The Ansbach Grizzlies are an American football team based in Ansbach, Germany. The club, together with the Düsseldorf Panther and the Munich Cowboys, is one of the oldest in Germany. The Grizzlies were a dominating force in the game during the first decade of American football in Germany, reaching all of the first eight German Bowls.[1][2]
Founded | 1979 |
---|---|
League | Landesliga Bayern Nord |
Based in | Ansbach, Germany |
Stadium | Sportanlage Carolinum |
Colors | Blue and White |
President | Florian Menzel |
Head coach | Andreas Schneider |
Championships | German Bowl: 1981, 1982, 1985 |
Division titles | GFL South: 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1988 |
Website | www.ansbach-grizzlies.com/ |
History
editThe Ansbach Grizzlies date back to the 3 April 1979, when an information session on the sport was held by Erich Grau and Uli Sorge, after which fifteen players ordered their football gear and formed a team. Initially, this team was part of the multi-sports club SpVgg Ansbach.[1]
In 1979, the Grizzlies became a founding member of the American Football Bundesliga, renamed the German Football League in 1999,[3] together with the Frankfurter Löwen, Düsseldorf Panther, Munich Cowboys, Berlin Bears und Bremerhaven Seahawks.[1][4]
The first three league seasons were dominated by Ansbach and Frankfurt, who met each other in the German Bowl on each occasion. In 1979 and 1980, Frankfurt, playing at home, proved the stronger, defeating the Grizzlies. In 1981, the year the club split from the SpVgg Ansbach and became independent as the Ansbach Grizzlies 1981 e.V., the Grizzlies finally triumphed and won their first German Bowl. For Frankfurt, it was the last-ever Bowl appearance, while Ansbach also won the one and only edition of the German Cup that year.[1]
After defeating the Cologne Crocodiles in the 1982 edition of the German Bowl, Ansbach had to face a new opposition in the following four finals, the Düsseldorf Panther. The two teams stood for opposing styles of football, the Panthers favouring a long-ranging passing game while the Grizzlies relied on their strong defence. Of the four encounters, three went for the team from Düsseldorf, with Ansbach only able to win the 1985 final.[1] It was not until the mid-2000s that the Braunschweig Lions surpassed the Grizzlies record of eight consecutive finals, the Lions eventually playing in twelve from 1997 to 2008.[2] The Grizzlies participated in the first-ever edition of the European Football League in 1986, losing to the Birmingham Bulls in the quarter-finals.
With the lost 1986 Bowl, the golden area of the team came to an end. Its domination of football in Southern Germany was halted by the Badener Greifs in 1987, and the Grizzlies were knocked out in the semi-finals. The move to semi-professional players lead to the demise of the team as a powerhouse and, by 1991, it was relegated from the Bundesliga. It suffered four relegations in a row in the following years and carried out a generation change in the process. By 1995, the club managed to stabilise itself, now playing in the Bayernliga, the Bavarian league. It played a couple of successful seasons until 1999, when a substantial loss of players forced it to withdraw from competition for a year.[1]
The team had to restart at the lowest level of football in Bavaria, but managed to work its way up again to the Bavarian league by going undefeated in the state league all season in 2001. The team continued as a dominant force in Bavaria in 2002 and narrowly missed out on another promotion to the college-player reinforced Burghausen Crusaders.[1]
Since then, the club's fortunes have once more declined and, lacking players, has been unable to field a team for a number of years.[5] For the 2015 season the club returned to league football, entering the tier five Landesliga Bayern Nord. It finished second in its division but lost the semi-final for the Landesliga championship to the reserve team of the Allgäu Comets.
Honours
edit- German Bowl
- Champions: 1981, 1982, 1985
- Runners-up: 1979, 1980, 1983, 1984, 1986
- German Cup
- Champions: 1981
- Junior Bowl
- Runners-up: 1990
- EFL
- Participations: 1986
- American Football Bundesliga
- Southern Division champions: 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1988
- Play-off qualification: (11) 1979–1989
- League membership: (12) 1979–1990
German Bowl appearances
editThe club's appearances in the German Bowl:[2]
Bowl | Date | Champions | Runners-Up | Score | Location | Attendance |
I | November 10, 1979 | Frankfurter Löwen | Ansbach Grizzlies | 14–8 | Frankfurt | 5,000 |
II | July 30, 1980 | Frankfurter Löwen | Ansbach Grizzlies | 21–12 | Frankfurt | 7,000 |
III | August 5, 1981 | Ansbach Grizzlies | Frankfurter Löwen | 27–6 | Cologne | 11,000 |
IV | November 2, 1982 | Ansbach Grizzlies | Cologne Crocodiles | 12–6 | Essen | 10,000 |
V | September 25, 1983 | Düsseldorf Panther | Ansbach Grizzlies | 22–7 | Nuremberg | 7,000 |
VI | October 13, 1984 | Düsseldorf Panther | Ansbach Grizzlies | 27–13 | Essen | 10,000 |
VII | November 12, 1985 | Ansbach Grizzlies | Düsseldorf Panther | 14–7 | Cologne | 9,000 |
VIII | July 27, 1986 | Düsseldorf Panther | Ansbach Grizzlies | 27–14 | Würzburg | 10,000 |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d e f g Vereinsgeschichte Archived July 7, 2011, at the Wayback Machine (in German) Ansbach Grizzlies website, accessed: 26 December 2010
- ^ a b c Bowls Archived 2015-09-29 at the Wayback Machine GFL website, accessed: 26 December 2010
- ^ GFL German Football League Archived 2011-07-18 at the Wayback Machine (in German) AFVD website, accessed: 27 December 2010
- ^ Geschichte Archived 2017-10-28 at the Wayback Machine (in German) AFVD website, accessed: 27 December 2010
- ^ Herren Archived February 26, 2011, at the Wayback Machine (in German) Ansbach Grizzlies website, accessed: 26 December 2010