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1982–83 FDGB-Pokal
The 1982–83 FDGB-Pokal was the 32nd competition for the trophy. By beating FC Karl-Marx-Stadt, 1. FC Magdeburg won their 7th FDGB-Pokal title. Participants 89 teams were eligible for the 1982-83 FDGB-Pokal. The 14 DDR-Oberliga teams and the 60 DDR-Liga teams were joined by the winners of the 15 1981-82 Bezirkspokal competitions. Mode The Oberliga teams of the 1982-83 season joined the competition in the second round. The other had to play through a qualifying round, followed by the first round proper and an intermediate round. All fixtures were decided in a single match, in case of a draw extra time was played, followed by a penalty shootout, if the score was still level. Competition Qualifying round First round * denotes Bezirkspokal winners(1) Match awarded to BSG Aktivist Schwarze Pumpe, as Robur Zittau had neglected to bring their players' passes. Intermediate round Second round Third round Quarterfinals Semifinals Final Stati ...
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ASG Vorwärts Dessau
ASG Vorwärts Dessau is a German association football club based in Dessau-Roßlau, Saxony-Anhalt. History ASG Vorwärts At the end of the 1973–74 season of the second-tier DDR-Liga the leadership of the Armeesportvereinigung Vorwärts decided to move ASG Vorwärts Leipzig to Dessau. Consequently, the Armeesportgemeinschaft (ASG) Vorwärts Dessau was founded on 4 September 1974, taking over the league spot from Leipzig with the start of the 1974–75 season. The team's first match was a friendly against a representative team from Haiphong in Vietnam in front of more than 10,000 spectators. The army club went on to play in the second-tier league without interruption until 1991, becoming the leading football club in the city, a role that had been occupied by rivals Motor Dessau. Vorwärts usually finished in the top third of the league and had a relatively strong following, considering the fact it was an army sports club. Both in 1976 and 1984 Vorwärts took part in the ...
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FC Mecklenburg Schwerin
FC Mecklenburg Schwerin is a German football club based in Schwerin in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. The club was formed from a merger in 2013 and competes in the fifth tier NOFV-Oberliga Nord. The club plays its home matches at the Sportpark Lankow. FC Mecklenburg Schwerin also has gymnastics squads and an Esports department. History FC Mecklenburg Schwerin was established from a merger of FC Eintracht Schwerin and FC Mecklenburg Schwerin on 28 May 2013. The club incorporates the history of several historical football clubs in Schwerin, such as Schweriner FC 03, BSG Einheit Schwerin, SC Traktor Schwerin, BSG Motor Schwerin, SG Dynamo Schwerin and ISG Schwerin. FC Eintracht Schwerin FC Eintracht Schwerin was formally founded as SG Schwerin in 1945, but the club can trace its history back the oldest football club in Schwerin. SG Schwerin was founded as a successor to Schweriner FC 03, which had been founded in 1903. Schweriner FC 03 was dissolved the Allied occupation authorities ...
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FSV Wacker 90 Nordhausen
FSV Wacker 90 Nordhausen is a German association football club from Nordhausen, Thuringia. The club's greatest success has been promotion to the Regionalliga Nordost in 1995 and 2013. It has also won the Thuringia Cup on three occasions and, through this, qualified for the first round of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup. __TOC__ History The football team ''FC Wacker 05 Nordhausen'' was founded on 1 November 1905 as an offshoot of a Protestant youth club in the city. By 14 June 1906 the team had broadened its scope to become the sports club ''SV Wacker 05 Nordhausen '' and in 1908 merged with local side ''Ballsport-Club Mars Nordhausen'' which had been formed in 1906. Until 1918 the club played as ''SV Wacker-Mars Nordhausen'' when it was renamed ''1. SV Wacker 05 Nordhausen''. Playing in the VMBV (Verband Mitteldeutscher Ballspiel Vereine or Federation of Middle German Ball Playing Teams), ''Wacker'' participated in the early rounds of the league championships in the mid- to lat ...
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BSG Aufbau Krumhermersdorf
FSV Krumhermersdorf is an association football club from Krumhermersdorf, Zschopau, Saxony, Germany. The club was founded on 1 July 1921. Under the name BSG Aufbau Krumhermersdorf and BSG Aufbau dkk Krumhermersdorf, it reached as high as the DDR-Liga, the second tier in East Germany, where it played in the penultimate (1989–90) season of the DDR-Liga. Following the reunification of Germany, the name FSV Krumhermersdorf was assumed in 1991. References Further reading *Hanns Leske Hanns Leske (born 1950 in Berlin) is a German sports historian, political scientist and former Berlin local politician. Life Hanns Leske served from 1979 to 1999 within the Social Democratic Party of Germany as a member of the district council of S ...: ''Enzyklopädie des DDR-Fußballs''. Göttingen: Die Werkstatt, 2007, ISBN 978-3-89533-556-3, p. 453 Football clubs in Germany Sport in Saxony Zschopau 1921 establishments in Germany Association football clubs established in 1921 {{Germany ...
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BSG Aktivist Schwarze Pumpe
Hoyerswerdaer FC is an association football club from Hoyerswerda, Saxony, Germany. The club was founded on 15 January 1956 in East Germany. Under the name BSG Aktivist Schwarze Pumpe, it reached as high as the DDR-Liga, the second tier in East Germany, where it played in the ultimate (1990–91) season of the DDR-Liga. Following the reunification of Germany, the club changed its name to FSV Hoyerswerda and later FC Lausitz Hoyerswerda. The club colours were yellow and black. It incorporated the club Hoyerswerdaer SV 1919 in 2016, changing its name to Hoyerswerdaer FC. References Further reading *Hanns Leske Hanns Leske (born 1950 in Berlin) is a German sports historian, political scientist and former Berlin local politician. Life Hanns Leske served from 1979 to 1999 within the Social Democratic Party of Germany as a member of the district council of S ...: ''Enzyklopädie des DDR-Fußballs''. Göttingen: Die Werkstatt, 2007, ISBN 978-3-89533-556-3, pp. 71–72. Football ...
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VfB Fortuna Chemnitz
VfB Fortuna Chemnitz is a German association football club from Chemnitz, Saxony. The club was formed in 2005 out of the fusion of ''VfB Chemnitz'' and ''SV Fortuna Furth Glösa''. __TOC__ History The older of these two sides is ''VfB'' which was established in 1901 as ''Reunion Chemnitz''. In 1914 the club was renamed ''FC Hohenzollern'' before becoming ''VfB Chemnitz'' in 1919. They played as a mid-table side in the Kreisliga Chemnitz until 1923 and the Gauliga Mittelsachsen until 1933. A 1938 merger with ''SV Teutonia 1901 Chemnitz'' saw the club become ''SpVgg 01 Chemnitz''. Following World War II all organizations in Germany were dissolved, including sports and football clubs. Sometime in 1951 the association was re-constituted as ''SG Chemnitz Schloß''. Clubs playing in what would become East Germany were subject to frequent name changes at the whim of state sports authorities. ''Schloß'' was soon playing as ''BSG Handel und Sozial-Versicherung Chemnitz''. When the city ...
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VfL Halle 1896
VfL Halle 1896 is a German football club from the city of Halle (Saale) in Saxony-Anhalt. History The oldest club in the city of Halle was founded as ''Hallescher Fußballclub von 1896'' on 16 July 1896. ''HFC'' was one of a dozen clubs that formed the VMBV (Verbandes Mitteldeutscher Ballspielvereine or Federation of Middle German Football Teams) on 16 December 1900 and was a founding member of the DFB (Deutscher Fußball-Bund) in Leipzig in January 1900. In 1909 the club was the first in the country to purchase its own grounds and on 10 September 1910 hosted ''VfB Leipzig'' in their new stadium facility. The club merged with the ''Kaufmännischer Turnverein Halle'' on 23 September 1919 to become ''VfL Halle von 1896''. The short-lived union ended in April the following year, but the club kept its new name. Throughout this period Halle enjoyed numerous successes, winning seven VMBV regional championships, as well as overall league titles in 1917 and 1919. German football w ...
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FSV Glückauf Brieske-Senftenberg
FSV Glückauf Brieske-Senftenberg is a German football club from Senftenberg in Brandenburg, currently playing in the Landesliga Brandenburg-Süd (VII). History FSV Glückauf Brieske-Senftenberg was founded on 19 January 1919 as ''Fußballverein Grube Marga'' before becoming ''Fußballsportverein Grube Marga'' in 1928. The club was renamed ''Sportverein Sturm Grube Marga'' in 1933 and played two seasons (1941–43) in the Gauliga Berlin-Brandenburg, one of the country's 16 top-flight regional divisions. After World War II, the club was closed before being reformed as ''Sportgemeinde Grube Marga'' and becoming part of the separate football competition that emerged in East Germany under Soviet occupation. In 1948, it was renamed ''BSG Franz Mehring Grube'' in recognition of leftist politician, journalist and writer Franz Mehring. Two years later the club was known as ''BSG Aktivist Ost Brieske'' and became part of the DDR-Oberliga (I). The team then played as ''SC Aktivist Br ...
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SV Lichtenberg
SV Lichtenberg 47 is a German association football club from Berlin. The footballers are part of a larger sports club that currently has over 900 members in departments for bowling, boxing, fitness and aerobics, gymnastics, line dancing, table tennis, and volleyball. History The club was established in 1945 as ''Sportgruppe Lichtenberg-Nord'' in Russian-occupied East Berlin. It was one of several sides from the district of Lichtenberg that were brought together in 1947 to form ''Sportclub Lichtenberg 47''. The team would play as ''SC Lichtenberg 47'' until 1950 when the club was renamed ''Sportgemeinschaft Lichtenberg 47''. The team would play as ''SG Lichtenberg 47'' until 1969 when the club merged with the worker's club ''Betriebssportgemeinschaft Elektroproject und Anlagebau Berlin'' to form ''BSG EAB Lichtenberg''. In 1979 the association was renamed ''BSG EAB Berlin 47''. The club spent over four decades as an elevator side that moved frequently up and down between the ...
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FC Energie Cottbus
FC Energie Cottbus (Lower Sorbian: ''Energija Chóśebuz'') is a German football club based in Cottbus, Brandenburg. It was founded in 1963 as SC Cottbus in what was East Germany. After the reunification of Germany, Energie played six seasons in the third tier of the German football league system before floating between the 2. Bundesliga and Bundesliga for 17 years between 1997 and 2014. From 2014 to 2016, the club played in the third tier, 3. Liga, and were then relegated to the Regionalliga Nordost. In 2018, they were promoted back into the 3. Liga, only to be relegated again the next season. History Predecessor sides Energie Cottbus can trace its roots back to a predecessor side of FSV Glückauf Brieske-Senftenberg, a club founded by coal miners in 1919, in what was then called the town of Marga. FV Grube Marga, as the club was then called, was active until 1924 when the miners left to form a new team called SV Sturm Grube Marga which was banned by the Nazi Party in 1933. E ...
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VFC Anklam
VFC Anklam is a German football club from the city of Anklam, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. History The team was established as ''Sportgemeinde Anklam'' in 1945 and became part of the separate football competition that emerged after World War II in Soviet occupied East Germany. Like most other East German clubs, the team underwent several name changes over the years; in 1949 they became ''BSG Konsum Anklam'', in 1952 ''BSG Empor Anklam'', and in 1960 ''BSG Lokomotive Anklam''. Playing as ''Lok'' they spent two seasons (1980–82) in the DDR-Liga, Staffel A as a lower table side. The club made appearances in the FDGB-Pokal (East German Cup) in 1954, 1957, 1982 and 1983, but was never able to advance out of the opening rounds.Grüne, Hardy (2001). Vereinslexikon. Kassel: AGON Sportverlag In 1990 the club adopted the name ''ESV Lok Anklam'' and became part of the single German competition formed after the reunification of the country. Known later as ''FV Lok Anklam'', they won their ...
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