Eintracht Trier
SV Eintracht Trier 05 | |||
Basic data | |||
---|---|---|---|
Surname | SV Eintracht-Trier 05 eV | ||
Seat | Trier , Rhineland-Palatinate | ||
founding | March 11, 1905 | ||
Colours | Blue-black-white | ||
Board | Roman Gottschalk | ||
Website | eintracht-trier.com | ||
First soccer team | |||
Head coach | Josef Çınar | ||
Venue | Moselle Stadium | ||
Places | 10,256 | ||
league | Oberliga Rhineland-Palatinate / Saar | ||
2019/20 | 5th place | ||
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The SV Eintracht-Trier 05 eV is a football club from Trier . In the season 2019/20 , the first men's team that plays their home games at Moselstadion discharges, in the Oberliga Rheinland-Pfalz / Saar .
history
family tree
SV Eintracht Trier 05 was created on March 11, 1948 through the merger of the Trier clubs SV Westmark Trier 05 and SV Eintracht Trier 06 .
The 05er were founded in 1905 as the Trier football club exactly 43 years before the merger by Ernst Vent, who is known as the "father of Trier football" . The founding document of the TFC was drawn up in the Trier restaurant "Zum Kurfürsten" and signed by 13 founders. The 05ers used a bumpy meadow area in the Olewig district of Trier as a training facility, which belonged to the owner of the restaurant "Zum Blesius Garten", which still exists today. The other stations were the Eurener parade ground and the Palastplatz (near the Kurfürstliches Palais ), before training took place on the parade ground of the Horn barracks. In the first home game on September 10, 1905, 1. FC Germania 1905 from Saarbrücken was beaten 12-0.
Numerous other football clubs were founded in Trier as early as 1906. The most famous start-ups of this year were the FC Moselland 06, FC Borussia Trier, Sportclub Trier, Concordia Trier, FC Viktoria Trier, Trier Football Club 06, Maximiner Football Club and the Trier Football Club Union . The most important role played the FC Moselland 06, which due to personnel problems in 1920 merged with the later founded FV Fortuna Trier in 1910 to form the United Lawn Players 06 Trier . But the next year, the next merger with SV Alemannia Trier in 1909 to form SV Eintracht Trier 06 was due. This club played in the Gauliga Mittelrhein from 1933 to 1936 , then relegated and remained first class after being promoted again until 1944.
The Trier Football Club in 1905 , which was repeatedly confronted with hostility, opened up to other sports in order to promote wider acceptance among the population. In the course of this, the name was changed to Sportverein Trier 05 in 1911 . This in turn merged in 1930 with the FV Kürenz and the police SV Trier to form SV Westmark Trier 05 . From 1933 the SV Westmark Trier 05 also played for three years in the Gauliga. Although he was champion of the Middle Rhine district class three times in a row after relegation, he subsequently failed - unlike the 06er - every time in the promotion round. After 1939 the SV Westmark Trier 05, which later removed the addition "Westmark" from its title, no longer played a role.
The first ideas about merging between 05s and 06s came up in the late 1920s. The reason for this was, among other things, the success of the Trier city selection, in which the best players from both teams were brought together. The related merger talks always had to be held behind the scenes because of high emotions. While no agreement could be found, the Trier city selection won further. On May 3, 1931, an 8-0 victory over the Luxembourg national soccer team was achieved. From 1943 until the end of the war, both clubs formed a war syndicate. The merger was not officially completed until March 11, 1948. The merger agreement was finally signed at a general assembly that took place in Trier's “Schiefferkeller”.
Sportive advancement
The new club SV Eintracht Trier 05 has been an integral part of high-class southwest German football from the start. Until 1962 the Trier played in the Oberliga Südwest , in which they never belonged to the top group. Due to their relegation they missed the last season of this league; nevertheless they were accepted into the new Regionalliga Südwest in 1963. There they started with a fifth and a third place, but then fell back into the middle of the table and in 1973, again a year before the league was dissolved, they were relegated to the third-class amateur league Rhineland.
After the runner-up in 1974 and two championships in the immediately following years, the Trier team rose in 1976 to the 2nd Bundesliga, which had been founded two years earlier . In the first year they would have been relegated in terms of sport, but were allowed to stay in the league due to the withdrawal of SV Röchling Völklingen . In 1981 they achieved their best placement in the second division, but had to relegate to the league due to their reduction to a season. In the following season, for the first time in the post-war period, they were only number two in the region behind FSV Salmrohr .
In the 1982/83 season , Eintracht under the coach Horst Brand tried a new beginning with the youngest league team at the time. In the following years the Trier team developed again into one of the top teams in the Oberliga Südwest. In 1984 , after a very good second half of the season, they came second and qualified for the German amateur championship . The team finished the following two seasons in third place. In the autumn of 1985, Eintracht Trier surprisingly made it into the round of 16 of the DFB Cup with a 3-0 win against reigning Cup defender Bayer 05 Uerdingen , where they failed against Bayer 04 Leverkusen .
In 1987 and 1993, Trier had the chance to rise again to the second division as Southwest champions, but could not prevail in the promotion round. In 1988 and 1989 they were each a 5-4 on penalties against VfB Oldenburg and SpVgg Bad Homburg German amateur champions.
After the third Southwest Championship in 1994, Eintracht again had the chance to move up to the Second Bundesliga. In the promotion round, Trier more or less failed at the green table when the DFB canceled a 2-1 win against SSV Ulm in 1846 , because a Trier supervisor is said to have shot the ball in the abdomen of a player from Ulm. As a champion, however, you were qualified for the Regionalliga West / Southwest newly introduced by the DFB . After only narrowly escaping relegation there in 1995/96 , Eintracht Trier was one of the top clubs in the following seasons and in the 1998/99 season was second again in the promotion round to the second division; the Trier but drawn the short straw against the Offenbacher Kickers .
Her greatest success so far was reaching the semi-finals in the 1997/98 DFB Cup season . On the way there, Eintracht beat the newly crowned UEFA Cup winner FC Schalke 04 in the second round and one round later the Champions League winner and later World Cup winner Borussia Dortmund . Due to the narrow semi-final defeat on penalties against Duisburg, Eintracht not only missed the cup final, but also the associated participation in the European Cup Winners' Cup.
Due to financial difficulties under the then President Hans-Joachim Doerfert , Eintracht had to file for bankruptcy in 1999. The procedure could only be successfully concluded the following year. Also in 1999 the Trier young Paul Linz was won as a coach, which turned out to be a stroke of luck for the club: After 2001 in the Regionalliga Süd, in which Trier competed after the dissolution of the West / Southwest relay, the promotion was narrowly missed again on the last match day the longed-for return to professional football finally succeeded on May 11, 2002.
Athletic decline
The decline of Eintracht began with the relegation to the Regionalliga on May 22, 2005. After six defeats in a row, a draw in the last game against 1. FC Saarbrücken was not enough. Energie Cottbus saved themselves by a goal difference that was one goal better. Paul Linz resigned due to the sporting descent and a physical attack in the club. The new coach was the former Eintracht captain Michael Prus . The start in the regional league failed; even the change of coach to Eugen Hach in October 2005 could not prevent the team's relegation.
The 2006/07 season played the club in the Oberliga Südwest. The goal was the direct return to the regional league. Adnan Kevrić was hired as sporting director and Roland Seitz as coach . The latter left the club after just a few match days; he was coach at the second division SC Paderborn 07 and replaced by Marco Pezzaiuoli . After just eight weeks, Adnan Kevric took over the coaching post after Pezzaiuoli lost three of five games with his team. Before the winter break 2006/07 Kevrić took over the post until the end of the season; However, he already announced his resignation on March 3, 2007, when Eintracht Trier had lost 2-0 at home to FV Engers and thus the sporting and financially urgently needed promotion to the Regionalliga Süd was a long way off. The coach was temporarily Herbert Herres , who had previously coached the A-Juniors and was assistant coach of the first team. After Herres' resignation on April 3rd after the 1: 3 defeat against Wirges a new coach was introduced on April 5th. The former Eintracht Trier player, Werner Kartz , took over the first team until the end of the season. Under his leadership they found their way back on track and on June 7th, 2007 they won the Rhineland Cup with a 2-1 after extra time against TuS Oberwinter in Krufter Vulkanstadion. With that the qualification for the first main round of the DFB-Pokal was accomplished, in which one went down on August 5th in the sold out Mosel stadium against the Bundesliga club FC Schalke 04 with 0: 9.
Recent developments: Relegation from the Regionalliga Südwest, rebuilding in the Oberliga
season | League level | space | Gates | Points | Average audience | DFB Cup |
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2008/09 | IV | 13 | 37:51 | 41 | 2,100 | 1st main round |
2009/10 | IV | 18th | 33:61 | 29 | 2,428 | Round of 16 |
2010/11 | IV | 2 | 58:34 | 62 | 2,105 | 1st main round |
2011/12 | IV | 4th | 57:34 | 64 | 1,988 | 2nd main round |
2012/13 | IV | 5 | 50:44 | 57 | 1,442 | - |
2013/14 | IV | 6th | 49:37 | 51 | 1,866 | 1st main round |
2014/15 | IV | 11 | 31:33 | 44 | 1,532 | 1st main round |
2015/16 | IV | 5 | 62:33 | 63 | 2,313 | - |
2016/17 | IV | 18th | 44:58 | 33 | 1.953 | 1st main round |
2017/18 | V | 4th | 65:36 | 71 | 861 | - |
2018/19 | V | 6th | 67:41 | 57 | 884 | - |
2019/20 | V | 5 | 33:20 | 37 | 1,239 | - |
Highlighted in red: descent |
For the 2007/08 season the team was reorganized and Werner Weiss was hired as a coach. The season goal was given as places 1 to 4, which would have meant qualification for the new Regionalliga West. At the beginning of last season, Eintracht had a series of eight wins. After two draws against 1. FC Saarbrücken and SF Köllerbach , they suffered their first defeat of the season in the 11th game on October 6, 2007 at SpVgg EGC Wirges . Nevertheless, the season was largely positive. In the end, Eintracht secured fourth place in the table with a 5-0 win against Eintracht Bad Kreuznach on May 24, 2008 and made their promotion to the new regional league perfect. In addition, Eintracht Trier won the Rhineland Cup on June 4, 2008. The final against the second team of TuS Koblenz ended with 2: 0 n. V .; Trier was the sole record holder with eight cup wins. Due to the regulation that second teams are no longer allowed to participate in the DFB-Pokal from the following season , Eintracht Trier was again qualified for the DFB-Pokal 2008/09 before the final . In the first DFB Cup main round they lost on August 8, 2008 against Hertha BSC . On August 30, 2008, immediately after the home game against Cloppenburg , which was lost 0: 5, coach White was dismissed with a balance of one point from three games and a goal difference of 0: 7. On September 8, 2008, Mario Basler was introduced as the new head coach, who shortly thereafter also replaced Werner Kartz as the sporting director. On June 10, 2009, the ninth cup victory for Eintracht followed, in the Maifeld Stadium in Polch, Mario Basler's team won 2-0 after extra time against SV Roßbach / Wied . This was the third time in a row that Eintracht had secured the Rhineland Cup and qualified for the 2009/10 DFB Cup . In the first main round they met on August 2, 2009 on the Bundesliga club Hannover 96 , who were defeated 3: 1 after a 0-1 half-time deficit. In the second main round, the SVE had another home game against second division Arminia Bielefeld on September 22, 2009 . This time the Trier won after a 2: 2 in regular time 4: 2 a. V. and thus moved into the round of 16, where, however, after a 0: 3 home defeat against 1. FC Köln was the last stop. Together with Lucas Barrios and Thomas Müller, Sahr Senesie was the top scorer in the DFB Cup with four goals each .
On February 21, 2010, Mario Basler was released as head coach and replaced by Reinhold Breu , who was replaced by Roland Seitz in April 2010 .
On the 32nd matchday, when it set a 0-1 home defeat against VfL Bochum II, the sporting relegation to the Oberliga Südwest was sealed. On June 8, 2010, however, it turned out that the regional league team SV Waldhof Mannheim as the third club after the Bonner SC and Rot-Weiss Essen did not get a license for the coming season. Thus, Trier remained in the Regionalliga West in the 2010/11 season despite the last place in the table. In terms of sport, they were far more successful in the Rhineland Cup, which they won for the fourth time in a row with a 2-1 victory over the Bundesliga club SpVgg Burgbrohl . This qualified the club for the first main round of the 2010/11 DFB Cup , in which they lost 2-0 to Bundesliga club 1. FC Nürnberg .
The 2010/11 season started with 15 new players . After the newly formed team had been able to decide all the test games for themselves, they won 2-0 on the first day of play against the FCK reserves . After the victory on the 11th matchday against SC Wiedenbrück , Trier even took the lead in the standings, which was surrendered again on the 15th matchday after a home defeat against M'gladbach II at Preußen Münster . At the end of the season, Eintracht took second place behind promoted Prussia Münster.
On May 25, 2011, Eintracht Trier won the Rhineland Cup for the fifth time in a row (for the 11th time overall) with a 2-0 victory in the Mosel Stadium over third division club TuS Koblenz and thus qualified for the first main round of the 2011 DFB Cup / 12 , in which you met the second division club FC St. Pauli . With a surprising 2-1 win against the "Kiezkicker", Trier made it into the second round, in which they were defeated by Hamburger SV just 1: 2 afterwards. In the regional league they finished in 4th place.
Eintracht was able to establish itself in the top group of the regional league in the following seasons; however, the leap into the promotion round did not succeed. In March 2014, after a 0-1 defeat against TuS Koblenz, the separation from coach Roland Seitz followed . Previously, the team had started weakly from the winter break and had not won any of the last four games. Seitz's successor was Jens Kiefer , who had previously led SV Elversberg into the third division. He received a contract until 2015.
With a 5-1 win in the Rhineland Cup against SG HWW Niederroßbach on the final day of the amateurs on May 28, 2016, the team qualified for the DFB Cup 2016/17 . In the first round, the club hosted Borussia Dortmund in the Moselle stadium ; Eintracht was defeated by the Bundesliga club 0: 3. After the 2016/17 season , Trier rose as the penultimate from the Regionalliga Südwest in the Oberliga Rheinland-Pfalz / Saar .
League history
season | League level | league | space | Gates | Points |
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1948/49 | 1 | Oberliga Südwest (North) | 7th | 46:62 | 20-28 |
1949/50 | 1 | Oberliga Südwest | 12. | 45:72 | 22-38 |
1950/51 | 1 | Oberliga Südwest | 6th | 51:43 | 31-21 |
1951/52 | 1 | Oberliga Südwest | 6th | 58:52 | 32-28 |
1952/53 | 1 | Oberliga Südwest | 13. | 43:66 | 23-37 |
1953/54 | 1 | Oberliga Südwest | 10. | 57:66 | 26-34 |
1954/55 | 1 | Oberliga Südwest | 11. | 45:59 | 24-36 |
1955/56 | 1 | Oberliga Südwest | 12. | 47:57 | 25-35 |
1956/57 | 1 | Oberliga Südwest | 12. | 41:56 | 26-34 |
1957/58 | 1 | Oberliga Südwest | 14th | 39:56 | 24-36 |
1958/59 | 1 | Oberliga Südwest | 8th. | 54:61 | 28-32 |
1959/60 | 1 | Oberliga Südwest | 14th | 37:75 | 22-38 |
1960/61 | 1 | Oberliga Südwest | 13. | 39:50 | 26-36 |
1961/62 | 1 | Oberliga Südwest | 15th | 28:78 | 19-41 |
1962/63 | 2 | 2. Oberliga Südwest | 2. | 75:41 | 41-19 |
1963/64 | 2 | Regionalliga southwest | 5. | 72:68 | 43-33 |
1964/65 | 2 | Regionalliga southwest | 3. | 67:27 | 48-20 |
1965/66 | 2 | Regionalliga southwest | 13. | 44:49 | 25-35 |
1966/67 | 2 | Regionalliga southwest | 5. | 67:48 | 38-22 |
1967/68 | 2 | Regionalliga southwest | 8th. | 57:46 | 32-28 |
1968/69 | 2 | Regionalliga southwest | 10. | 47:45 | 28-32 |
1969/70 | 2 | Regionalliga southwest | 10. | 36:48 | 28-32 |
1970/71 | 2 | Regionalliga southwest | 11. | 53:68 | 24-36 |
1971/72 | 2 | Regionalliga southwest | 13. | 51:71 | 24-36 |
1972/73 | 2 | Regionalliga southwest | 15th | 34:83 | 12-48 |
1973/74 | 3 | Amateur League Rhineland | 2. | 86:47 | 39-21 |
1974/75 | 3 | Amateur League Rhineland | 1. | 63:29 | 44-20 |
1975/76 | 3 | Amateur League Rhineland | 1. | 84:35 | 45-15 |
1976/77 | 2 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 17th | 46:68 | 28-48 |
1977/78 | 2 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 12. | 58:64 | 35-41 |
1978/79 | 2 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 10. | 58:57 | 36-40 |
1979/80 | 2 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 15th | 60:57 | 36-44 |
1980/81 | 2 | 2nd Bundesliga South | 8th. | 56:52 | 41-35 |
1981/82 | 3 | Oberliga Südwest | 6th | 60:42 | 49-31 |
1982/83 | 3 | Oberliga Südwest | 6th | 80:54 | 48-28 |
1983/84 | 3 | Oberliga Südwest | 2. | 71:35 | 48-20 |
1984/85 | 3 | Oberliga Südwest | 3. | 70:38 | 48-20 |
1985/86 | 3 | Oberliga Südwest | 3. | 77:30 | 52-16 |
1986/87 | 3 | Oberliga Südwest | 1. | 81:29 | 50-18 |
1987/88 | 3 | Oberliga Südwest | 2. | 76:24 | 52-16 |
1988/89 | 3 | Oberliga Südwest | 2. | 83:31 | 52-16 |
1989/90 | 3 | Oberliga Südwest | 5. | 63:42 | 40-28 |
1990/91 | 3 | Oberliga Südwest | 2. | 71:27 | 52-16 |
1991/92 | 3 | Oberliga Südwest | 3. | 62:33 | 44-24 |
1992/93 | 3 | Oberliga Südwest | 1. | 92:19 | 57-11 |
1993/94 | 3 | Oberliga Südwest | 1. | 77:26 | 51-17 |
1994/95 | 3 | Regionalliga West / Southwest | 7th | 50:48 | 38-30 |
1995/96 | 3 | Regionalliga West / Southwest | 15th | 38:53 | 38 |
1996/97 | 3 | Regionalliga West / Southwest | 9. | 41:45 | 43 |
1997/98 | 3 | Regionalliga West / Southwest | 5. | 56:41 | 54 |
1998/99 | 3 | Regionalliga West / Southwest | 2. | 62:37 | 60 |
1999/2000 | 3 | Regionalliga West / Southwest | 5. | 54:47 | 60 |
2000/01 | 3 | Regional league south | 4th | 48:43 | 57 |
2001/02 | 3 | Regional league south | 2. | 51:34 | 59 |
2002/03 | 2 | 2nd Bundesliga | 7th | 53:46 | 48 |
2003/04 | 2 | 2nd Bundesliga | 11. | 46:51 | 45 |
2004/05 | 2 | 2nd Bundesliga | 15th | 39:53 | 39 |
2005/06 | 3 | Regional league south | 16. | 41:58 | 36 |
2006/07 | 4th | Oberliga Südwest | 5. | 59:44 | 53 |
2007/08 | 4th | Oberliga Südwest | 4th | 61:30 | 67 |
2008/09 | 4th | Regionalliga West | 13. | 37:51 | 41 |
2009/10 | 4th | Regionalliga West | 18th | 33:61 | 29 |
2010/11 | 4th | Regionalliga West | 2. | 58:34 | 62 |
2011/12 | 4th | Regionalliga West | 4th | 57:34 | 64 |
2012/13 | 4th | Regionalliga southwest | 5. | 50:44 | 57 |
2013/14 | 4th | Regionalliga southwest | 6th | 49:37 | 51 |
2014/15 | 4th | Regionalliga southwest | 11. | 31:33 | 44 |
2015/16 | 4th | Regionalliga southwest | 5. | 62:33 | 63 |
2016/17 | 4th | Regionalliga southwest | 18th | 44:58 | 33 |
2017/18 | 5 | Oberliga Rheinpfalz-Saar | 4th | 65:36 | 71 |
2018/19 | 5 | Oberliga Rheinpfalz-Saar | 6th | 67:41 | 57 |
2019/20 | 5 | Oberliga Rheinpfalz-Saar | 5. | 33:20 | 37 |
Trainer
At the time of the (first-class) Oberliga Südwest , the coaches of SV Eintracht Trier 05 were: Strehle (1953–1954), Paul Janes (1954–1956), Kurt Reicherdt (1956–1957), Heinz (1959–1960) and Simon (1960 -1962). At the time of the second class from 1976 to 1981, Hans-Wilhelm Loßmann (until 1977), Hans-Dieter Roos (1977–1978), Lothar Kleim (1978–1979) and Werner Kern (from 1979) looked after the Trier team. Below are all of the trainers at Eintracht since 1988:
Surname | Nat. | Time at SVE | |
---|---|---|---|
from | to | ||
Paul Linz | 1988 | 1989 | |
Alexander Szatmari | 1989 | 1991 | |
Dragoslav Stepanović | February 1991 | April 1991 | |
Manfred Höner | July 1991 | October 1991 | |
Udo Klug | October 1991 | June 1993 | |
Udo Klug | February 1994 | June 1995 | |
Guido Mey | March 1996 | June 1996 | |
Valentin mr | July 1996 | November 1996 | |
Horst Brand | November 1996 | November 1996 | |
Karl-Heinz Emig | November 1996 | June 1998 | |
Peter Vollmann | July 1998 | October 1999 | |
Paul Linz | October 1999 | May 2005 | |
Michael Prus | July 2005 | October 2005 | |
Eugen Hach | October 2005 | June 2006 | |
Roland Seitz | July 2006 | September 2006 | |
Vitomir Milošević | September 2006 | September 2006 | |
Marco Pezzaiuoli | September 2006 | October 2006 | |
Adnan Kevrić | October 2006 | March 2007 | |
Herbert Herres | March 2007 | April 2007 | |
Werner Kartz | April 2007 | April 2007 | |
Werner Weiss | April 2007 | September 2008 | |
Mario Basler | September 2008 | February 2010 | |
Reinhold Breu | February 2010 | April 2010 | |
Roland Seitz | April 16, 2010 | 17th March 2014 | |
Jens Kiefer | March 18, 2014 | June 30, 2014 | |
Peter Rubeck | July 1, 2014 | 22nd September 2016 | |
Rudi Thömmes | 23rd September 2016 | 3rd October 2016 | |
Oscar Corrochano | 4th October 2016 | April 14, 2017 | |
Rudi Thömmes | April 15, 2017 | June 30, 2017 | |
Daniel Paulus | July 1, 2017 | September 30, 2018 | |
Josef Cinar | 1st October 2018 |
player
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Stadion
The team played at the beginning of the Waldstadion Trier and later moved into the opened in 1930 Moselstadion order. This is located in the middle of a sports complex with several sports fields. After various renovations and modernizations, the stadium currently holds 10,256 spectators, with around 2,000 covered standing and seating spaces each.
Since the stadium no longer complies with the licensing requirements of the higher leagues of the DFL , there were plans in Trier in 2004 to build a new and more modern stadium. After Eintracht's relegation from higher-class football, implementation of the plans is not to be expected for the time being.
Greatest successes
- DFB Cup semi-finals: 1997/98 (victories, among others, against UEFA Cup winners FC Schalke 04 and World Cup winners Borussia Dortmund )
- German amateur champion: 1988 , 1989
- 2nd Bundesliga : 1976–1981 (2nd division south) and 2002–2005
- Best placement in the 2nd Bundesliga: 7th place - 2002/03 season
- Rhineland Cup winners: 1982, 1984, 1985, 1990, 1997, 2001, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2014, 2016
In the " Eternal Table of the 2nd Bundesliga ", Eintracht ranks 45th with 294 games.
On August 2, 2009, Eintracht defeated Hannover 96 in the first main round of the DFB Cup with 3-1. The second victory followed in the 2nd round on September 22nd against Arminia Bielefeld 4-2 a.d.
Two years later, the Moselle townspeople achieved a 2-1 win against FC St. Pauli . In the second round they had to admit defeat to Hamburger SV 1: 2 after extra time.
In the last game to date in the first main round of the DFB Cup , Eintracht Trier received Borussia Dortmund on August 22nd, 2016 in front of 10,805 spectators in Trier's Mosel Stadium . The game was watched by 4.23 million people on ARD live broadcast. Borussia Dortmund won 0-3.
Fan songs
- For us only Eintracht Trier / Leiendecker Bloas ( 2005 )
- Here comes the harmony / Guildo Horn ( 2003 )
- Eintracht-Lied / Leiendecker Bloas ( 1995 )
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ eintracht-trier.com: statutes of SV Eintracht-Trier 05 e. V.
- ^ Eintracht Trier: Seitz inherits Breu as trainer , Trierischer Volksfreund on April 15, 2010.
- ↑ DFB Cup 11/12. Retrieved July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ TV ratings: moderate ratings for "The Great Farmers' Olympics" by RTL. Retrieved July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ Eintracht Trier missed the cup sensation against Borussia Dortmund. In: Eintracht Trier. August 22, 2016, accessed on July 8, 2020 (German).