Hansa Rostock won the East classic against Dynamo Dresden 1-0 (1-0) in the third division. The game was overshadowed by riots in the half.
It was quiet in the Baltic Sea Stadium for 45 minutes before there were firewords and the end of neon rockets in the stands from both dynamo and Hansa fans. After a more than 30-minute interruption, things finally went on-but it was not the first time that this East derby left a bitter aftertaste.
“The sporty takes a back seat, of course. It pisses you off to see such pictures,” said Hansa CEO Jürgen Wehlend in the NDR interview. “The trigger clearly went from the guest fans, there is no stone on the other in the block. But the reaction to it is of course also underground,” added Wehlend.
“Something like that doesn’t belong in a football stadium. My son was sitting over the player tunnel and cried because he was afraid,” Rostock’s coach Daniel Brinkmann commented on the riots: “These were scenes that were dangerous. And it is a shame if it is a shame I have a bad feeling in the second half because my children are in the stands.
Fröling heads Hansa in the lead
Brinkmann expressly praised the performance of his team, which showed a strong reaction after the 0: 5 debacle near Waldhof Mannheim a week ago. “The team showed a very disciplined performance. We had a high willingness to run. I am proud.”
There was not a scanning phase in this encounter, which was led by both teams with a high level of intensity and a lot of passion. The hosts managed to hit the first effect: Alexander Rossipal sent a flank to a very long trajectory. Nevertheless, the Dynamo defense did not succeed in positioning itself properly and Nils Fröling and his header made the first eruption of feelings on the Rostock side (11th).
The Hansa fans could truly be satisfied with their team, who did not avoid a duel and always had good offensive campaigns.
Dresden, on the other hand, only got a good chance in the 30th minute when Tony Menzel from twelve meters set a direct acceptance over the goal. Overall, the most dangerous offensive in the third division disappointed to date with an uninspired appearance and a never -ending series of long -beaten balls.
Pens for Rostock? Pipe remains silent
The break for the Rostock was deserved and could have been even higher if referee Tom Bauer had decided on penalty in added time between Sigurd Haugen and Dresden’s Aljaz Casar. However, the referee let go – which was at least worth discussing.
Riots Almost cause a game of the game
When the actors were present at the beginning, the firecrackers and rockets flew. Referee Bauer sent the teams back to the cabin and threatened to drop out in the event of a further incident. Almost on the lawn there would have been an argument between the actors. However, it remained in harsh words before the minds calmed down again.
So after a long break it went on. The game flow was initially completely gone. In the 60th minute, Dresden almost had a balance. At first Christoph Daferner came past the ball, then Menzel missed.
Dynamo pressed, Robin Meißner narrowly missed the finish line from 16 meters (84th). But it was no longer enough. Hansa celebrated the first home win against the old opponent since 2011. However, the Rostock managers could not be happy due to the accompanying circumstances.
Play statistics FC Hansa Rostock – Dynamo Dresden
25th match day, 22.02.2025 2:00 p.m.
| FC Hansa Rostock | 1 |
| Dynamo Dresden | 0 |
Goals:
FC Hansa Rostock: Uphoff – Manu, Gürleyen (71. Gearing), Rossipal – Ruschke, Pfanne, M. Schuster, Neidhart (9th Mejdr) – Fröling (63. Naderi), Lebeau – Haugen (63. C. Kinsombi)
Dynamo Dresden: Schreiber – Sterner (56. R. Meißner), Hoti, Bünning, Risch (56. Heise) – Casar (78th Kammerknecht) – N. Hauptmann, Menzel – Lemmer, Daferner (78th Kother), Baur (35th Kutschke)
Viewers: 29000
This topic in the program:
Nordmagazin | 22.02.2025 | 7:30 p.m.
