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Wuppertaler SV

Wuppertaler SV is a German association football club located in Wuppertal, North Rhine-Westphalia. The city was founded in the year of 1880 by the union of a number of smaller towns including Elberfeld, Barmen, Vohwinkel, Cronenberg and Ronsdorf – each with its own football club. Wuppertal Sport Verein was formed on 8.July 1954 out of the merger of TSG Vohwinkel and SSV Wuppertal and was later joined by Borussia Wuppertal to form the present day club. In addition to the football side, today's sports club includes departments for boxing, gymnastics, handball, and track and field.

Wuppertaler SV
Full nameWuppertaler Sport-Verein e.V.
Nickname(s)WSV, Die Löwen (The Lions)
Founded
  • 1880 as Gymnastic Club
  • 1904 as Football Club
GroundStadion am Zoo
Capacity23,067
ChairmanAlexander Eichner
ManagerHüzeyfe Doğan
LeagueRegionalliga West (IV)
2022–232nd

History edit

Early history of predecessors TSG and SSV edit

TSG was active as a gymnastics club as early as 1880 while the roots of'SSV go back to the 1904 establishment of the winter sports club Bergischer Wintersport-und SV 04 Elberfeld, which was known simply as SSV Elberfeld by 1905. This club took part in the early rounds of the national finals in 1930–31 and went on to play in the Gauliga Niederrhein, one of sixteen top-flight divisions formed in the 1933 re-organization of German football under the Third Reich, for two seasons in 1936–37 and 1937–38. The side was re-christened SSV 04 Wuppertal the following year and remained in the Gauliga another two seasons until relegated in 1940. They returned to first tier football in 1941 and earned a strong third-place finish, but left the division part way through the 1942–43 season because they were unable to continue to field a full side as a result of wartime manpower shortages.

Post war play and the formation of WSV edit

 
Historical chart of Wuppertal league performance

After World War II, TSG Vohwinkel emerged as the stronger side and took up play in the first division Oberliga West in 1947 where they would compete until being relegated after a 14th-place finish in 1950.

Both clubs were part of the 2. Oberliga West (II) through the early 1950s, SSV under the guidance of coach Fritz Szepan, one-time star of Schalke 04 which had dominated German football from the mid-1930s to the mid-1940s. The union of the two associations that created "Wuppertaler SV" in 1954 paid almost immediate dividends as the combined side vaulted to the top and captured the division title in 1954–55. Wuppertal's return to the Oberliga was less successful despite the presence of players such as rising star Horst Szymaniak and Austria's international Erich Probst. The club could not escape the lower half of the table and was relegated following a next-to-last place finish in 1958.

WSV returned to the top flight for the 1962–63 campaign, which was the last Oberliga season before the creation of the new first division Bundesliga. Although they had a poor regular season, the team enjoyed a good DFB-Pokal run, advancing to the semi-finals where they lost a closely fought match (0–1) to first division side and eventual cup winners Hamburger SV before a record hometown crowd of 40,000.

Rise to the Bundesliga edit

The following year, the club became part of the Regionalliga West, one of the five divisions in the newly established second-tier circuit. Wuppertal delivered a solid performance, finishing second in their division behind Alemannia Aachen. They remained competitive throughout the remainder of the 1960s and into the early 1970s. In 1972, they achieved a breakthrough by winning the Regionalliga West title and subsequently triumphing in the Bundesliga promotion playoffs. WSV dominated their opposition, winning all eight of their promotion round matches, a remarkable feat in the 11 seasons played under this playoff format.

Bundesliga 1972–75 edit

Die Löwen played three seasons in the top flight with their debut 1972–73 season being their most successful. While they never seriously challenged eventual champions Bayern Munich for the title, newly promoted WSV spent five weeks in second place before finally settling for a fourth-place finish – a result that has only been bettered twice by teams newly promoted to the Bundesliga.

The fourth-place finish earned the club a place in the 1973–74 UEFA Cup tournament the season after. They went out in the first round 6:8 on aggregate (1–4, 5–4) to Polish side Ruch Chorzów. In the league that season they only escaped relegation on goal difference after an 82nd minute away goal in the final match of their campaign in Stuttgart.

Widely regarded as having too old a roster to compete, in the third top tier season the club stumbled to an ignominious last place finish on 12 points. This stands as the second-worst Bundesliga result in history, only four points better than the Tasmania Berlin side of 1965–66. The only bright spot of this poor campaign was a 3–1 victory over the Bayern Munich side built around Franz Beckenbauer that dominated European football at the time.

Post-Bundesliga (1975) to 2013 edit

After the 1975 relegation from the Bundesliga, Wuppertal next played five seasons in the second tier 2. Bundesliga until 1980. From 1980 the played a dozen seasons in the Amateur Oberliga Nordrhein (III). A series of strong finishes in the late 80s eventually led to a return to the 2. Bundesliga for the 1992–93 and 1993–94 seasons before relegation once again to third tier football in the Regionalliga West/Südwest.

The club had a close brush with bankruptcy in 1998 and the next season was sent down to the Oberliga Nordrhein (IV) for failing to pay their dues. By 2003 they had earned a return to the Regionalliga Nord (III).

In 2004, the club merged with Borussia Wuppertal to become Wuppertaler SV Borussia adopting the red and blue colours and logo of the more senior WSV. Borussia had been formed in 1976 through the union of SV Germania 1907 Wuppertal and VfL 1912 Wuppertal. Like SSV, Germania was also the successor to an Elberfeld club – Germania Elberfeld – which took part in the preliminary rounds of the national finals in the early 30s. While "Borussia" quickly developed into a competitive side, they were not financially strong enough to support their ambition and joined forces with WSV in hopes of returning the city to football prominence. From supporter's side, the additional name Borussia has been constantly rejected, due to the club's history and identification issues. This controversy and the recent merger has been frequently discussed at annual meetings for almost nine years before the era of chairman Runge ended in 2013.

In the 2007–08 DFB-Pokal (German Cup) tournament, Wuppertaler SV reached the Round of 16 after beating Erzgebirge Aue (4–3 on penalties) and Hertha BSC Berlin (2–0). They were put out by eventual cup winners Bayern Munich (2–5). Because of the small capacity of Stadion am Zoo, the match was played at Arena AufSchalke in Gelsenkirchen.

The era after chairman Runge edit

At an annual meeting on 24 May 2013 the club's name returned to Wuppertaler SV. A new administrative board was formed by the 13 members of Initiative WSV 2.0 of which Alexander Eichner was a member of. President Klaus Mathies resigned from this position to allow a smooth transition and for Eichner to take over. At a news conference on 4 June 2013 it was announced that the club was bankrupt, which resulted in an enforced relegation. Wuppertaler SV played in the fifth division, the Oberliga Niederrhein, until 2015–16 when a league championship took the club back up to the Regionalliga.

Recent seasons edit

Year Division Level Position
1999–2000 Oberliga Nordrhein IV 1st
2000–01 Oberliga Nordrhein 2nd
2001–02 Oberliga Nordrhein 2nd
2002–03 Oberliga Nordrhein 1st ↑
2003–04 Regionalliga Nord III 4th
2004–05 Regionalliga Nord 5th
2005–06 Regionalliga Nord 8th
2006–07 Regionalliga Nord 5th
2007–08 Regionalliga Nord 6th
2008–09 3. Liga 14th
2009–10 3. Liga 20th ↓
2010–11 Regionalliga West IV 8th
2011–12 Regionalliga West 5th
2012–13 Regionalliga West 15th ↓
2013–14 Oberliga Niederrhein V 3rd
2014–15 Oberliga Niederrhein 2nd
2015–16 Oberliga Niederrhein 1st ↑
2016–17[1] Regionalliga West IV 11th
2017–18 Regionalliga West 3rd
2018–19 Regionalliga West 10th
2019–20 Regionalliga West 13th
2020–21 Regionalliga West 12th
2021–22 Regionalliga West 3rd
2022–23 Regionalliga West 2nd

Honours edit

The club's honours:

Fans edit

Despite the club's relative poor on field performance, the club draws big support. There are currently 18 supporter groups: Red Blue 1954, Treue Löwen, Die Wuppys 04, Die Falken, Teamgeist, Pflegestufe 4, Schwebende Jonges, Zooalarm Wuppertal, Red Blue Fanatics, Opus W, Sektion Gegengerade, Tradition 1954, Wupper-Piraten, WSV Fans Mittelrhein, Wupperlümmel's, Die Mecker Oppas, Wupperschlümpfe and Debakel Arrenberg.[2]

Many of the club's fans sympathise with Schalke 04, and have a long-standing friendship with Lok Leipzig; in the past the fans maintained somewhat amiable relations with fans of Hertha Berlin.[3] Rot-Weiss Essen are the fiercest rivals,[4][5] Rot-Weiß Oberhausen and Alemannia Aachen[6] are the other fierce rivals, as are VfL Bochum and Fortuna Düsseldorf.

Current squad edit

As of 3 February 2024[7]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF   GER Ilhan Altuntas
3 DF   GER Migel-Max Schmeling
5 MF   GER Steve Tunga
6 MF   GER Tom Geerkens (on loan from Arminia Bielefeld)
7 MF   GER Semir Saric
8 MF   GER Lukas Demming
9 MF   GER Kevin Hagemann
11 FW   SRB Damjan Marčeta
12 GK   GER Mert Temiz
13 MF   GER Jef Tchouangue
14 DF   GER Philipp Hanke
17 DF   TUR Mert Göçkan
18 MF   GER Tim Korzuschek
No. Pos. Nation Player
19 FW   GER Phil Beckhoff
20 MF   GER Tobias Peitz
21 MF   TUR Hüseyin Bulut
22 GK   POL Krystian Woźniak
23 MF   GER Aday Ercan
25 DF   GER Lion Schweers
27 DF   POL Kevin Pytlik
29 DF   GER Davide Itter
30 DF   GER Niklas Dams
33 MF   GER Marco Terrazzino
34 GK   GER Paul Grave (on loan from VfL Bochum)
35 FW   CUW Charlison Benschop

Notable players edit

Track and field edit

SSV Wuppertal brought their track and field department to the 1954 union that formed Wuppertaler SV. Athletes from the club have competed in the European and World championships as well as the Olympics. Some notable athletes from the club are:

  • Manfred Kinder, 400m-Runner, European Champion, Olympic medalist
  • Maria Jeibmann, 400m-Runner, German champion
  • Manfred Knickenberg, 100m-/200m-Runner, Olympic participant, European championship medalist, German champion
  • Maren Collin, 100m-/200m-Runner, European championship runner-up, German champion
  • Ruth Limbach, 100m-/200m-Runner, German championship runner-up (1949)

Former coaches edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Reviersport Information (in german)".
  2. ^ "Rot-Blau.com - Wuppertaler SV". www.rot-blau.com.
  3. ^ "Wuppertaler SV". www.abseits-soccer.com.
  4. ^ "Wuppertaler SV - Rot-Weiss Essen 24.11.2012". Ultras-Tifo.
  5. ^ "Rot-Weiss Essen - Wuppertal 17.03.2012". Ultras-Tifo.
  6. ^ "Wuppertaler SV - Alemannia Aachen 20.7.2014". Ultras-Tifo.
  7. ^ "Kader" (in German). Wuppertaler SV 1984. Retrieved 22 August 2023.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Official Facebook site
  • The Abseits Guide to German Soccer (Wuppertaler SV)
  • The Abseits Guide to German Soccer (Borussia Wuppertal)

wuppertaler, german, association, football, club, located, wuppertal, north, rhine, westphalia, city, founded, year, 1880, union, number, smaller, towns, including, elberfeld, barmen, vohwinkel, cronenberg, ronsdorf, each, with, football, club, wuppertal, spor. Wuppertaler SV is a German association football club located in Wuppertal North Rhine Westphalia The city was founded in the year of 1880 by the union of a number of smaller towns including Elberfeld Barmen Vohwinkel Cronenberg and Ronsdorf each with its own football club Wuppertal Sport Verein was formed on 8 July 1954 out of the merger of TSG Vohwinkel and SSV Wuppertal and was later joined by Borussia Wuppertal to form the present day club In addition to the football side today s sports club includes departments for boxing gymnastics handball and track and field Wuppertaler SVFull nameWuppertaler Sport Verein e V Nickname s WSV Die Lowen The Lions Founded1880 as Gymnastic Club 1904 as Football ClubGroundStadion am ZooCapacity23 067ChairmanAlexander EichnerManagerHuzeyfe DoganLeagueRegionalliga West IV 2022 232ndHome coloursAway colours Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history of predecessors TSG and SSV 1 2 Post war play and the formation of WSV 1 3 Rise to the Bundesliga 1 4 Bundesliga 1972 75 1 5 Post Bundesliga 1975 to 2013 1 6 The era after chairman Runge 2 Recent seasons 3 Honours 4 Fans 5 Current squad 6 Notable players 7 Track and field 8 Former coaches 9 References 10 External linksHistory editEarly history of predecessors TSG and SSV edit TSG was active as a gymnastics club as early as 1880 while the roots of SSV go back to the 1904 establishment of the winter sports club Bergischer Wintersport und SV 04 Elberfeld which was known simply as SSV Elberfeld by 1905 This club took part in the early rounds of the national finals in 1930 31 and went on to play in the Gauliga Niederrhein one of sixteen top flight divisions formed in the 1933 re organization of German football under the Third Reich for two seasons in 1936 37 and 1937 38 The side was re christened SSV 04 Wuppertal the following year and remained in the Gauliga another two seasons until relegated in 1940 They returned to first tier football in 1941 and earned a strong third place finish but left the division part way through the 1942 43 season because they were unable to continue to field a full side as a result of wartime manpower shortages Post war play and the formation of WSV edit nbsp Historical chart of Wuppertal league performance After World War II TSG Vohwinkel emerged as the stronger side and took up play in the first division Oberliga West in 1947 where they would compete until being relegated after a 14th place finish in 1950 Both clubs were part of the 2 Oberliga West II through the early 1950s SSV under the guidance of coach Fritz Szepan one time star of Schalke 04 which had dominated German football from the mid 1930s to the mid 1940s The union of the two associations that created Wuppertaler SV in 1954 paid almost immediate dividends as the combined side vaulted to the top and captured the division title in 1954 55 Wuppertal s return to the Oberliga was less successful despite the presence of players such as rising star Horst Szymaniak and Austria s international Erich Probst The club could not escape the lower half of the table and was relegated following a next to last place finish in 1958 WSV returned to the top flight for the 1962 63 campaign which was the last Oberliga season before the creation of the new first division Bundesliga Although they had a poor regular season the team enjoyed a good DFB Pokal run advancing to the semi finals where they lost a closely fought match 0 1 to first division side and eventual cup winners Hamburger SV before a record hometown crowd of 40 000 Rise to the Bundesliga edit The following year the club became part of the Regionalliga West one of the five divisions in the newly established second tier circuit Wuppertal delivered a solid performance finishing second in their division behind Alemannia Aachen They remained competitive throughout the remainder of the 1960s and into the early 1970s In 1972 they achieved a breakthrough by winning the Regionalliga West title and subsequently triumphing in the Bundesliga promotion playoffs WSV dominated their opposition winning all eight of their promotion round matches a remarkable feat in the 11 seasons played under this playoff format Bundesliga 1972 75 edit Die Lowen played three seasons in the top flight with their debut 1972 73 season being their most successful While they never seriously challenged eventual champions Bayern Munich for the title newly promoted WSV spent five weeks in second place before finally settling for a fourth place finish a result that has only been bettered twice by teams newly promoted to the Bundesliga The fourth place finish earned the club a place in the 1973 74 UEFA Cup tournament the season after They went out in the first round 6 8 on aggregate 1 4 5 4 to Polish side Ruch Chorzow In the league that season they only escaped relegation on goal difference after an 82nd minute away goal in the final match of their campaign in Stuttgart Widely regarded as having too old a roster to compete in the third top tier season the club stumbled to an ignominious last place finish on 12 points This stands as the second worst Bundesliga result in history only four points better than the Tasmania Berlin side of 1965 66 The only bright spot of this poor campaign was a 3 1 victory over the Bayern Munich side built around Franz Beckenbauer that dominated European football at the time Post Bundesliga 1975 to 2013 edit After the 1975 relegation from the Bundesliga Wuppertal next played five seasons in the second tier 2 Bundesliga until 1980 From 1980 the played a dozen seasons in the Amateur Oberliga Nordrhein III A series of strong finishes in the late 80s eventually led to a return to the 2 Bundesliga for the 1992 93 and 1993 94 seasons before relegation once again to third tier football in the Regionalliga West Sudwest The club had a close brush with bankruptcy in 1998 and the next season was sent down to the Oberliga Nordrhein IV for failing to pay their dues By 2003 they had earned a return to the Regionalliga Nord III In 2004 the club merged with Borussia Wuppertal to become Wuppertaler SV Borussia adopting the red and blue colours and logo of the more senior WSV Borussia had been formed in 1976 through the union of SV Germania 1907 Wuppertal and VfL 1912 Wuppertal Like SSV Germania was also the successor to an Elberfeld club Germania Elberfeld which took part in the preliminary rounds of the national finals in the early 30s While Borussia quickly developed into a competitive side they were not financially strong enough to support their ambition and joined forces with WSV in hopes of returning the city to football prominence From supporter s side the additional name Borussia has been constantly rejected due to the club s history and identification issues This controversy and the recent merger has been frequently discussed at annual meetings for almost nine years before the era of chairman Runge ended in 2013 In the 2007 08 DFB Pokal German Cup tournament Wuppertaler SV reached the Round of 16 after beating Erzgebirge Aue 4 3 on penalties and Hertha BSC Berlin 2 0 They were put out by eventual cup winners Bayern Munich 2 5 Because of the small capacity of Stadion am Zoo the match was played at Arena AufSchalke in Gelsenkirchen The era after chairman Runge edit At an annual meeting on 24 May 2013 the club s name returned to Wuppertaler SV A new administrative board was formed by the 13 members of Initiative WSV 2 0 of which Alexander Eichner was a member of President Klaus Mathies resigned from this position to allow a smooth transition and for Eichner to take over At a news conference on 4 June 2013 it was announced that the club was bankrupt which resulted in an enforced relegation Wuppertaler SV played in the fifth division the Oberliga Niederrhein until 2015 16 when a league championship took the club back up to the Regionalliga Recent seasons editYear Division Level Position 1999 2000 Oberliga Nordrhein IV 1st 2000 01 Oberliga Nordrhein 2nd 2001 02 Oberliga Nordrhein 2nd 2002 03 Oberliga Nordrhein 1st 2003 04 Regionalliga Nord III 4th 2004 05 Regionalliga Nord 5th 2005 06 Regionalliga Nord 8th 2006 07 Regionalliga Nord 5th 2007 08 Regionalliga Nord 6th 2008 09 3 Liga 14th 2009 10 3 Liga 20th 2010 11 Regionalliga West IV 8th 2011 12 Regionalliga West 5th 2012 13 Regionalliga West 15th 2013 14 Oberliga Niederrhein V 3rd 2014 15 Oberliga Niederrhein 2nd 2015 16 Oberliga Niederrhein 1st 2016 17 1 Regionalliga West IV 11th 2017 18 Regionalliga West 3rd 2018 19 Regionalliga West 10th 2019 20 Regionalliga West 13th 2020 21 Regionalliga West 12th 2021 22 Regionalliga West 3rd 2022 23 Regionalliga West 2ndHonours editThe club s honours Regionalliga West Champions 1972 Oberliga Nordrhein IV Champions 1990 1992 2000 2003 Oberliga Niederrhein V Champions 2016 Lower Rhine Cup Winners 1981 1985 1999 2000 2005 2007 2021Fans editDespite the club s relative poor on field performance the club draws big support There are currently 18 supporter groups Red Blue 1954 Treue Lowen Die Wuppys 04 Die Falken Teamgeist Pflegestufe 4 Schwebende Jonges Zooalarm Wuppertal Red Blue Fanatics Opus W Sektion Gegengerade Tradition 1954 Wupper Piraten WSV Fans Mittelrhein Wupperlummel s Die Mecker Oppas Wupperschlumpfe and Debakel Arrenberg 2 Many of the club s fans sympathise with Schalke 04 and have a long standing friendship with Lok Leipzig in the past the fans maintained somewhat amiable relations with fans of Hertha Berlin 3 Rot Weiss Essen are the fiercest rivals 4 5 Rot Weiss Oberhausen and Alemannia Aachen 6 are the other fierce rivals as are VfL Bochum and Fortuna Dusseldorf Current squad editAs of 3 February 2024 7 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player 2 DF nbsp GER Ilhan Altuntas 3 DF nbsp GER Migel Max Schmeling 5 MF nbsp GER Steve Tunga 6 MF nbsp GER Tom Geerkens on loan from Arminia Bielefeld 7 MF nbsp GER Semir Saric 8 MF nbsp GER Lukas Demming 9 MF nbsp GER Kevin Hagemann 11 FW nbsp SRB Damjan Marceta 12 GK nbsp GER Mert Temiz 13 MF nbsp GER Jef Tchouangue 14 DF nbsp GER Philipp Hanke 17 DF nbsp TUR Mert Gockan 18 MF nbsp GER Tim Korzuschek No Pos Nation Player 19 FW nbsp GER Phil Beckhoff 20 MF nbsp GER Tobias Peitz 21 MF nbsp TUR Huseyin Bulut 22 GK nbsp POL Krystian Wozniak 23 MF nbsp GER Aday Ercan 25 DF nbsp GER Lion Schweers 27 DF nbsp POL Kevin Pytlik 29 DF nbsp GER Davide Itter 30 DF nbsp GER Niklas Dams 33 MF nbsp GER Marco Terrazzino 34 GK nbsp GER Paul Grave on loan from VfL Bochum 35 FW nbsp CUW Charlison BenschopNotable players edit nbsp Striker Gunter Meister Propper born 12 August 1941 played with Wuppertaler SV from 1970 79 and represents the club s golden era of the early 70s His 52 goals in the club s 1971 72 campaign set a second division record that still stands In 87 Bundesliga matches he scored 39 goals After retiring he settled in Wuppertal and has remained associated with the club nbsp Outside forward Horst Szymaniak who was with WSV from 1956 59 participated in two World Cups He is the only player from the club to be called to play for the national side while playing in Wuppertal where he earned 20 of his 43 caps He was one of the first German players to follow the big money to play professionally in Italy and won the European Champions Cup in 1964 with Inter Milan Szymaniak was also an unfortunate member of the worst ever Bundesliga side Tasmania 1900 Berlin nbsp While Erich Probst enjoyed only limited success during his stay in Wuppertal 1956 58 he made 19 appearances for the Austria national football team and participated in the World Cup 1954 where Austria finished third Probst scored six goals tying him for second place with two other players among goalscorers at the competition nbsp Alfred Coppi Beck 1955 58 capped once for Germany when with FC St Pauli nbsp Erich Haase 1956 68 played one international match for East Germany while with Turbine Halle nbsp Waldemar Ksienzyk 1992 94 played one international match for East Germany while with Dynamo Berlin nbsp Erich Ribbeck who later coached the German national team started his career with SSV and later played with WSV In his early days as a coach at Rot Weiss Essen he used Gunter Propper only rarely which caused that player to move on to Wuppertaler SV nbsp Mohammad Reza Adelkhani played the 1968 69 season in Wuppertal He joined Tehran club Esteghlal FC in 1973 and was capped 17 times for Iran nbsp Thomas Litjens nbsp Jose ValenciaTrack and field editSSV Wuppertal brought their track and field department to the 1954 union that formed Wuppertaler SV Athletes from the club have competed in the European and World championships as well as the Olympics Some notable athletes from the club are Manfred Kinder 400m Runner European Champion Olympic medalist Maria Jeibmann 400m Runner German champion Manfred Knickenberg 100m 200m Runner Olympic participant European championship medalist German champion Maren Collin 100m 200m Runner European championship runner up German champion Ruth Limbach 100m 200m Runner German championship runner up 1949 Former coaches editRaymond Schwab 1954 1956 Edmund Conen 1956 1957 Walter Werner 1957 Jupp Schmidt 1957 1958 Emil Melcher 1958 1959 Willibald Kress 1959 1961 Robert Gebhardt 1961 1965 Adi Preissler 1965 1967 Kuno Klotzer 1967 1968 Horst Buhtz 1968 1974 Janos Bedl 1974 1975 Diethelm Ferner 1975 1976 Herbert Burdenski 1976 1977 Erhard Ahmann 1977 Herbert Burdenski 1977 1978 Bernd Hoss 1978 1979 Rolf Muller 1979 1980 Heinz Lucas 1980 Rolf Muller 1980 1981 Kalli Hoffmann 1981 1982 Jonny Hey 1982 1983 Manfred Reichert 1983 Thomas Bartel 1983 Manfred Reichert 1983 1984 Detlef Pirsig 1984 1986 Gunter Propper 1986 Rolf Muller 1986 1989 Dieter Tartemann 1989 1990 Wolfgang Jerat 1990 1992 Gerd Vom Bruch 1992 1993 Michael Lorkowski 1993 1994 Dieter Tartemann 1994 Werner Fuchs 1994 1996 Wolfgang Jerat 1996 1997 Ali Hofer 1997 Rudi Gores 1997 1999 Roman Geschlecht 1999 Frantisek Straka 1999 2001 Jonny Hey 2001 2002 Georg Kress 2002 2004 Werner Kasper 2004 Uwe Fuchs 2005 2007 Wolfgang Jerat 1990 1992 Wolfgang Frank 2008 Christoph John 2008 Uwe Fuchs 2008 2010 Peter Radojewski interim 2010 Michael Damgen 2010 2011 Karsten Hutwelker 2011 Hans Gunter Bruns 2011 2012 Jorg Jung 2012 2013 Peter Radojewski 2013 Reinhold Fanz 2013 Peter Radojewski 2013 2014 Thomas Richter 2014 2015 Stefan Vollmerhausen 2015 2018 Christian Britscho 2018 Adrian Alipour 2018 2019 Andreas Zimmermann 2019 Alexander Voigt 2019 2020 Pascal Bieler 2020 Alexander Voigt 2020 Bjorn Mehnert 2020 References edit Reviersport Information in german Rot Blau com Wuppertaler SV www rot blau com Wuppertaler SV www abseits soccer com Wuppertaler SV Rot Weiss Essen 24 11 2012 Ultras Tifo Rot Weiss Essen Wuppertal 17 03 2012 Ultras Tifo Wuppertaler SV Alemannia Aachen 20 7 2014 Ultras Tifo Kader in German Wuppertaler SV 1984 Retrieved 22 August 2023 External links editOfficial website Official Facebook site The Abseits Guide to German Soccer Wuppertaler SV The Abseits Guide to German Soccer Borussia Wuppertal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wuppertaler SV amp oldid 1221885446, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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