Germania Brötzingen

Germania Brötzingen was a German association football club from the district of Brötzingen in Pforzheim, Baden-Württemberg. Together with the 1. FC Pforzheim and VfR Pforzheim, it was one of three clubs in the city who have played higher league football.

Germania Brötzingen
Full nameFuβball-Club Germania e.V. Pforzheim-Brötzingen
Founded1906
Dissolved30 June 2011
2010–11Kreisliga Pforzheim (VIII), 2nd

On 1 July 2011, the club merged with 1. FC Eutingen to form SV Kickers Pforzheim, with the new side playing in the tier seven Landesliga.[1]

History

The club was established in December 1906 as Fuβball-Club Germania Brötzingen. In 1913, it was merged briefly with Ballspielclub 05 Brötzingen as BC Germania Pforzheim, but the union quickly fell apart. Following World War I, in 1920, several clubs including Turnverein Brötzingen, KSV Achilles Brötzingen, and Radfahrclub Sturm Brötzingen joined with FC to create the current club.[2]

FC enjoyed a steady string of successes in local play that soon saw the club promoted to the senior regional circuit, the Kreisliga Südwest and then the Bezirksliga Württemberg-Baden, where they took part in qualification for the national playoff round in 1928–29. Following the reorganization of German football under the Third Reich into 16 top flight divisions, Brötzingen became part of the Gauliga Baden. A poor campaign led to the club's demotion after their debut season, but they returned to the Gauliga to play three more seasons between 1935–38.

After World War II, FC became part of the Amateurliga Nordbaden-Süd, later the Amateurliga Baden (II), where they fared poorly through the late 40s and 50s. The side improved in the 60s and enjoyed local title and cup wins on their way to promotion to the Amateurliga Nordbaden (III) in 1968. FC was relegated after a 16th-place result there in 1971 and returned to the Bezirksliga (VIII) level.

Spending its final four seasons at Kreisliga level, where the side achieved a second-place finish in 2011, the club eventually disappeared through a merger with 1. FC Eutingen to form SV Kickers Pforzheim on 1 July 2011.[1]

Honours

Recent seasons

The recent season-by-season performance of the club:[3][4]

Season Division Tier Position
2002–03 Landesliga Mittelbaden VI 9th
2003–04 Landesliga Mittelbaden 10th
2004–05 Landesliga Mittelbaden 7th
2005–06 Landesliga Mittelbaden 11th
2006–07 Landesliga Mittelbaden 14th ↓
2007–08 Kreisliga Pforzheim VII 4th
2008–09 Kreisliga Pforzheim VIII 7th
2009–10 Kreisliga Pforzheim 4th
2010–11 Kreisliga Pforzheim 2nd
Promoted Relegated

International players

Theodor Burkhardt, appeared for the national side in 1930, playing one game against the Hungary national football team.[5]

gollark: I don't know about in general, but here, yes.
gollark: I like it here; there's no commute, I don't have to wear uniform, and it's possible to browse Discord during lessons.
gollark: It seems like I'm going back to in-person school next week, annoyingly.
gollark: I think the main thing is that, in the past, if some horrible virus wiped out a big chunk of human civilization, it would not spread anywhere else because they then died.
gollark: I didn't say there was one.

References

  1. Der SV KICKERS PFORZHEIM ist da!!!! (in German) SV Kickers Pforzheim website, accessed: 21 September 2011
  2. Grüne, Hardy (2001). Vereinslexikon. Kassel: AGON Sportverlag ISBN 3-89784-147-9
  3. Das deutsche Fußball-Archiv (in German) Historical German domestic league tables
  4. Fussball.de – Ergebnisse Archived 18 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine (in German) Tables and results of all German football leagues
  5. kicker Almanach 1990 (in German) Yearbook of German football, publisher: kicker, published: 1989, page: 83, accessed: 30 November 2008
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