SSV Jahn Regensburg explained

Clubname:SSV Jahn Regensburg
Fullname:Sport- und Schwimmverein
Jahn Regensburg e. V.
Upright:0.7
Nickname:"Die Jahnelf" (the Jahn Eleven)
"Die Rothosen" (the Red Shorts)
Ground:Jahnstadion Regensburg
Capacity:15,210[1]
Chairman:Hans Rothammer[2]
Coach:Joe Enochs
Website:https://www.ssv-jahn.de/
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Current:2024–25 SSV Jahn Regensburg season

Sport- und Schwimmverein Jahn Regensburg e. V., commonly known as SSV Jahn Regensburg, Jahn Regensburg, SSV Jahn or simply Jahn is a German football club based in Regensburg, Bavaria.

The club plays their home games at Jahnstadion Regensburg since 2015. The club colours are white and red, the team's most common nicknames 'Rothosen' (Red Shorts) and 'Jahnelf' (Jahn Eleven). Jahn currently plays in the 2. Bundesliga the German second division, having been promoted from the 3. Liga in the 2023–24 season.

History

The club is based on a gymnastics club founded in 1886 as Turnerbund Jahn Regensburg which took its name from Friedrich Ludwig Jahn, whose ideas of gymnastics greatly influenced German sport in the 19th century. The football department was created in 1907.

The footballers left their parent club in 1924 to form Sportbund Jahn Regensburg. In 1934, they joined Sportverein 1889 Regensburg and Schwimmverein 1920 Regensburg to form SSV which has departments for athletics, boxing, futsal, gymnastics, handball, kendo and nine-pin bowling. The football department separated in 2000 as SSV Jahn Regensburg.

Despite the 1934 merger of the football section into the wider sports club, the footballing side's best finish in the Bezirksliga Bayern was a second-place finish in 1930. In the Gauliga Bayern, one of sixteen top flight divisions formed in the re-organization of German football under the Third Reich in 1933, Jahn lasted for only two seasons before being relegated in 1935. It returned in 1937 and their best performances were consecutive third-place finishes in 1938 and 1939 after which they became a less competitive mid-to-lower table side.

The club spent most of the period between the end of World War II and the formation of the Bundesliga in 1963 as a "yo-yo team" oscillating between the Oberliga Süd and the second division. Regensburg played the early 1960s in the third division before making their way back to the Regionalliga Süd (II). By the mid-1970s, the team's results worsened and by the end of the decade had become a team mostly playing in the third and fourth divisions, as well as playing three years in the Landesliga Bayern-Mitte, the fifth tier, in the late 1990s.

In 2000 the football team left to become an independent club and were joined by players from SG Post/Süd Regensburg in 2002. Regensburg played in the Regionalliga Süd, the third tier since with a single season in the 2. Bundesliga in 2003–04. However, the club faced financial difficulties and narrowly avoided bankruptcy in 2005. After being relegated to the fourth division, the Oberliga Bayern in 2005–06, Jahn achieved first place in the following season and were promoted back to the Regionalliga Süd. Due to a reorganisation of the leagues, Jahn had to finish in tenth place or higher in order to stay in the third division, which is now the new 3. Liga. Jahn struggled to do so but finished ninth in the end and gained entry to the new league.

The club played its first two seasons in the 3. Liga close to the relegation zone but then improved and came third in 2011–12, qualifying to play against the Karlsruher SC in the promotion round to the 2. Bundesliga. They drew 1–1 at Regensburg and 2–2 at Karlsruhe, which meant Jahn returned to second level after eight years thanks to the away goal rule.

The Jahn finished last in the 2. Bundesliga in 2012–13 and were relegated back to the 3. Liga, finishing eleventh in 2013–14. In 2014–15 they also finished last in the 3. Liga and were relegated back to the Regionalliga. In the following season, they won the Regionalliga Bayern and faced the Regionalliga Nord champions VfL Wolfsburg II in the play-offs. The club defeated Wolfsburg II 2–1 on aggregate and immediately returned to third level for the 2015–16 season.[3] The following season Jahn finished third in the 3. Liga. As in 2012, they were subsequently promoted to the second tier via the play-off, defeating 1860 Munich 3–1 on aggregate.

Players

Out on loan

Reserve team

See main article: SSV Jahn Regensburg II. SSV Jahn Regensburg II (or SSV Jahn Regensburg Amateure) made a single season appearance in the southern division of the Amateurliga Bayern in 1962–63, the last year of the league being divided into two regional divisions. An eleventh place in the league that season was not enough to qualify for the new single-division league and the team also did not become part of the new Landesliga Bayern-Mitte.[4]

A lengthy period in the lower amateur divisions followed until 2002, when the merger of the first team with SG Post/Süd Regensburg allowed the reserve side to take Post's place in the Bayernliga, where the team played from 2002 to 2006. In 2006, the first team's relegation meant, they had to move down one level even so they finished eleventh this season. After three average seasons, the side became a promotion contender again, finishing second in 2010–11, but losing to SpVgg Bayern Hof in the promotion round.

At the end of the 2011–12 season, the club qualified directly for the newly expanded Bayernliga after finishing third in the Landesliga.[5]

Coaching staff

PositionName
Head Coach Joe Enochs
Assistant Coach Andreas Patz
Christoph Rezler
First-Team Coach & Opponent Analyst Oliver Seitz
Goalkeeper Coach Philipp Tschauner
Athletic Coach Christoph Rezler
Chief Scout Ilija Dzepina
Scout Andreas Wagner
Karl Müller
Doctor Dr. Andreas Harlass-Neuking
Physiotherapist Wolfgang Brummer
Matthias Günther
Lead Academy Physiotherapist Tobias Rutzinger
Head of Media and Communications Johannes Liedl
Team official Klaus-Dieter Schneider
Kit Manager Reinhold Reisinger
Head of Finance and Human Resources Simon Leser
Head of Private Customer Marketing Cornelius Knappe
Head of Operations and Infrastructure Andreas Hahn
Team Manager Katja Schöppl
Academy Manager Christian Martin

Recent managers

Recent managers of the club:[6]

ManagerStartFinish
Günter Sebert1 July 200230 June 2003
Ingo Peter1 July 200317 November 2003
Günter Brandl18 November 200330 June 2004
Mario Basler1 July 200420 September 2005
Dariusz Pasieka21 September 20056 April 2006
Günter Güttler7 April 200630 June 2008
Thomas Kristl1 July 200824 November 2008
Markus Weinzierl25 November 200830 June 2012
Oscar Corrochano1 July 20124 November 2012
Franz Gerber4 November 20122 January 2013
Franciszek Smuda2 January 201310 June 2013
Thomas Stratos11 June 201330 June 2014
Alexander Schmidt1 July 201410 November 2014
Christian Brand18 November 20146 December 2015
Heiko Herrlich11 January 2016[7] 30 June 2017
Achim Beierlorzer1 July 201730 June 2019
Mersad Selimbegović1 July 20199 May 2023
Joe Enochs10 May 2023

Recent seasons

The recent season-by-season performance of the club:[8] [9]

SSV Jahn Regensburg

SeasonDivisionTierPosition
2000–01Regionalliga SüdIII12th
2001–02Regionalliga Süd3rd
2002–03Regionalliga Süd2nd ↑
2003–042. BundesligaII16th ↓
2004–05Regionalliga SüdIII8th
2005–06Regionalliga Süd17th ↓
2006–07BayernligaIV1st ↑
2007–08Regionalliga SüdIII9th
2008–093. LigaIII15th
2009–103. Liga16th
2010–113. Liga8th
2011–123. Liga3rd ↑
2012–132. BundesligaII18th ↓
2013–143. LigaIII11th
2014–153. Liga20th ↓
2015–16Regionalliga BayernIV1st ↑
2016–173. LigaIII3rd ↑
2017–182. BundesligaII5th
2018–192. Bundesliga8th
2019–202. Bundesliga12th
2020–212. Bundesliga14th
2021–222. Bundesliga15th
2022–232. Bundesliga17th ↓
2023–243. LigaIII3rd ↑

SSV Jahn Regensburg II

SeasonDivisionTierPosition
2002–03BayernligaIV11th
2003–04Bayernliga8th
2004–05Bayernliga8th
2005–06Bayernliga11th ↓
2006–07Landesliga Bayern-MitteV14th
2007–08Landesliga Bayern-Mitte8th
2008–09Landesliga Bayern-MitteVI11th
2009–10Landesliga Bayern-Mitte3rd
2010–11Landesliga Bayern-Mitte2nd
2011–12Landesliga Bayern-Mitte3rd ↑
2012–13Bayernliga SüdV5th
2013–14Bayernliga Nord7th
2014–15Bayernliga Nord6th
2015–16Bayernliga Nord13th
2016–17Bayernliga Süd16th ↓
2017–18Landesliga Bayern-MitteVI1st ↑
2018–19Bayernliga SüdV3rd
Key
PromotedRelegated

Honours

League

Cup

Youth

References

Cited sources

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Daten und Fakten . de . Jahn Regensburg . 27 August 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150827111017/http://www.ssv-jahn.de/home/stadion/jahnstadion/allgemeine-infos_neu . 27 August 2015 . dmy-all .
  2. https://www.idowa.de/regionen/woerth-und-regensburg/regensburg/ssv-jahn-regensburg-vereint-vereine-gegen-rechts-3780514.html https://www.idowa.de/regionen/woerth-und-regensburg/regensburg/ssv-jahn-regensburg-vereint-vereine-gegen-rechts-3780514.html
  3. Web site: Regensburg, Lotte und Zwickau steigen in die 3. Liga auf. 29 May 2016. de.
  4. Book: Die Bayernliga 1945–97 . 55.
  5. Web site: Das war die Relegation 2012 auf Verbandsebene . de . fupa.net . 7 June 2012 . 16 January 2015.
  6. Web site: Jahn Regensburg: Trainer von A-Z. de. weltfussball.de. 27 July 2014.
  7. Web site: Herrlich übernimmt den Jahn . de . kicker.de . 20 December 2015 . 21 December 2015.
  8. Web site: Das deutsche Fußball-Archiv . de . f-archiv.de . 20 September 2014.
  9. Web site: Ergebnisse . de . Fussball.de . 20 September 2014.