FC Energie Cottbus

FC Energie Cottbus (Lower Sorbian: Energija Chóśebuz) is a German football club based in Cottbus, Brandenburg. It was founded in 1963 as SC Cottbus in what was East Germany. After the reunification of Germany, Energie played six seasons in the third tier of the German football league system before floating between the 2. Bundesliga and Bundesliga for 17 years between 1997 and 2014. From 2014 to 2016, the club played in the third tier, 3. Liga, and were then relegated to the Regionalliga Nordost. In 2018, they were promoted back into the 3. Liga, only to be relegated again the next season.

Energie Cottbus
Full nameFußballclub Energie Cottbus e. V.
Nickname(s)Energie
Die Lausitzer (Lusatian)
Ultima Raka (Crayfishes)
Founded31 January 1966
GroundStadion der Freundschaft
Capacity22,528 (10,949 seated)
ChairmanMatthias Auth
ManagerSebastian Abt
LeagueRegionalliga Nordost
2018–193. Liga 17th (relegated)
WebsiteClub website

History

Predecessor sides

Energie Cottbus can trace its roots back to a predecessor side of FSV Glückauf Brieske-Senftenberg, a club founded by coal miners in 1919, in what was then called the town of Marga. FV Grube Marga, as the club was then called, was active until 1924 when the miners left to form a new team called SV Sturm Grube Marga which was banned by the Nazi Party in 1933.

GDR

Historical chart of Energie league performance after WWII

The club re-emerged after World War II in 1949 as BSG Franz Mehring Grube, becoming BSG Aktivist Brieske-Ost in 1950. The club was renamed SC Aktivist Brieske-Senftenberg in 1954 and played in the DDR-Oberliga generally earning mid-table results until calamitously falling all the way to the fourth tier Cottbus Bezirksliga in the early 1960s. The players of this side formed SC Energie Cottbus in 1963, whilst the reserve team merged back to BSG Aktivist Brieske-Ost to form BSG Aktivist Senftenberg. The club still exists as FSV Glückauf Brieske-Senftenberg today. SC Cottbus was quickly assisted by a wholesale transfer of players from BSG Aktivist Brieske-Ost ordered by the East German authorities, who often intervened in the business of the country's sports and football clubs for political reasons. East German authorities had a penchant for tagging sports teams with the names of socialist heroes: Franz Mehring was a German socialist politician and journalist.

In the mid-1960s, a re-organization program by the regime led to the separation of football sides from sports clubs and the creation of BSG von Bodo Krautz under the patronage of a local coal mine. The football club went by that name only briefly and was quickly renamed BSG Energie in early 1966.

German reunification

Team bus of Energie Cottbus.
Previous logo.

The team took on the name FC Energie in 1990 at the time of German reunification.

After years as a II division or lower-table I division side in East Germany, Energie emerged as one of the few former DDR sides to enjoy relative prosperity in a united Germany. After six seasons playing tier III football, the club earned promotion to the 2. Bundesliga in 1997 (the same year they became the first former East German club to play the DFB Cup Final), winning the Regionalliga Nordost, and then played its way into the Bundesliga in 2000, where it managed a three-year stay. A key player in the Bundesliga run was Vasile Miriuță, an imaginative midfield player who played a large part in the team's promotion. After being relegated, Energie narrowly missed a prompt return to the top tier, losing out to Mainz 05 on goal differential. In 2004–05, Energie struggled into both financial (reported debts of €4.5 million) and sports problems: the season goal of promotion was missed by far – the club escaped the relegation to third tier Regionalliga by scoring one more goal (season overall) than Eintracht Trier while having the same number of points and amount of goal differential. During season the manager and the chairman were replaced. Next season (2005–06) was a much more successful one – the club returned to play in the First Division Bundesliga after winning promotion.

The 2006–07 Bundesliga season resulted in a 13th-place finish and a club record in Bundesliga season points earned, with 41. Energie Cottbus was the only club from the former East Germany playing in the Bundesliga until 1. FC Nürnberg relegated the team on 1 June 2009. Cottbus remained in the 2. Bundesliga for another five seasons until 2014, when an 18th-place finish meant relegation to the 3. Liga, ending a 17-season stint in the Bundesliga and 2. Bundesliga. After a 19th-place finish in the 3. Liga in 2015–16, the club suffered another relegation, to the Regionalliga Nordost.

Following 2 seasons in the 4th tier, Cottbus gained promotion back to the 3. Liga after beating Weiche Flensburg over 2 legs in the Regionalliga playoffs. Following the 2018-19 3. Liga season they were relegated back to the 4th tier after finishing 17th.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel is an honorary member of the club.

Honours

The club's honours:

Team

Current squad

As of 10 February 2020[1]

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  GER Tim Stawecki
2 DF  GER Florian Brügmann
3 DF  GER Marcel Hoppe
4 DF  BIH Ibrahim Hajtic
5 MF  GER Paul Gehrmann
6 MF  GER Jonas Zickert
7 FW  TUR Abdulkadir Beyazit
8 FW  BUL Dimitar Rangelov
10 MF  GER Felix Geisler
13 MF  GER Berkan Taz (on loan from Union Berlin)
14 MF  GER Tobias Hasse
16 DF  GER Robert Müller
17 DF  GER Ben Meyer
19 MF  GER Niklas Geisler
20 DF  GER Axel Borgmann
No. Pos. Nation Player
21 MF  GER Tobias Eisenhuth
22 MF  GER Niclas Erlbeck
23 FW  GER Felix Brügmann
24 DF  GER Jan Koch
25 MF  GER Dominik Pelivan
26 MF  GER Damir Bektić
27 FW  TUR Orhan Yıldırım
30 GK  GER Jan Glinker
31 GK  GER Toni Stahl (on loan from Fulham)
32 GK  GER Julian Simon
33 FW  GER Moritz Broschinski
34 MF  GER Colin Raak
35 DF  GER Adrian Jarosch
37 MF  GER Rico Gladrow

Notable players

Statistics

The all-foreign line-up

On 6 April 2001, Energie became the first Bundesliga club to field a side made up of 11 foreign players. Energie often fielded nine or ten foreigners that season: German players appeared a total of just 83 times, with striker Sebastian Helbig as the leader with 28.

The players were Tomislav Piplica, Faruk Hujdurović, Bruno Akrapović (Bosnia and Herzegovina), János Mátyus, Vasile Miriuță (Hungary), Rudi Vata (Albania), Moussa Latoundji (Benin), Andrzej Kobylański (Poland), Antun Labak (Croatia), Laurențiu Reghecampf (Romania), and Franklin (Brazil). As a side note, even the three substitutes were foreigners, namely Johnny Rödlund from Sweden, Sabin Ilie from Romania and Witold Wawrzyczek from Poland .

Reserve team

The club's reserve team, FC Energie Cottbus II, has played as high as Regionalliga level, last playing in the Regionalliga Nordost in 2012–13. The team most recently played in the tier five NOFV-Oberliga Süd but has, in the past, also played in the northern division of the league. It first reached Oberliga level in 1998 and has won league championships in 2007 and 2010.[2][3] At the end of the 2015–16 season, the team was withdrawn from competition.

In 1998, it also won the Brandenburgischer Landespokal, the local cup competition in Brandenburg, and qualified for the first round of the DFB-Pokal through this. In 1998–99, it went out losing 1–0 to SpVgg Greuther Fürth, in 2001–02 it lost 4–0 to Arminia Bielefeld.

gollark: For example, people don't really do Botania stuff all that often, so you can sell them that sort of equipment.
gollark: Not everyone makes everything in a kitchen sink pack, mind you.
gollark: Not Krist-as-actual-economy.
gollark: That's just Krist-for-artificial-gating.
gollark: ... no.

References

  1. "Das Profi-Team des FC Energie Cottbus". fcenergie.de (in German). 21 October 2015. Archived from the original on 2 October 2015.
  2. Das deutsche Fußball-Archiv (in German) Historical German domestic league tables
  3. FC Energie Cottbus II at Fussball.de (in German) Tables and results of all German football leagues
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