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1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig

1. Fußballclub Lokomotive Leipzig e.V. is a German football club based in the locality of Probstheida in the Südost borough of Leipzig, Saxony. The club was previously known as VfB Leipzig and was the first national champion of Germany. It has also been known as SC Leipzig. The club won four titles in the FDGB-Pokal and the 1965–66 Intertoto Cup during the East German era. It also finished runner-up in the 1986–87 European Cup Winners' Cup. 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig was renamed VfB Leipzig after German re-unification and managed to qualify for the Bundesliga in 1993. However, like many clubs of the former DDR-Oberliga, VfB Leipzig faced hard times in reunified Germany and a steady decline soon followed. 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig was refounded in 2003 and has climbed through divisions since then. The team competes in the fourth-tier Regionalliga Nordost as of 2021. The 1. in front of the club's name indicates that it was the first to be founded in the city.

1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig
Full name1. Fußballclub Lokomotive Leipzig e.V.
Nickname(s)Loksche
Founded11 November 1893; 129 years ago (1893-11-11)
(as SC Sportbrüder Leipzig)
GroundBruno-Plache-Stadion
Capacity15,600
ChairmanThomas Löwe
CoachAlmedin Civa
LeagueRegionalliga Nordost (IV)
2020–217th
WebsiteClub website
The various names and forms of 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig.

History

1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig claims to be the successor to the VfB Leipzig and SC Sportbrüder Leipzig, established in 1896 and 1893, respectively, and to be, therefore, one of the oldest clubs of the German Football Association. However, they are not nominal successors. In 2018, 1. FC Lokomotive announced a merger with the formally extant but bankrupt and dormant VfB Leipzig in order to be entitled to the forerunner's titles.[1] Due to the significant breaks and turmoils in the club's history, especially during the post-World War II era, many fans identify 1966 as the year of establishment rather than 1893.

VfB Leipzig (1893–1946)

The club was formed as VfB Leipzig on 13 May, 1896, out of the football department of the gymnastics club Allgemeine Turnverein 1845 Leipzig. However, the club laid claim to an earlier date of origin by reaching back to a club that was merged with VfB Leipzig in 1898, the SC Sportbrüder Leipzig, which was one of four football clubs formed in Leipzig in 1893.

Following the merger with SC Sportbrüder Leipzig, the club competed under the name VfB Sportbrüder 1893 Leipzig. VfB Sportbrüder 1893 Leipzig was one of the original 86 teams that came together in the city on 28 January 1900 to form the German Football Association (DFB). On 2 May, 1900, the Sportbrüder 1893 part of the name was dropped, and the team became again known as VfB Leipzig.

 
The team that won the first German league championship in 1903.
 
Eintritts-Karte Fussballwettspiel um die Meisterschaft von Deutschland Pfingstsonntag, 31. Mai 1903 Nachm. 4 Uhr Exerzierplatz Altona

VfB Leipzig were immediately successful at their chosen sport and made their way to the first German national championship final held in 1903. Their opponents were DFC Prag, a German-Jewish side from Prague, which was then part of Austria-Hungary. The DFB had invited "German" clubs of this sort from other countries in order to boost numbers in their new national association.

DFC Prag had made their way to the final under circumstances that had allowed them to avoid playing a single playoff match, while VfB Leipzig had come through some hard-fought matches. Arriving in Hamburg for the match, the heavily favoured Pragers took themselves off on an ill-advised pub crawl the night before the contest and so arrived on the pitch in less than ideal match shape. The contest was delayed by half an hour as officials scrambled to find a football that was in good condition. The host, FC 93 Altona Hamburg, provided a new ball, and 11 minutes in, DFC Prag scored the first goal. At the end of the first half, the score stood at 1–1, but VfB Leipzig then pulled away to emerge as the first winners of the Viktoria Meisterschaftstrophäe ("Victoria Championship Trophy"), representative of German football supremacy, on the strength of a decisive 7–2 victory.

VfB Leipzig played themselves into another final appearance in 1904, but the match was never contested. A protest by FV Karlsruhe over their disputed semi-final with Britannia Berlin was never resolved, and the DFB called off the final only hours before its scheduled start. There would be no champion that year. The following season, VfB Leipzig found themselves unable to cover the expense of travelling to participate in their scheduled first-round playoff match and so were eliminated from that year's competition. However, they did go on to raise the Viktoria again in 1906 and 1913 and also played in the 1911 and 1914 finals.

In the period leading up to World War II, VfB Leipzig was unable to repeat its early success. Gyula Kertész coached the side from 1932-33.[2]

After the reorganization of German football leagues under the Third Reich in 1933, the club found itself in Gauliga Sachsen, one of the 16 upper-tier divisions. While they earned strong results within their own division, they were unable to advance in the playoff rounds. In 1937, they captured the Tschammerpokal, known today as the DFB-Pokal, in a match against Schalke 04, the dominant side of the era.

Post-war turmoil

 
Historical chart of Lokomotive Leipzig league performance
 
1. Lok Leipzig team photo, 23 August 1983.

The club, like most other organizations in Germany, including sports and football clubs, was dissolved by the occupying Allied authorities in the aftermath of the war. Club members reconstituted the team in 1946 as SG Probstheida under the auspices of the occupying Soviets. After playing as BSG Erich Zeigner Probstheida and then BSG Einheit Ost, the club merged with sports club SC Rotation Leipzig in 1954 and played in the DDR-Oberliga, East Germany's top-flight league, but earned only mediocre results. In 1963, the city of Leipzig's two most important sports clubs, SC Rotation and SC Lokomotive Leipzig, were merged, resulting in the founding of two new sides: SC Leipzig and BSG Chemie Leipzig.

1. FC Lokomotive (1966–1990)

East German football went through a general reorganization in 1965, creating football clubs as centres of high-level football, during which the football department of SC Leipzig was separated from the sports club and reformed into football club 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig, while rival Chemie Leipzig continued as a Betriebssportgemeinschaft (BSG), or corporate team. Like most East German clubs, it was assigned to a publicly owned enterprise as its "sponsor". In the case of Lokomotive, the providing enterprise was Deutsche Reichsbahn—the East German state railways—hence the name. The club's fortunes improved somewhat as they almost always finished well up the league table, but they were unable to capture the top honour in the DDR-Oberliga with losing final appearances in 1967, 1986, and 1988.

Lok earned a clutch of East German Cups (FDGB Pokal) with victories in 1976, 1981, 1986, and 1987, against failed appearances in the Cup final in 1970, 1973, and 1977. They also won the UEFA Intertoto Cup in 1966 and made an appearance in the 1987 final of the European Cup Winners' Cup, falling 0-1 to Johan Cruyff's Ajax after a Marco van Basten goal.

VfB Leipzig (1991–2004)

The re-unification in 1990 was followed by the merger of the football leagues of the two Germanies[3] a year later. A poor season led to a seventh-place finish in the transitional league, but an unexpectedly strong playoff propelled the club into the 2. Bundesliga.

1. FC Lokomotive grasped at their former glory by reclaiming the name VfB Leipzig. A third-place finish in 1993 advanced the team to the top-flight Bundesliga, where they finished last in the 1994 season. The new VfB began a steady slide down through the 2. Bundesliga into the Regionalliga Nordost (III) by 1998 and then further still to the NOFV-Oberliga Süd (IV) by 2001. They were bankrupted in 2004, their results were annulled, and the club was dissolved.

1. FC Lokomotive (since 2003–04)

In late 2003, the club was re-established by a group of fans as 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig. The renewed side had to start in the lowest league, eleventh-tier 3. Kreisklasse, Staffel 2, in 2004–05. Even so, they continued to receive solidly enthusiastic fan support: their match against Eintracht Großdeuben's second team in the Leipzig Zentralstadion on 9 October, 2004, broke the world record for lower-league attendance with 12,421 spectators. Thanks to a merger with SSV Torgau, the club could play in the seventh-tier Bezirksklasse Leipzig, Staffel 2, in 2005–06. Finishing this league as champions, the team qualified for the sixth-tier Bezirksliga. In 2006, 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig also played a friendly match against FC United of Manchester (4–4) and qualified for the 2006–07 Landespokal by winning the Bezirkspokal. 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig finished as champions of their group and were promoted to the fifth-tier Landesliga Sachsen Group for the 2007–08 season. The club finished second to Erzgebirge Aue and missed out on direct promotion to the NOFV-Oberliga Süd by two points in the 2007–08 season. It still had the chance to regain Oberliga status through a relegation play-off with Schönberg, winning the first leg 2–1 at Schönberg. In the return leg, in front of almost 10,000 spectators, the club lost 0–1 but still gained Oberliga promotion via the away goals rule.[4]

1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig finished the Oberliga in third place in 2008–09, 12th in 2009–10, and eighth in 2010–11. 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig was promoted to Regionalliga Nordost after finishing Oberliga sixth due to the reserve teams of FC Rot-Weiß Erfurt, Dynamo Dresden, and FC Carl Zeiss Jena being ineligible for promotion. Lokomotive finished in tenth place in the 2012–13 season but were relegated to Oberliga Nordost after finishing 15th in 2013–14.[5][6]

The club stayed in contention for promotion back up to the Regionalliga during the 2014–15 season, having hired former German international Mario Basler as director of sports in early 2015. In the final match of the season, Lok supporters stormed the field after their club had fallen behind 2–0, forcing the match to be abandoned and the club to finish outside of the promotion ranks.[7] The club finished in first place in the southern group of the NOFV-Oberliga and returned to the Regionalliga Nordost for the 2016–17 season.

Rivalries

The club's fans share a fierce and often violent rivalry with the supporters of Chemie Leipzig. When both teams met in the quarter finals of the Sachsenpokal in 2016, German daily newspaper Die Welt called the match the "German hooligan summit".[8] An additional reason for the enmity between some fan groups (namely their ultras) is a political one. Whereas certain Chemie fan clubs express left-wing and anti-fascist political views, Lok has vocal supporters from the right and far-right of the political spectrum.[9][10] Lok also have lesser local rivalry with RB Leipzig.

Lokomotive Leipzig in European competitions

Season Competition Round Nation Club Score
1963–64[a] Inter-Cities Fairs Cup 1R   Újpesti Dózsa 0–0, 2–3
1964–65[a] Inter-Cities Fairs Cup 1R   Wiener Sport-Club 1–2, 0–1
1965–66[a] Inter-Cities Fairs Cup 2R   Leeds United 1–2, 0–0
1966–67 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup 1R   Djurgårdens IF 3–1, 2–1
2R   RFC Liège 0–0, 2–1
1/8   Benfica 3–1, 1–2
1/4   Kilmarnock 1–0, 0–2
1967–68 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup 1R   Linfield 5–1, 0–1
2R   Vojvodina 0–0, 0–2
1968–69 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup 1R   KB Walkover
2R   Hibernian 1–3, 0–1
1973–74 UEFA Cup 1R   Torino 2–1, 2–1
2R   Wolverhampton Wanderers 3–0, 1–4
1/8   Fortuna Düsseldorf 1–2, 3–0
1/4   Ipswich Town 0–1, 1–0 (4–3 a.p.)
1/2   Tottenham Hotspur 1–2, 0–2
1976–77 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 1R   Hearts 2–0, 1–5
1977–78 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 1R   Coleraine 4–1, 2–2
1/8   Real Betis 1–1, 1–2
1978–79 UEFA Cup 1R   Arsenal 0–3, 1–4
1981–82 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup Q   Politehnica Timișoara 0–2, 5–0
1R   Swansea City 1–0, 2–1
1/8   Velež Mostar 1–1, 1–1 (a.e.t.) (4–1 p)
1/4   Barcelona 0–3, 2–1
1982–83 UEFA Cup 1R   Viking 0–1, 3–2
1983–84 UEFA Cup 1R   Bordeaux 3–2, 4–0
2R   Werder Bremen 1–0, 1–1
1/8   Sturm Graz 0–2, 1–0
1984–85 UEFA Cup 1R   Lillestrøm 7–0, 0–3
2R   Spartak Moscow 1–1, 0–2
1985–86 UEFA Cup 1R   Coleraine 1–1, 5–0
2R   Milan 0–2, 3–1
1986–87 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 1R   Glentoran 1–1, 2–0
1/8   Rapid Wien 1–1, 2–1
1/4   Sion 2–0, 0–0
1/2   Bordeaux 1–0, 0–1 (a.p.)
Final   Ajax 0–1
1987–88 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 1R   Marseille 0–0, 0–1
1988–89 UEFA Cup 1R   Aarau 3–0, 4–0
2R   Napoli 1–1, 0–2
  1. ^ a b c Participated as part of sports club SC Leipzig.

European record

Competition Record
G W D L Win %
UEFA Cup 32 15 4 13 046.88
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 25 10 8 7 040.00
Inter-Cities Fairs Cup[a] 22 8 4 10 036.36
Total 79 33 16 30 041.77
  1. ^ Participated 1963-1966 as part of sports club SC Leipzig.

Honours

National

Leagues

  1. ^ a b c d e f Won by VfB Leipzig.

Cups

  1. ^ Won by VfB Leipzig.
  2. ^ SC Lokomotive Leipzig.
  3. ^ SC Leipzig.

International

  1. ^ Won by SC Leipzig.

Regional

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Won by VfB Leipzig.
  2. ^ a b c Won by reserve team.

Youth

  • East German Junior Championship (de)[a]
    • Winners: 1961,[b] 1971, 1974, 1976, 1977
    • Runners-up: 1964,[c] 1972, 1982
  • East German Youth Championship (de)[d]
    • Winners: 1969, 1971, 1979, 1981, 1984 (record)
    • Runners-up: 1966, 1970, 1978, 1980
  • East German Junior Cup (Junge Welt-Pokal) (de)[a]
    • Winners: 1971, 1974, 1975, 1988
  • East German Youth Cup (Youth FDGB-Pokal) [d]
    • Winners: 1959,[b] 1968
  1. ^ a b Corresponds to U19 level.
  2. ^ a b Won by SC Rotation Leipzig.
  3. ^ Won by SC Leipzig.
  4. ^ a b Corresponds to U17 level.

Managers

BSG Leipzig-Ost

  • Rudolf Walseck (1951–1952)
  • Otto Winter (1952–1954)
  • Arthur Fischer (1953–1954)

SC Rotation Leipzig

  • Heinz Krügel (1954–1956)
  • Werner Welzel (1956–1959)
  • Martin Brunnert (1959–1960)
  • Martin Schwendler (1961–1963)

SC Leipzig

1. FC Lok Leipzig

  • Hans Studener (1966–1969)
  • Kurt Holke (1969–1971)
  • Horst Scherbaum (1971–1976)
  • Manfred Pfeifer (1976–1978)
  • Heinz Joerk (1978–1979)
  • Harro Miller (1979–1985)
  • Hans-Ulrich "Uli" Thomale (1985 – February 1990)
  • Gunter Böhme (February 1990 – 27 May 1991)

VfB Leipzig

1. FC Lok Leipzig

  • Rainer Lisiewicz (1 July 2004 – 12 May 2009)
  • Jörg Seydler (12 May 2009 – 29 November 2009)
  • Uwe Trommer (29 November 2009 – 30 June 2010) – Caretaker
  • Joachim Steffens (1 July 2010 – 7 June 2011)
  • Mike Sadlo (7 June 2011 – 7 December 2011)
  • Willi Kronhardt (3 January 2012 – 30 June 2012)
  • Marco Rose (1 July 2012 – 30 June 2013)
  • Carsten Hänsel (1 July 2013 – 23 September 2013)
  • Heiko Scholz (8 October 2013 – 23 September 2018)
  • Björn Joppe (27 September 2018 – 17 December 2018)
  • Rainer Lisiewicz (18 December 2018 – 19 October 2019)
  • Wolfgang Wolf (20 October 2019 – 30 June 2020)
  • Almedin Civa (since 1 July 2020)

Current squad

As of 10 August 2022

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 Isa Dogan
2 DF   KOR Eun-soo Gong
3 DF   GER Mike Eglseder
5 DF   GER David Urban
6 MF   GER Zak Paulo Piplica
7 FW   SRB Bogdan Rangelov
8 MF   GER Farid Abderrahmane
9 FW   GER Osman Atilgan
13 FW   GER Djamal Ziane
15 DF   GER Linus Zimmer
17 MF   CRO Antonio Verinac
No. Pos. Nation Player
18 DF   GER Leon Heynke
19 DF   GER Eric Voufack
22 MF   GER Maik Salewski
23 MF   GER Sascha Pfeffer
24 DF   GER Luca Sirch
27 FW   GER Theo Ogbidi
30 GK   GER Dennis Dickmann
31 MF   GER Riccardo Grym
32 MF   GER Julian Weigel
34 FW   GER Tobias Dombrowa
44 GK   GER Niclas Müller

Organizational history

1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig has undergone several reorganizations during its history and has taken several different forms and names. The club was a football department of sports clubs SC Rotation Leipzig and later SC Leipzig, before being reorganized as football club 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig in 1966.

Date Name Note
13 May 1896 VfB Leipzig
15 June 1898 VfB 1893 Sportbrüder Leipzig Merger with SC Sportbrüder Leipzig, founded on 11 November 1893.
2 November 1900 VfB Leipzig The name 1893 Sportbrüder was dropped.
1946 SG Probstheida VfB Lepzig was dissolved in 1946. The remains were reorganized as SG Probstheida.
31 July 1950 BSG Erich Zeigner Probstheida The club was renamed.
1953 BSG Einheit Ost The club was again renamed.
November 1954 SC Rotation Leipzig
July 1963 SC Leipzig
20 January 1966 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig Football department of SC Leipzig was reorganized as a football club.
1 July 1991 VfB Leipzig Renamed.
10 December 2003 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig Refounded as 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig. VfB Leipzig became defunct on 1 July 2004.

References

  1. ^ "Lok Leipzig: Fusion mit VfB ist näher gerückt" [Lok Leipzig: Merger with VfB is closer]. fussball.de (in German). Deutscher Fußball-Bund. 28 November 2018. from the original on 30 November 2018. Retrieved 11 November 2011.
  2. ^ "Gyula Kertész". worldfootball.net. from the original on 3 October 2020. Retrieved 16 September 2020.
  3. ^ JOACHIM REMAK. Two Germanies—and Then? 3 June 2020 at the Wayback Machine. Journal of International Affairs.
  4. ^ . Lok Leipzig. Archived from the original on 15 May 2008. Retrieved 23 June 2008.
  5. ^ "Das deutsche Fußball-Archiv". Das deutsche Fußball-Archiv (in German). from the original on 24 February 2016. Retrieved 3 August 2015.
  6. ^ "1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig". fussball.de (in German). Deutscher Fußball-Bund. from the original on 10 July 2015. Retrieved 3 August 2015.
  7. ^ "Lok Leipzig: Spielabbruch nach Platzsturm" [Lok Leipzig: Match cancelled after pitch invasion]. kicker (in German). Nuremberg: Olympia-Verlag. 14 June 2015. from the original on 9 November 2017. Retrieved 3 August 2015.
  8. ^ Wöckener, Lutz (12 November 2016). "Lok vs. Chemie Leipzig: Angst vor dem deutschen Hooligan-Gipfel am Sonntag" [Fear of the German hooligan summit on Sunday]. Die Welt (in German). Berlin: Axel Springer SE. ISSN 0173-8437. from the original on 15 February 2020. Retrieved 2 June 2017.
  9. ^ "St Pauli, politics and fighting (good and bad)". FourFourTwo. Bath: Future. 26 December 2009. ISSN 1355-0276. from the original on 20 January 2018. Retrieved 2 June 2017. At Leipzig right-wing supporters of Lok Leipzig prey on left-wing supporters of Chemie Leipzig.
  10. ^ Krauss, Bastian (14 November 2016). "Wie Antifa und Neonazis ihren politischen Kampf im Leipziger Derby austragen" [How Antifa and Neo-Nazis carry out their political fight in the Leipzig derby]. Vice News (in German). from the original on 11 November 2019. Retrieved 2 June 2017.

External links

  • Official website
  • The Abseits Guide to German Soccer

lokomotive, leipzig, women, football, team, women, fußballclub, lokomotive, leipzig, german, football, club, based, locality, probstheida, südost, borough, leipzig, saxony, club, previously, known, leipzig, first, national, champion, germany, also, been, known. For the women s football team see 1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig women 1 Fussballclub Lokomotive Leipzig e V is a German football club based in the locality of Probstheida in the Sudost borough of Leipzig Saxony The club was previously known as VfB Leipzig and was the first national champion of Germany It has also been known as SC Leipzig The club won four titles in the FDGB Pokal and the 1965 66 Intertoto Cup during the East German era It also finished runner up in the 1986 87 European Cup Winners Cup 1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig was renamed VfB Leipzig after German re unification and managed to qualify for the Bundesliga in 1993 However like many clubs of the former DDR Oberliga VfB Leipzig faced hard times in reunified Germany and a steady decline soon followed 1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig was refounded in 2003 and has climbed through divisions since then The team competes in the fourth tier Regionalliga Nordost as of 2021 The 1 in front of the club s name indicates that it was the first to be founded in the city 1 FC Lokomotive LeipzigFull name1 Fussballclub Lokomotive Leipzig e V Nickname s LokscheFounded11 November 1893 129 years ago 1893 11 11 as SC Sportbruder Leipzig GroundBruno Plache StadionCapacity15 600ChairmanThomas LoweCoachAlmedin CivaLeagueRegionalliga Nordost IV 2020 217thWebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThe various names and forms of 1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig Contents 1 History 1 1 VfB Leipzig 1893 1946 1 2 Post war turmoil 1 3 1 FC Lokomotive 1966 1990 1 4 VfB Leipzig 1991 2004 1 5 1 FC Lokomotive since 2003 04 2 Rivalries 3 Lokomotive Leipzig in European competitions 3 1 European record 4 Honours 4 1 National 4 1 1 Leagues 4 1 2 Cups 4 2 International 4 3 Regional 4 4 Youth 5 Managers 6 Current squad 7 Organizational history 8 References 9 External linksHistory Edit1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig claims to be the successor to the VfB Leipzig and SC Sportbruder Leipzig established in 1896 and 1893 respectively and to be therefore one of the oldest clubs of the German Football Association However they are not nominal successors In 2018 1 FC Lokomotive announced a merger with the formally extant but bankrupt and dormant VfB Leipzig in order to be entitled to the forerunner s titles 1 Due to the significant breaks and turmoils in the club s history especially during the post World War II era many fans identify 1966 as the year of establishment rather than 1893 VfB Leipzig 1893 1946 Edit The club was formed as VfB Leipzig on 13 May 1896 out of the football department of the gymnastics club Allgemeine Turnverein 1845 Leipzig However the club laid claim to an earlier date of origin by reaching back to a club that was merged with VfB Leipzig in 1898 the SC Sportbruder Leipzig which was one of four football clubs formed in Leipzig in 1893 Following the merger with SC Sportbruder Leipzig the club competed under the name VfB Sportbruder 1893 Leipzig VfB Sportbruder 1893 Leipzig was one of the original 86 teams that came together in the city on 28 January 1900 to form the German Football Association DFB On 2 May 1900 the Sportbruder 1893 part of the name was dropped and the team became again known as VfB Leipzig The team that won the first German league championship in 1903 Eintritts Karte Fussballwettspiel um die Meisterschaft von Deutschland Pfingstsonntag 31 Mai 1903 Nachm 4 Uhr Exerzierplatz Altona VfB Leipzig were immediately successful at their chosen sport and made their way to the first German national championship final held in 1903 Their opponents were DFC Prag a German Jewish side from Prague which was then part of Austria Hungary The DFB had invited German clubs of this sort from other countries in order to boost numbers in their new national association DFC Prag had made their way to the final under circumstances that had allowed them to avoid playing a single playoff match while VfB Leipzig had come through some hard fought matches Arriving in Hamburg for the match the heavily favoured Pragers took themselves off on an ill advised pub crawl the night before the contest and so arrived on the pitch in less than ideal match shape The contest was delayed by half an hour as officials scrambled to find a football that was in good condition The host FC 93 Altona Hamburg provided a new ball and 11 minutes in DFC Prag scored the first goal At the end of the first half the score stood at 1 1 but VfB Leipzig then pulled away to emerge as the first winners of the Viktoria Meisterschaftstrophae Victoria Championship Trophy representative of German football supremacy on the strength of a decisive 7 2 victory VfB Leipzig played themselves into another final appearance in 1904 but the match was never contested A protest by FV Karlsruhe over their disputed semi final with Britannia Berlin was never resolved and the DFB called off the final only hours before its scheduled start There would be no champion that year The following season VfB Leipzig found themselves unable to cover the expense of travelling to participate in their scheduled first round playoff match and so were eliminated from that year s competition However they did go on to raise the Viktoria again in 1906 and 1913 and also played in the 1911 and 1914 finals In the period leading up to World War II VfB Leipzig was unable to repeat its early success Gyula Kertesz coached the side from 1932 33 2 After the reorganization of German football leagues under the Third Reich in 1933 the club found itself in Gauliga Sachsen one of the 16 upper tier divisions While they earned strong results within their own division they were unable to advance in the playoff rounds In 1937 they captured the Tschammerpokal known today as the DFB Pokal in a match against Schalke 04 the dominant side of the era Post war turmoil Edit Historical chart of Lokomotive Leipzig league performance 1 Lok Leipzig team photo 23 August 1983 The club like most other organizations in Germany including sports and football clubs was dissolved by the occupying Allied authorities in the aftermath of the war Club members reconstituted the team in 1946 as SG Probstheida under the auspices of the occupying Soviets After playing as BSG Erich Zeigner Probstheida and then BSG Einheit Ost the club merged with sports club SC Rotation Leipzig in 1954 and played in the DDR Oberliga East Germany s top flight league but earned only mediocre results In 1963 the city of Leipzig s two most important sports clubs SC Rotation and SC Lokomotive Leipzig were merged resulting in the founding of two new sides SC Leipzig and BSG Chemie Leipzig 1 FC Lokomotive 1966 1990 Edit East German football went through a general reorganization in 1965 creating football clubs as centres of high level football during which the football department of SC Leipzig was separated from the sports club and reformed into football club 1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig while rival Chemie Leipzig continued as a Betriebssportgemeinschaft BSG or corporate team Like most East German clubs it was assigned to a publicly owned enterprise as its sponsor In the case of Lokomotive the providing enterprise was Deutsche Reichsbahn the East German state railways hence the name The club s fortunes improved somewhat as they almost always finished well up the league table but they were unable to capture the top honour in the DDR Oberliga with losing final appearances in 1967 1986 and 1988 Lok earned a clutch of East German Cups FDGB Pokal with victories in 1976 1981 1986 and 1987 against failed appearances in the Cup final in 1970 1973 and 1977 They also won the UEFA Intertoto Cup in 1966 and made an appearance in the 1987 final of the European Cup Winners Cup falling 0 1 to Johan Cruyff s Ajax after a Marco van Basten goal VfB Leipzig 1991 2004 Edit The re unification in 1990 was followed by the merger of the football leagues of the two Germanies 3 a year later A poor season led to a seventh place finish in the transitional league but an unexpectedly strong playoff propelled the club into the 2 Bundesliga 1 FC Lokomotive grasped at their former glory by reclaiming the name VfB Leipzig A third place finish in 1993 advanced the team to the top flight Bundesliga where they finished last in the 1994 season The new VfB began a steady slide down through the 2 Bundesliga into the Regionalliga Nordost III by 1998 and then further still to the NOFV Oberliga Sud IV by 2001 They were bankrupted in 2004 their results were annulled and the club was dissolved 1 FC Lokomotive since 2003 04 Edit In late 2003 the club was re established by a group of fans as 1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig The renewed side had to start in the lowest league eleventh tier 3 Kreisklasse Staffel 2 in 2004 05 Even so they continued to receive solidly enthusiastic fan support their match against Eintracht Grossdeuben s second team in the Leipzig Zentralstadion on 9 October 2004 broke the world record for lower league attendance with 12 421 spectators Thanks to a merger with SSV Torgau the club could play in the seventh tier Bezirksklasse Leipzig Staffel 2 in 2005 06 Finishing this league as champions the team qualified for the sixth tier Bezirksliga In 2006 1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig also played a friendly match against FC United of Manchester 4 4 and qualified for the 2006 07 Landespokal by winning the Bezirkspokal 1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig finished as champions of their group and were promoted to the fifth tier Landesliga Sachsen Group for the 2007 08 season The club finished second to Erzgebirge Aue and missed out on direct promotion to the NOFV Oberliga Sud by two points in the 2007 08 season It still had the chance to regain Oberliga status through a relegation play off with Schonberg winning the first leg 2 1 at Schonberg In the return leg in front of almost 10 000 spectators the club lost 0 1 but still gained Oberliga promotion via the away goals rule 4 1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig finished the Oberliga in third place in 2008 09 12th in 2009 10 and eighth in 2010 11 1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig was promoted to Regionalliga Nordost after finishing Oberliga sixth due to the reserve teams of FC Rot Weiss Erfurt Dynamo Dresden and FC Carl Zeiss Jena being ineligible for promotion Lokomotive finished in tenth place in the 2012 13 season but were relegated to Oberliga Nordost after finishing 15th in 2013 14 5 6 The club stayed in contention for promotion back up to the Regionalliga during the 2014 15 season having hired former German international Mario Basler as director of sports in early 2015 In the final match of the season Lok supporters stormed the field after their club had fallen behind 2 0 forcing the match to be abandoned and the club to finish outside of the promotion ranks 7 The club finished in first place in the southern group of the NOFV Oberliga and returned to the Regionalliga Nordost for the 2016 17 season Rivalries EditThe club s fans share a fierce and often violent rivalry with the supporters of Chemie Leipzig When both teams met in the quarter finals of the Sachsenpokal in 2016 German daily newspaper Die Welt called the match the German hooligan summit 8 An additional reason for the enmity between some fan groups namely their ultras is a political one Whereas certain Chemie fan clubs express left wing and anti fascist political views Lok has vocal supporters from the right and far right of the political spectrum 9 10 Lok also have lesser local rivalry with RB Leipzig Lokomotive Leipzig in European competitions EditSeason Competition Round Nation Club Score1963 64 a Inter Cities Fairs Cup 1R Ujpesti Dozsa 0 0 2 31964 65 a Inter Cities Fairs Cup 1R Wiener Sport Club 1 2 0 11965 66 a Inter Cities Fairs Cup 2R Leeds United 1 2 0 01966 67 Inter Cities Fairs Cup 1R Djurgardens IF 3 1 2 12R RFC Liege 0 0 2 11 8 Benfica 3 1 1 21 4 Kilmarnock 1 0 0 21967 68 Inter Cities Fairs Cup 1R Linfield 5 1 0 12R Vojvodina 0 0 0 21968 69 Inter Cities Fairs Cup 1R KB Walkover2R Hibernian 1 3 0 11973 74 UEFA Cup 1R Torino 2 1 2 12R Wolverhampton Wanderers 3 0 1 41 8 Fortuna Dusseldorf 1 2 3 01 4 Ipswich Town 0 1 1 0 4 3 a p 1 2 Tottenham Hotspur 1 2 0 21976 77 UEFA Cup Winners Cup 1R Hearts 2 0 1 51977 78 UEFA Cup Winners Cup 1R Coleraine 4 1 2 21 8 Real Betis 1 1 1 21978 79 UEFA Cup 1R Arsenal 0 3 1 41981 82 UEFA Cup Winners Cup Q Politehnica Timișoara 0 2 5 01R Swansea City 1 0 2 11 8 Velez Mostar 1 1 1 1 a e t 4 1 p 1 4 Barcelona 0 3 2 11982 83 UEFA Cup 1R Viking 0 1 3 21983 84 UEFA Cup 1R Bordeaux 3 2 4 02R Werder Bremen 1 0 1 11 8 Sturm Graz 0 2 1 01984 85 UEFA Cup 1R Lillestrom 7 0 0 32R Spartak Moscow 1 1 0 21985 86 UEFA Cup 1R Coleraine 1 1 5 02R Milan 0 2 3 11986 87 UEFA Cup Winners Cup 1R Glentoran 1 1 2 01 8 Rapid Wien 1 1 2 11 4 Sion 2 0 0 01 2 Bordeaux 1 0 0 1 a p Final Ajax 0 11987 88 UEFA Cup Winners Cup 1R Marseille 0 0 0 11988 89 UEFA Cup 1R Aarau 3 0 4 02R Napoli 1 1 0 2 a b c Participated as part of sports club SC Leipzig European record Edit Competition RecordG W D L Win UEFA Cup 32 15 4 13 0 46 88UEFA Cup Winners Cup 25 10 8 7 0 40 00Inter Cities Fairs Cup a 22 8 4 10 0 36 36Total 79 33 16 30 0 41 77 Participated 1963 1966 as part of sports club SC Leipzig Honours EditNational Edit Leagues Edit German Championship Winners 1903 a 1906 a 1913 a Runners up 1904 a uncontested 1911 a 1914 a DDR Oberliga Runners up 1966 67 1985 86 1987 88 a b c d e f Won by VfB Leipzig Cups Edit DFB Pokal Winners 1936 a FDGB Pokal Winners 1975 76 1980 81 1985 86 1986 87 Runners up 1958 b 1963 64 c 1969 70 1972 73 1976 77 Won by VfB Leipzig SC Lokomotive Leipzig SC Leipzig International Edit UEFA Cup Winners Cup Runners up 1986 87 Lost 0 1 to AFC Ajax Intertoto Cup Winners 1965 66 Runners up 1964 65 a Group Runners up 1967 UEFA Cup Semi finalist 1973 74 Won by SC Leipzig Regional Edit Central German football championship I Winners 11 1903 a 1904 a 1906 a 1907 a 1910 a 1911 a 1913 a 1918 a 1920 a 1925 a 1927 a Runners up 1914 a 1923 a 1930 a Gauliga Sachsen I Runners up 1933 34 a 1938 39 a Regionalliga Nordost IV Winners 2019 20 NOFV Oberliga Sud V Winners 2015 16 Runners up 1998 99 a 1999 2000 b 2000 01 Sachsenliga VI Winners 1998 b Saxony Cup Winners 1995 96 b 2020 21 2022 23 Runners up 2016 17 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Won by VfB Leipzig a b c Won by reserve team Youth Edit East German Junior Championship de a Winners 1961 b 1971 1974 1976 1977 Runners up 1964 c 1972 1982 East German Youth Championship de d Winners 1969 1971 1979 1981 1984 record Runners up 1966 1970 1978 1980 East German Junior Cup Junge Welt Pokal de a Winners 1971 1974 1975 1988 East German Youth Cup Youth FDGB Pokal d Winners 1959 b 1968 a b Corresponds to U19 level a b Won by SC Rotation Leipzig Won by SC Leipzig a b Corresponds to U17 level Managers EditBSG Leipzig Ost Rudolf Walseck 1951 1952 Otto Winter 1952 1954 Arthur Fischer 1953 1954 SC Rotation Leipzig Heinz Krugel 1954 1956 Werner Welzel 1956 1959 Martin Brunnert 1959 1960 Martin Schwendler 1961 1963 SC Leipzig Rudolf Krause 1963 1965 Gunter Konzack 1965 1966 1 FC Lok Leipzig Hans Studener 1966 1969 Kurt Holke 1969 1971 Horst Scherbaum 1971 1976 Manfred Pfeifer 1976 1978 Heinz Joerk 1978 1979 Harro Miller 1979 1985 Hans Ulrich Uli Thomale 1985 February 1990 Gunter Bohme February 1990 27 May 1991 VfB Leipzig Jurgen Sundermann 28 May 1991 30 June 1993 Bernd Stange 1 July 1993 21 February 1994 Jurgen Sundermann 22 February 1994 8 April 1994 Damian Halata 9 April 1994 30 June 1994 Tony Woodcock 1 July 1994 30 October 1994 August Gustl Starek 31 October 1994 30 May 1996 Damian Halata 1 June 1996 30 June 1996 Sigfried Siggi Held 1 July 1996 7 October 1997 Damian Halata 8 October 1997 30 June 1998 Hans Ulrich Uli Thomale 1 July 1998 28 March 1999 Dragoslav Stepanovic 29 March 1999 29 August 1999 Joachim Steffens 30 August 1999 22 July 2001 Hans Jurgen Dixie Dorner 23 July 2001 26 March 2003 Detlef Schossler 27 March 2003 3 June 2003 Hermann Andreev 24 June 2003 19 March 2004 Michael Breitkopf and Jorg Engelmann 20 March 2004 22 April 2004 Mike Sadlo 23 April 2004 30 June 2004 Player manager1 FC Lok Leipzig Rainer Lisiewicz 1 July 2004 12 May 2009 Jorg Seydler 12 May 2009 29 November 2009 Uwe Trommer 29 November 2009 30 June 2010 Caretaker Joachim Steffens 1 July 2010 7 June 2011 Mike Sadlo 7 June 2011 7 December 2011 Willi Kronhardt 3 January 2012 30 June 2012 Marco Rose 1 July 2012 30 June 2013 Carsten Hansel 1 July 2013 23 September 2013 Heiko Scholz 8 October 2013 23 September 2018 Bjorn Joppe 27 September 2018 17 December 2018 Rainer Lisiewicz 18 December 2018 19 October 2019 Wolfgang Wolf 20 October 2019 30 June 2020 Almedin Civa since 1 July 2020 Current squad EditAs of 10 August 2022Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player1 GK GER Isa Dogan2 DF KOR Eun soo Gong3 DF GER Mike Eglseder5 DF GER David Urban6 MF GER Zak Paulo Piplica7 FW SRB Bogdan Rangelov8 MF GER Farid Abderrahmane9 FW GER Osman Atilgan13 FW GER Djamal Ziane15 DF GER Linus Zimmer17 MF CRO Antonio Verinac No Pos Nation Player18 DF GER Leon Heynke19 DF GER Eric Voufack22 MF GER Maik Salewski23 MF GER Sascha Pfeffer24 DF GER Luca Sirch27 FW GER Theo Ogbidi30 GK GER Dennis Dickmann31 MF GER Riccardo Grym32 MF GER Julian Weigel34 FW GER Tobias Dombrowa44 GK GER Niclas MullerOrganizational history Edit1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig has undergone several reorganizations during its history and has taken several different forms and names The club was a football department of sports clubs SC Rotation Leipzig and later SC Leipzig before being reorganized as football club 1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig in 1966 Date Name Note13 May 1896 VfB Leipzig15 June 1898 VfB 1893 Sportbruder Leipzig Merger with SC Sportbruder Leipzig founded on 11 November 1893 2 November 1900 VfB Leipzig The name 1893 Sportbruder was dropped 1946 SG Probstheida VfB Lepzig was dissolved in 1946 The remains were reorganized as SG Probstheida 31 July 1950 BSG Erich Zeigner Probstheida The club was renamed 1953 BSG Einheit Ost The club was again renamed November 1954 SC Rotation LeipzigJuly 1963 SC Leipzig20 January 1966 1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig Football department of SC Leipzig was reorganized as a football club 1 July 1991 VfB Leipzig Renamed 10 December 2003 1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig Refounded as 1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig VfB Leipzig became defunct on 1 July 2004 References Edit Lok Leipzig Fusion mit VfB ist naher geruckt Lok Leipzig Merger with VfB is closer fussball de in German Deutscher Fussball Bund 28 November 2018 Archived from the original on 30 November 2018 Retrieved 11 November 2011 Gyula Kertesz worldfootball net Archived from the original on 3 October 2020 Retrieved 16 September 2020 JOACHIM REMAK Two Germanies and Then Archived 3 June 2020 at the Wayback Machine Journal of International Affairs Ruckspiel Aufstiegs Relegation zur Oberliga Saison 2007 2008 Lok Leipzig Archived from the original on 15 May 2008 Retrieved 23 June 2008 Das deutsche Fussball Archiv Das deutsche Fussball Archiv in German Archived from the original on 24 February 2016 Retrieved 3 August 2015 1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig fussball de in German Deutscher Fussball Bund Archived from the original on 10 July 2015 Retrieved 3 August 2015 Lok Leipzig Spielabbruch nach Platzsturm Lok Leipzig Match cancelled after pitch invasion kicker in German Nuremberg Olympia Verlag 14 June 2015 Archived from the original on 9 November 2017 Retrieved 3 August 2015 Wockener Lutz 12 November 2016 Lok vs Chemie Leipzig Angst vor dem deutschen Hooligan Gipfel am Sonntag Fear of the German hooligan summit on Sunday Die Welt in German Berlin Axel Springer SE ISSN 0173 8437 Archived from the original on 15 February 2020 Retrieved 2 June 2017 St Pauli politics and fighting good and bad FourFourTwo Bath Future 26 December 2009 ISSN 1355 0276 Archived from the original on 20 January 2018 Retrieved 2 June 2017 At Leipzig right wing supporters of Lok Leipzig prey on left wing supporters of Chemie Leipzig Krauss Bastian 14 November 2016 Wie Antifa und Neonazis ihren politischen Kampf im Leipziger Derby austragen How Antifa and Neo Nazis carry out their political fight in the Leipzig derby Vice News in German Archived from the original on 11 November 2019 Retrieved 2 June 2017 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig Official website The Abseits Guide to German Soccer Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1 FC Lokomotive Leipzig amp oldid 1159928635, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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