Hertha BSC Berlin

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Hertha BSC
logo
Full name Hertha Berliner Sport Club
Nickname(s) Die Alte Dame (the Old Lady)
Founded July 25, 1892
Ground Olympic Stadium, Berlin
Capacity 74,500
Chairman Dieter Hoeneß
Manager Falko Götz
League Bundesliga
2005-06 Bundesliga, 6th
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
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Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
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Away colours

Hertha BSC Berlin is a German football club based in Berlin.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Early years

The club was formed in 1892 as BFC Hertha 92, taking its name from a steamship with a blue and white smokestack. One of the four young men who founded the club had taken a day trip on this ship with his father.

Hertha performed consistently well on the field, including a win in the first Berlin championship final in 1905. However, their on-field success was not matched financially and in 1920 Hertha merged with the well-heeled club Berliner Sport-Club to form Hertha Berliner Sport Club. The new team continued to enjoy considerable success, while also enduring a substantial measure of frustration. The team played its way to the German championship final in six consecutive seasons from 1926 to 1931, but were only able to come away with the title in 1930 and 1931 with BSC leaving to become an independent club again after the combined side's first championship. Even so, Hertha emerged as the Germany's second most successful team during the inter-war years.

[edit] Play under the Third Reich

German football was re-organized under the Third Reich in 1933 into sixteen top-flight divisions, which saw Hertha playing in the Gauliga Berlin-Brandenburg. The club continued to enjoy success within their division, regularly finishing in the upper half of the table and capturing the divisional title in 1935, 1937, and 1944. However, they faded from prominence, unable to advance out of the early rounds of the national championship rounds.

[edit] Postwar play in divided Berlin

After World War II, occupying Allied authorities banned most organizations in Germany, including sports and football clubs. Hertha was re-formed late in 1945 as SG Gesundbrunnen and resumed play in the Oberliga Berlin - Gruppe C. The thirty-six teams of the first season of the postwar Oberliga Berlin were reduced to just a dozen the next year and the club found itself out of first division football and playing in the Amateurliga Berlin. By the end of 1949, they had re-claimed their identity as Hertha BSC Berlin and earned a return to the top-flight.

Tensions between the western Allies and the Russians occupying various sectors of the city, and the developing Cold War, led to chaotic conditions for football in the capital. Hertha was banned from play against East German teams in the 1949-50 season after taking on several players and a coach who had fled the Dresden club SG Friedrichstadt for West Berlin. A number of sides from the eastern half of the city were forced from the Oberliga Berlin to the newly established DDR-Liga beginning with the 1950-51 season.

Through the 50's an intense rivalry developed with Tennis Borussia Berlin. A proposal for a merger between the two clubs in 1958 was resoundingly rejected.

[edit] Entry to the Bundesliga

At the time of the formation of the Bundesliga in 1963, Hertha was Berlin's reigning champion and so became an inaugural member of the new professional national league. In spite of finishing clear of the relegation zone, the team was demoted after the 1964-65 season following attempts to bribe players to play in the city under what had become decidedly unpleasant circumstances after the erection of the Berlin Wall. This caused something of a crisis for the Bundesliga which wanted for political reasons to continue to have a team in its ranks representing the former capital. Through various machinations this led to the promotion of Tasmania 1900 Berlin, which then delivered the worst-ever performance in Bundesliga history. Hertha managed a return to the premier German league in 1968-69 and developed a solid following making it Berlin's favorite side.

However, Hertha was again soon touched by scandal through its involvement with several other clubs in the Bundesliga match fixing scandal of 1971. In the course of an investigation of Hertha's role, it was also revealed that the club was 6 million DM in debt. Financial disaster was averted through the sale of the team's home ground.

In spite of this, the team continued to enjoy a fair measure of success on the field through the 70's with a second place Bundesliga finish behind Borussia Moenchengladbach in 1974-75, a semi-final appearance in the 1979 UEFA Cup, and two appearances in the final of the German Cup (1977 and 1979). The following season saw the fortunes of the team take a turn for the worse as they were relegated to 2.Bundesliga where they would spend thirteen of the next seventeen seasons.

Plans in 1982 for a merger with Tennis Borussia, Blau Weiss 90 and SC Charlottenburg to form a side derisively referred to as FC Utopia never came to fruition. Hertha slipped as low as the third tier Amateur Oberliga Berlin where they spent two seasons (1986-87 and 1987-88). Two turns in the Bundesliga (1982-83 and 1990-91) saw the team immediately relegated after poor performances. Financial woes once more burdened the club in 1994 as it found itself 10 million DM in debt. The crisis was again resolved through the sale of real estate holdings in addition to the signing of a new sponsor and management team. By 1997 Hertha found its way back to the Bundesliga where they have generally managed to finish in the upper third of the slate. When Hertha was promoted in 1997, it ended Berlin's ten-year-long drought without a Bundesliga side – Blau-Weiß 90 Berlin had been the last. During this period, Germany was probably the only nation in the world whose capital city was not represented in the country's top-flight football league.

Most recently, bright spots for the side have been a continuous string of appearances in international play in the UEFA Cup and the UEFA Champions League beginning in the 1999 season, and the signing of players such as Sebastian Deisler and Brazilian international Marcelinho, named the Bundesliga's player of the year in May of 2005. Hertha has also invested heavily in its own youth football academy, which has produced several players with Bundesliga potential.

The team was almost relegated in the 2003-04 season, but rebounded and finished 4th the following season, but missed out on the Champions League after they were held to a draw on the final day by Hannover 96, which saw Werder Bremen over take them for the spot on the final day. As a thank-you gesture, Werder sent the Hannover squad ninety-six bottles of champagne. In 2005-06 the Herthaner finished 6th, and qualified for the UEFA Cup by defeating FK Moskva in the Intertoto Cup.

[edit] Stadium

Hertha BSC plays its matches in Berlin's Olympiastadion. The facility has a capacity of 76,243, making it the second-largest stadium in Germany behind Borussia Dortmund's Westfalenstadion (82,932, including ~67,000 seats).

The stadium hosts the annual German Cup final and was also the site for six matches of the 2006 FIFA World Cup as well as the tournament final.

Since 1904, Hertha's home ground was the Plumpe in the city's Wedding (Gesundbrunnen) district. A stadium was built there in 1923 having a capacity of ~35,000 (~3,600 seats). BSC left that facility behind when it joined the Bundesliga in 1963. The sale of the site in 1974 helped the club avoid bankruptcy

[edit] Current squad

No. Position Player
3 Flag of Germany DF Arne Friedrich
4 Flag of Netherlands DF Dick van Burik
5 Flag of Germany DF Sofian Chahed
6 Flag of Brazil MF Gilberto
7 Flag of Turkey MF Yıldıray Baştürk
8 Flag of Hungary MF Pál Dárdai
9 Flag of Serbia FW Marko Pantelić
11 Flag of Netherlands FW Ellery Cairo
12 Flag of Germany GK Christian Fiedler
13 Flag of Argentina FW Christian Giménez
14 Flag of Croatia DF Josip Šimunić
15 Flag of Brazil MF Mineiro
16 Flag of Iran FW Ashkan Dejagah
17 Flag of Germany MF Kevin-Prince Boateng
18 Flag of Croatia FW Srđan Lakić
No. Position Player
19 Flag of Germany MF Andreas Schmidt
20 Flag of Germany MF Zecke
21 Flag of Nigeria FW Solomon Okoronkwo
23 Flag of Denmark DF Dennis Cagara
27 Flag of Germany DF Amadeus Wallschläger
29 Flag of Germany DF Malik Fathi
32 Flag of Germany MF Robert Müller
33 Flag of Denmark GK Kevin Stuhr Ellegaard
37 Flag of Germany MF Christian Müller
38 Flag of Germany MF Patrick Ebert
39 Flag of Germany FW Chinedu Ede
40 Flag of Germany GK Nico Pellatz
41 Flag of Germany DF Jérôme Boateng
43 Flag of Germany DF Christopher Schorch

[edit] Team trivia

  • In 1993, Hertha's amateur side advanced all the way to the final of the German Cup where their unexpected run ended in a close 0:1 defeat at the hands of Bundesliga side Bayer Leverkusen.
  • Hertha is a variation on the name Nerthus referring to a Germanic fertility goddess.

[edit] Famous players

[edit] External links

UEFA Cup 2006-07
v  d  e

Quarter-Finals
Flag of Netherlands AZ | Flag of Germany Bayer Leverkusen | Flag of Portugal Benfica | Flag of Spain Espanyol | Flag of Spain Osasuna | Flag of Spain Sevilla |
Flag of England Tottenham Hotspur | Flag of Germany Werder Bremen

Eliminated in Round of 16
Braga | Celta Vigo | Lens | Maccabi Haifa | Newcastle United | Paris Saint-Germain | Rangers | Shakhtar Donetsk |

Eliminated in Round of 32
AEK | Ajax | Blackburn Rovers | Bordeaux | CSKA Moscow | Dinamo Bucharest | Fenerbahçe 
Feyenoord (expelled) | Hapoel Tel Aviv | Livorno | Nancy | Panathinaikos | Parma | Spartak Moscow | Steaua | Zulte-Waregem
Eliminated in Group Stage
Austria Wien | Auxerre | Basel | Beşiktaş | Club Brugge | Eintracht Frankfurt | Grasshoppers | Heerenveen | Liberec | Mladá Boleslav | Odense | Palermo | Partizan | Rapid Bucureşti | Sparta Prague | Wisła
Eliminated in First Round
Achna | Artmedia | Atromitos | Åtvidaberg | Brøndby | Chievo | Chornomorets | CSKA Sofia | Derry City | Dinamo Zagreb | Groningen | Hearts | Hertha Berlin | Iraklis | Kayserispor | Legia | Levadia | Litex | Lokomotiv Moscow | Lokomotiv Sofia | Marseille | Molde | Nacional da Madeira | Pasching | Rabotnički | Randers | Red Star | Rubin | Ružomberok | Salzburg | Schalke | Sion | Slavia Prague | Standard Liège | Start | Trabzonspor | Vitória Setúbal | West Ham United | Xanthi | Zaporizhzhya
German Bundesliga Football Clubs (2006-07)
Alemannia Aachen | Arminia Bielefeld | Bayer Leverkusen | Bayern Munich
VfL Bochum | Borussia Dortmund | Borussia Mönchengladbach | Eintracht Frankfurt
Energie Cottbus | Hamburger SV | Hannover 96 | Hertha BSC Berlin | 1. FSV Mainz 05
1. FC Nürnberg | FC Schalke 04 | VfB Stuttgart | Werder Bremen | VfL Wolfsburg
German Regionalliga Nord (III) Football Clubs (2006-07)
Rot-Weiß Ahlen | Hertha BSC Berlin II | 1. FC Union Berlin | Werder Bremen II
Borussia Dortmund II | Dynamo Dresden | Fortuna Düsseldorf | BSV Kickers Emden
FC Rot-Weiss Erfurt | Hamburger SV II | Holstein Kiel | Bayer Leverkusen II
VfB Lübeck | 1. FC Magdeburg | Borussia Mönchengladbach II | VfL Osnabrück
FC St. Pauli | SV Wilhelmshaven | Wuppertaler SV Borussia