Vierdeklasser sells more than 125,000 tickets for the match during the crown crisis



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Monday, April 13, 2020 at

According to Lokomotive Leipzig’s tally, 120,000 spectators attended the Cup Winners Cup semi-finals against Girondins Bordeaux in 1987 and the club currently playing at the German fourth tier appears to be able to dream of just those numbers at the moment. Still commits Locksche In this period without football, an attempt to break that record, albeit with virtual viewers. The club organizes on May 8 a game against an “invisible opponent”, which can be seen by people around the world for a fee of one euro.

By Robin Bruggeman

At the time the “royal” record was set, Lokomotive was a club that regularly made its appearance in European cup competitions. In the 1986/87 season, the Germans even managed to reach the final of the European Cup II at the expense of Bordeaux and faced Ajax of coach Johan Cruijff. A goal by Marco van Basten finally beat the Amsterdam team and this campaign was Lokomotive’s last great achievement.

The club had achieved some notable successes in the previous decades and even became Germany’s first national champion in 1903 under the name VfB Leipzig. However, after the chaos of World War II and the partition of the country, the Allied authorities dissolved all German clubs and thus the history of VfB Leipzig came to an end. In the years that followed, soccer grew slowly again and Lokomotive Leipzig turned out to be a cupfighter from East Germany, with European tickets accompanying FDGB Pokal earnings as a nice extra.

Lokomotive Leipzig now plays its matches in the Regionalliga Nordost

German unification gave Lokomotive a fresh blow in the early 1990s as there was only room for two East German clubs in the new Bundesliga. Because these admission tickets were given to Hansa Rostock and Dynamo Dresden, the Leipzig club had no choice but to join the 2. Bundesliga. In 1993 there was still a success with promotion at the highest level, but in the following years Lokomotive, which once again adopted the name VfB Leipzig, failed to reverse the decline. After a slow descent through the German soccer pyramid, the club officially ceased to exist in 2004 due to bankruptcy.

A group of fans did not stop there and shortly after the end of the club continued under the name 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig a restart at the eleventh level. The team that became Germany’s first champion in 1903 and played a European final against Ajax in 1987 had to end their matches at that time on a shared field with runners and people walking their dogs. However, fans had not forgotten about Lokomotive and the first match against TSV Böhlitz Ehrenberg attracted no less than four thousand followers.

In a first season in which the average number of followers was a few thousand and even with a record of visitors set at 12,421 for the match against Eintracht Großdeuben, Lokomotive took the first step backwards on the long road. In the 2005/06 season, after a merger with SSV Torgau, the club was even able to enter the seventh level and, in the meantime, Lokomotive is back in the Regionalliga, where he finished in sixth place last season.

Lokomotive, which by the rise and advancement of RB Leipzig, has managed fierce competition for the hearts of football fans in the city, like many other clubs has now been greatly affected by the crown crisis. To generate some revenue these days, the ‘People, Fill That Store’ action started on March 19, selling tickets for a match against an ‘invisible opponent’ on May 8 of this year, with the aim of breaking the Record of visitors set against Bordeaux in the 1980s.

The campaign quickly resumed in and out of Germany and two weeks after the start of the action, no less than 100,000 tickets were sold. “This is simply impressive. We have received requests from countries like Australia and Namibia, “President Thomas Löwe recently told the regional station. MDR. “We have put our love and passion at Lokomive for the past few years and we look forward to continuing this, that the season continues.”

The number of 120,000 tickets sold was reached on Saturday and with the “game” to play on May 8, Lokomotive appears to have exceeded its target. It is still unclear which buyers of the 125,000 tickets that have been sold so far will be served by their euro, but a spokesman recently left the BBC We know the club has something in mind: “There is a live broadcast from the stadium, the lamp posts are on and our commentators are on hand. I can’t say anything about it at the moment. In any case, there is no doubt that the income will be well spent: “Money is used to Lok keep going We have three hundred youth players, you have to pay the staff and you have to keep everything. ”

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