1. FC Germania Egestorf/Langreder

1. FC Germania Egestorf/Langreder is a German association football club from the town of Barsinghausen, Lower Saxony. The club's greatest success has been promotion to the tier four Regionalliga Nord in 2016. By reaching the final of the 2015–16 Lower Saxony Cup the club also qualified for the German Cup for the first time, entering the first round of the 2016–17 edition.

1. FC Germania Egestorf/Langreder
Full name1. Fußballclub Germania Egestorf/Langreder e.V
Founded16 March 2001
GroundSportanlage Egestorf
Capacity3,000
ChairmanTorsten Seebeck
Head coachPaul Nieber
LeagueOberliga Niedersachsen (V)
2020–21Season annulled
WebsiteClub website

History edit

The club was formed on 16 March 2001 when two local clubs, TSV Egestorf and TSV Langreder, merged to form the current club in an effort to combine the extensive youth department of the former with the senior team of the latter.[1]

The new club took started out in the tier seven Bezirksliga Hannover 1 but won promotion from this level to the Landesliga Hannover in 2003. It spent the next nine seasons there, with the league renamed to Bezirksoberliga Hannover from 2006 to 2010. After finishing runners-up in 2008 and 2010 and missing out on promotion Germania won the league in 2011–12 and earned promotion to the Niedersachsenliga for the first time. At this level the club finished sixth in its first season and gradually improving every year. A second place finish in 2015–16 and success in the promotion round moved the club up to the tier four Regionalliga Nord for the first time.[2] They were relegated in 2019.

The club qualified for the final of the Lower Saxony Cup and thereby directly for the first round of the 2016–17 DFB-Pokal.[3] They lost 6–0 in the first round at home to Hoffenheim.[4]

Current squad edit

As of 12 February 2018[5]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK   GER Markus Straten-Wolf
5 DF   GER Jan Baßler
6 DF   GER Jannik Oltrogge
7 MF   GER Björn Lindemann
8 DF   GER Marvin Stieler
9 FW   GHA Michael Owusu
10 MF   GER Sascha Derr
11 FW   GER Dominik Behnsen
14 DF   GER Marvin Schlömer
15 FW   GER Christoph Beismann
16 FW   GER Torben Engelking
17 DF   GER Mirko Dismer
No. Pos. Nation Player
18 DF   GER Marek Waldschmidt
19 FW   GER Sebastian Baar
20 MF   GER Joshua Siegert
21 DF   GER Marco Schikora
22 MF   GER Theo Hellwig
23 DF   GER Niklas Teichgräber
25 DF   GER Yannick Oelmann
27 GK   GER Sean Millard
28 GK   GER Ole Schöttelndreier
29 MF   GER Hendrik Weydandt
33 MF   GER Kevin Schumacher
MF   GER Lennart Novotny

Honours edit

The club's honours:

Seasons edit

The season-by-season performance of the club:[2][6]

Season Division Tier Position
2001–02 Bezirksliga Hannover 1 VII
2002–03 Bezirksliga Hannover 1 2nd ↑
2003–04 Landesliga Hannover VI 6th
2004–05 Landesliga Hannover 5th
2005–06 Landesliga Hannover 6th
2006–07 Bezirksoberliga Hannover 6th
2007–08 Bezirksoberliga Hannover 2nd
2008–09 Bezirksoberliga Hannover 11th
2009–10 Bezirksoberliga Hannover 2nd
2010–11 Landesliga Hannover 4th
2011–12 Landesliga Hannover 1st ↑
2012–13 Niedersachsenliga V 6th
2013–14 Niedersachsenliga 5th
2014–15 Niedersachsenliga 4th
2015–16 Niedersachsenliga 2nd ↑
2016–17 Regionalliga Nord IV 10th
2017–18 Regionalliga Nord 5th
  • The Landesliga Hannover was renamed to Bezirksoberliga Hannover from 2006 to 2010.
Promoted Relegated

References edit

  1. ^ "Historie des 1.FC Germania Egestorf/Langreder" [History of the 1. FC Germania Egestorf/Langreder]. 1fc-germania.de (in German). Germania Egestorf website. Retrieved 29 April 2016.
  2. ^ a b Germania Egestorf at Fussball.de (in German) accessed: 29 April 2016
  3. ^ "Die Wege in den DFB-Pokal" [The ways to qualify to the German Cup]. kicker.de (in German). kicker. 14 April 2016. Retrieved 29 April 2016.
  4. ^ "DFB-Pokal". dfb.de. 10 May 2014. Retrieved 12 January 2019.
  5. ^ "Unser Erste" (in German). 1. FC Germania Egestorf/Langreder. Retrieved 12 February 2018.
  6. ^ Historic German football league tables (in German) Das Deutsche Fussball Archiv, accessed: 29 April 2016

External links edit