FC Viktoria Köln

FC Viktoria Köln
Full name Fußballclub Viktoria Köln 1904 e.V.
Founded 1904 (as FC Germania Kalk)
1957 (as SCB Viktoria Köln)
22 June 2010 (re-founded as FC Viktoria Köln)
Ground Sportpark Höhenberg
Ground Capacity 6,214
President Günter Pütz
Head coach Marco Antwerpen[1]
League Regionalliga West (IV)
2015-16 3rd
Website Club home page

FC Viktoria Köln is a German association football club from the city of Cologne in North Rhine-Westphalia.

History

Founded in 1904 as FC Germania Kalk it is one of the oldest football clubs in the city. In 1909 Germania merged with FC Kalk to form SV Kalk 04 and in 1911 this club was, in turn, united with Mülheimer FC to create VfR Mülheim-Kalk 04. The club was renamed VfR Köln 04 in 1918 and, in 1926, won its first Western German football championship and entry to national championship play.

After the re-organization of German football in 1933 under the Third Reich into sixteen top flight divisions, VfR played in the Gauliga Mittelrhein taking titles there in 1935 and 1937 but then performed poorly at the national level. In 1941 The Gauliga Mittelrhein was split into the Gauliga Moselland and Gauliga Köln-Aachen, with VfR playing in the latter division. Two years later the club joined Mülheimer SV to play as the combined wartime side (Kriegsspielgemeinschaft) KSG VfR 04 Köln/Mülheimer SV 06. Mülheim had also played in the Gauliga Mittelrhein since 1933 claiming titles of its own in 1934 and 1940, and had similarly poor results at the national level. Play in the Gauliga Köln-Aachen was suspended in the 1944–45 season as Allied armies advanced into Germany at the end of World War II.

After the war VfR Köln resumed playing first division football in the Oberliga West, but lasted only a single season before being relegated. In 1949 the team merged with its wartime partner Mülheimer SV to become SC Rapid Köln 04 and played in the 2. Oberliga West (II) until falling to third tier football after 1952. Rapid joined local rivals SC Preußen Dellbrück forming SC Viktoria 04 Köln in 1957. Of these sides, Preußen Dellbrück was most successful, advancing to the semi-finals of the national championships in 1950 before going out against Kickers Offenbach in a replay of their scoreless first match.

Logo of 1994 merger partner SC 1930 Köln Brück and historical logos of SC Viktoria Köln in use until 1994 and SCB Preußen Köln in use 1994–2002

In 1963, the city selected Viktoria as its representative in the Fairs Cup, the forerunner of today's UEFA Cup, but the club was unable to capitalize on the opportunity. The team played as a second and third division side with generally unremarkable results until the 1994 merger with SC Brück that created SCB Preußen Köln, the new team being named after predecessor Preußen Dellbrück. The new club earned a second-place finish in their division in 2000, but quickly tumbled to the Oberliga Nordrhein (IV), even spending one season in fifth division Verbandsliga Mittelrhein. The pattern continued after the team was re-christened SCB Viktoria Köln in 2002.

On 22 June 2010, a new club called FC Viktoria Köln was founded which took over the youth teams of now insolvent SCB Viktoria Köln. Although it was expected that the new club can begin in the Landesliga, where SCB Viktoria had played at last, they were forced by the association to start in the lowest league, Kreisliga D. Nonetheless, on 24 February 2011 they took over FC Junkersdorf which became champion of the 2010–11 Mittelrheinliga and so FC Viktoria Köln could start in 2011–12 in the NRW-Liga.

A 2012 title in this league earned the club promotion to the Regionalliga West where it plays today.

Honours

The club's honours:

Current squad

As of 29 July, 2016[2]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 Germany GK Nico Pellatz
23 Germany GK Alexander Monath
33 Germany GK Philipp Kühn

2 Germany DF Markus Brzenska
3 Germany DF Sascha Eichmeier
11 Belgium DF Michael Lejan
15 Germany DF Daniel Reiche
25 Germany MF Edwin Schwarz
28 Germany DF Patrick Koronkiewicz
36 Germany DF Dominik Lanius

5 Germany MF Felix Backszat
6 Germany MF Tim Jerat
No. Position Player
7 Germany MF Florian Heister
8 Germany MF Mike Wunderlich
13 Germany MF Lukas Nottbeck
14 Germany MF Senol Ak
17 Germany MF Marcel Gottschling
19 Germany MF Kevin Holzweiler
21 Latvia MF Andrejs Ciganiks
30 Italy MF Marco Fiore
31 Germany MF Mehdi Reichert
35 Germany MF Hamza Saghiri

9 Germany FW David Jansen
10 Germany FW Fatih Candan
20 Germany FW Sven Kreyer

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/30/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.