Everything about 1 Fc Nuremberg totally explained
Thomas von Heesen |
manager =
Martin Bader |
league =
2. Bundesliga |
season =
2007/08 |
position = Bundesliga, 16th (Relegated) |
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1. FC Nuremberg is a
German football club in
Nuremberg,
Bavaria. It was founded on
May 4,
1900 by a group of eighteen young men who had gathered at the local pub called the "Bürenhütte" to assemble a side committed to playing football rather than rugby, one of the other new "English" games becoming popular at the time. Today's club offers its members boxing, handball, hockey, rollerblading and ice skating, swimming, skiing, and tennis. They play in the 2nd Bundesliga after being relegated in 2008.
History
Rise of "Der Club"
By
1909 the team was playing well enough to lay claim to the South German championship. After
World War I,
Nürnberg would gradually turn their success into dominance of the country's football. In the period from July
1918 to February
1922 the team would go unbeaten in 104 official matches. As early as
1919 they came to be referred to simply as "
Der Club" in recognition of their skill and of their style on and off the field, and would go on to become one of the nation's most widely recognized and popular teams.
Nürnberg faced
SpVgg Greuther Fürth in the first national championship held after the end of
World War I and beat the defending champions 2:0. That would be the first of five titles
Der Club would capture over the course of eight years. In each of those wins they'd shutout their opponents.
The
1922 final was contested by Nürnberg and
Hamburger SV but never reached a conclusion on the pitch. The match was called on account of darkness after three hours and ten minutes of play, drawn at 2:2. The re-match also went into extra time, and in an era that didn't allow for substitutions, that game was called at 1:1 when
Nürnberg was reduced to just seven players and the referee ruled they couldn't continue. Considerable wrangling ensued over the decision. The
DFB (Deutscher Fussball Bund or German Football Association) awarded the win to Hamburg, under the condition that they renounce the title in the name of "good sportsmanship" – which they grudgingly did. Ultimately, the Viktoria trophy wasn't officially presented that year for more or less sordid sports political reasoning.
After the Glory Years
1. FCN's dominance was already being to fade when they captured their final trophy of the era in
1927 as the game began to evolve into a more quickly paced contest which didn't suit their slower, more deliberate approach. While they continued to field strong sides, other clubs rose to the forefront of German football. In
1934, they lost in the final to
Schalke 04 a club that would go on to become the strongest side in the era of football under the
Third Reich.
Nürnberg would capture national titles just before and after
World War II in
1936 and
1948 in the first post-war national final, and would also take the Tschammerpokal, the forerunner of today's
German Cup, in
1935 and
1939.
Into the Modern Era
The post-war period began with the
Club being integrated in the
Oberliga Süd, one of the five top divisions in West-Germany at the time. Nürnberg managed to win this league six times until 1963, winning the national championship in 1948. In
1961,
1. FCN captured their eighth national title and appeared in a losing effort in the following year's final. Some consolation was to be had in the team capturing its second
German Cup in
1962. Their strong play made them an obvious choice to be amongst the sixteen teams selected to the
Bundesliga, Germany's new professional football league, formed in
1963.
Der Club played as a mid-table side through the league's early years until putting on a dominating performance in
1968 in which they sat atop the league table from the fifth week of play on to the end of the season on their way to their first Bundesliga title. They promptly went on to the ignominy of being relegated the next year as coach
Max Merkel decided his veteran team was too old and so rid the club of its existing players in favour of a dozen newcomers.
It would take the club nine years to recover and return from an exile in the second tier, first the
Regionalliga Süd, then the
2nd Bundesliga Süd, that included several failed efforts in the promotion rounds.
1. FCN returned to the Bundesliga for a year in
1978, but played to a 17th place finish and were relgated again. They immediately played their way back to the top flight, but since then their Bundesliga peerformances have been stumbling ones, characterized by finishes well down the league table and occasional relegation for a season or two. Their best recent result was a fifth place finish in
1988.
The early 1980s also saw the rise of a longstanding and intense friendship between the fans of
Nürnberg and those of former arch rival
FC Schalke 04. Fans accompany each others on their respective away games, and the two season matches between the teams are generally a very laid-back and hospitable affair for all fans involved.
In the mid-90's
Nürnberg had financial problems that led to their being penalized 6 points in the 1995-96 season while playing in the 2.Bundesliga. The club was relegated to the third division as a consequence. Improved management saw the club clawing back and return to the top flight eventually.
However, in
1999,
FCN suffered what was arguably the worst meltdown in Bundesliga history. Going into the last game of the season, they were in 12th place, three points and five goals ahead of
Eintracht Frankfurt who were sitting in 16th place and seemingly headed to relegation.
Nürnberg was closing out the season with what looked to be an easy home game against
SC Freiburg who were also facing relegation.
Frankfurt was up against
1. FC Kaiserslautern, last season's champions who were in a fight for a
UEFA Cup spot.
The stage was set for an improbable outcome.
Nürnberg lost 1:2 with
Frank Baumann missing a chance to score in the last minute. Every other
FCN rival won, including
Frankfurt, who whipped
FCK 5:1 with three late tallies - this put them ahead on goals scored and sent
FCN crashing to 16th place and into a shock relegation.
FCN wasn't relegated because they'd fewer points than
Frankfurt, nor because of a lower goal differential, but on the third tie-breaker - fewer goals scored.
1. FCN rebounded and currently plays in the Bundesliga but still find themselves flirting with relegation from season to season. However, they've comfortably avoided relegation in the 2005-06 season finishing 8th in the Bundesliga. After several years of consolidation, Nürnberg seems back as a force to reckon with in
Bundesliga football. Manager Martin Bader's professional and sometimes even spectacular work (the signing of former Ajax Amsterdam captain and Czech international
Tomáš Galásek, for example, was greeted with enthusiasm), as well head coach
Hans Meyer's tactically modern understanding of football, help
Nürnberg to its most successful time in almost 40 years. In May 2007 the cut for the UEFA Cup was sure and after the triumph over Eintracht Frankfurt in the
DFB Pokal the
Club was in the final of that tournament for the first time since 1982. On May 26 the
Club won this final against
VfB Stuttgart in overtime 3:2, winning the DFB Pokal again 45 years after the last victory.
Honours
Der Club boasted the title of
Deutscher Rekordmeister as holder of the most championships for over sixty years (although occasionally having to share the honour with
Schalke) before being overtaken by
Bayern Munich in
1987.
Germany honours its Bundesliga champions by allowing them to display the
gold stars of the "Verdiente Meistervereine" – one star for three titles, two stars for five, and three stars for ten. However, currently only titles earned since 1963 in the Bundesliga are officially recognized. Despite winning the national title nine times,
Nürnberg – the country's second most successful side – isn't entitled to sport any championship stars.
- German champions: 1920, 1921, 1924, 1925, 1927, 1936, 1948, 1961, 1968
- German vice-champions: 1922, 1934, 1937, 1962
- German Cup winners: 1935, 1939, 1962, 2007
- German Cup finalists: 1940, 1982
- South German champions: 1916, 1918, 1920, 1921, 1924, 1927, 1929
- Bavarian champions: 1907
- Gauliga Bayern champions: 1934, 1936, 1937, 1938, 1940
- Gauliga Bayern, northern division champions: 1943, 1944
- Oberliga Süd (I) champions: 1947, 1948, 1951, 1957, 1961, 1962
- Regionalliga Süd (II) champions: 1971
- 2nd Bundesliga Süd (II) champions: 1980
- 2nd Bundesliga (II) champions: 1985, 2001, 2004
Stadium
"Der Club" plays in the communally owned Frankenstadion (former Städtisches Stadion renamed in 1990), which until recently accommodated 46,700 spectators (34,700 seats). The stadium was built in 1928 and was known as Stadion der Hitler-Jugend from 1933 to 1945. Originally having a capacity of 40,000 spectators, it was expanded in 1965 to hold 65,000 and subsequently hosted the 1967 Cup Winners final between
Bayern Munich and
Rangers, won 1:0 by the German side.
The facility was refurbished for the 1974 World Cup and another recently completed renovation allowed it to seat 45,000 for four preliminary round matches and one Round of 16 contest of the
FIFA World Cup 2006.
The Frankenstadion since 2006 bears the commercial name "EasyCredit Stadium" under an arrangement with a local bank. The majority of the fans was in favour of renaming it after club legend Max Morlock, but they've to wait at least six years for that to happen, as this is the period of the contractual arrangement - but by then it might well be named after another product.
Team trivia
The Club prides itself of two World Cup winning players from its ranks. Striker Max Morlock was part of the 1954 Miracle of Bern side, while goalkeeper Andreas Köpke was part of Germany's 1990 team. In 1961 and 1993 respectively, both were awarded with the honour German Footballer of the Year.
Nürnberg is the only defending champion to ever go directly from capturing the title (1968) to being relegated the next year (1969).
1.FCN hold the unfortunate distinction of having been relegated from the Bundesliga a record seven times.
The 1927 final between Nürnberg and Hertha BSC Berlin was the first match to be broadcast live and in full on German radio.
Nürnberg appeared in the first post-World War national championship matches held in 1920 and 1948, winning both times.
former coach Hans Meyer is the first trainer to have won the East German FDGB Cup and the DFB Cup.
Famous players and Coaches
Besides a legion of outstanding pre-war players such as Hans Kalb, Heiner Stuhlfauth, Hans "Bumbes" Schmidt, Swiss international Gustav Bark, Georg Hochgesang the Uebelein brothers, to name but a few from the golden era, these are the Club's heroes of more recent times:
| Max Morlock
Heiner Stuhlfauth
Andreas Köpke
Stefan Reuter
Norbert Eder
Dieter Eckstein
Georg Volkert
Ferdinand Wenauer
Heinz Strehl
Franz Brungs
|
Only brief spells with the Club, but notable players:
Mario Cantaluppi, Swiss international
Jacek Krzynówek, Polish World Cup participant 2002, 2006
Samuel Osei Kuffour, in 2001 European Cup winner with Bayern, African Player of the Year
Uli Hoeness, from Bayern, World Cup winner 1974, played 11 matches in 1978/79
Horst Blankenburg, European Cup winner with Ajax in the early 1970s
Robert Kovač
Tony Sanneh
|
The most famous coaches of the modern era would probably be
Outstanding coaches of the earlier years were Izidor "Dori" Kürschner (1921,22), Fred Spiksley (1913, 1920s), former player Alfred Schaffer (1930s), Dr. Karl Michalke (1930s), Alwin "Alv" Riemke (1940s-1950s) and former player Hans "Bumbes" Schmidt (1940s, 1950s), who notably dit not win a single of his four German Championship titles as coach with Nürnberg, but three of them with the long standing main rivals FC Schalke 04. He was also four times champion as player, thereof three times with the Club, and once with the earlier arch rival SpVgg Fürth.
Current squad
(External Link
)
Transfers winter 2007/08
In:
Out:
Transfers 2008/09
In:
Out:
Further Information
Get more info on '1 Fc Nuremberg'.
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