Charity Match at Ammersee with Dual Purpose
Ammersee Charity Match with Klaus Augenthaler: Football for Floodlights and Leukemia Aid
In Inning am Ammersee, football will be deliberately used as a means to an end on April 25, 2026: At the "Ammersee Charity Match," SV Inning and the Global Academy of FC Bayern will face each other – combined with a donation day for club infrastructure and a typing campaign in the fight against leukemia.
According to the organizers, the event will start at 10 a.m., with the main event scheduled for 3 p.m. Admission is free.
A Charity Match with Sporting Celebrities
In sporting terms, the charity match relies on star power: With Klaus Augenthaler, a big name in German football will be present. The hosts' opponent is the Global Academy of FC Bayern – an appearance that, as experience shows, attracts an audience and thus creates exactly the setting that charity formats need: attention, encounters, opportunities for conversation.
The character of the event is clearly defined. It's not about league points, but about mobilizing people through football – for donations and for a cause where every additional registration can count.
Donation Goal: New Floodlight System – Target Amount Named
A focus of the day is the financing of a modern floodlight system for SV Inning. The target amount is stated as 50,000 euros. This sum is less a sign of a secured financing plan than an ambitious benchmark: The greater the reach of the event, the more realistic it becomes that many individual contributions will add up to a significant amount for the club's infrastructure.
For an amateur club, modern lighting can be much more than comfort: Training times become more predictable, operations become less dependent on the season and daylight – and especially in the months when pitches are most heavily used, light often decides whether sessions can take place or have to be canceled.
Typing Campaign On Site: Registration as a Stem Cell Donor Possible
Parallel to the match, a typing campaign will be offered. Visitors can register as potential stem cell donors. This gives the event a second level that goes beyond the sports grounds: Anyone who gets typed increases the chance that patients with blood cancer will find a suitable donor.
It is precisely this combination that forms the core of the "Ammersee Charity Match": Football serves as a crowd-puller – and the audience gets the opportunity to help directly. Donations for a concrete, local measure on the one hand, potentially life-saving registration on the other.

