FC Grimma
Full nameFußballclub Grimma
Founded1919 (as SV 1919 Grimma)
2009 (FC Grimma)
StadiumHusaren-Sportpark
Capacity1200
LeagueNOFV-Oberliga Süd
WebsiteClub website

Fußballclub Grimma is a German football team based in Grimma. The club presently competes in the NOFV-Oberliga Süd. The club originated from SV 1919 Grimma, but in 2009 the football department separated from the rest of the club to become independent.

History

SV 1919 Grimma logo

FC Grimma's origins stem from SV 1919 Grimma, which was founded in 1919. In 1945, after World War II, the club was dissolved, due to the general ban on sports clubs in the Soviet occupation zone. After East German sports had been re-organized though company sports associations in 1948, NAGEMA (the Grimma machine factory) took over operations of the existing sports association and promoted it to BSG NAGEMA Grimma, with name changes to BSG Stahl and BSG Motor West occurring shortly after. In 1990, the machine company no longer support the sports club in their usual way due to the changing economic condiations at the time. Consequently, BSG members founded a registered assoiciation named SV Motor Grimmato develop other sources of finance. In November 1991, the club fully separated completely from the former sponsoring company and re-took the historical name of SV 1919 Grimma, developing into a large multisport club.[1]

On July 1, 2009, the football departement of the club separated from the club and formed its own club by the name of FC Grimma.[1] The club played in the German sixth tier (and the top level in Saxony) the Landesliga Sachsen for 13 years, before returning winning the title and earning promotion to the fifth-tier NOFV-Oberliga Süd.[1][2]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Fußballclub Grimma e.V.: Fußballsport in der Perle des Muldentals" [Football Club Grimma eV: Football sport in the pearl of the Muldental]. FC Grimma (in German).
  2. Wohllebe, Matthias (26 June 2019). "FC Grimma: Der Oberliga-Kader nimmt Formen an" [FC Grimma: The Oberliga squad is taking shape]. Sportbuzzer (in German).
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