Jump to content

SV Wehen Wiesbaden

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by S.A. Julio (talk | contribs) at 13:23, 25 July 2017 (Current squad: rmv comma). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Wehen Wiesbaden
File:SV Wehen Wiesbaden.png
Full nameSportverein Wehen 1926 - Taunusstein e. V. (organisation)
Sportverein Wehen 1926 Wiesbaden GmbH (company)
Founded1926; 98 years ago (1926)
GroundBRITA-Arena
Capacity13,500
ChairmanMarkus Hankammer
ManagerRüdiger Rehm
League3. Liga
2016–177th
Current season

Wehen Wiesbaden is a German association football club based in Wiesbaden, Hesse. Since the beginning of the 2007–08 season the club no longer plays its homegames in Taunusstein, where they were originally located. In the summer of 2007 Wiesbaden has been added to the original name of SV Wehen.

History

The club was founded under the name of SV Wehen 1926 – Taunusstein in 1926 and disbanded by the Nazi government in 1933, although the football department was maintained by playing occasional friendly matches until 1939. The club re-established itself in 1946, following World War II. They operated both first and reserve teams from the beginning, with their first team competing in local amateur division, the B-Klasse Wiesbaden. The club's first youth team was established in 1955 and they subsequently started to use their own talented young players to strengthen the first team. By the mid-1970s, the youth department was split in ten teams with more than 150 players and a women's team was first established in 1984.

The club won the Hessenpokal in 1988, 1996 and 2000, which gave them berths in the German Cup in those years. In the 2000–01 season, the club gave two good performances in the German Cup, eliminating at the time Second Bundesliga side Stuttgarter Kickers with a 2–1 victory in the first round and narrowly losing 1–0 to Bundesliga giant Borussia Dortmund in extra time of their second-round match.

Historical logo of SV Wehen Taunusstein

The club competed between fourth and sixth divisions of German football for a few decades before eventually being promoted to the third division in the late 1980s. They were relegated back to the fourth division in 1995, but returned to the third-division Regionalliga Süd in 1997. The club managed to establish itself in the third division and in the 2000s, they further established themselves as one of the top teams in the Regionalliga Süd and narrowly missed promotion to the Second Bundesliga with third-place finishes in both 2005 and 2006 before finally achieving promotion to the Second Bundesliga in 2007 after finishing first in Regionalliga Süd.

The club lasted for two seasons in Germany's second division before being relegated again, now to the new 3. Liga, where two fourth-place finishes, in 2011 and 2014, were the clubs best results.

Honours

Recent managers

Recent managers of the club:[1]

Manager Start Finish
Manfred Petz 1 July 1997 12 May 1998
Bruno Hübner 12 May 1998 30 June 1998
Martin Hohmann 1 July 1998 30 October 1998
Werner Orf 1 November 1999 6 May 2000
Gerd Schwickert 7 May 2000 3 November 2002
Djuradj Vasic 4 November 2002 16 October 2006
Christian Hock 17 October 2006 30 June 2007
Djuradj Vasic 2 July 2007 20 August 2007
Christian Hock 21 August 2007 17 December 2008
Wolfgang Frank 19 December 2008 23 March 2009
Hans Werner Moser 24 March 2009 9 February 2010
Gino Lettieri 10 February 2010 15 February 2012
Peter Vollmann February 2012 21 October 2013
Marc Kienle 28 October 2013 12 April 2015
Christian Hock 12 April 2015 30 June 2015
Sven Demandt 1 July 2015 7 March 2016
Torsten Fröhling 14 March 2016 6 February 2017
Rüdiger Rehm 13 February 2017 present

Recent seasons

The recent season-by-season performance of the club:[2][3]

Season Division Tier Position
1999–2000 Regionalliga Süd III 13th
2000–01 Regionalliga Süd 11th
2001–02 Regionalliga Süd 6th
2002–03 Regionalliga Süd 7th
2003–04 Regionalliga Süd 7th
2004–05 Regionalliga Süd 3rd
2005–06 Regionalliga Süd 3rd
2006–07 Regionalliga Süd 1st ↑
2007–08 2. Bundesliga II 8th
2008–09 2. Bundesliga 18th ↓
2009–10 3. Liga III 15th
2010–11 3. Liga 4th
2011–12 3. Liga 16th
2012–13 3. Liga 7th
2013–14 3. Liga 4th
2014–15 3. Liga 9th
2015–16 3. Liga 16th
2016–17 3. Liga 7th
2017–18 3. Liga

Key

Promoted Relegated

Players

Current squad

As of 25 July 2017[4]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Germany GER Markus Kolke
4 DF Germany GER Sascha Mockenhaupt
5 DF Germany GER Sören Reddemann
6 DF Germany GER Patrick Funk
7 MF Germany GER Philipp Müller
8 MF Poland POL David Blacha
9 FW Germany GER Manuel Schäffler
10 MF Germany GER Robert Andrich
13 DF Slovakia SVK Vladimír Kováč
14 FW Germany GER Jules Schwadorf
16 DF Germany GER Niklas Dams
18 DF Germany GER Steven Ruprecht
19 GK Germany GER Jan Albrecht
No. Pos. Nation Player
20 MF Germany GER Moritz Kuhn
22 DF Germany GER Michael Akoto
23 DF Germany GER Alf Mintzel
24 DF Germany GER Jeremias Lorch
25 GK Germany GER Lukas Watkowiak
26 FW Germany GER Patrick Breitkreuz
27 MF Germany GER Kevin Pezzoni
29 DF Germany GER Dominik Nothnagel
33 DF Poland POL Sebastian Mrowca
36 FW Democratic Republic of the Congo COD Stephané Mvibudulu
37 MF Switzerland SUI Stephan Andrist
39 MF Ghana GHA Evans Nyarko

References

  1. ^ SV Wehen Wiesbaden .:. Trainer von A-Z Template:De icon weltfussball.de, accessed: 10 December 2011
  2. ^ Das deutsche Fußball-Archiv Template:De icon Historical German domestic league tables, accessed: 20 September 2014
  3. ^ Fussball.de - Ergebnisse Template:De icon Tables and results of all German football leagues, accessed: 20 September 2014
  4. ^ http://www.svwehen-wiesbaden.de/profis/kader/