Fixtures

Tyskland - Bundesliga II 05/05 11:30 32 Wehen SV vs Holstein Kiel - View
Tyskland - Bundesliga II 05/12 11:30 33 Eintracht Braunschweig vs Wehen SV - View
Tyskland - Bundesliga II 05/19 13:30 34 Wehen SV vs St Pauli - View

Results

Tyskland - Bundesliga II 04/28 11:30 31 [16] Wehen SV v Greuther Furth [9] L 3-5
Tyskland - Bundesliga II 04/20 11:00 30 [17] Kaiserslautern v Wehen SV [14] D 1-1
Tyskland - Bundesliga II 04/13 11:00 29 [14] Wehen SV v Fortuna Dusseldorf [3] L 0-2
Tyskland - Bundesliga II 04/05 16:30 28 [17] Hansa Rostock v Wehen SV [12] L 3-1
Tyskland - Bundesliga II 03/31 11:30 27 [13] Wehen SV v VfL Osnabruck [18] L 0-1
Internasjonalt - Vennskapskamper 03/21 12:00 - Wehen SV v Waldhof Mannheim W 3-1
Tyskland - Bundesliga II 03/17 12:30 26 [4] Hamburg v Wehen SV [13] L 3-0
Tyskland - Bundesliga II 03/09 12:00 25 [13] Wehen SV v Hannover 96 [5] D 1-1
Tyskland - Bundesliga II 03/03 12:30 24 [11] Elversberg v Wehen SV [14] W 0-3
Tyskland - Bundesliga II 02/23 17:30 23 [13] Wehen SV v Paderborn [6] L 1-2
Tyskland - Bundesliga II 02/17 12:00 22 [14] Schalke v Wehen SV [13] L 1-0
Tyskland - Bundesliga II 02/09 17:30 21 [12] Wehen SV v Nürnberg [10] D 1-1

Statistikk

 TotalHjemmeBorte
Matches played 47 25 22
Wins 18 12 6
Draws 10 6 4
Losses 19 7 12
Goals for 69 40 29
Goals against 68 30 38
Clean sheets 9 6 3
Failed to score 8 3 5

Wikipedia - SV Wehen Wiesbaden

SV Wehen Wiesbaden is a German association football club based in Wiesbaden, Hesse. Since the beginning of the 2007–08 season the club has no longer played its home games in Taunusstein, where it was originally located. In the summer of 2007 Wiesbaden was added to the original name of SV Wehen. The club currently competes in the 2. Bundesliga from 2023–24 after promotion from 3. Liga in 2022–23.

History

Amateur Football (1926–1994)

Historical chart of Wehen Wiesbaden league performance

The club was founded under the name of SV Wehen 1926 – Taunusstein in 1926 and disbanded by the Nazi government in 1933, although the football department was maintained by playing occasional friendly matches until 1939. The club re-established itself in 1946, following World War II. They operated both first and reserve teams from the beginning, with their first team competing in local amateur division, the B-Klasse Wiesbaden. The club's first youth team was established in 1955 and they subsequently started to use their own talented young players to strengthen the first team. By the mid-1970s, the youth department was split in ten teams with more than 150 players and a women's team was first established in 1984. Wehen won the Hessenpokal in 1988, 1996 and 2000, which gave them berths in the German Cup in those years.

Third Tier and upwards (1994–)

Historical crest of SV Wehen Taunusstein

In 1994, the third tier of German football underwent a reform which resulted in the elevation of the Regionalliga. Wehen had finished seventh in the Oberliga Hessen in the previous year and thus became a founding member of the Regionalliga Süd. In spite of its relegation in 1995, the club managed to establish itself in the newly-founded league over the next ten years.

At the end of the 2006–07 season, Wehen finished first and earned promotion to the 2.Bundesliga. Its first second-tier season saw the club finish eighth and the inauguration of its current home, Brita-Arena. In spite of a berth in the DFB Pokal quarterfinals, Wehen was relegated to the 3. Liga in 2009, which would remain the club's division for the next ten seasons.

Wehen achieved a third-place finish at the end of the 2018–19 season and thereby qualified for the promotion playoffs to the 2.Bundesliga against FC Ingolstadt. After a 1–2 defeat in their home game, the team managed to carry a 3–2 victory on Ingolstadt's turf. Advancing on away goals, Wehen was promoted to the 2. Bundesliga for only the second time in club history. However, the club experienced a difficult 2019–20 season and finished in 17th place, fielding the league's worst defence with 65 goals conceded. Along with Dynamo Dresden, Wehen were relegated after just one season in the second tier.

On 6 June 2023, Wehen Wiesbaden secured promotion to 2. Bundesliga from 2023–24 after defeating Arminia Bielefeld on aggregate 6–1 in the promotion/relegation play-off matches and returned to the second tier after three years absence.

SV Wehen Wiesbaden er et tysk fotballag fra byen Wiesbaden i Hessen. Klubben ble grunnlagt i 1907 og spiller i 3. Liga, den tredje øverste divisjonen i tysk fotball.

Wehen Wiesbaden har en jevn historie med opp- og nedrykk mellom 2. Bundesliga og 3. Liga. Klubbens største suksess kom i 2004, da de nådde semifinalen i DFB-Pokal, den tyske cupen.

Klubbens hjemmebane er Brita-Arena, som har en kapasitet på 12 566 tilskuere. Wehen Wiesbaden har et trofast følge av supportere som er kjent for sin lidenskap og stemning på hjemme- og bortekamper.

Noen av de mest kjente spillerne som har spilt for Wehen Wiesbaden inkluderer Sebastian Rode, der spilte for klubben fra 2007 til 2010, og Marc-André ter Stegen, som spilte for klubben fra 2010 til 2011.