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SV Meppen

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

SV Meppen
BERJAYA
Full nameSportverein Meppen 1912 e.V.
NicknameSVM
Founded29 November 1912; 113 years ago (1912-11-29)
GroundHänsch-Arena
Capacity13,241[1]
ChairmanAndreas Kremer
ManagerLucas Beniermann
League3. Liga
2025–26Regionalliga Nord, 1 of 18 (promoted)
BERJAYA Current season

SV Meppen is a German association football club playing in Meppen, Lower Saxony. The club was founded on 29 November 1912 as Amisia Meppen and joined Männer-Turnverein Meppen on 8 February 1920 to form TuS Meppen 1912. The football branch left TuS Meppen in 1921 to create a separate club called Sport Verein Meppen 1912 e.V.. SV Meppen spent a total of 11 years in the 2. Bundesliga.

History

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BERJAYA
Historical chart of SV Meppen's league performance

Meppen have had a relatively quiet history playing in III and IV level circles, winning their first title of any sort when they claimed the Amateurliga Lower Saxony (IV) championship in 1961. They claimed a second title there in 1968 and then qualified for the Regionalliga Nord (II) in 1972. After league re-structuring in 1974 the team played in the Oberliga Nord (III) where they won the championship in 1987 and then emerged out the promotion playoffs to join the 2. Bundesliga.

Generally, the side ended up in mid-table with their best finishes being 7th in 1994 and 6th in 1995. Meppen played their way into the final eight of the 1997 DFB-Pokal competition on the strength of a memorable 6–1 victory over Eintracht Frankfurt. The club's eleven-year run on the professional circuit ended in 1998 and they began a slide that landed them in the Oberliga Nord (V), where played half a dozen seasons burdened by ongoing financial problems. During the new century Meppen dropped to the Niedersachsenliga (5th division). They won the championship in 2011 and advanced to the Regionalliga Nord, which they won in 2017 to return to the 3. Liga.

Honours

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Players

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Current squad

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As of 3 February 2026[2]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK BERJAYA GER Noah Oberbeck
2 DF BERJAYA GER Dominique Domröse
3 DF BERJAYA GER Tobias Mißner
5 MF BERJAYA GER Jonas Fedl (captain)
6 MF BERJAYA GER Ersin Zehir
7 FW BERJAYA GER Oliver Schmitt
8 MF BERJAYA GER Erik Zenga
10 FW BERJAYA GER Julian Ulbricht
11 FW BERJAYA GER Simon Engelmann
13 FW BERJAYA GER Jonathan Wensing
14 MF BERJAYA GER Thorben Deters
17 MF BERJAYA GER Mika Stuhlmacher
18 FW BERJAYA MKD Leon Tasov (on loan from Preußen Münster)
No. Pos. Nation Player
19 DF BERJAYA GER Luis Sprekelmeyer
20 DF BERJAYA TOG Nikell Touglo
22 MF BERJAYA GER Mika Herrmann
23 MF BERJAYA GER Niclas Wessels
27 FW BERJAYA GER Lasse Zumdieck
28 DF BERJAYA GER Jonas Goldenstein
29 FW BERJAYA GER Malte Zumdieck
30 DF BERJAYA GER Daniel Haritonov
33 DF BERJAYA BIH Stefan Rankić
36 MF BERJAYA GER Amin Muja
40 MF BERJAYA GER Niclas Nadj
44 GK BERJAYA GER Julius Pünt

Stadium

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The Hänsch-Arena is located in northern Meppen on Lathener Straße. Construction on the site was finished in 1924 and the stadium was named after Paul von Hindenburg two years later. In 1992 the stadium was renamed "Emslandstadion". A sponsorship deal in 2014 currently has the stadium branded as "Hänsch-Arena". The stadium's largest ever crowd of 18,000 spectators watched SV Meppen play a 1982 friendly against a Barcelona team that included Diego Maradona. Today the stadium has a capacity of 13,241.

Literature

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  • Hans Vinke: Die Meppen-Story, Geschichte eines Fußball-Phänomens, 1997, ISBN 3-927099-56-2

References

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  1. "Stadion". svmeppen.de (in German). Retrieved 25 October 2024.
  2. "SV Meppen – Herren 2024/25". svmeppen.de. Retrieved 1 October 2024.
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