dissolved by occupying Allied authorities. In 1945 the former memberships of SG OrPo and BSV Vorwärts formed a new association called Verein für Bewegungsspile Lübeck. The new club resumed play in the top flight, first in the Berzirksmeisterschaft Schleswig-Holstein, and then in 1947, in the newly formed Oberliga Nord. Over the next decade and a half VfB bounced up and down between first and second division play; they were consistently a top performer in the Amateurliga Schlewig-Holstein (II), but completely incapable of escaping the basement of the Oberliga Nord (I).

Following the 1963 formation of the Bundesliga, the country's professional first division circuit, the team settled into the Regionalliga Nord (II), generally earning mid-table results. A second-place finish in 1969 led VfB to the qualification round for the Bundesliga, where they finished last in their group with only a single point from eight matches.

After 1974, VfB slipped from the ranks of second tier teams to fourth division Landesliga Schleswig-Holstein. They recovered a place in the 2.Bundesliga just over two decades later and resumed their role as an "elevator side", moving frequently between the second and third divisions. In 2004, the team reached the semi-finals of the DFB-Pokal (German Cup), but lost to Werder Bremen in extra time. They currently play in the Regionalliga Nord (IV) where they earned two consecutive third-place finishes before slipping to ninth this past season.

After it was revealed that the club has been suffering from financial difficulties, it finally filed for bankruptcy at the district court Lübeck in April 2008 and was eventually forcibly relegated to the Schleswig-Holstein-Liga (fifth division) for the 2013–14 season. After a league championship at this level and success in the promotion round the club returned to Regionalliga level from 2014.

In July 2009, VfB Lübeck shocked Bundesliga club 1. FSV Mainz 05, beating them 2–1 after extra time in the first round of the DFB-Pokal. They were eliminated in the next round by VfB Stuttgart (3:1) after again taking a Bundesliga club into extra time.

Honours

The club's honours:

Current squad

See also List of VfB Lübeck players As of 7 March 2016 Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 Germany GK Jonas Toboll
3 Germany DF Lukas Knechtel
4 Germany DF Dennis Wehrendt
6 Germany MF Aleksander Nogovic
7 Germany FW Christopher Kramer
8 Germany MF Dennis Voss
9 Germany FW Henrik Sirmais
10 Germany MF Marcello Meyer
11 Germany FW Stefan Richter
13 Germany MF Marvin Thiel
14 Germany MF Nils Lange
15 Germany MF Kubilay Büyükdemir
16 Germany MF Enes Dagli
No. Position Player
18 Germany GK Kennet Kostmann
19 Germany FW Timo Barendt
20 Germany MF Yannick Bremser
21 Germany MF Maurice Maletzki
22 Canada FW Derek Cornelius
23 Germany DF Patrick Bohnsack
25 Germany DF Cedric Szymczak
26 Germany DF Moritz Marheineke
27 Germany GK Eric Schlomm
28 Germany FW Cemal Sezer
30 Germany MF Andre Senger
33 Germany DF Jan-André Sievers

References

  1. Grüne, Hardy (2001). Vereinslexikon. Kassel: AGON Sportverlag ISBN 3-89784-147-9
  2. http://www.f-archiv.de/ Das deutsche Fußball-Archiv historical German domestic league tables (in German)

External links

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