1993–94 NOFV-Oberliga
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1993–94 NOFV-Oberliga
The 1993–94 season of the NOFV-Oberliga was the third and final season of the league at tier three (III) of the German football league system before the reintroduction of the Fußball-Regionalliga. The NOFV-Oberliga was split into three divisions, NOFV-Oberliga Nord, NOFV-Oberliga Mitte and NOFV-Oberliga Süd. The champions of the ''Nord'' and ''Süd'' divisions entered into a play-off with the runners-up from ''Mitte'', which FSV Zwickau won, and as such, were promoted to the 1994–95 2. Fußball-Bundesliga. The other two teams, plus the 14 clubs highlighted in light green and located with a "''(Q)''" in the tables below, became founding members of the newly introduced Regionalliga Nordost, together with FC Carl Zeiss Jena and Tennis Borussia Berlin who had been relegated from the 2. Bundesliga The 2. Bundesliga ( ) is the second division of professional football in Germany. It was implemented 11 years after the founding of the Fußball-Bundesliga as the new secon ...
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NOFV-Oberliga
The NOFV- Oberliga is a division at step 5 of the German football league system. After the fall of the Berlin Wall, it became the successor of the DDR-Oberliga, and functions today as a 5th division in the former territory of East Germany and the city of Berlin. This league is named after the Nordostdeutscher Fußballverband (NOFV: North-East German Football Association), the regional association of the DFB in the former East German territories. The league is currently split in two groups, north and south, the NOFV-Oberliga Nord and NOFV-Oberliga Süd. A third league, the NOFV-Oberliga Mitte existed from 1991 to 1994. 1990–91 Season The NOFV-Oberliga developed after the entry of the Deutscher Fußball-Verband (the East German Football Association) to the Deutscher Fußball-Bund. It was the successor of the DDR-Oberliga and functioned as the elite division in the former East Germany for this season only. FC Hansa Rostock became champions of that league, with Dynamo Dresden ...
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Eisenhüttenstädter FC Stahl
Eisenhüttenstädter FC Stahl was a German association football club based in Eisenhüttenstadt in Brandenburg. The club dissolved in 2016 and merged into FC Eisenhüttenstadt. FC Eisenhüttenstadt plays in the sixth tier Brandenburg-Liga as of the 2021–22 season. History The predecessor of Eisenhüttenstädter FC Stahl was founded as enterprise sports community BSG Stahl Fürstenberg Ost in Fürtstenberg in Bezirk Frankfurt in 1950. The football team was admitted to the new third tier Bezirksliga Frankfurt an der Oder in 1952. The community of Stalinstadt was built nearby for the workers of the local ironworks, and so the team was known as BSG Stahl Stalinstadt from 1953. Fürstenberg, Stalinstadt and the village of Schönfließ were merged to form Eisenhüttenstadt in late 1961. The sports community was thus renamed BSG Stahl Eisenhüttenstadt. ''Stahl'' played as a second division side in East Germany's DDR-Liga just two forays into the first tier DDR-Oberliga. In 19 ...
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Verbandsliga
The Verbandsliga ( en, Football Association League) is usually a tier-six football league in the German football league system, covering the area of a '' Bundesland'' or a regional part of such Bundesland.Fussball.de - Ergebnisse
Tables and results of all German football leagues
As the German football league system below the tier-four is organised individually by the 21 state member associations of the nationwide governing body (Deutscher Fußball-Bund), the league st ...
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1994–95 Regionalliga
The 1994–95 Regionalliga season was the first year of the Regionalliga as the third tier of German football. There were four regional sections, Nord, Nordost, West-Südwest and Süd, each with eighteen teams. Most teams qualified from the Oberliga, which dropped to become a fourth-tier league, while five teams were relegated from the previous year's 2. Bundesliga. In the Nord section, four teams were promoted from the formerly fourth-tier Verbandsliga. The four regional champions were all promoted directly to the 2. Bundesliga. The four runners-up entered the Amateur Championship, which was not a promotion playoff. Twelve teams were relegated, although the amount per region varied depending on the teams relegated from the second tier. This was the last season of two points for a win, before it was increased to three. Regionalliga Nord The Regionalliga Nord covered the states of Bremen, Hamburg, Lower Saxony and Schleswig-Holstein. Teams The division largely replaced the ...
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SG Bergmann-Borsig
SG Bergmann-Borsig is a German sports club from borough of Pankow, in Berlin. The club has departments in several sports, such as tennis, tabletennis, gymnastics, volleyball, kyudo and ninjutsu. History It was established following World War II on 8 April 1946 by handball players from Charlottenburg, Rosenthal and Wilhelmsruh in the city's Pankow district. Located in the Soviet-occupied quarter of Berlin, ''SG'' formed a football department that was part of the separate competition that emerged in East Germany. The club became independent of its parent association club in 1990 as ''Pankower Fußballverein Bergmann-Borsig'' before failing financially in 1994. ''SG'' was associated with and received financial support from the Bergmann-Borsig energy and metalworks factory. It was renamed ''Betriebssportgemeinschaft Stahl Wilhelmsruh'' on 24 August 1950, and following the transition of the factory to the manufacture of machinery and transport equipment in 1952, it became ''BSG Moto ...
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FSV Rot-Weiß Prenzlau
FSV may refer to: * Fidelity Special Values, a British investment trust * File System Visualizer, a file manager for Linux and other Unix-like operating systems * Fort St. Vrain Generating Station, in Colorado, United States * M1131 Fire Support Vehicle The Fire Support Vehicle (FSV) of the Stryker series provides automated enhanced surveillance, target acquisition, target identification, target tracking, target designation, position location and communications functionality. Targets will be tra ... * Fullskip Void, in Realm of the Mad God {{disambiguation ...
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FSV Velten
The FSV Velten was a German association football club from the town of Velten, Brandenburg. The club's greatest success during play in the former East Germany was a single season spend in the second tier DDR-Liga in 1989–90, then under the name of Chemie Velten. After the German reunion, now as FSV Velten, the club earned promotion to the tier three Regionalliga Nordost in 1995 and played at this level for two seasons before being relegated again. The following season, 1997–98 the club had to declare insolvency in mid-season and folded. A new club was formed, the SC Oberhavel Velten, but has not reached the heights of the former club. History The formation of the FSV Velten dates back to 1912 when the Veltener BC 1912 was formed. ''VBC'' was outlawed by the Nazis in 1933 but reformed shortly after the end of the Second World War only to be renamed to SG Velten a little while later when the East German authorities reorganised all sports clubs. The club became BSG Industrie Ve ...
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SV Schwarz-Rot Neustadt
SV Schwarz-Rot Neustadt is a German football club based in Neustadt (Dosse), Brandenburg, currently playing in the Landesliga Brandenburg-Nord (VII). History The forerunner of SV Schwarz-Rot Neustadt was founded in July 1922 as ''Köritzer Sport-Club''. ''KSC'' became ''BSG Landbau Neustadt'' in 1978 and the final renaming to ''SV Schwarz-Rot'' was announced on 27 July 1990. The club competed in the 1993–94 NOFV-Oberliga as a third-tier side, taking 11th place in the NOFV-Oberliga Nord which preceded 13th and 14th placed finishes the following two seasons. The club made a further cameo appearance in the 2000–01 NOFV-Oberliga, but were relegated back to the Verbandsliga Brandenburg The Brandenburg-Liga (VI) (''formerly the Verbandsliga Brandenburg'') is the highest league for football teams exclusively in the German state of Brandenburg and at step six of the German football league system. Until the introduction of the 3. L ... after finishing second from bottom. In 200 ...
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FC Eintracht 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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Greifswalder SC
Greifswalder Sport Club was a German football club from Greifswald, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. It was active from 1926 to 1945, and 1990 to 2003. History Founded on 3 January 1926, the club played in the state football system before World War II. It achieved promotion to the Gauliga Pommern, the top flight, in 1937. After the war, all private sports clubs were shut down by the Soviet occupation in East Germany; the city was represented by state team BSG Einheit Greifswald (1946–1968) and nuclear plant team BSG KKW Greifswald (1968–1990). Following German reunification, the club was revived on 21 June 1990, entering the NOFV-Oberliga in 1991. It became a force in the newly created Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Cup, winning four consecutive times from 1993 to 1996. The team was relegated to the Verbandsliga Mecklenburg-Vorpommern in 2002, where it played its final season before dissolution on 30 June 2003. It was replaced by Greifswalder SV 04 (2004–2015). The team entered the D ...
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FSV Optik Rathenow
FSV Optik Rathenow is a German association football club who compete in the Oberliga. The club is situated in the city of Rathenow, near Berlin, and play their home games at the Vogelgesang. In 1994, the club earned three promotions in quick succession under coach, Ingo Kahlisch, and reached Germany's 3rd tier, enjoying a three-season spell at that level competing against the likes of FC Union Berlin and Dynamo Dresden. Following their return to fourth-tier play in 1997, the Rathenowers were regulars in the competition until 2005. The club has featured twice in the DFB Pokal main rounds, most recently against 2. Bundesliga club, FC St. Pauli. __TOC__ History The earliest roots of football in the Rathenow area go back to the establishment of ''Spielvereinigung Rathenow'' in 1906. In the 1930s this club merged with ''Turnverein Vater Jahn Rathenow'' to create ''VfL Rathenow'', which went on to play second division football in Berlin-Brandenburg. A community sports club known ...
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Spandauer SV
Spandauer SV was a German football club from Berlin. History Early years The capital city was one of the earliest centres of German football and was home to 1. Spandauer Fußballklub Triton, formed on 24 May 1894, and Sportclub Germania Spandau, formed on 15 October 1895. These two sides merged late in 1920 to form Spandauer Sport-Vereinigung 94/95 e.V., the predecessor of today's club. The team was promoted to the Verbandsliga Berlin-Brandenburg in 1921 where they earned a string of third- and fourth-place finishes. Their best result was a distant second place behind Hertha BSC in 1928. German football was re-organized under the Third Reich in 1933 into sixteen top flight Gauligen. SSV joined the Gauliga Berlin-Brandenburg and played there until relegated in 1936. They returned briefly in 1939 only to be immediately relegated again. In 1944, towards the end of World War II, Spandau and SC Minerva 93 Berlin were melded into the wartime side KSG Minerva/SSG Berlin to play ...
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