FC Hennef 05

{{short description|German football club}}

{{Infobox football club

| clubname = FC Hennef 05

| image = FC HENNEF 05.svg

| fullname = Fußball-Club Hennef 05 e.V.

| nickname =

| founded = 1 July 2005

| ground = Stadion im Sportzentrum Hennef

| capacity = 5,000

| chairman = Anton Klein

| manager = Marco Bäumer

| league = Mittelrheinliga (V)

| season = 2022–23

| position = 1st

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| body1 = FF0000

| rightarm1 = FF0000

| shorts1 = FF0000

| socks1 = FF0000

| pattern_la2 = _redline

| pattern_b2 =

| pattern_ra2 = _redline

| pattern_sh2 =

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The FC Hennef 05 is a German association football club from the town of Hennef, North Rhine-Westphalia. Apart from football the club also offers handball as a second sport.

The club's greatest success has been to earn promotion to the tier four Regionalliga West in 2014 but they were relegated after just one season.

History

FC Hennef 05 was formed in 2005 in a merger of two local clubs, TuRa Hennef and FC Geistingen, two local amateur clubs of which TuRa had been the more successful.

The new club took up TuRa's place in the Landesliga Mittelrhein 1 from 2005, a tier six league while Geistingen, playing in the same league that season and relegated gave its place to the new club's reserve team. Hennef won the league in its second season and earned promotion to the Verbandsliga Mittelrhein but lasted for only two seasons before being relegated down again. The club made an immediate return to the Verbandsliga in 2010 after finishing runners-up in the Landesliga. After an eleventh-place finish in 2011 the club entered a more successful era, winning the league in 2012. It also won the Middle Rhine Cup that season and qualified for the first round of the 2012–13 DFB-Pokal where it lost to TSV 1860 Munich.[http://www.fussball.de/mannschaft/fc-hennef-o5-fc-hennef-05-mittelrhein/-/saison/1415/team-id/011MIE8GEO000000VTVG0001VTR8C1K7#!/section/teamTimeline FC Hennef 05] {{in lang|de}} fussball.de, accessed: 17 September 2014

At the end of the 2011–12 season the German football league system saw some changes, among them the Verbandsliga Mittelrhein being elevated a tier and receiving Oberliga status. Hennef remained at this level rather than being promoted to the Regionalliga West and won the Oberliga in the next two seasons. In 2013 it declined promotion but took it up the following year, entering Regionalliga level football for the first time.[https://www.kicker.de/regionalliga-west/spieltag/2014-15 Regionalliga West tables & results] kicker.de, accessed: 17 September 2014 It came last in the Regionalliga in 2014–15 and was relegated from the league.

Honours

The club's honours:

Recent seasons

The recent season-by-season performance of the club:[http://www.f-archiv.de/ Das deutsche Fußball-Archiv] {{in lang|de}} Historical German domestic league tables, accessed: 16 September 2014[http://www.fussball.de/homepage#!/ Fussball.de – Ergebnisse] {{in lang|de}} Tables and results of all German football leagues, accessed: 16 September 2014

class="wikitable"

! Season

! Division

! Tier

! Position

align="center"

| 2005–06

| align="left"| Landesliga Mittelrhein 1

| rowspan=2| VI

| 3rd

align="center"

| 2006–07

| align="left"| Landesliga Mittelrhein 1

| bgcolor="#ddffdd"| 1st ↑

align="center"

| 2007–08

| align="left"| Verbandsliga Mittelrhein

| V

| 9th

align="center"

| 2008–09

| align="left"| Verbandsliga Mittelrhein

| VI

| bgcolor="#ffcccc"| 14th ↓

align="center"

| 2009–10

| align="left"| Landesliga Mittelrhein 1

| VII

| bgcolor="#ddffdd"| 2nd↑

align="center"

| 2010–11

| align="left"| Verbandsliga Mittelrhein

| rowspan=2| VI

| 11th

align="center"

| 2011–12

| align="left"| Verbandsliga Mittelrhein

| 1st

align="center"

| 2012–13

| align="left"| Mittelrheinliga

| rowspan=2| V

| 1st

align="center"

| 2013–14

| align="left"| Mittelrheinliga

| bgcolor="#ddffdd"| 1st ↑

align="center"

| 2014–15

| align="left"| Regionalliga West

| IV

| bgcolor="#ffcccc"| 18th ↓

align="center"

| 2015–16

| align="left"| Mittelrheinliga

| rowspan=3|V

| 9th

align="center"

| 2016–17

| align="left"| Mittelrheinliga

| 13th

align="center"

| 2017–18

| align="left"| Mittelrheinliga

| 2nd

  • With the introduction of the Regionalligas in 1994 and the 3. Liga in 2008 as the new third tier, below the 2. Bundesliga, all leagues below dropped one tier.

=Key=

class="wikitable" align="center"

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"| ↑ Promoted

|bgcolor="#ffcccc"| ↓ Relegated

References

{{reflist}}