SC Weiche Flensburg 08

SC Weiche Flensburg 08 is a German association football club from the Weiche suburb of Flensburg, Schleswig-Holstein. Apart from football the club also offers other sports like volleyball and table tennis.

SC Weiche Flensburg 08
Full nameSportclub Weiche Flensburg von 1908 e.V.
Founded1908
GroundManfred-Werner-Stadion
Capacity2,500
ChairmanHans-Lothar Suhr
ManagerThomas Seeliger
LeagueRegionalliga Nord (IV)
2022–235th

Before July 2017, the club was known as ETSV Weiche. The club's greatest success has been to earn promotion to the tier four Regionalliga Nord in 2012. The club is associated with the German railways, as evident by the term railway sports club in its former prefix ETSV (German: Eisenbahner Turn- und Sportverein). Weiche is the German term for railroad switch but also the name of the Flensburg suburb the club hails from.

History

Manfred-Werner-Stadion, home ground of Weiche Flensburg.
Former logo as ETSV Weiche.

The club was formed as Reichsbahn-Sportverein Flensburg-Weiche in 1908. In 1933, the Weiche was affected by the rise of the Nazis to power and came under the control of the Reichssportführer. By 1940, with the effects of the Second World War, activities within the club came to a standstill. Despite early efforts after the war in 1945 the club took until April 1947 to reform, now as ESV Flensburg-Weiche. The football department however left the club in 1949 to form TSV Weiche-West.[1] From 1962 onwards the two clubs started discussing a merger for the first time. Animosity between the two clubs however prevented progress until 1971, when the two finally agreed on a merger.[2]

The football department of ETSV Weiche was formed in 1932 but left the club in 1949 to form the TSV Weiche-West. In 1957 this team won the local Kreisliga and earned promotion to the tier three 2. Amateurliga Schleswig-Holstein Nord. Weiche-West played in this league until it was renamed to Bezirksliga Schleswig-Holstein Nord in 1968, with a runners-up finish in 1961 as its best result. The club continued in the Bezirksliga after 1968, from 1971 onwards as ETSV Weiche. Throughout the 26 seasons in the 2. Amateurliga and Bezirksliga the club rarely challenged for the championship but, in 1982–83, it finally won this league and earned promotion to the Landesliga Schleswig-Holstein Nord. In this league, in 1983–84, the club came a distant last and was promptly relegated again. Another decade in the Bezirksliga followed until Weiche could win the league again in 1994 and return to the Landesliga. Three Landesliga seasons followed in which the club struggled against relegation each year and finally dropped down again in 1997. Weiche missed out on a place in the new Bezirksoberliga in 1999, a league that replaced the Landesliga above the Bezirksliga but won the later in the following year and was promoted again.[3]

Weiche spend the next seven seasons in the Bezirksoberliga, winning the league in 2006–07 and qualifying for the Verbandsliga Schleswig-Holstein, the states highest league, for the first time. The 2007–08 season was the last of the Verbandsliga in this format. From 2008 the league was renamed Schleswig-Holstein-Liga and the four leagues below received the name Verbandsliga. Weiche did not qualify for the new league and had to stay at Verbandsliga level, being grouped in the Verbandsliga Schleswig-Holstein-Nord-West. It came second in its Verbandsliga division in 2009 and was promoted to the Schleswig-Holstein-Liga. Three seasons at this level followed before the 2011–12 season saw the club finish runners-up in the Schleswig-Holstein-Liga and being promoted alongside champions VfR Neumünster.[3]

Since 2012 the club has played in the tier four Regionalliga Nord, finishing in the upper half of the table each season.[4] In March 2016 it was announced that the club planned a merger with local rival Flensburg 08,[5] and in November of that year both clubs agreed that Flensburg 08 would be merged into ETSV Weiche at the end of June 2017. The club subsequently changed its name into SC Weiche Flensburg 08.[6]

Current squad

As of 19 August 2023[7]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Denmark DEN Philip Østerbæk
2 DF Germany GER Bjarne Schleemann
3 DF Germany GER Torben Marten
7 FW Germany GER Jonah Gieseler
8 MF Germany GER Finn Wirlmann
9 FW Germany GER Jannic Ehlers (on loan from SV Werder Bremen II)
10 MF Germany GER Marcel Cornils
11 FW Germany GER Noel Kurzbach
12 GK Germany GER Jesper Heim
13 DF Germany GER David Pfeil
14 FW Germany GER Calvin Ogara
16 DF Romania ROU Dan Neicu
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 FW Germany GER René Guder
19 MF Germany GER Theis Richter
20 DF Germany GER Patrick Thomson
21 MF Germany GER Pelle Hoppe
22 MF Germany GER Marten Schmidt
23 FW Germany GER Felix Brügmann
27 DF Brazil BRA Ilídio
28 DF Germany GER Theo Behrmann
30 DF Germany GER Tobias Fölster
32 MF Germany GER John Dethlefs
33 DF Germany GER Torben Rehfeldt
37 MF Germany GER Dominic Hartmann

Honours

The club's honours:

Recent seasons

The recent season-by-season performance of the club:[8][9][10]

Season Division Tier Position
1999–2000 Bezirksliga Nord VII 1st ↑
2000–01 Bezirksoberliga Nord VI 4th
2001–02 Bezirksoberliga Nord 1st
2002–03 Bezirksoberliga Nord 10th
2003–04 Bezirksoberliga Nord 11th
2004–05 Bezirksoberliga Nord
2005-06 Bezirksoberliga Nord 4th
2006–07 Bezirksoberliga Nord 1st ↑
2007–08 Verbandsliga Schleswig-Holstein V 14th
2008–09 Verbandsliga Schleswig-Holstein-Nord-West VI 2nd ↑
2009–10 Schleswig-Holstein-Liga V 9th
2010–11 Schleswig-Holstein-Liga 6th
2011–12 Schleswig-Holstein-Liga 2nd ↑
2012–13 Regionalliga Nord IV 7th
2013–14 Regionalliga Nord 6th
2014–15 Regionalliga Nord 5th
2015–16 Regionalliga Nord 3rd
2016–17 Regionalliga Nord 2nd
2017–18 Regionalliga Nord 1st
2018–19 Regionalliga Nord 4th
2019–20 Regionalliga Nord 3rd
2020–21 Regionalliga Nord (North Group) 1st
2021–22 Regionalliga Nord (North Group) 2nd
2022–23 Regionalliga Nord 5th
Key
Promoted Relegated

References

  1. Festschrift Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine (in German) ETSV Weiche website – 75th anniversary brochure –1930–71, accessed: 17 September 2014
  2. Festschrift Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine (in German) ETSV Weiche website – 75th anniversary brochure –1971–current, accessed: 17 September 2014
  3. History of the football department (in German) ETSV Weiche website, accessed: 16 September 2014
  4. Regionalliga Nord tables & results kicker.de, accessed: 17 September 2014
  5. "Fusionspläne zwischen ETSV Weiche und Flensburg 08" [Merger plans between ETSV Weiche and Flensburg 08]. kicker.de (in German). Kicker. 4 March 2016. Retrieved 11 March 2016.
  6. Ulrich Schörder (20 March 2017). "Fusion von Flensburg 08 und ETSV Weiche beschlossen" [Merger of Flensburg 08 and ETSV Weiche decided on] (in German). SHZ.
  7. "Kader" (in German). SC Weiche Flensburg 08. Retrieved 19 August 2023.
  8. Das deutsche Fußball-Archiv (in German) Historical German domestic league tables, accessed: 16 September 2014
  9. Fussball.de - Ergebnisse (in German) Tables and results of all German football leagues, accessed: 16 September 2014
  10. ETSV Weiche Flensburg (in German) fussball.de, accessed: 16 September 2014
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