GROUND LIST

Showing posts with label ERZGEBIRGE AUE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ERZGEBIRGE AUE. Show all posts

Saturday, 17 February 2018

HOLSTEIN KIEL (Holstein Stadion)

2.BUNDESLIGA, HOLSTEIN KIEL 2-2 ERZGEBIRGE AUE, ATTENDANCE: 9,702


My final trip of the weekend took me to north to the city of Kiel, located on the shores of the Baltic Sea. The city is a major maritime base and busy port and the Kiel canal is one of the busiest in the world.

It was an early start from Münster in order to make the 1300 kick off. The ground is a good 30 minute bus ride from the main station, but fortunately buses are frequent so there was plenty of time for a beverage and a frikadellen. Holstein Kiel were hosting Erzgebirge Aue in a 2.Bundesliga clash. Coincidentally, Kiel were the visitors when I travelled to Aue a few years ago.

Kieler Sportvereinigung Holstein were formed in 1900 and in their early years were a dominant force in the north. They won the German championship in 1912 but have never reached the promised land of the Bundesliga, spending most of their history in the second and third tiers.



The club returned to the 2.Bundesliga for the 2017/18 season and are enjoying a very good season thus far. Admittedly the good ship KSV has hit choppy waters in 2018, having failed to win so far, but going into the winter break they were in one of the automatic promotion positions. Kiel are still third in the table, which is a promotion play off position, but the other teams below them are now closing in.




In order to meet the criteria for any promotion, plenty of work has been done on the Holstein Stadium. At one stage the ground did not meet the minimum criteria necessary for the Bundesliga so major renovation has taken place. Two new stands were erected to replace the old terracing. In fact the only remnants of the old terracing are behind one of the goals where the away fans are placed.

All the differing builds give the feel of a bit of a hotch-potch ground. I was having a chat with a couple of fans and there is talk that the club could, in the next few years, be demolishing the ground completely and re-building it to create a stadium with a capacity of around around 25,000. 



Erzgebirge Aue were the visitors this afternoon, making the 400 mile journey from Saxony and they would have returned happy having secured a precious point as Holstein Kiel's inability to turn draws into wins haunted them once again.

It started well for the Stork's as they found themselves 2-0 up. After 10 minutes good work down the right led to Dominck Drexler crossing the ball to an unmarked Marvin Ducksch to sidefoot home from 12 yards. Kiel were on the front foot and their winless run looked to be coming to end when Drexler swept home a second goal, after Rafael Czichos headed the ball on from a corner kick.


However on 36 minutes The Violets got a goal back in slightly controversial circumstances. A corner was flicked on and Malcolm Cacutalua challenged the Kiel 'keeper, Kenneth Kronholm, who appeared to have caught the ball. He subsequently lost control and Cacutalua prodded the loose ball home. It terms of modern football it was certainly a foul on the 'keeper but the referee let the goal stand.

It got better for Erzgebirge Aue 90 seconds later when Cacutalua levelled things up. A free kick was launched forward and Cacutalua's header from the edge of penalty area looped over the 'keeper into the net.

The second half was a more cagey affair and both teams had chances to seal the win but the game eventually petered out and both teams had to settle for the draw. That's eight games without a win for Kiel and if that continues their promotion hopes will surely be sunk.

After the match I headed back to Hamburg for a few night caps. On the journey north it was noticeable how much snow there was on the ground and on my way back south I received confirmation the my game of choice for Sunday had been postponed. The weather had played havoc with other games in the lower leagues too, so this turned out to be my final game of this trip. Another fantastic weekend in Germany and hopefully I will be able to get over once more before this season is out.







Saturday, 26 September 2015

ERZGEBIRGE AUE (Erzgebirgsstadion)

LIGA 3, ERZGEBIRGE AUE 0-0 HOLSTEIN KIEL, ATTENDANCE: 6,700


"This is one, this is one I've waited for" sang those Mancunian funsters, well in terms of Groundhoping this is the one I've been waiting to visit since my trips to Germany became a regular thing.

Why? Well I can't really put my finger on anything specific. Could it be the name, Erzgebirge Aue? Erzgebirge being the mountains within which the club is located. Could it be the city of Aue? The location is really awkward to get to as it is virtually on the border with the Czech Republic? Could it be the old stadium is about to undergo a "modernisation" programme? Maybe it's combination of all three.

Regardless, I left Leipzig at 7am where a bus replacement service (I learnt another German word this week - Ersatz) was waiting for me.

After being dropped off in the middle of nowhere (Neukieritzsch) I picked up the train to Zwickau (and met up with a mate of mine who had travelled from Munich) where another bus replacement was waiting to take us to another station to pick up the train to Aue (this week has destroyed any myth in my mind about German trains).




It is about a 20 minute walk from the main train station, all up hill too, to the ground. The ground is a bowl shaped arena, built into the valley. The views are stunning. The pitch is surrounding by an athletics track but that doesn't diminish the atmosphere, I am glad I opted for the terraces where the noise, led by a megaphone man, was fantastic.

The ground is a mix of standing and seating, with the most recent upgrade in 2010 when part of the terrace was covered and seated along with the installation of Schalke's old scoreboard. As mentioned, the ground is due to be "modernised" soon, with work due to start in the next few months and to be completed by 2017.





The club was founded as SG Aue in 1945 and in 1948 became BSG Pneumatik Aue after the local construction tool works. Further changes in sponsorship led to the club's name being changed to Zentra Wismut Aue (1949) and then to SC Wismut Aue (1951).



The most bizarre name change though occurred in 1954 when the East German government, in typical fashion of the time, decided that the nearby city of Karl Marx Stadt (Chemnitz as it is now) deserved a successful team so the club was renamed SC Wismut Karl Marx Stadt. However, unlike other clubs that had been forcibly merged, Aue did not have to relocate as, for example Dynamo Dresden did when they got moved to Berlin, so you ended up with a club named after a city in which they did not play!

It was during this time though the club enjoyed it's most successful period, winning the GDR championship four times in 1955, 1956, 1957 and 1959, with an East German cup in 1955 thrown for good measure. This success also meant that Aue represented the GDR in the newly formed European Cup competition. 



In 1963 though Karl Marx Stadt finally got a team to call its own, so Aue's team became BSG Wismut Aue. The club stayed in the GDR top flight until reunification, though they did not win another championship. The club changed name again in 1993 to their current name, to recognise the location of the club in the Erzgebirge mountains. 

After the leagues merged the club spent the next decade or so in the lower reaches of German football before they won promotion to the 2.Bundesliga in 2003. The club was relegated in 2008, thus becoming a founder member of 3 Liga.




The club bounced back to the second level in 2010, but are now back in the third tier, after finishing 17th last season, where today they were taking Holstein Kiel, who I saw play at Energie Cottbus earlier in the week.

The game was an insipid affair that ended goalless, but I guess the visitors will be the happier of the two teams after earning a point on the road.

Post match we managed to find a superb brauhaus in the city centre, where a few beers were sunk, some great food was eaten and time was spent reflecting on another fantastic week of groundhopping in Germany.






The main man with the megaphone!


Sunday, 17 March 2013

SSV JAHN REGENSBURG (Jahnstadion)

2.BUNDESLIGA, SSV JAHN REGENSBURG 1-1 ERZGEBIRGE AUE,
ATTENDANCE: 6,771

Sport- und Schwimmverein Jahn 2000 Regensburg, to give their full name, were founded in 1907 when a football team was created as part of a larger sports club which began in 1889.  The Turnerbund Jahn Regensburg, which took its name from Friedrich Ludwig Jahn, whose ideas of gymnastics greatly influenced German sport in the 19th century. The footballers and swimmers left their parent club in 1924 to form Sportbund Jahn Regensburg.

A merger with Sportverein 1889 Regensburg in 1934 to form Vereinsname Sport- und Schwimmverein Jahn Regensburg did little to improve fortunes and the club have spent most of their existence in the lower leagues of German football.

In 2000 the football team left to become an independent club, hence the 2000 in the club name, and were joined by players from SG Post/Süd Regensburg in 2002.

The club faced financial difficulties and narrowly avoided bankruptcy in 2005. They plunged to the depths of the Oberliga Bayern in 2005–06, but Jahn won the title the following season and were promoted again to the Regionalliga Süd. Due to a reorganisation of the leagues in 2008, Jahn were founder members of the newly created Liga 3. 


The club struggled down in the lower reaches of the table before finishing in the play-off positions in 2012 and gaining promotion to Bundesliga 2 after beating Karlsruhe on the away goals rule.

They are currently bottom of the league, so it is safe to assume a quick return to Liga 3 is likely.

The Jahnstadion was the ground i'd been looking forward to visiting since this trip was planned and it did not disappoint. The ground is a proper a old ground with vast open terraces. Built in 1926 It was used for football games during the Olympic games of 1972. There is, what looks like, a temporary stand behind the goal but apart from that the ground gives the impression it has changed little from the day it was built.




 


The game was a decent affair, with the goals and most of chances coming in the opening 45 minutes. The point though doesn't really help Regensburg with their battle against relegation.

Kevin Schlitte gave the visitors the lead after 12 minutes before a scrambled equaliser from Koke after 25 minutes. The game was marred by a serious injury to Jahn skipper Andre Laurito, who left the stadium in an ambulance.




The was just time for one more beer in Munich before catching our flights home and a top draw (in more ways than one) euro weekender was at an end.