Sportclub
Sperber von 1898 e. V. is a football club that was formed on September 27th
1898; going on to merge with FC Saxonia 1906 Hamburg to form SC Sperber-Saxonia
Hamburg in 1907. By 1909 the club independently returned to their original
title.
Along with
football, the club has other departments for gymnastics, heart sports, senior
sports, tennis and table tennis.
The club from
Alsterdorf district of Hamburg merged with other local clubs during both World
Wars. Between 1917 and 1919 an association with St. Georger FC, which then merged
in 1919 with Winterhude Eppendorfer TV to become VfTuR Hamburg.
The clubs
went their separate ways again in 1921. During World War Two St. Georger again
joined forces, followed in 1944-45 by the merger with Post SG Hamburg, HSV
Barmbek-Uhlenhorst and SV St. Georg to form KSG Alsterdorf.
During the
period under the Third Reich German football was divided into sixteen regional
top flight Gauliga. KSG were promoted to Gauliga Nordmark between 1934-35 and
1937 and then again from 1939 to 1941.
Promotion
was achieved again in 1942, this time to Gauliga Hamburg. Once back in
peacetime the clubs went their own way once more. Sperber became Amateurliga Hamburg runners-up in the 1956-57 season.
The team
missed out on promotion after going down to VfB Lübeck with Sperber’s side
built around the talents of Klaus "Micky" Neisner. The 1964-65
campaign also saw the club miss out on going up in the play-off rounds against Bremen
SV, SV Union Salzgitter and Heider SV.
However,
promotion was won in 1965-66 as 1. FC Wolfsburg were defeated as Sperber
progressed to Regionalliga Nord, which was the second tier of German football
at the time.
Former
Hamburger SV players Erwin Piechowiak, Horst Dehn and Peter Wulf joined up as
Sperber dreamed of a Bundesliga spot for a brief spell before being relegated
back to the Amateurliga in 1968-69.
The club
returned to Regionalliga Nord in 1969-70 before being relegated after a couple
of seasons as SC Sperber Hamburg to Fußball-Landesliga Hamburg, where the side narrowly
avoided relegation in 1974-75 and 1975-76.
This was
followed by a huge improvement with fourth and fifth placed finishes in 1976-77
1977-78 and then 1978-79 as the league was renamed Fußball-Verbandsliga Hamburg.
Three comfortable campaigns ensued before relegation was narrowly averted in
1982-83.
Normal
service was restored with Sperber going onto top seven finishes until escaping
relegation on goal difference in 1985-86; which was backed up by a fourth place
in 1986-87. A couple of seasons of bottom third endings and then a mid table
spot followed.
Sperber were
relegated in 1990-91 to Landesliga Hamburg Hansa. The club suffered further demotions
down to local football before climbing back to the Landesliga. However, Sperber
suffered another decline to find themselves in Bezirksliga Hamburg-Nord in 2006.
In 2008-09 Sperber
ended as runners-up, winning promotion through the play-offs to take up a place
in Landesliga Hamburg Hammonia from where they were transferred to the Hansa
Staffel after one year.
By the 2012-13
campaign Sperber were back in the Hammonia section where they put in three
seasons in the bottom half of the table. The club were demoted to Bezirksliga Nord at the end of the 2014-15 season; presumably
as some disciplinary measure?
After two
seasons finishing in mid table, Sperber narrowly averted another relegation in
2018-19 prior to finish bottom of the table the following season. The club awaited news of a possible relegation as the campaign was halted early owing to the Coronavirus outbreak.
SC Sperber
Hamburg will play in Hamburg Bezirksliga Nord in the 2019-20 season.
My visit
Thursday
14th March 2019
I’d just arrived
on a flight to a grey, wet and cold Hamburg Airport but I was still determined
to enjoy the afternoon before heading off to check in to my Altona hotel for a
three day stay. SC Sperber was the first port of call on my agenda.
To be honest
I was unaware of the club until I gave Google Maps a thorough look and then
cross checked any venue against club status and history. Sperber was definitely
worth a look, I reckoned; especially because of its handy location.
I knew that
Alsterdorf was just a few stops from the airport on the S Bahn and a change was
required at Ohldorf. Unfortunately, my bearings were still rusty, and I
travelled in the wrong direction after swapping and was going north until I
corrected myself at Kornweg.
Once outside
the Alsterdorf stop I quickly sussed that the Sport-Duwe-Stadion was virtually
next door on Heubergredder. I initially came across the smart clubhouse and
restaurant before finding the entrance to the car park behind where the ground
was located.
Another
building across the car park appeared to accommodate tenant club FC Winterhude.
The feature that immediately grabbed my attention through the wire fencing
where I could see into the venue was the long low covered stand down one side
containing six rows of bench seating.
On the
opposite side was grass banking with a few overgrown steps with the railway
behind. There was a similar arrangement behind the far goal; whereas the near
end had no spectator accommodation. It was certainly better than I was
expecting.
Once I’d
taken photos, I took some extra shots from high on the platform before taking a
train U1 towards Farmsen. Alighting at Jungfernstieg I changed onto the U2
towards Niendorf Nord before getting out at Emilienstraße to visit
Hamburg-Eimsbütteler BC.
Just a small correction: "Another building across the car park appeared to accommodate tenant club FC Winterhude."
ReplyDeleteThat building is the SC Sperber tennis hall, built in 1996.
Many thanks for this and terribly sorry for the late reply.
ReplyDelete