FC Bayern Alzenau
Full name | Fußball-Club Bayern Alzenau/Ufr. 1920 e.V. | ||
---|---|---|---|
Founded | 27 March 1920 | ||
Ground | Sportzentrum am Prischoß | ||
Capacity | 5,113 | ||
Manager | Angelo BarlettaJochen Seitz | ||
League | Hessenliga (IV) | ||
2023–24 | Hessenliga, 12th | ||
|
FC Bayern Alzenau is a German football club based in Alzenau, Bavaria. They currently are in the Hessenliga.
History
[edit]The club was initially formed as Alzenauer Fußball Club and joined gymnastics club Turn- und Sport Alzenau as that club's football department on 16 September 1922 before again becoming independent in 1923 as FC Bayern Alzenau. After World War II the club was re-established as SKG Alzenau before again taking on its pre-war name in 1947.
Since 1983 the club has played as a fifth tier side, first in the Landesliga Bayern-Nord and later in the Landesliga Hessen-Süd. Like the nearby club Viktoria Aschaffenburg, FC Bayern Alzenau is a Bavarian side playing in the state league of Hesse against closer, neighbouring cities. This also reflects in part the history of the region, not traditionally part of Bavaria. The club slipped as low as the Bezirksliga Gelnhausen (VII) in 1998 before working its way back up. The team enjoyed its greatest sporting success with promotion to the Hessenliga (IV) in 2006 after a second place Landesliga finish and subsequent advance through the promotion playoffs.
In 2008–09, FC Bayern Alzenau achieved promotion to the Regionalliga Süd despite coming second behind SC Waldgirmes, as only two clubs applied for a Regionalliga license, Alzenau and Rot-Weiss Frankfurt.[1] Alzenau was unable to survive at this level however, coming last in the Regionalliga and being relegated immediately, back to the Hessenliga.[2]
After another promotion in 2011, back to the Regionalliga, the club was grouped into the new Regionalliga Südwest at the end of the 2011–12 season, a league which replaced the Regionalliga Süd in the region. At this level it lasted for only one season before being relegated back to the Hessenliga.
Honours
[edit] League[edit]
| Cup[edit]
|
Recent seasons
[edit]The recent season-by-season performance of the club:[3][4]
Year | Division | Tier | Position |
---|---|---|---|
2002–03 | Landesliga Hessen-Süd | V | 4th |
2003–04 | Landesliga Hessen-Süd | 4th | |
2004–05 | Landesliga Hessen-Süd | 2nd ↑ | |
2005–06 | Hessenliga | IV | 5th |
2006–07 | Hessenliga | 6th | |
2007–08 | Hessenliga | 7th | |
2008–09 | Hessenliga | V | 2nd ↑ |
2009–10 | Regionalliga Süd | IV | 16th ↓ |
2010–11 | Hessenliga | V | 1st ↑ |
2011–12 | Regionalliga Süd | IV | 18th |
2012–13 | Regionalliga Südwest | 19th ↓ | |
2013–14 | Hessenliga | V | 10th |
2014–15 | Hessenliga | 4th | |
2015–16 | Hessenliga | 15th | |
2016–17 | Hessenliga | 4th | |
2017–18 | Hessenliga | 2nd | |
2018–19 | Hessenliga | 2nd ↑ |
- With the introduction of the Regionalligas in 1994 and the 3. Liga in 2008 as the new third tier, below the 2. Bundesliga, all leagues below dropped one tier. In 2012, the number of Regionalligas was increased from three to five with all Regionalliga Süd clubs except the Bavarian ones entering the new Regionalliga Südwest.
↑ Promoted | ↓ Relegated |
References
[edit]- ^ FC Bayern Alzenau braucht noch vier Punkte Archived 30 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine FC Bayern Alzenau website – News, retrieved 2 June 2009
- ^ Regionalliga Süd 2009/2010 (in German) weltfussball.de, retrieved 7 March 2011
- ^ Das deutsche Fußball-Archiv (in German) Historical German domestic league tables
- ^ Fussball.de – Ergebnisse (in German) Tables and results of all German football leagues
External links
[edit]- Official website (in German)
- FC Bayern Alzenau profile at Weltfussball.de (in German)