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VfL Bochum

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VfL Bochum
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Full name Verein für Leibesübungen Bochum 1848
Fußballgemeinschaft e.V.
Nickname(s) Die Unabsteigbaren ("The Unrelegables", only prior to 1994)
Founded 1848
Ground Ruhrstadion
(Capacity: 31,328)
Chairman Flag of Germany Werner Altegoer
Head Coach Flag of Switzerland Marcel Koller
League Bundesliga
2008-09 Bundesliga, 14th
Team colours
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Home colours
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Away colours
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VfL Bochum is a German football club based in Bochum, North Rhine-Westphalia.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Founding to World War II

VfL is one of the oldest sports organizations in Germany claiming an origin date of July 26, 1848 when an article in the Märkischer Sprecher - a local newspaper - called for the creation of a gymnastics club. The Bochumer Turnverein was then formally established with the authorities on February 18, 1849. However, the origin of the VfLs football department is the predecessor side of the Fußballklub 06 formed in 1906, later known as SV Germania 06 Bochum.

Another ancestor - Spiel und Sport Bochum - was formed in 1908 and played the first football match at the Castroper Straße (Ruhrstadion) on October 8, 1911. After a merger with another local side in 1919, they took on the name TuS Bochum 1848.

Two of these clubs played in the Gauliga Westfalen, one of sixteen top-flight divisions established through the re-organization of German football under the Third Reich in 1933. TuS Bochum appeared there briefly in 1936 and 1937, while Germania Bochum played in the division from 1933 to 1938. VfL Bochum was formed when the Naziregime ordered the consolidation of TuS, Germania, and Turnverein Bochum 1848 on April 14, 1938 and began play in the 1938-39 season. After 1943 they played with yet another club as the combined wartime side Kriegsspielgemeinschaft (KSG) VfL 1848 Bochum/Preußen Bochum until the end of the conflict. Although the club was able to field competitive sides, they had the misfortune of playing in the same division as Schalke 04 which was the dominant team of the era: Bochum's best results were a number of distant second place finishes.

[edit] Postwar and entry to Bundesliga play

Following the war the football section resumed play as the independent VfL Bochum Fussballgemeinschaft 1848 and played its first season in the second division 2.Oberliga West in 1949, while Preußen Bochum went on to lower tier amateur level play. VfL captured the division title in 1953 to advance to the Oberliga West for a single season. They repeated their divisional win in 1956 and returned to the top-flight until again being relgated after the 1960-61 season.

With the formation of the Bundesliga, Germany's new professional league, in 1963, VfL found itself in the third tier Amateurliga Westfalen. A first place result there in 1965 raised them to the Regionalliga West (II) from where they began a steady climb up the league table to the Bundesliga in 1971. During this rise Bochum also played its way to the final of the 1968 German Cup where they dropped a 1:4 decision to 1. FC Köln.h

In spite of being a perennial lower table side, Bochum developed a reputation for tenaciousness on the field in a run of twenty seasons at the top flight. The club made a repeat appearance in the German Cup final in 1988, this time going down 0:1 to Eintracht Frankfurt. Relegated after a 16th place finish in 1993, the team has become a classic "elevator side", bouncing up and down between the Bundesliga and 2.Bundesliga. The club's best Bundesliga results have come relatively recently as 5th place finishes in 1997 and 2004, which earned them appearances in the UEFA Cup tournament. In 1997, they advanced to the third round where they were put out by Dutch side Ajax Amsterdam, and in 2004, they were eliminated early through away goals (0-0 and 1-1) by Standard CL Liège of Belgium.

[edit] Current

Today's sports club has 5,000 members with the football department accounting for over 2,200 of these. Other sections now part of the association include athletics, badminton, basketball, dance, fencing, gymnastics, handball, hockey, swimming, table tennis, tennis, and volleyball.

[edit] Players

See also List of VfL Bochum players

[edit] Current squad

As of July 3, 2009[1][2]

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Portugal GK Daniel Fernandes
2 Flag of Sweden DF Matias Concha
4 Flag of Germany DF Marcel Maltritz (captain)
5 Flag of Germany MF Christoph Dabrowski (vice-captain)
6 Flag of Austria MF Christian Fuchs
7 Flag of Germany MF Paul Freier
8 Flag of Sweden MF Andreas Johansson
9 Flag of Slovakia FW Stanislav Šesták
10 Flag of Cameroon MF Joël Epalle
11 Flag of Slovenia FW Zlatko Dedič
14 Flag of Argentina FW Diego Klimowicz
15 Flag of Canada MF Daniel Imhof
16 Flag of Iran FW Vahid Hashemian
No. Position Player
17 Flag of Turkey FW Sinan Kaloğlu
18 Flag of Germany GK Philipp Heerwagen
19 Flag of Germany MF Dennis Grote
20 Flag of Germany DF Mergim Mavraj
21 Flag of France MF Marc Pfertzel
22 Flag of Germany MF Mimoun Azaouagh
23 Flag of Japan MF Shinji Ono
24 Flag of Germany DF Philipp Bönig
25 Flag of Algeria DF Antar Yahia
26 Flag of Germany GK Andreas Luthe
27 Flag of Germany MF Kevin Vogt
30 Flag of Germany DF Patrick Fabian
31 Flag of Germany GK Rene Renno

[edit] Players out on loan

No. Position Player
Flag of Croatia MF Ivo Iličević (on loan at Kaiserslautern until July 2010)
 

For recent transfers, see List of German football transfers summer 2008#VfL Bochum and List of German football transfers winter 2008-09#VfL Bochum.

[edit] VfL Bochum II squad

As of 30 December 2008

Manager: Flag of Germany Nicolas Michaty

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Germany GK Andreas Luthe
2 Flag of Germany DF Christian Mäscher
3 Flag of Germany DF Thiemo Höhn
4 Flag of Germany DF Christian Kalina
5 Flag of Germany DF Daniel Klinger
6 Flag of Germany MF David Zajas
7 Flag of Germany MF Mirkan Aydın
8 Flag of Germany MF Jürgen Duah
9 Flag of Germany FW Sami El-Nounou
10 Flag of Germany MF Heinrich Schmidtgal
11 Flag of Turkey MF Dilaver Güclü
No. Position Player
12 Flag of Germany GK Michael Esser
13 Flag of Germany MF Lukas Schmitz
14 Flag of Germany MF Oliver Zech
15 Flag of Italy MF Gianluca Zavarise
16 Flag of Germany FW Mike Hibbeln
17 Flag of Germany FW Roman Prokoph
18 Flag of Germany FW Alexander Neumann
21 Flag of Germany FW Mohamed Labiadh
22 Flag of Germany DF Rouven Schröder
23 Flag of Germany DF Jonas Acquistapace
30 Flag of Germany DF Patrick Fabian

[edit] Notable players

The following are listed on the club's official site as their "Legendary Players", or are among the Bundesliga players with most appearances or goals.

See also: Category:VfL Bochum players

Germany

Iceland

Netherlands

Poland

Iran

Greece

[edit] Honours

UEFA Cup
1997/98 (Third Round), 2004/05 (First Round)
German Cup finalists
1967/68, 1987/88
Bundesliga UEFA Cup qualification
1996/97 (5th), 2003/04 (5th)
Bundesliga top goal scorer
1985/86 (Stefan Kuntz, 22 goals), 2002/03 (Thomas Christiansen, 21 goals (w/Giovane Elber)), 2006/07 (Theofanis Gekas, 20 goals)
Promoted to Bundesliga
1970/71 (1st Regionalliga West, 1st promotion group #1), 1993/94 (1st), 1995/96 (1st), 1999/2000 (2nd), 2001/02 (3rd), 2005/06 (1st)
2. Bundesliga champions
1993/94, 1995/96, 2005/06
2. Bundesliga top goal scorer
1993/94 (Uwe Wegmann 22 goals)

[edit] Youth

[edit] League results

[edit] Stadium

Ruhrstadion (also known as "rewirpowerSTADION" under a sponsorship deal) was one of the first modern football-only stadiums in Germany. It was built in the 1970s on the traditional ground of TuS Bochum 08 at the Castroper Straße north of the city centre.

The fully-roofed venue's capacity is 31,328, including standing room for 15,639.

[edit] Team trivia

  • One of the most prominent supporters of VfL Bochum is popular German musician and actor Herbert Grönemeyer, who wrote the song "Bochum" which soon became the club's unofficial anthem sung by VfL fans prior to every home match.
  • In 1955, VfL Bochum became the first German football club to travel to Israel to play a friendship match.
  • The club does not assign the number 12 to any player in order to honour its fans as the 12th man.

[edit] Coaches

1967-1972 Hermann Eppenhoff
1972-1979 Heinz Höher
1979-1981 Helmuth Johannsen
1981-1986 Rolf Schafstall
1986-1988 Hermann Gerland
1988-1989 Franz-Josef Tenhagen
1989-1991 Reinhard Saftig
1991 Rolf Schafstall
1991-1992 Holger Osieck
1992-1995 Jürgen Gelsdorf
1995-1999 Klaus Toppmöller
1999 Ernst Middendorp
1999-2000 Bernard Dietz
2000-2001 Ralf Zumdick
2001 Rolf Schafstall
2001 Bernard Dietz
2001-2005 Peter Neururer
2005- Marcel Koller

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Heerwagen, Luthe und Vogt rücken auf". VfL Bochum. 2009-07-01. http://vfl-bochum.de/webcache/Aktuelles_meldung_6595_3_de.htm. Retrieved on 2009-07-02. 
  2. ^ "Dedic wechselt zum VfL". VfL Bochum. 2009-07-03. http://vfl-bochum.de/webcache/Aktuelles_meldung_6603_3_de.htm. Retrieved on 2009-07-04. 
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Player statistics". All time top five most Bundesliga games and most Bundesliga goals. http://vfl-bochum.de/webcache/Historie_Spielerstatistik_en_126.htm. Retrieved on 2009-01-08. 
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am "VfL legends: Portraits of legendary players". http://vfl-bochum.de/webcache/Historie_VfL_Legenden_en_123.htm. Retrieved on 2008-06-12. 

[edit] External links

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