Ronny’s Act: Junge Welt Report – 04.09.2025

Ultras from FC Saxony show a great choreography

It is cold in Leuzland: After five games in the Regionalliga Northeast, the football men’s department of BSG Chemie Leipzig is still there without a dot. Worse: that’s already 13 behind the hereditary enemy FC Lokomotive. Against Probstheida, the chemists pulled three times last season-twice in the league, plus a 1: 4 clap in the quarter-finals of the Saxony Cup.

“Only a Leutzscher is a German”: You haven’t heard the saying in the Alfred Kunze sports park for a while, even if it seems that Germanity is at least maintained when it comes to losing war. The internal lye rivalry has also grossly divided through the football supporter: chemistry is somehow left and locomotive somehow on the right. If you look at the respective trailer, confirm the numerous exceptions as such the rule of thumb.

For a long time, it looked different for the BSG and the FC Sachsen Leipzig, which was brought together in 1990 from Grün-Weiß Leipzig and Chemistry Böhlen: In the ranks, green-white with green-whites and at the latest when moving to the central stadium, the internal conflict also made it clear as a club policy that had to differ here. BSG Chemie, founded in 1997 for name protection and for promoting FC Saxony, took up the game in 2008, three years later FC Saxony became history.

Clemens Meyer can also tell stories. The one, born in Halle/Saale in 1977, but since left to the childbirth station, but was persuaded in the east of Leipzig in the mid -1990s, was persuaded by his buddy to visit a home game from FC Saxony. “Ronny did it, I am now also a chemist,” said counter athlete and horse girl Meyer recently in the Leipzig city history museum at Talk “Leipzig meets the 90s!”. By Alexander Mennicke, one of the curators of the exhibition “We are Leutzscher!”, The special exhibition with the main exposure of the house, “Between the departure and processing: the 90s in Leipzig” was hereby broken down a week before both exhibitions are dismantled on September 8th.

Anyone who knows Meyer as an author probably also knows him as a riot: if he doesn’t get a book price, he shows that he is more amusing than his work in a charming way. “It smells strange because I smoke,” he said with reference to his FC-Saxony-Nicki, which he otherwise hangs in his study, into which he only slipped once to celebrate the day. But why FC Saxony? “Why do they call themselves FC? Where is ›Club‹ a swear word? «Very justified question. Other Schmährrede disturbed Meyer differently: Neither the original “Which whore, which cattle, the BSG chemistry?” Sports in the east-Livestreams on YouTube reaction “Which whore, which bit, created the 1. FC Lok?” Can Meyer get something off, since there are disparations from sex workers. His cancellation of “ACAB” as discrediting of non -married children is also accepted by the numerous audiences with amusement such as applause.

Even though this has been primarily primarily for the football anecdotes, Meyer is still based on the 90s, which was made by Mennicke than this baseball bat year: Meyer was threatened with firearms at least three times. He preferred to stay at home as a prospective writer (“What can happen to you? Nothing.”); If he went out, then take something. The bridge is also beaten back to football: Meyer and Mennicke can report on their experiences how they went to the stadium with a knife in their pockets. Mennicke even smuggled it as a plug without knowing why. Meyer hid the accidentally taken weapon in the bushes and never found it again. Anyway: “Pack the knives away, buy pepper spray!”

And the German national dirt? Meyer once had to call crumbs Ronny to the Raison, and it is credible how much such ankel the author of “When we dream” (2006). So much is taken from him that from today that he innovated the GDR before the liquidation of the GDR and chanted at that time “only a Leutzscher is a German” as Löcken against the State Security Sting and “High Form of Irony”. Honestly: which Böcklein, which cattle, calls something irony?

Aiko Tanaka

Aiko Tanaka is a combat sports journalist and general sports reporter at Archysport. A former competitive judoka who represented Japan at the Asian Games, Aiko brings firsthand athletic experience to her coverage of judo, martial arts, and Olympic sports. Beyond combat sports, Aiko covers breaking sports news, major international events, and the stories that cut across disciplines — from doping scandals to governance issues to the business side of global sport. She is passionate about elevating the profile of underrepresented sports and athletes.

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