BBC Südost

The BBC South East was a football club in Berlin's Kreuzberg district.

History

The BBC was founded in 1950 by former members and players of the East Berlin club SG Union Oberschoeneweide (predecessor of today's club 1.FC Union Berlin). This had fled to West Berlin because Union delegates from the Berlin City League in the DDR - Oberliga and beyond the association to participate in the finals of the German Championship had been denied. The newly founded by the " refugees " SC Union 06 Berlin was assigned by the former Berlin Football Association ( VBB) as a venue for the post stadium in Moabit. That was many members who lived in Kreuzberg near the border, and also some of the audience had traveled from Köpenick too far. Therefore, the BBC, the ( the dreaded " Wrangelritze " ) was located near the border in the Wrangelstraße his home place, they founded.

It went up fast and in the mid- 1950s they played in the then second-rate amateur league ( three years). The actual altitude flight then began in 1966 when Tasmania Berlin relegation from the Bundesliga. Several players from Tasmania ended their career. So goalkeeper Klaus Basikow, the coach at the BBC was. After three years in the A-Class came in 1969 again the rise in the amateur league.

In 1973 the BBC Berlin Amateur League Champions and took part in the so German Amateur Championship against TSV Büdelsdorf (1:4 and 2:3 ). Initially, it was explained by the typical " Berlin dialect ", against which it would be " barefoot and three-digit " play. In the same year the club (behind the Bundesliga then the second highest class in Germany ) was achieved promotion to the Regionalliga Berlin. In these years, the BBC put down a variety of players for national teams Berlin.

By introducing the two-pronged 2nd Bundesliga in 1974 was moved to a table in ninth ( of 12 teams ) after the season in the newly formed Football Oberliga Berlin. After the departure of coach Basikows the late 1970s, it went slowly downhill. In 1990, the BBC was dissolved.

Notable people

  • Gerd Achterberg, coaches
  • Klaus Basikow, players and coaches
  • Rainer Liedtke, player
  • Ilyas Tüfekçi, youth players
  • Gerhard Stierwald, Players 1963 - 1973
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