Landespokal Berlin 03/24 13:00 - 첼렌도르프 v SV 리치텐베르그 47 L 1-2
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 03/17 13:00 21 카를로텐부르크 v 첼렌도르프 - Cancelled
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 03/10 13:00 20 첼렌도르프 v Rostocker FC W 7-0
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 03/02 13:00 19 RSV Eintracht 1949 v 첼렌도르프 W 3-4
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 02/25 12:30 18 첼렌도르프 v FSV 유니온 푸르스텐발데 W 7-0
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 02/17 12:00 17 SV 리치텐베르그 47 v 첼렌도르프 D 1-1
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 02/11 13:00 16 첼렌도르프 v 비스마르 L 2-3
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 02/03 13:00 15 [1] 첼렌도르프 v FSV 옵틱 라테노프 [13] W 2-0
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 12/10 13:00 15 첼렌도르프 v FSV 옵틱 라테노프 - Postponed
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 11/25 12:30 14 디나모 슈베린 v 첼렌도르프 W 2-4
Landespokal Berlin 11/19 12:30 - 아인트라츠 마흘스도르프 v 첼렌도르프 W 2-4
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 11/10 18:30 13 [1] 첼렌도르프 v 베를린 [5] W 4-0
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 11/05 13:00 12 [1] 첼렌도르프 v 슈파르타 리히텐베르크 [4] D 2-2
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 10/29 11:00 11 Makkabi Berlin v 첼렌도르프 D 1-1
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 10/22 12:00 10 [2] 첼렌도르프 v TSG 노이스트렐리츠 [11] W 3-0
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 10/08 12:00 9 SC 슈타켄 v 첼렌도르프 W 0-2
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 10/01 12:00 23 [6] 아인트라츠 마흘스도르프 v 첼렌도르프 [1] W Postponed
클럽 친선 경기 09/26 17:00 - 첼렌도르프 v 빅토리아 베를린 L 0-1
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 09/22 17:00 7 [7] TB 베를린 v 첼렌도르프 [1] W 2-3
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 09/17 12:00 6 [2] 첼렌도르프 v 카를로텐부르크 [15] W 4-2
클럽 친선 경기 09/08 16:30 - 첼렌도르프 v 헤르타 L 1-4
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 09/02 12:00 5 [4] Rostocker FC v 첼렌도르프 [1] W 0-5
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 08/25 17:30 4 첼렌도르프 v RSV Eintracht 1949 W 3-2
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 08/18 17:30 3 [11] FSV 유니온 푸르스텐발데 v 첼렌도르프 [2] W 1-4
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 08/06 12:00 2 [3] 첼렌도르프 v SV 리치텐베르그 47 [3] W 2-1
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 07/29 12:00 1 비스마르 v 첼렌도르프 W 1-2
클럽 친선 경기 07/23 11:00 - 베를리너 AK 07 v 첼렌도르프 W 0-3
클럽 친선 경기 07/12 16:30 - 바벨스버그 v 첼렌도르프 L 3-2
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 06/10 12:00 34 [7] 베를린 v 첼렌도르프 [4] W 0-4
오베르리가 북부 NOFV 오베르리가 06/04 12:00 33 [4] 첼렌도르프 v MSV 팜포우 [17] W 4-2

Wikipedia - Hertha Zehlendorf

The Hertha Zehlendorf is a German football club from the suburb of Zehlendorf in Berlin.

The club is one of the largest football clubs in the country and has a strong youth department which has won two national youth championships. The department has developed a number of international players for Germany and other countries.

History

1903–1945

The club was formed by 30 local football enthusiasts on 10 March 1903, under the name of Thor- und Fußballclub Germania 03 Zehlendorf. By 1909, it had however changed its name to FC Hertha Zehlendorf. In 1913, the club moved to a new ground, Siebenendenweg, now called Ernst-Reuter-Sportfeld, away from the Tempelhofer Feld, where it was never entirely happy. The team was for a time part of BFC Hertha 1892 but by September 1914 the club became independent again, under the name of FC Hertha 06 Zehlendorf.

After the end of the First World War, in January 1919, the club merged with local side VfB Zehlendorf 03 to form the current club, FC Hertha 03 Zehlendorf. It was from this union that the club took its foundation date.

For the next decade, the club did not particularly stand out within the ranks of Berlin football clubs. In 1933, it finally won a championship in the local Kreisklasse. However, they missed out on being promoted when German football league system was restructured with the introduction of the top-flight Gauliga.

The club struggled through this period and eventually had to form an on-the-field relationship with Union 24 Lichterfelde to survive. During the Second World War, play came almost completely to a halt.

1945–1963

After the war, all previously existing clubs and associations were outlawed in Berlin and the former Hertha existed under the name of SG Zehlendorf for a while. It entered the Amateurliga Berlin (II) in 1947, a league that was played in a number of regional groups. It however became the first club in Berlin to receive a license in 1948 to revert to its original name by the allied occupation authorities.

On the field, the club qualified for the single-division Amateurliga in 1950 and immediately became a strong side in this league, winning the championship in 1953. The club's youth side took out its first Berlin championship in 1950, a game played as a curtain raiser for a Germany versus Turkey friendly, in front of 60,000, on 17 June 1951. Germany lost 1–2, but Zehlendorf beat Hertha BSC 3–2.

The team entered the tier-one Oberliga Berlin for the 1953–54 season, were all the big names of West Berlin football were playing in those days. It found life at this level much harder and was immediately relegated again, finishing 11th out of 12 teams. Back in the Amateurliga, another championship was won and the club earned the right to return to the Oberliga.

In this league, the team would stay until 1963, earning lower table finishes each season but surviving nevertheless. Hertha in this time earned much more local success with its youth teams, a fact not much changed even today, winning Berlin championship in various age groups over the years.

1963–74: Regionalliga years

In 1963, West German football was fundamentally changed with the introduction of the Bundesliga. Below it, five regional leagues, the Regionalligas, were formed. Hertha did not apply for a spot in the new Bundesliga as only one club from Berlin was admitted and the bigger names in local football, Hertha BSC and Tasmania 1900 Berlin far out qualified the little club.

Instead, the club qualified for the new tier-two Regionalliga Berlin, a league it would belong to until its disbanding in 1974. In this league, Hertha continued its existence as an average side, at least for the first couple of seasons. From 1965, the club's results improved and it developed into an upper table side.

In 1968–69, the team achieved its greatest success so far, winning the Regionalliga and thereby qualifying for the promotion round to the Bundesliga. In this competition, the club came fourth out of five teams, when only the winner, Rot-Weiß Oberhausen, qualified for promotion.

The following season, the team repeated its success; winning the league once more and getting another try at Bundesliga promotion. The club finished one rank better this time, coming third but the Bundesliga spot went to Kickers Offenbach. The club took out the second edition of the West German under-19 championship that year, a huge success for the Hertha.

From 1970 onwards, the club returned to its mid-table existence, staying out of relegation trouble but also not really in contention for another championship either. In 1970–71, Tasmania 1900 was all to dominating anyway, winning the league title and going broke two seasons later.

For Hertha, the year 1974 was the last as a second division team, the introduction of the 2. Bundesligas meaning the end for the five Regionalligas. To qualify for the new 2. Bundesliga Nord, the club had to be one of the two top clubs in its league but a fourth spot was not enough and it was demoted to the tier-three Amateurliga Berlin instead.

1974–present

Hertha missed out on the league championship there in its first season, coming second by a point to Spandauer SV, who won promotion to the second division. The next three seasons, the club spent in midfield but its youth teams once more impressed, reaching the final in both the under-19 and the under-17 German championships in 1978.

In 1978–79, it managed to win the league. This entitled the club to take part in the promotion round to the 2. Bundesliga. It had to play OSC Bremerhaven and beat the opposition 5–4 in Berlin. In Bremerhaven it held a 0–0 until four minutes from the end, seeing itself already in the second division but then OSC scored the winning goal and earned promotion on the away goal rule. Its Berlin title qualified the club for the German amateur football championship, too, where it went all the way to the final and lost to ESV Ingolstadt.

The club continued to be a driving force in what was now renamed Amateur Oberliga Berlin, finishing in the top five all but once in the next twelve seasons. In 1981–82, another highlight followed, coming second in the league to Tennis Borussia Berlin, on equal points but falling nine goals short. The team returned to the German amateur championship, where the FSV Mainz 05 proofed to strong in the semi-finals, winning both games. Thirdly, the club also qualified for the DFB-Pokal on the strength of a Berliner Landespokal win. It drew Hertha BSC for the first round and, in front of 12,000 spectators, the score was two all after regular time but then the big Hertha scored two more goals and knocked the little Hertha out of the cup. Little Hertha (German: Kleine Hertha) is the long-standing nickname of the club, referring to the fact that Hertha BSC was always the bigger and more successful of the two Herthas.

The season after, the club came second in the league once more, this time to SC Charlottenburg, and earned another shot at the amateur championship but this time, the FC Bayern Munich II in the first round was as far as it went.

In 1988, the club's under-17's finally took out the West German championship, beating southern powerhouse VfB Stuttgart 2–1 in the final with later German international Christian Ziege in Zehlendorf's line-up. The year after, wealthy FC Bayern Munich managed to beat the amateur club's youth team on penalties only in the final.

From 1988 to 1990, the Oberliga Berlin became the scene of Hertha's struggle with Reinickendorfer Füchse for the league championship but both times Reinickendorf won the upper hand. Each time, Hertha only earned the right to compete for the amateur championship again and each time it lost in the first round.

1990–91 was the Oberliga Berlin's last season, the German reunion also affected football and the NOFV-Oberliga was established instead. Hertha became part of the NOFV-Oberliga Mitte, a league dominated by 1. FC Union Berlin in its short three-year existence and Zehlendorf managed only average performances. Nevertheless, it did qualify for the new tier-three Regionalliga Nordost in 1994. In a league full of former East German football powerhouses, the team struggled for four seasons before being relegated in 1998.

The club managed to only survive two seasons in the NOFV-Oberliga Nord (IV) before another relegation, now to the tier-five Verbandsliga Berlin. It played in this league, renamed the Berlin-Liga in 2008, until 2014 when a championship took the club back to the NOFV-Oberliga Nord.

첼렌도르프(TSG Celleldorf)는 독일 바이에른주에 소재한 축구 클럽입니다. 1902년에 창단되었으며, 현재는 레기오날리가 바이에른(독일 4부 리그)에 참가하고 있습니다.

첼렌도르프는 1990년대에 짧은 기간 동안 분데스리가 2부 리그에 참가했지만, 곧 강등되었습니다. 그 이후로는 4부 리그와 5부 리그에서 오르내리며 리그를 뛰고 있습니다.

첼렌도르프는 지역 라이벌인 잉골슈타트 04와 치열한 경쟁을 벌이고 있습니다. 두 팀은 매년 "바이에른 더비"라는 경기를 펼치며, 항상 많은 관중이 모여듭니다.

첼렌도르프의 홈 경기장은 첼렌도르프 슈타디온이며, 수용 인원은 10,000명입니다. 첼렌도르프는 빨간색과 흰색을 팀 컬러로 사용합니다.

첼렌도르프의 유명 선수로는 다음과 같은 선수가 있습니다.

* 토마스 헬메르(Thomas Helmer): 독일 국가대표팀으로 68경기에 출장하였으며, 1990년 FIFA 월드컵과 1992년 UEFA 유럽 축구 선수권 대회에 참가했습니다.
* 토르스텐 핑크(Thorsten Fink): 독일 국가대표팀으로 17경기에 출장하였으며, 1994년 FIFA 월드컵에 참가했습니다.
* 세바스티안 델라네(Sebastian Delané): 독일 U-21 국가대표팀으로 11경기에 출장하였으며, 2006년 UEFA U-21 유럽 축구 선수권 대회에 참가했습니다.

첼렌도르프는 작은 클럽이지만, 역사와 전통을 지닌 클럽입니다. 첼렌도르프는 언젠가 다시 분데스리가에 진출하기 위해 노력하고 있습니다.