Borussia Mönchengladbach

Borussia Mönchengladbach
Full name Borussia VfL 1900
Mönchengladbach e.V.
Nickname(s) Die Fohlen (the Foals)
Founded 1 August, 1900
Ground Borussia-Park,
Mönchengladbach
(Capacity: 54,067)
Chairman Flag of Germany Rolf Königs
Manager Flag of Germany Hans Meyer
League Bundesliga
2007-08 2. Bundesliga, 1st
(promoted)
Team colours Team colours Team colours
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Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
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Away colours
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Borussia Mönchengladbach, is a German football club based in Mönchengladbach, North Rhine-Westphalia. The team plays in the first division 1. Bundesliga and is one of the country's most well-known, best-supported, and successful teams. Borussia Mönchengladbach has almost 40,000 members and is the fourth largest club in Germany. The official mascot of the club is the foal Jünter. "Borussia" is a Latinized form of Prussia, a popular term in naming German clubs located within the former Kingdom of Prussia.

Contents

History

Early history

The club's forerunner was a loose association of young men known as Fussball Club Germania München-Gladbach from the city's Eicken district organized in late 1899. FC Borussia M.Gladbach was formally established on August 1, 1900 and took up play in the Rheinisch-Westfälischen Spielverband.

The new club made steady progress, moving upward through the different levels of league play and in 1912 appeared in the final of the Westdeutsche Verbandsliga, losing 2:4 to Kölner BC. In 1919, they joined Turnverein Germania 1889 to form Verein für Turn- und Rasensport 1889 München-Gladbach. The next year VfTuR made a second appearance in the final against Kölner BC, this time coming away with a 3:2 overtime victory. The next month they played their first game in a national championship playoffs, but did poorly, losing 0:7 to SpVgg Fürth in the opening round. In 1921, the footballers decided to leave Germania's gymnasts behind to form Borussia VfL München-Gladbach.

In 1933 the club formed a short-lived union with SC München-Gladbach to play as SC Borussia München-Gladbach until August 1934. SC Borussia qualified to play in the Gauliga Niederrhein, one of sixteen top-flight divisions established in 1933 in the re-organization of German football under the Third Reich. They played two more season at that level as VfL before being relegated to lower tier competition until moving up to the Oberliga West in 1952.

Ascent to the Bundesliga

In 1960 the club won its first major honours when they beat Karlsruher SC 3:2 in the final of the German Cup and the following year took on the now familiar name Borussia VfL Mönchengladbach. Further honours would be another decade in coming. Borussia's results in the ten years leading up to the formation of the Bundesliga in 1963 were not good enough to earn them admission into the ranks of the nation's new top flight professional league and so they played in the second tier Regionalliga West.

Mönchengladbach played their way into the Bundesliga in the 1965-66 season, alongside future powerhouse Bayern Munich. These two clubs would go on to a fierce struggle as they challenged each other for league supremacy throughout the 1970s. Bayern counted first, winning the Bundesliga championship in 1969. M'gladbach struck back immediately in the next season with a championship of their own and followed up with another one in 1971, becoming the first Bundesliga club ever to successfully defend their title.

Borussia's Golden Decade

Bayern then became the first club to win three consecutive titles with Borussia finishing only a point behind the champions in 1974. Die Fohlen were able to take some consolation in a 2:1 victory over 1. FC Köln in 1973 to win their second German Cup. Under coach Hennes Weisweiler the young side displayed an offensive minded philosophy and powerful play that attracted fans from all over Germany. The team stayed on the attack and matched Bayern's achievement with three consecutive titles of their own from 1975 to 1977. M'gladbach lost the 1977 final of the European Cup to Liverpool, but also made four appearances in the UEFA Cup with wins in 1975 and 1979 against losses in 1973 and 1980. The club's spectacular run had come to an end with eight titles to their credit. And although they would continue to be competitive for many years, success would be much harder to come by.

1980 and Beyond

Mönchengladbach's golden era ended in the 80's as the club had to sell many of its best players to keep its finances in order, and without talented coaches like Hennes Weisweiler and Udo Lattek it was not possible to stay on top. Even so, they managed to finish most seasons in the upper half of the league table and, in 1984, they were part of a four way race to the Bundesliga championship, finishing one point ahead of Bayern, and tied on points with Hamburg and champions Stuttgart, but behind on goal differential. That same season M'gladbach lost the German Cup final to Bayern on penalties.

The team's performance slipped significantly in the 90's and they found themselves struggling in the lower half of the Bundesliga table. They lost another German Cup on penalties – this time to Hanover – before winning their last honours to date with a 3-0 Cup win over Wolfsburg in 1995. Finally, in 1999, they were relegated to 2.Bundesliga where they would spend two seasons. The club's return performance in the Bundesliga was uninspired as they remained mired in the bottom half of the league.

In 2004, M'Gladbach hired Dick Advocaat, who had guided the Dutch national team to the semi-finals of the Euro 2004 tournament and was a successful manager at Rangers, as their new coach. He was unable to turn the team's fortunes and resigned in April the next year. Former Mönchengladbach player and German international Horst Köppel was appointed caretaker for the remaining five fixtures of the season. Köppel had managed the club's reserves since leaving Borussia Dortmund in June 2004. For the 2006/2007 season legendary Mönchengladbach player and coach Jupp Heynckes was appointed as team coach.

Borussia has taken steps to improve their financial situation with the construction of a new state-of-the-art stadium called Borussia-Park with a permitted capacity of 59,771 spectators (limited to 54,067 for Bundesliga games and to 46,249 for international games). The club had long been hindered by playing in a much smaller and older facility (Bökelberg, capacity 34,500) and with the opening of the new stadium in 2004 can look forward to increased revenues through higher ticket sales and the ability to host lucrative international matches.

On the 31st matchday of the 2006/2007 season Borussia Mönchengladbach were relegated from the Bundesliga after Arminia Bielefeld upset Werder Bremen 3-2 while Borussia lost 1-0 at home to VfB Stuttgart.

They were promoted back to the Bundesliga on the 32nd matchday of the 2007/2008 season after winning the match vs. SV Wehen 3-0.

Manager History

Players

Current squad

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Germany GK Christofer Heimeroth
2 Flag of Germany MF Sebastian Schachten
3 Flag of Belgium DF Filip Daems
4 Flag of the Netherlands DF Roel Brouwers
5 Flag of Côte d'Ivoire DF Steve Gohouri
6 Flag of Germany DF Jan-Ingwer Callsen-Bracker
8 Flag of Denmark MF Sebastian Svärd
9 Flag of Israel FW Roberto Colautti
11 Flag of Germany MF Marko Marin
13 Flag of Germany DF Alexander Voigt
15 Flag of Germany DF Thomas Kleine
16 Flag of Canada FW Rob Friend
17 Flag of the Netherlands MF Patrick Paauwe
18 Flag of Germany GK Frederic Löhe
No. Position Player
19 Flag of Israel MF Gal Alberman
20 Flag of France DF Jean-Sébastien Jaurès
21 Flag of Germany GK Uwe Gospodarek
22 Flag of Germany DF Tobias Levels
23 Flag of Cameroon MF Marcel Ndjeng
25 Flag of Germany FW Moses Lamidi
26 Flag of the United States MF Michael Bradley
27 Flag of Germany FW Oliver Neuville (captain)
28 Flag of Germany MF Johannes van den Bergh
29 Flag of Germany MF Alexander Baumjohann
33 Flag of Germany DF Christian Dorda
35 Flag of Germany DF Oliver Stang
37 Flag of Germany MF Tony Jantschke
40 Flag of Algeria FW Karim Matmour

For recent transfers, see List of German football transfers summer 2008.

Reserve Squad

No. Position Player
7 Flag of Mali MF Soumaila Coulibaly
10 Flag of Germany FW Sascha Rösler
14 Flag of Sweden MF Sharbel Touma
-- Flag of Germany GK Marc Engelmann
-- Flag of Germany GK Julien Jansen
-- Flag of Turkey DF Baris Cömez
-- Flag of Australia DF Peter Cvetanovski
-- Flag of France DF Joel Damahou
-- Flag of Germany DF Christian Dorda
-- Flag of Germany DF Tim Heubach
-- Flag of Turkey DF Safa Tolga Kacinoglu
-- Flag of the Czech Republic DF Christoph Kasak
-- Flag of the Republic of the Congo DF Christ Kasela Mbona
-- Flag of Germany DF Michél Kniat
-- Flag of Germany DF Jan Lukas Pirschel
-- Flag of Germany DF Tim Rubink
-- Flag of Germany DF Jochen Schumacher
-- Flag of Germany DF Oliver Stang
-- Flag of Germany DF Daniel Vogel
-- Flag of Germany MF Fabian Bäcker
No. Position Player
-- Flag of Turkey MF Muhittin Bastürk
-- Flag of Turkey MF Adem Demir
-- Flag of Poland MF Dennis Dowidat
-- Flag of Turkey MF Ekrem Engin
-- Flag of Serbia MF Mirhudin Kacar
-- Flag of Turkey MF Abdulla Keseroglu
-- Flag of Poland MF Dominik Kruczek
-- Flag of Hungary MF Christian Petry
-- Flag of Germany MF Patrick Schaaf
-- Flag of Germany MF Sören Seidel
-- Flag of Slovakia MF Sascha Tobor
-- Flag of Germany MF Stephan Wanneck
-- Flag of Turkey FW Bünyamin Aksoy
-- Flag of Turkey FW Cengiz Can
-- Flag of Turkey FW Tezcan Karabulut
-- Flag of Turkey FW Gökan Lekesiz
-- Flag of Germany FW Christian Schlösser
-- Flag of Germany FW Lars Schuchardt
-- Flag of Germany FW Eric Tappiser
-- Flag of Germany FW Matthias von der Weth

Staff Head Coach

Assistant Coach

Famous players

Heinz Ditgens became the club's first international in 1936. Since then Borussia Mönchengladbach has sent over 30 players to the national team, many of these from their outstanding sides of the 1970s. The 1974 World Cup winning side included five "Foals" players.

Among the notable players are:

Honorable mentions are also deserved by:

Dietmar Danner, Ludwig Müller, Dane Ulrik le Fevre, Damian Mori, Peter Dietrich, Michael Frontzeck, the one eyed Wilfried Hannes, Wolfgang Kleff, Horst Köppel, Herbert Laumen, Frank Mill, Kasey Keller,Oliver Neuville, Klaus-Dieter Sieloff, Hartwig Bleidick, Marko Marin.

(see also: List of Borussia Mönchengladbach players)

Honours

Borussia Mönchengladbach's five Bundesliga championships entitle the club to display two gold stars of the "Verdiente Meistervereine".

*Kirin Cup was shared with SE Palmeiras

Records

Borussia Mönchengladbach's name is attached to a number of Bundesliga records:

  • Mönchengladbach has a fearsome record when it comes to laying a drubbing on other teams. On April 29, 1978 they beat Borussia Dortmund (12:0), the biggest winning margin ever in league history, as well as the most goals scored by a single side in a match. The Dortmund coach, Otto Rehhagel, was not only immediately fired after the game, he got also the nickname "Torhagel" ("Goal hail"). They also hold second place in the category for beating Schalke 04 (11:0) on January 7, 1967, and third place for a pair of (10:0) victories over Eintracht Braunschweig on November 11, 1984 and Borussia Neunkirchen on November 4, 1967.
  • The most penalties in a match is 5 in a game played between M'gladbach and Dortmund on November 9, 1965.

Players' Honours

Players of the club achieved the following honours:

Player of the Year - Europe

Player of the Year - Germany

Player of the Year - Australia

Player of the Year - Austria

Player of the Year - Belgium

Player of the Year - Denmark

Player of the Year - Sweden

Player of the Year - USA

Bundesliga Top-Scorers

Goal of the Year

Recent League Finishes

References

  1. "Borussias Trainer" (in German). borussia.de.

External links