Allemagne - Oberliga NOFV Sud 05/11 12:00 27 SV 09 Arnstadt v Ludwigsfelder FC - View
Allemagne - Oberliga NOFV Sud 05/18 12:00 28 VfB 1921 Krieschow v Ludwigsfelder FC - View
Allemagne - Oberliga NOFV Sud 06/02 12:00 29 Ludwigsfelder FC v FSV Budissa Bautzen - View
Allemagne - Oberliga NOFV Sud 06/08 12:00 30 Einheit Rudolstadt v Ludwigsfelder FC - View

Wikipedia - Ludwigsfelder FC

Ludwigsfelder FC is a German football club from Ludwigsfelde in Brandenburg.

History

The association was created in 1947 as Vorwärts Ludwigsfelde as the postwar successor to Rot-Weiß Ludwigsfelde established in 1939. The club was renamed BSG Traktor Ludwigsfelde in 1952, then BSG Motor Ludwigsfelde in 1953, before going on to make several appearances in East Germany's second division DDR-Liga through the 1970s and 1980s.

After German reunification in 1990 the club competed in the Landesliga Brandenburg (VI) until winning its way to the Verbandsliga Brandenburg (V) in 1997. In 2004 a Verbandsliga championship saw the club promoted to the NOFV-Oberliga Nord where they played until their relegation in 2011. In 2013 they slipped further down to Landesliga Brandenburg (VII) but won the league in 2015–16 and were promoted.

Ludwigsfelde won the Brandenburgischer Landespokal in 2003 with a 1–0 victory over Brandenburger SC Süd 05. This qualified the team for the DFB-Pokal where they were defeated 1–9 by Bundesliga side SV Werder Bremen in the first round.

Le Ludwigsfelder FC est un club de football allemand basé à Ludwigsfelde, dans le Brandebourg. Le club a été fondé en 1945 et évolue actuellement en Regionalliga Nordost, la quatrième division allemande.

Le Ludwigsfelder FC dispute ses matchs à domicile au Waldstadion, un stade d'une capacité de 5 000 places. Le club a remporté la Verbandsliga Brandenburg à deux reprises, en 2006 et en 2016, ce qui lui a permis d'accéder à la Regionalliga Nordost.

Parmi les joueurs notables qui ont joué pour le Ludwigsfelder FC figurent Sven Benken, qui a ensuite joué pour le Werder Brême et le Borussia Mönchengladbach, et René Tretschok, qui a joué pour le Hertha Berlin.