DRC Hannover

Summary

The DRC Hannover is a German rugby union club from Hannover, currently playing in the Rugby-Regionalliga. The club should not be confused with the DRC 1884 Hannover, a rowing club and a separate entity.[1]

DRC Hannover
Full nameDeutscher Rugby Club Hannover
UnionGerman Rugby Federation
Founded1905
LocationHannover, Germany
Ground(s)Rugbyplatz an der Beeke (Capacity: 1,500)
ChairmanThomas Schmidt
Coach(es)United Kingdom George Kenrick
Captain(s)Alexander Luft
League(s)2. Rugby-Bundesliga (II)
2015–162. Rugby-Bundesliga North, 5th
Team kit
Official website
www.rugby-drc.de

History edit

The club was formed in 1905 in the Hannover suburb of Ricklingen.

The club did not really make an impact on the German rugby scene for the first 80 years of its history, facing strong opposition within Hannover, one of the two centres of German rugby.

A German rugby union cup finals appearance in 1981 was the first time it reached a national final. In 1988, after beating local rival DSV 1878 Hannover 12-9 in the final, the club took out its first national championship.[2] After this, it did not appear in a final again for another ten years.

The DRC's great era begun in 1997, when it started to dominate the Bundesliga. The club managed to reach every championship final from 1998 to 2005, winning six out of the eight. The 2001-02 season was the only one ever played were there wasn't a final; the regular season champion also became the national one.

In 2005-06, the club missed out on the final by having lost both regular season games to second-placed SC Neuenheim, being on equal points with the club.[3] This meant, for the first time in the history of the German championship, no club from Hannover played in the final. the following season, the club came third again, missing out on the final by two points to the RG Heidelberg. After this, the DRC fell into decline.

On the last day of the 2007-08 season, the club performed a miracle, beating top of the table side SC 1880 Frankfurt, who had previously only lost one game this season, and securing their Bundesliga survival for another year. The club managed to reach seventh place, ahead of RK Heusenstamm.[4] In the promotion/relegation round, the club then easily beat ASV Köln Rugby despite having only 18 players available and assured that the Rugby-Bundesliga would still have a club from Hannover next season.[5]

The 2008-09 season saw the club struggle even more and finish last in the table, without a win. DRC decided not to play the relegation final against RK 03 Berlin and to accept direct relegation instead.[6] The club's reserve side played in the 2nd Bundesliga in 2008-09, having joined up with SC Schwalbe to form SG Schwalbe/DRC Hannover II.

A league reform in 2012 allowed the club promotion to the Bundesliga as the league was expanded from ten to 24 teams. The club however did not field a team in the opening game of the new season and instead withdrew from the league altogether.[7] The club was able to gain admittance instead to the tier three Regionalliga, despite the season already being underway. The reasons for the voluntary withdrawal was that DRC had, in its more successful days, neglected its youth program and had a number of players fail or were unable to appear for the opening match of the Bundesliga.[8]

The club bounced back, winning its Regionalliga division and returning to the 2nd Bundesliga for 2013–14. The club qualified for the DRV-Pokal, but finished last in the north-east division and missed out on the play-offs. In the 2014–15 season, the club finished third in the north-east Liga-Pokal group, but was knocked out by Neckarsulmer SU in the first round of the play-offs after a 45–7 loss.

Club honours edit

Men edit

Women edit

  • German rugby union championship
    • Champions: 2002
    • Runners up: 1991, 1993

Recent seasons edit

Recent seasons of the club:[9]

Year Division Position
1997-98 Rugby-Bundesliga (I) 3rd — Champions
1998-99 Rugby-Bundesliga North/East 1st
Bundesliga championship round 1st — Champions
1999-2000 Rugby-Bundesliga North/East 1st
Bundesliga championship round 1st — Champions
2000-01 Rugby-Bundesliga North/East 1st
Bundesliga championship round 2nd — Champions
2001-02 Rugby-Bundesliga 1st — Champions
2002-03 Rugby-Bundesliga 1st — Runners up
2003-04 Rugby-Bundesliga 2nd — Runners up
2004-05 Rugby-Bundesliga 1st - Champions
2005-06 Rugby-Bundesliga 3rd
2006-07 Rugby-Bundesliga 3rd
2007-08 Rugby-Bundesliga 7th
2008-09 Rugby-Bundesliga 9th — Relegated
2009–10 2nd Rugby-Bundesliga North/East (II) 7th
2010–11 2nd Rugby-Bundesliga North/East 7th
2011–12 2nd Rugby-Bundesliga North/East 5th — Relegated
2012–13 Rugby-Regionalliga Nord (III) 1st
2013–14 2nd Rugby-Bundesliga qualification round – North 2nd
DRV-Pokal – North-East 8th
2014–15 2nd Rugby-Bundesliga qualification round – North 5th
Liga-Pokal – North-East 5th –First round
2015–16 2nd Rugby-Bundesliga North 5th
  • Until 2001, when the single-division Bundesliga was established, the season was divided in autumn and spring, a Vorrunde and Endrunde, whereby the top teams of the Rugby-Bundesliga would play out the championship while the bottom teams together with the autumn 2nd Bundesliga champion would play for Bundesliga qualification. The remainder of the 2nd Bundesliga teams would play a spring round to determine the relegated clubs. Where two placing's are shown, the first is autumn, the second spring. In 2012 the Bundesliga was expanded from ten to 24 teams and the 2nd Bundesliga from 20 to 24 with the leagues divided into four regional divisions.

Rugby internationals edit

In Germany's 2006–08 European Nations Cup campaign, Benjamin Danso and Timur Tekkal were called up for the national team.

In the 2008–10 campaign, Danso appeared for the DRC and Germany again but left the club at the end of the 2008-09 season to join Heidelberger RK.

Semesa Rokoduguni, who played for DRC while stationed in Germany with the British Army made his debut for England in an international against New Zealand in November 2014.

Coaches edit

Recent coaches of the club:

Name Period
Torsten Schippe 1993 - 2003
Mark Kuhlmann - 2008
  George Kenrick 2008–present

References edit

  1. ^ DRC 1884 Hannover website accessed: 13 January 2009
  2. ^ Profile of Kelso-Online's Webmaster Archived 2009-04-16 at the Wayback Machine Profile of Gregory John Davidson, former DRC player (1987-91 & 1995-99), accessed: 13 January 2009
  3. ^ Rugby Bundesliga 2006-06 Table and results, accessed: 13 january 2009
  4. ^ Das grüne Wunder von der Beeke - doch 1. Bundesliga in Hannover? (in German) Article on DRC's survival in 2008, accessed: 13 January 2009
  5. ^ DRC bleibt der 1. Rugby-Bundesliga erhalten Article on the relegation match in 2008, accessed: 13 January 2009
  6. ^ DRC Hannover verzichtet auf Bundesliga-Playdown Archived 2009-05-02 at the Wayback Machine (in German) Rugby Journal, accessed: 16 May 2009
  7. ^ TotalRugby Review: 1. Bundesliga - 1. Spieltag (in German) totalrugby.de, published: 26 August 2012, accessed: 28 August 2012
  8. ^ DRC Hannover vor Neuanfang in der Regionalliga Nord (in German) totalrugby.de, published: 5 September 2012, accessed: 6 September 2012
  9. ^ RugbyWeb Ergebnisarchiv (in German) rugbyweb.de - Results archive, accessed: 24 July 2012

External links edit

  • (in German) Official website
  • Lower Saxony rugby association
  • DRC Hannover team info at totalrugby.de
  • Tables and results of German rugby on rugbyweb.de
  • DRC Hannover at totalrugby.de