Berliner FC Dynamo

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Berliner FC Dynamo
logo
Full name Berliner Fussball Club Dynamo e.V.
Nickname(s) "The Wine Reds", "The Hohenschönhauseners"
Founded 1953, 1966
Ground Dynamo-Sportforum,

Friedrich Ludwig Jahn Sportpark
(Capacity 10,000/ 20,000)

Chairman Flag of Germany Frank Berton
Manager Flag of Germany Volkan Uluc
League NOFV-Oberliga Nord (IV)
2006-07 10th
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

Berliner FC Dynamo (commonly Dynamo Berlin) is a German football club and is the successor organization to the club that played in East Berlin as Dynamo Berlin from 1953 to 1966.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Founding and Stasi patronage

A predecessor side to the current-day club was established as SV Dynamo on March 27, 1953 and then re-christened SC Dynamo Berlin on October 1, 1954. Initially a local side, the team was promoted to the DDR-Liga (II) in 1957 and captured the division championship that year to immediately advance to the DDR Oberliga. Dynamo enjoyed some success in the late 50s and early 60s with a number of top-three finishes and an East German Cup win in 1959. However, by 1963 their play had fallen off and they had become a lower table side leading to their relegation in 1967.

The club was re-established on January 15, 1966 as BFC Dynamo Berlin when the football department was spun off as part of a general re-organization of football in the country. The team members of Dynamo Dresden, one of the better teams in East Germany at the time, were ordered to leave for the capital to establish a competitive side in Berlin while the Dresden club was left to carry on using its second team players. Dynamo Berlin quickly returned to first division play after a single season absence and would soon become infamous under the patronage of Erich Mielke, head of East Germany's Stasi (the secret police), for the various means used to manipulate the outcome of the team's games and ensure its dominance.

Playing in the DDR-Oberliga BFC won ten consecutive titles from 1979 to 1988 assisted by crooked referees[1], unfair player transfers from other teams and assorted other unsportmanlike practices. Dynamo was reviled by many of the citizens of Berlin and the cheating was so blatant that it incurred the unofficially expressed displeasure of the country's ruling Politburo. Manipulation of the 1986 championship match between Dynamo and Lokomotive Leipzig which ended in a 1:1 draw that handed Dynamo its eighth title led to nationwide protests, but resulted only in sanctions against referee Bernd Stumpf.[2]

[edit] Post-unification

The original SC Dynamo logo ca. 1954 and logos in use by FC Berlin ca. 1990-99.
The original SC Dynamo logo ca. 1954 and logos in use by FC Berlin ca. 1990-99.

After German re-unification in 1990 the side was re-named FC Berlin in an attempt to re-package it and distance it from its unsavory past, but in 1999, they again took up the name BFC Dynamo. Without its powerful patron, the side quickly fell to tier III play and since the 2000-01 season has toiled in IV or V division leagues. The team went bankrupt in 2001-02 but was required by the DFB (Deutscher Fussball Bund or German Football Association) to play out the balance of its games for the season as "mandatory friendlies", which did not count in league standings, using available third string players – not an uncommon practise in these types of circumstances. The farce was played out in a series of lopsided defeats.

The club recovered to win the Verbandsliga Berlin (V) championship in 2004 and return to fourth division play in the Oberliga Nordost-Nord (IV) where they have settled in as mid-table side.

[edit] Championship stars controversy

Dynamo's unsanctioned unilateral adoption of championship stars helped stir a controversy in German football.
Dynamo's unsanctioned unilateral adoption of championship stars helped stir a controversy in German football.

In 2004, the DFB (Deutscher Fussball Bund or German Football Association) introduced the Verdiente Meistervereine – a system to honor the most successful teams in Bundesliga history awarding one star for three titles, two stars for five, and three stars for ten – allowing qualifying teams to display on their jerseys the stars they have earned. Dynamo Berlin petitioned the league to have their East German titles recognized, but received no reply. [3] They eventually took matters into their own hands and emblazoned their jerseys with three stars. This caused considerable debate given the tainted nature of their championships, and more generally, that the DFB did not recognize East German championships, only those championships won since the 1963 formation of the Bundesliga. The issue also affected other former East German teams including Dynamo Dresden (8 titles), Vorwärts Berlin (6), SC Wismut Karl Marx Stadt, FC Carl Zeiss Jena, and 1. FC Magdeburg.

The DFB has since updated this practise by broadening recognition to include all national level men's competitions since 1903 (when the first recognized national championship was staged), including those of the former East Germany, as well as all women's competitions since 1974. In addition, new standards for how championship stars are to be displayed on a team's uniform have been established. The DFB governs the use of championship stars and a club must have that governing body's approval before displaying any such badge.

Dynamo recently began use of the championship star in accordance with DFB graphic standards, displaying a star bearing the number 10 over the team logo in the current team photo and on the sponsorship page of their website. (March 2007).

[edit] Stadiums

The home of the club is the stadium at the Sportforum Hohenschönhausen built in 1970. It has a capacity of 10,000 spectators (~2,000 seats) and is part of a larger sports complex opened in 1986 with facilities for speed skating, athletics, and cycling. When opened it offered the world's first covered indoor speed skating oval. The football stadium was renovated in 2005-06 to include fences and player tunnels required to meet security standards. Dynamo played more important games – European Cup matches for example – in the larger, more secure Friedrich Ludwig Jahn Sportpark.

[edit] Club culture

The BFC has rivalries with Dynamo Dresden, Türkiyemspor Berlin, 1. FC Magdeburg, FC Sachsen Leipzig, and Union Berlin while enjoying friendly relations with Hertha BSC Berlin and VFL Bochum.

[edit] Ownership of the BFC logo

Dynamo's traditional logo is at the centre of an ownership dispute with related marketing revenues at stake.
Dynamo's traditional logo is at the centre of an ownership dispute with related marketing revenues at stake.
An alternate team crest prepared ca. 2004 as a possible replacement for the traditional logo, but only ever actually used by the club's youth sides.
An alternate team crest prepared ca. 2004 as a possible replacement for the traditional logo, but only ever actually used by the club's youth sides.

After German re-unification many former East German clubs rushed to drop the names they were often forced to bear during the Communist era and return to traditional names used prior to the end of World War II or to adopt completely new identities. Dynamo was among the clubs to do so, becoming FC Berlin. However, like many others of these clubs they found more value and fan recognition in the names, colours and crests they had played under in East Germany and so returned to these.

Dynamo's situation was complicated as they had neglected to copyright their old logo and found that when they tried to recover it in early 1999 that they no longer held title, having to share it with sports souvenir seller Peter "Pepe" Mager who laid claim to the orphaned image in March 1997. Control of the logo image has since passed to André Sommer and Rayk Bernt and their marketing firm Ra-Be GmbH through which they take ten percent of the value of all fan articles sold. Sommer and Bernt also served as directors in the period following the club's bankruptcy in 2001. This was the cause of additional concern for the beleaguered football association as the pair were known to have links to violent fan groups and the Hells Angels motorcycle club.

The situation remains unresolved and Dynamo is still working to recover the rights to its familiar traditional logo. In the meantime several alternative logos have been developed and registered in the event that they are unsuccessful in the attempt. The disputed image is in use on Dynamo's first team uniforms, at its website, and in other limited contexts, but the club still is unable to fully exploit the commercial value of the logo to its benefit.[4]

[edit] Current squad

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Germany GK Nico Thomaschewski
2 Flag of Germany MF Patrick Boese
3 Flag of Germany DF Jörn Lenz
4 Flag of Germany DF Robert Littmann
5 Flag of Germany DF Robert Rudwaleit
6 Flag of Germany MF Richard Below
7 Flag of Germany DF Julien Wienbreyer
8 Flag of Germany MF Daniel Rauschenbach
9 Flag of Germany FW Christian Ritter
10 Flag of Germany MF Dennis Kutrieb
12 Flag of Germany MF Daniel Schmele
13 Flag of Germany FW Jeff Kayser
No. Position Player
14 Flag of Germany MF Sebastian Ilic
15 Flag of Germany MF Manuel Benthin
16 Flag of Germany FW Dani Fakhro
17 Flag of Germany MF Daniel Metzke
18 Flag of Germany MF Max Gehrke
19 Flag of Germany FW Christian Rauch
20 Flag of Germany DF Oliver Kelm
21 Flag of Germany MF Eric Palmer
22 Flag of Germany FW Nico Paepke
23 Flag of Germany GK Dirk Brändike
24 Flag of Germany DF Jens Manteufel
37 Flag of Germany MF Alexander Jakowitz
79 Flag of Germany GK Kevin Sommer

[edit] Trainers

1954-1973

  • Flag of the German Democratic Republic Helmut Petzold 1954-1956 (from Dresden)
  • Flag of Hungary Flag of the German Democratic Republic Istvan Orczifalvi/Fritz Bachmann 1957–1958
  • Flag of the German Democratic Republic Fritz Bachmann 1959
  • Flag of the German Democratic Republic Janos Gyarmati 1961-62
  • Flag of the German Democratic Republic Fritz Gödicke 1962-1965
  • Flag of the German Democratic Republic Karl Schäffner 1965-66
  • Flag of the German Democratic Republic Bela Volentik 1966-67
  • Flag of the German Democratic Republic Karl Schäffner 1967-1969
  • Flag of the German Democratic Republic Hans Geitel 1969-1971
  • Flag of the German Democratic Republic Günter Schröter 1972-73
  • Flag of the German Democratic Republic Harry Nippert 1974-1977

1977-2003

  • Flag of the German Democratic Republic Jürgen Bogs 1977-1989
  • Flag of the German Democratic Republic Helmut Jäschke 1989-90
  • Flag of the German Democratic Republic Peter Rohde 1989-1991
  • Flag of Germany Jürgen Bogs 1990-1994
  • Flag of Germany Helmut Koch 1994-1996
  • Flag of Germany Werner Voigt 1996-1998
  • Flag of Germany Ingo Rentzsch 1997-98
  • Flag of Germany Henry Häusler 1998-99
  • Flag of Germany Klaus Goldbach 1999-2000
  • Flag of Germany Jürgen Bogs 2000-01
  • Flag of Germany Dirk Vollmar 2002-03

2003-

  • Flag of Germany Sven Orbanke 2002-04
  • Flag of Germany Christian Backs 2004-05
  • Flag of Germany Bodo Rudwaleit 2004-05
  • Flag of Germany Rajko Fijalek 2004-05
  • Flag of Germany Jürgen Piepenburg 2005-06
  • Flag of Germany Rajko Fijalek 2006-07
  • Flag of Germany Nico Thomaschewski, Jörn Lenz 2006-07
  • Flag of Germany Ingo Rentzsch 2006-07
  • Flag of Germany Nico Thomaschewski, Jörn Lenz 2006-07
  • Flag of Turkey Uluc Volkan 2007

[edit] Honours

Dynamo Berlin was East Germany's most successful club capturing 10 national titles, and is second in the country only to Bayern Munich who have 20 national titles to their credit. Those 10 titles came consecutively - a feat no other team in Germany has matched at the top level of competition.

  • East German champions (DDR-Oberliga): 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988
  • East German vice champions: 1960, 1972, 1976, 1989
  • East German Cup winners (FDGB Pokal): 1959, 1988, 1989
  • East German Cup runners-up (FDGB Pokal): 1962, 1971, 1979, 1982, 1984, 1985
  • GDR Supercup winners: 1989
  • Paul Rusch Cup (Berlin Cup) winners: 1999
  • Paul Rusch Cup (Berlin Cup) runners-up: 2000
  • NOFV-Oberliga Nord (IV) champions: 2002
  • Verbandsliga Berlin (V) champions: 2004
  • Fair Play Trophy: 2007

Dynamo club member and referee Lutz-Michael Fröhlich was awarded the 2007 Fair Play Trophy as selected by German journalists. Fröhlich has over 200 first division matches to his credit and was recognized for his even-handed treatment of Michael Ballack in a November 6, 2004 match between Bayern Munich and Hannover 96, withdrawing a yellow card that would have put the player out of the match after consulting with his assistant over the correctness of the call. He was also a leading figure in uncovering the match fixing scandal of 2005 involving referee Robert Hoytzer.[5]

[edit] Poetry about BFC Dynamo

During the days of the GDR, Dynamo did not find much support in the general public and its success was often attributed to match fixing and biased refeeres. A poem, written by an unknown author in 1988, clearly states the peoples opinion on Dynamo:

German:

Gemeinsam klappts!!!
Beim BFC geht’s gut voran
mit Prokop, Stumpf und Habermann.
Auch Rossner, Scheurell sorgen prompt,
dass der BFC nach vorne kommt…
So schafft man mit vereinter Kraft
für den BFC die Meisterschaft.
Doch ist der Schirie mal neutral,
bleibt auch der BFC nur zweite Wahl.
Im Meistercup gibt’s schwere Stunden:
BFC gewogen und zu leicht gefunden!!!

English:

Together we succeed!!!
BFC is marching forward
with Prokop, Stumpf, and Habermann.
Rossner, Scheurell making sure,
for BFC to move ahead...
And so, they archive with united strength
another title for the BFC.
But with a neutral referee,
BFC only finishes second.
In the European Cup they find only dark hours:
BFC scaled and found too light!!!

Source:Behind the Wall: East German football between state and society. GFL-Journal, Mike Dennis. Retrieved on 2008-03-18.

  • The poem refers in names to five East German refeeres all considered by the general public to have rigged matches in favor of Dynamo.

[edit] BFC Dynamo in European competitions

Season Competition Round Land Club Score
1971/1972 Cup Winners' Cup 1st round Flag of Wales Cardiff City 1:1, 1:1, 5:6 (a.p.)
1/8 final Flag of Belgium K. Beerschot V.A.C. 3:1, 3:1
quarter-final Flag of Sweden Åtvidabergs FF 2:0, 2:2
semi-final Flag of the Soviet Union FC Dynamo Moscow 1:1, 1:1, 4:1 (a.p.)
1972/73 UEFA Cup 1st round Flag of France Angers SCO 1:1, 2:1
2nd round Flag of Bulgaria PFC Levski Sofia 3:0, 0:2
1/8 final Flag of England Liverpool FC 0:0, 1:3
1976/77 UEFA Cup 1st round Flag of the Soviet Union Shakhtar Donetsk 0:3, 1:1
1978/79 UEFA Cup 1st round Flag of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade 5:2, 1:4
1979/80 European Cup 1st round Flag of Poland Ruch Chorzów 4:1, 0:0
1/8 round Flag of Switzerland Servette FC 2:1, 2:2
quarter-final Flag of England Nottingham Forest 1:0, 1:3
1980/81 European Cup 1st round Flag of Cyprus APOEL 3:0, 1:2
1/8 final Flag of the Czech Republic Baník Ostrava 0:0, 1:1
1981/82 European Cup 1st round Flag of Austria FC Zürich 2:0, 1:3
1/8 final Flag of England Aston Villa 1:2, 1:0
1982/83 European Cup 1st round Flag of Germany Hamburger SV 1:1, 0:2
1983/84 European Cup 1st round Flag of Luxembourg Jeunesse Esch 4:1, 2:0
1/8 final Flag of Yugoslavia Partizan Belgrade 2:0, 0:1
quarter-final Flag of Italy AS Roma 0:3, 2:1
1984/85 European Cup 1st round Flag of Scotland Aberdeen FC 1:2, 2-1, 5:4 (a.p.)
1/8 final Flag of Austria FK Austria Wien 3:3, 1:2
1985/86 European Cup 1st round Flag of Austria FK Austria Wien 0:2, 1:2
1986/87 European Cup 1st round Flag of Sweden Örgryte IS 3:2, 4:1
1/8 final Flag of Denmark Brøndby IF 1-2, 1-1
1987/88 European Cup 1st round Flag of France Girondins de Bordeaux 0:2, 0:2
1987/88 European Cup 1st round Flag of Germany Werder Bremen 3:0, 0:5
1989/90 Cup Winners' Cup 1st round Flag of Iceland Valur 2:1, 2:1
1/8 final Flag of Monaco AS Monaco 0:0, 1:1

[edit] External links

[edit] See also


[edit] References

  1. ^ East Germany's Star Quality in Question. Deutsche Welle (13 May 2005). Retrieved on 2008-03-18.
  2. ^ Weinreich,Jens http://www.berlinonline.de/berliner-zeitung/archiv/.bin/dump.fcgi/2005/0324/sport/0005/index.html title: Büttel an der Pfeife (Büttel at the whistle) publisher=Berliner Zeitung date: 2005-03-24 accessdate: 2007-02-02 (German)
  3. ^ East Germany's Star Quality in Question | German Soccer | Deutsche Welle | 13.05.2005
  4. ^ http://www.berlinonline.de/berliner-kurier/archiv/.bin/dump.fcgi/2006/0406/sport/0038/index.html (German)
  5. ^ Web-Source: http://www.netzeitung.de/sport/bundesliga/335720.html Schiedsrichter Fröhlich erhält Fair-Play-Preis (Referee Fröhlich receives Fair Play prize)

Coordinates: 52°32′27″N, 13°28′34″E