BFC Preussen explained

Nickname:The Prussians
Ground:Preussen-Stadion an der Malteserstraße
Capacity:5,000
Season:2017/2018
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Clubname:BFC Preussen
Fullname:Berliner Fussball Club Preußen 1894 e.V.
Chairman:Karl-Heinz Ulbrich
Manager:Thomas Häßler
League:Berlin-Liga (VI)
Position:5th

BFC Preussen is a German football club from Berlin. The team is part of a sports club which also has departments for handball, volleyball, athletics, gymnastics, and ice hockey. Preussen was one of the founding clubs of the German Football Association in Leipzig in 1900.

History

The club was formed as BFC Friedrich Wilhelm on 1 May 1894 by a number of players who had left Hevellia Berlin. It was named in honour of Crown Prince Wilhelm, an early and enthusiastic supporter of the new game of football who donated the Kronprinzenpokal (en: Crown Prince's Cup), the German game's earliest prize. In 1895, the club was renamed Preußen for the Kingdom of Prussia, and went on to success playing in the Verband Deutscher Ballspiel Vereine (Federation of German Ballgame Teams). The team lost the league final in 1898 before going on to win three consecutive titles in 1899–1901, and then repeating as champions in 1910 and 1912. While Preußen remained a prominent side playing in the Verbandsliga Berlin-Brandenburg and Oberliga Berlin-Brandenburg through to the early 1930s, they earned just mid-table results.

In 1933, German football was re-organized under the Third Reich into sixteen regional first division Gauligen. However, an uncharacteristically poor finish to the 1932–33 season that saw Preußen finish in last place put the club out of top-flight football. In the aftermath of World War II occupying Allied authorities banned organizations throughout Germany, including sports and football clubs, as part of the process of denazification. The club was dissolved, then re-established in 1949.

By the 1970s, Preussen had settled into third-tier competition in the Amateurliga Berlin (III). A short-lived breakthrough to the Regionalliga Berlin (II) lasted two seasons from 1972 to 1974 before the team briefly crashed to the Landesliga Berlin (IV) in 1974–75. The team's quick return to the third tier Amateur Oberliga Berlin was marked by five exceptional seasons in which they earned three first and two second-place finishes. They narrowly missed promotion to the 2. Bundesliga in 1980 when they lost the playoff to SC Göttingen 05 (0–1 and 1–1). Preußen played out the balance of the 1970s and on into the early 1990s in the third division.

The team soon found itself in the fifth tier Verbandsliga Berlin and slipped as low as the Landesliga Berlin-1 (VI) in 1999–2000. In 2011–12, they were demoted from the Berlin-Liga (VI) after an 18th-place result. After three seasons in the Landesliga they were promoted back to the Berlin-Liga by winning the 2014–15 Landesliga Berlin 1.

International players

Honours

The club's honours:

Recent seasons

YearDivisionPositionPointsGoal difference
2000–01Verbandsliga Berlin (V)2nd83+55
2001–028th58+7
2002–035th56+14
2003–043rd62+19
2004–051st 79+41
2005–06NOFV-Oberliga Nord (IV)11th38+1
2006–078th39−6
2007–0813th20−44
2008–0915th 28−19
2009–10Berlin-Liga (VI)12th49+17
2010–1115th37−11
2011–1218th 32−28
2012–13Landesliga Berlin 2 (VII)10th39+17
2013–14Landesliga Berlin 1 (VII)3rd68+52
2014–151st 73+81
2015–16Berlin-Liga (VI)5th

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.iffhs.de/?29da14a95814689b5528db14a85fdcdc3bfcdc0aec70aeeda0ae01 Stats for the Hungary -Germany international 4 April 1909
  2. http://ergebnisdienst.fussball.de/torjaeger/1-2-herren-berlin-liga/berlin/berlin-ligen/herren/spieljahr1112/berlin/M66S1112W661111Atorjaeger