SV Waldhof Mannheim

SV Waldhof Mannheim is a multi-sports club, located in Mannheim, Baden-Württemberg. It is most known for its association football team; however, there are also professional handball and table-tennis sides. The club today has a membership of over 2,400.

Waldhof Mannheim
Full nameSportverein Waldhof Mannheim 07 e.V.
Nickname(s)Waldhof Buben (The Waldhof Boys)
Founded1907
GroundCarl-Benz-Stadion
Capacity25,667
ChairmanBernd Beetz
ManagerMarco Antwerpen
League3. Liga
2022–233. Liga, 7th of 20
WebsiteClub website
Current season

History

The club was founded 1907 and played in the second division of the Westkreis-Liga before the First World War. Waldhof became part of the Kreisliga Odenwald in 1919 and won this league in 1920 and 1921. In each of those seasons, the club failed to advance in the Southern German championship because it was grouped with all-powerful 1. FC Nürnberg at the time. The club took a Bezirksliga Rhein championship in 1924 before joining the Bezirksliga Rhein-Saar in 1927, where it won five out of the next six division titles without ever performing particularly well in the Southern championship.[citation needed]

Its enjoyed its best performances in the Gauliga Baden, one of sixteen top-flight divisions established through the 1933 re-organization of German football under the Third Reich. Waldhof dominated the division through the 1930s and into the early 1940s, capturing the title five times. They were unable, however, to translate that into success at the national level. Their best result came in 1940 when they went out in a semi-final against FC Schalke 04, the dominant side of the era, before settling for fourth place after losing a consolation round match to Rapid Vienna.

Historical chart of Waldhof Mannheim league performance

After World War II, Waldhof competed in the Oberliga Süd, where they earned mid-table results until being relegated to the 2nd Oberliga Süd in 1954. They bounced up and down between first and second division play until the formation of the Bundesliga, Germany's new professional football league, in 1963. The next season saw them in the tier II Regionalliga Süd alongside local rivals VfR Mannheim. A string of unimpressive results finally led to relegation to the Amateurliga Nordbaden (III) in 1970.

SV Chio Waldhof Mannheim ca. 1972–78.

Support from a new sponsor, the snack chip maker Chio, revived the team and helped their return to the second division where they played as SV Chio Waldhof Mannheim from 1972 to 1978. They continued to play as a middling side there until they broke through to the Bundesliga in 1983. Waldhof spent seven seasons in the top flight until a 17th-place finish saw the club relegated at the end of the 1989–90 season. They played for seven seasons as a 2. Bundesliga club until slipping to the Regionalliga Süd for two seasons in 1997–99. A merger with VfR Mannheim was considered in 1998 but the club walked away from a deal at the last minute. Their return to the 2. Bundesliga in 1999 after a season-long struggle with Kickers Offenbach was cut short in 2003 when financial irregularities saw the German Football Association deny the team a licence, dropping them to the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg (IV). Another attempt at a merger with VfR failed that same year. The club played in the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg until 2007–08, when a third-place finish allowed them to qualify for the Regionalliga.

After coming fourth in the Regionalliga Süd in 2008–09, the club moved to the Regionalliga West in 2009–10 to balance out the three Regionalligas.[1]

Waldhof again had their licence withdrawn in 2010 and were demoted back to the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg, now the fifth level of German football, despite having finished clear of the relegation zone with the league's smallest budget.[citation needed] Waldhof spent only one year in the Oberliga, winning the league in 2010–11 and advancing directly back to the Regionalliga. On 11 June 2011 they defeated FV Illertissen 6–0 in their final league match to clinch promotion and also set a new fifth division attendance record of 18,312. It surpassed the previous record, the 2009 Leipzig derby, by more than 3,000 spectators.[2]

At the end of the 2011–12, season the club was grouped into the new Regionalliga Südwest, which replaced the Regionalliga Süd in the region. Waldhof won the league in 2015–16 but lost to Sportfreunde Lotte in the promotion round. They also lost promotion play-offs in the following two seasons after finishing second in the Regionalliga Südwest, to Meppen on penalties in 2017 and to KFC Uerdingen in 2018 after crowd disturbances caused the second leg to be abandoned while Waldhof were losing 3–1 on aggregate.[3] In the 2018–19 season, the team secured the Regionalliga Südwest championship and direct promotion to the 3. Liga on the 30th matchday with a 1–0 home win over Wormatia Worms.[4]

Players

Current squad

As of 3 February 2024[5]

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

No.Pos. NationPlayer
18DF  LUXLaurent Jans
19FW  GERJesaja Herrmann
20MF  GERPer Lockl
21MF  GERJulian Rieckmann
22FW  CGOYann Mabella
24DF  GERLukas Klünter
25DF  GERLuca Bolay
26DF  ALGMadéno Albenas
27GK  GERMalwin Zok
28DF  GERJonas Carls
30GK  GERLucien Hawryluk
32FW  NGAKennedy Okpala
33MF  POLMartin Kobylański
36FW  AUTKelvin Arase

Out on loan

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

Reserve team

The SV Waldhof II, historically also referred to as SV Waldhof Amateure, rose to the tier-IV league Verbandsliga Nordbaden in 1986 and remained there until gaining promotion to the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg in 2001. After two seasons in the Oberliga with good results, the team had to be withdrawn due to the forced relegation of the first team. In the 2007–08 season, the team narrowly missed out on Verbandsliga promotion when it finished second on equal points to the SV Sandhausen II.[6]

Honours

The club's honours:

  • Won by reserve team.

Recent managers

Recent managers of the club:[7][8]

ManagerStartFinish
Uwe Rapolder29 March 199712 November 2001
Walter Pradt12 November 20013 December 2001
Andy Egli6 December 200110 September 2002
Walter Pradt11 September 20022 April 2003
Stefan Kuntz3 April 200326 May 2003
Viktor Olscha27 May 200330 June 2004
Eugen Hach1 July 20043 November 2004
Maurizio Gaudino4 November 20046 January 2005
Slavko Petrović7 January 200522 December 2005
Massimo Morales23 December 200530 June 2006
Steffen Menze1 July 200620 September 2007
Alexander Conrad21 September 200730 June 2009
Walter Pradt1 July 200930 June 2010
Reiner Hollich1 July 20102 April 2013
Andreas Clauß3 April 201330 June 2013
Kenan Kocak1 July 20132 July 2016
Gerd Dais7 July 201616 October 2017
Michael Fink16 October 20173 January 2018
Bernhard Trares4 January 20184 July 2020
Patrick Glöckner20 July 202030 June 2022
Christian Neidhart1 July 202230 June 2023
Rüdiger Rehm1 July 202331 January 2024
Marco Antwerpen31 January 2024

Recent seasons

The recent season-by-season performance of the club:[9][10]

SV Waldhof Mannheim II

SeasonDivisionTierPosition
1999–2000Verbandsliga NordbadenV2nd
2000–01Verbandsliga Nordbaden2nd ↑
2001–02Oberliga Baden-WürttembergIV6th
2002–03Oberliga Baden-Württemberg10th ↓
2003–04Verbandsliga NordbadenV16th ↓
2004–05Landesliga Rhein/NeckarVI9th
2005–06Landesliga Rhein/Neckar11th
2006–07Landesliga Rhein/Neckar8th
2007–08Landesliga Rhein/Neckar2nd
2008–09Landesliga Rhein/NeckarVII2nd ↑
2009–10Verbandsliga NordbadenVI5th
2010–11Verbandsliga Nordbaden12th
2011–12Verbandsliga Nordbaden7th
2012–13Verbandsliga Nordbaden11th
2013–14Verbandsliga Nordbaden8th
2014–15Verbandsliga Nordbaden13th ↓
2015–16Landesliga Rhein/NeckarVII7th
2016–17Landesliga Rhein/Neckar9th
2017–18Landesliga Rhein/Neckar3rd
2018–19Landesliga Rhein/Neckar1st ↑
2019–20Verbandsliga NordbadenVI

Key

PromotedRelegated

Rivals

Waldhof have a fierce rivalry with 1. FC Kaiserslautern. However, due to the league gap between the two sides, the rivalry was rarely competed until the 2019–20 season, where the two sides met for the first time in 22 years in the 3. Liga, the third tier of German football. Past meetings between the two have resulted in violence between the two sets of supporters, as well as between supporters and police. Another incident before a derby saw weapons seized by police.[11]

Waldhof also share smaller rivalries with Kickers Offenbach[12] and Mannheim city-rivals VfR Mannheim.

Stadium

SV Waldhof plays its home games at the Carl-Benz-Stadion, which holds 27,000 and opened in 1994.[13]

References

External links