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FC Heilbronn

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Association football club

Football club
FC Heilbronn
logo
Full nameFußball-Club Heilbronn e.V.
Founded2003
Dissolved2012
GroundFrankenstadion
Capacity17,284
2011–12Bezirksliga Unterland (VIII), 4th

FC Heilbronn (German:[ɛfˈtseːhaɪlˈbʁɔn]) was aGerman association football club based inHeilbronn,Baden-Württemberg formed in 2003 out of a merger betweenVfR Heilbronn (German:[faʊʔɛfˈʔɛʁhaɪlˈbʁɔn]) andHeilbronner SpVgg.

In 2012 the club merged with the football department ofUnion Böckingen to form a new club, theFC Union Heilbronn.

History

[edit]
Historical logo of VfR Heilbronn ca. 1931

The club was founded in 1896 asHeilbronner Fußball Club 96 and over the next decade assimilated a number of other local clubs beginning in 1900 with a high school team calledSchüler Fußball Club. Shortly after that they merged withWürttemberger Fußball Club to becomeHeilbronner Fussballgesellschaft, and in 1907, were joined byFC Amicitia Heilbronn. The team took on the nameHeilbronner Fußballvereinigung in 1913 after being joined bySportverein Adler. They finally becameVerein für Rasenspiele Heilbronn in 1920 and started playing in theKreisliga Württemberg (I). The club was briefly submerged in the widespread politically motivated mergers of clubs that took place under theThird Reich in 1934. It re-emerged asSportverein Heilbronn 96 that same year and by 1937 was again playing asVfR.[1]

Heilbronner Spielvereinigung was the younger side, founded in 1907 asSportverein Adler. This club joinedVfR for the first time in 1907, but was re-formed as a separate side in 1927. They joinedTurnerbund Heilbronn in 1933 to formHeilbronner Spvgg 07. Through the years, the new club maintained good relations withVfR Heilbronn in all its incarnations, until the two sides finally merged in 2003.

VfR celebrated few successes during its existence. It became part of theGauliga Württemberg, one of sixteen top-flight divisions formed in the 1933 re-organization of German football under the Third Reich, but played only 13 matches of the 1933–34 season before being disqualified after failing financially. The club was soon playing again and won a promotion round playoff in 1941 to return to the Gauliga, where they played two seasons before being relegated.

After the war,Heilbronn earned a string of indifferent results playing in the Amateurliga Württemberg (III) and lower-tier play through the late 40s and on into the mid-50s. The team captured the Amateurliga title in 1956 and advanced to the 2. Liga Süd for a single season turn in 1956–57. They were promptly sent down, but returned to second division play in 1962.VfR was again immediately relegated and failed in its attempt to win re-promotion the following season, settling into competition in the Amateurliga Nordwürttemberg (III) for a handful of seasons. Another Amateurliga championship in 1969 and a successful promotion round playoff propelled the team into the Regionalliga Süd where they played as a mid-table side until 1975. The team made regular appearances in the opening rounds of play for theDFB-Pokal (German Cup) through the 1970s. Over the next three decadesVfR played in tier III, IV and V football until financial problems finally grounded them in 2002.

Heilbronner SpVgg never enjoyed even that level of success, only managing to work their way up to the Landesliga (VI) before the merger.

Following the merger of the two clubs, newly formedFC Heilbronn took up the place ofVfR in the Verbandsliga Württemberg. On-going financial woes drove them down to the Landesliga Württemberg (VI) in 2004, where they continue to compete until 2011, when another relegation took them down to the Bezirksliga Unterland.

In 2012 the football department of the club left to merge withUnion Böckingen to form a new club, theFC Union Heilbronn. Both clubs voted on the merger on 27 March 2012 and achieved the necessary 75 percent majority to carry out the merger, ending the history of the football department of Union Böckingen.[2][3]

Honours

[edit]

Recent seasons

[edit]

The recent season-by-season performance of the club:[4][5]

SeasonDivisionTierPosition
1999–2000Oberliga Baden-WürttembergIV10th
2000–01Oberliga Baden-Württemberg3rd
2001–02Oberliga Baden-Württemberg15th ↓
2002–03Verbandsliga WürttembergV11th
2003–04Verbandsliga Württemberg13th ↓
2004–05Landesliga Württemberg IVI9th
2005–06Landesliga Württemberg I3rd
2006–07Landesliga Württemberg I5th
2007–08Landesliga Württemberg I7th
2008–09Landesliga Württemberg IVII5th
2009–10Landesliga Württemberg I11th
2010–11Landesliga Württemberg I16th ↓
2011–12Bezirksliga UnterlandVIII4th
PromotedRelegated

References

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  1. ^Grüne, Hardy (2001). Vereinslexikon. Kassel: AGON SportverlagISBN 3-89784-147-9
  2. ^Vereinsfusion: Konzept für FC Union Heilbronn steht(in German)Die Stimme, published: 28 February 2012, accessed: 12 July 2012
  3. ^Mitglieder stehen hinter FC Union Heilbronn(in German)Die Stimme, published: 3 July 2012, accessed: 12 July 2012
  4. ^Das deutsche Fußball-Archiv(in German) Historical German domestic league tables
  5. ^Fussball.de – ErgebnisseArchived 18 May 2011 at theWayback Machine(in German) Tables and results of all German football leagues

External links

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Seasons
2024–25 clubs
Former clubs
2. Bundesliga(1981–present)
2. Bundesliga Nord(1974–1981)
2. Bundesliga Süd(1974–1981)
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