BFC Dynamo

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BFC Dynamo
Logo of the BFC Dynamo
Basic data
Surname Berlin soccer club
Dynamo e. V.
Seat Berlin - Alt-Hohenschönhausen
founding January 15, 1966
Colours wine red-white
president Norbert Uhlig
Website bfc.com
First soccer team
Head coach Christian Benbennek
Venue Friedrich Ludwig Jahn Sports Park
Places 19,708
league Regionalliga Northeast
2019/20 6th place
home
Away

The Berlin soccer club Dynamo e. V. , BFC Dynamo for short , is a football club from the Berlin district of Alt-Hohenschönhausen in the Lichtenberg district . With 10 championship titles in a row from 1979 to 1988, the club is one of the most successful football clubs in the GDR and the record champions of the GDR league . Since the promotion in the 2013/14 season , the BFC has played in the fourth-class Regionalliga Nordost . The first team plays its home games in the Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Sportpark in the Prenzlauer Berg district in the Pankow district .

history

The historical logos of the club from left to right: as SC Dynamo Berlin (1954–1966), twice as FC Berlin (1990–1999 and March to May 1990) and as BFC Dynamo (1966–1990 and 1999–2009)

SC Dynamo Berlin - Before BFC was founded (1954–1966)

Like every club and every sports community under the heading “Dynamo”, the BFC Dynamo belonged to the superordinate sports association Dynamo until 1989 .

The origin of the BFC Dynamo goes back to the SG Volkspolizei Berlin, which has existed since 1949, which in 1951/52 narrowly missed promotion to the second-rate league in the third-class Berlin district class with a second place behind Adlershofer BC. With the formation of the Dynamo sports association in March 1953, the SG Volkspolizei Potsdam team was delegated to Berlin. With the incorporation of Potsdamer, the name was also changed to SG Dynamo Berlin .

With the admission of the Potsdam People's Police, the takeover of their league place was connected with which SG Dynamo Berlin finished the season 1952/53 as ninth-placed second division team. As bottom 14th in the table, SG Dynamo Berlin actually rose to the 3rd league in 1953/54.

The sudden success from the retort was ultimately based on the transfer of part of the Oberliga team from Dynamo Dresden to Berlin in 1954 , with which Dynamo Dresden lost its league place to the Berliners and the 2nd team from Dynamo Dresden became the new 1st team.

Dynamo Dresden was formed in 1950 around the Potsdam trio Herbert Schoen , Günter Schröter and Johannes Matzen , delegated by the SG Volkspolizei Potsdam to Dresden , in order to take the Oberligaplatz of SG Friedrichstadt , previously Dresdner SC , in Dresden , whose players had left the GDR . In 1954 the political functionaries wanted to finally establish a strong football team in East Berlin .

In their first season under the name SC Dynamo Berlin , the team finished seventh. This left the other capital club ASK Vorwärts Berlin , which had been relocated from Leipzig ( ASG Vorwärts Leipzig ) to Berlin a year earlier , behind. Before the team moved from Dresden, SV Dynamo in Berlin already operated a sports community with SG Dynamo Berlin , which was then renamed Dynamo Berlin-Mitte . In 1957, this team was merged with the second representative of SC Dynamo Berlin and played in the following period under the name SG Dynamo Hohenschönhausen in the GDR league .

Cup winner 1959 : Dynamo Berlin

The capital city club won its first title in 1959. In the final of the GDR soccer cup competition , Dynamo defeated Aue- based SC Wismut Karl-Marx-Stadt - after a 0-0 penalty in the first game - in the replay with 3: 2. At the next finals in 1962 , Dynamo had to admit defeat to SC Chemie Halle .

Until the winter break of the 1965/66 season, the footballers competed as SC Dynamo Berlin.

Rise of the BFC Dynamo (1966–1989)

In the course of the nationwide separation of the soccer sections from the sports clubs, the BFC Dynamo was founded as a soccer club in 1966 . At the same time, the SG Dynamo Hohenschönhausen, which primarily consisted of retired players and young talents from SC Dynamo Berlin, was run as the second team of the BFC Dynamo. At the latest from this point in time, the club was considered a “Stasi Club” due to the support of its honorary chairman, the Stasi boss and chairman of SV Dynamo Erich Mielke . In addition, the BFC Dynamo as a center of excellence, as well as Vorwärts Frankfurt / Oder or Dynamo Dresden , for example, benefited from the player transfers procedure common in GDR football. These were not carried out through financial resources, but in the course of a concentration of performance, for (sport) political reasons. The BFC played a special role compared to the other major league teams, as it was to be developed into the figurehead of GDR football - albeit against resistance from political officials in Dresden and Leipzig, for example.

The championship team from 1979

With promotion to the top division in 1968 , the development of the top team began with runners-up in the 1971/72 seasons , combined with reaching the semi-finals of the European Cup Winners' Cup in the same season, and 1975/76 . The league season 1978/79 marked a turning point in GDR football and brought the first of ten championship titles in a row for the Berlin FC Dynamo. However, the club only celebrated its first cup win after 1959 in 1988 .

In the quarter-finals of the National Champion Cup in 1980 , the BFC won 1-0 in the later successful defending champion Nottingham Forest under coach Brian Clough , but was eliminated by a second leg defeat (1: 3). The 1-0 victory in Nottingham was the first victory of a German team in the national championship cup (now the UEFA Champions League ) in England.

In the mid-eighties, the club was unbeaten for 36 match days in the GDR league, which was a record that was no longer achieved. It was only after a year and a half of dominance that FC Karl-Marx-Stadt managed to beat the record champions in the 1983/84 season . Although the rumors about match-fixing in favor of the GDR record champions could never be completely dispelled, it is a fact that the BFC Dynamo achieved its sporting successes on the basis of a youth work that is still recognized today. The top performers of the 80s came mostly from their own youth or from lower-class teams, e.g. B. Thom , Rohde , Ernst , Schulz , Backs and Rudwaleit previously played in their own offspring. You shaped the 1st team for years. Poaching from other teams, etc. a. In 1984 Frank Pastor's delegation (came from HFC Chemie ) or in 1986 Doll's engagement (from Hansa Rostock , who was relegated at the time ), were actually not necessary for national success. These changes gave the players a better chance to prove themselves internationally, but increased the displeasure of the fans of other teams.

In the major league games, there were a few controversial referee decisions in favor of the Berliners, which led to speculation that the years of dominance of the capital city club was not solely due to the sporting performance. A decision by the referee Bernd Stumpf in 1986, also known as the “ shame penalty from Leipzig ”, was particularly controversial . With the majority of football fans in the GDR, the BFC from the capital was unpopular despite or perhaps because of its successes.

With the emergence of the BFC and its appearances in the European Cup, conflicts arose between BFC fans and GDR political officials in the 1980s. Tickets for the German-German European Cup duels against Hamburger SV (1982) and against SV Werder Bremen (1988) were not sold to fans except for a small contingent, but to political functionaries throughout the GDR GDR distributed. The disappointment of many fans about this led to a decline in the number of spectators at home games of the BFC in the mid-1980s.

Decline, era FC Berlin and insolvency (1989–2001)

After 1989 , the newly founded club was initially unable to build on its sporting successes. The rapid, sporty descent is u. a. due to the fact that the BFC lost parts of its infrastructure and the financial and personal support from politics at the time of the fall. At the same time, many top performers switched to the financially more attractive leagues in Western Europe. During the winter break of the 1989/90 season, on February 19, 1990, the BFC changed its name to “FC Berlin” and competed under this name for the first time on February 24, 1990 in Erfurt. At the end of the following season, the BFC only reached eleventh place and missed qualifying for both the 1st and 2nd Bundesliga .

In 1999, at the insistence of the fans, it was renamed BFC Dynamo. However, the trademark rights to the traditional emblem (with the traditional Dynamo-D and the abbreviation BFC) have belonged to Peter Mager, founder of the Hertha Frogs fan association and fan merchandise dealer, since 1998 and have not been repurchased by the BFC or transferred back to the BFC to this day. In terms of sport, the club initially had no success and in 2000 rose from the Regionalliga Nordost to the Oberliga Nordost (Staffel Nord). The promotion failed in the following season when the BFC failed in the promotion relegation at the champions of the southern season 1. FC Magdeburg . As a result, economic problems intensified, so that the BFC filed for bankruptcy at the end of 2001 and lost the right to play in the league.

Consolidation (2001-2010)

The controversial first draft of the new logo

After successfully surviving bankruptcy proceedings (November 2004) and the Berlin championship in the 2003/04 season, the BFC returned to the Oberliga Nordost. President Norbert Uhlig has been since October 11, 2008. The main sponsor is the Berlin real estate company INFINITY; In addition, UNITEC GmbH, which mainly carries out facade renovation and painting work, is another main sponsor. The shirt sponsor has been DWB-Bau GmbH since the 2011/12 season.

A new logo was designed in 2009 as the original emblem was still in third-party ownership. The spelling of the club's name in the new logo sparked a discussion, as the spelling of the word football with double s is only permitted in accordance with German spelling rules with continuous capitalization . In connection with the Gothic font used , the assumption arose that the association wanted to flirt with national symbolism. The Dynamo President Uhlig pointed out in this regard that this spelling has always been used for fan articles. Nevertheless, the logo was revised a little later, so the club name now appears in capital letters .

Resurgence (2010-2014)

In terms of sport, the BFC Dynamo took 7th place in the Oberliga Nordost / Nord in the 2010/11 season and qualified for the 2011/12 DFB Cup by winning the Berlin State Cup . In the first main round of the DFB Cup, the BFC faced 1. FC Kaiserslautern . The game ended 0: 3 and with 10,104 spectators was the best-attended game since the fall of the Berlin Wall . Six years later, this record was surpassed by 4,000 spectators in the DFB-Pokal game against FC Schalke 04 . After the game, there were riots when 250 to 300 hooligans from the BFC camp broke into the guest block. The DFB punished this incident with a fine of 12,000 euros and a suspension for two games.

In May 2012, the Turkish-born Berlin soccer teacher Volkan Uluç took over the coaching position at BFC Dynamo. Uluç had already trained the BFC from 2007 to 2009 and only just missed promotion. In addition, there were personnel changes in the management of the BFC in the summer of 2012. Under Uluç, the BFC reached the final of the Berlin Cup again in the 2012/13 season. There they won 1-0 against SV Lichtenberg 47 and qualified again for the DFB Cup. The 6,381 spectators present in the final represented a record attendance for the cup competition that has been held for the whole of Berlin since 1992.

In the first round of the DFB Cup on August 4, 2013 in Jahnsportpark in front of 9,227 spectators, BFC Dynamo met VfB Stuttgart and lost 2-0 with two goals from Vedad Ibišević in the 40th and 76th minute of the game (penalty kick) .

The 2013/14 league season started very successfully for BFC Dynamo. Of the first 16 games, 15 were won, with only one draw against SV Lichtenberg 47 . At this point in time (March 3, 2014), the BFC Dynamo point coefficient was the best value of all clubs in the top five German leagues. FC Bayern Munich had two draws at the same time (out of 23 games). The following games were also won, so that nine game days before the end of the season, the BFC had already worked out a lead of 25 points over the runner-up and almost certainly achieved promotion to the regional league. At this point in time (April 5, 2014), the BFC had not conceded a single goal in competitive and friendly matches since November 2013. All friendlies in the 2013/14 winter break were won without a goal , for example at FC Carl Zeiss Jena 2-0 and against TSG Neustrelitz 3-0. On April 13, 2014, the BFC Dynamo celebrated promotion to the Regionalliga Nordost . The pursuers Brandenburger SC Süd 05 played a draw, so that promotion was already certain on the 22nd matchday. The season ended with 34 points (and 66 goals) clear of the runner-up.

Regional league from 2014

The coaching team and all regular players extended their contracts for the 2014/15 regional league season in March / April 2014 . Until the winter break, the BFC under Thomas Stratos remained undefeated in the championship and the cup and ended its premier season in the Regionalliga in 5th place. On May 20, 2015, the team won the Berlin Cup with a 1-0 win against Tasmania Berlin and thus qualified again for the DFB Cup . With 6,914 paying spectators, the attendance record set two years earlier in the final against Lichtenberg 47 for a Berlin Cup final was exceeded.

At the start of the 2015/16 season , numerous players with third division experience joined the BFC, including Bernhard Hendl , Andreas Güntner , Thiago Rockenbach and Kevin Weidlich . On the other hand, Andis Shala , Stephan Flauder and Lukáš Nový left the club . Without being able to endanger the eventual champions FSV Zwickau , the BFC team finished 4th at the end of the season. In the first round of the DFB Cup, they lost 2-0 to the then second division FSV Frankfurt .

On May 7, 2016, the former Bundesliga professional René Rydlewicz , who as a 16-year-old raced for the BFC himself with special permission from the GDR Football Association, took over as coach at the BFC. While some players left the BFC, young players in particular joined the club. The changed team ended the 2016/17 season after a good start to the season only in the lower midfield of the table; the last game of the season against the later promoted FC Carl Zeiss Jena was lost 4-0. Nevertheless, the BFC achieved an important goal of the season with the final of the Berlin State Cup. This was won on the final day of the amateurs, which was broadcast on ARD television on May 25, 2017 in front of 6,690 spectators after extra time with 3: 1 against Viktoria Berlin through goals from Otis Breustedt and Kai Pröger . The goal to make it 3: 1 by audience favorite Pröger , who joined Rot-Weiss Essen after the season , was nominated for the goal of the month of May 2017 and achieved 10.9% of the audience's votes.

After the 2016/2017 season, Dennis Srbeny and Pröger left the club, who moved to SC Paderborn in the 3rd division. New to the BFC were the Bundesliga experienced Solomon Okoronkwo , the Azerbaijani international Rufat Dadashov and three players from SV Babelsberg 03 , including the new captain Bilal Cubukcu . In 2017, with another victory in the Berlin State Cup, they made it back to the DFB Cup. In the first round, the BFC lost to FC Schalke 04 with 0: 2 on August 14, 2017 and were eliminated from the competition. With 14,117 spectators, this game was the best-attended game for the BFC since the fall of the Wall . There were around 4,000 more spectators than the previous record game against 1. FC Kaiserslautern on July 30, 2011.

The 2017/18 regional league season ended with the BFC in 4th place in the table after having been in second place behind the later promoted Energie Cottbus for almost the entire season . BFC Dynamo qualified for the DFB-Pokal 2018/19 by defending the Berlin State Cup due to a 2-1 final victory in front of 6,428 spectators against Berliner SC on May 21, 2018. However, after the season, important pillars such as striker Rufat Dadashov left the club. The DFB-Pokal game against 1. FC Köln took place in the Berlin Olympic Stadium, as the Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Sportpark was not available due to the Para Athletics European Championships 2018 . After a 1-0 lead through a goal from newcomer Patrik Twardzik , they lost 1: 9 (1: 4) through four goals from Simon Terodde , among other things . With 14,357 spectators, the record for BFC games from the previous year was surpassed. After the first half of the 2018/19 season was disappointing, the former Bundesliga player Matthias Maucksch took over the coaching position at BFC in January 2019 as the successor to René Rydlewicz, who retired in December 2018 . At Maucksch's request, the contract was terminated at the end of the season, his successor is Christian Benbennek .

Stadion

The training area of ​​the BFC is the Sportforum Hohenschönhausen , a sports facility complex built in GDR times, which is still unique in Europe today. In addition to the stadium, there are sports facilities for clubs from a wide variety of sports (including the Eisbären Berlin ice hockey team , figure skating, speed skating, swimming, athletics, cycling, judo). Currently, the structural condition only partially shows the importance of the site as a focus for German competitive sport .

The sports forum has served the BFC (previously SC Dynamo) as a venue since 1961. SC Dynamo had previously used the World Youth Stadium for home games. In the first few years, the stadium in the Sportforum was a simple grass pitch that only offered a small number of spectators. That is why the BFC regularly went to the Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Sportpark for “big” games , where FC Vorwärts Berlin played its home games. In 1970 the spectator capacity of the sports forum was expanded to 20,000 seats (including 10,000 seats). Nevertheless, the BFC Dynamo moved permanently to the Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Sportpark after the army sports club FC Vorwärts was relocated to Frankfurt (Oder) in 1971 . From then on, the sports forum only served as a training facility. The 1986/87 season, when the Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Sportpark was renovated, was played by the BFC in the Sportforum.

In 1992, the GDR record champions, temporarily renamed FC Berlin, returned to the Sportforum. At the turn of the year 2005/06, the stadium was adapted to the safety standards for games with a higher number of guest fans. New separating fences were erected between the BFC fan blocks and the guest block as well as a players tunnel that connects the playing field with the changing rooms. Explosive games and games with a high number of spectators continued to be played in the traditional Jahnsportpark in Prenzlauer Berg for safety reasons.

With the regional league promotion achieved in 2014 and the associated higher media and audience interest, the BFC returned permanently to the Jahnsportpark near the Mauerpark and the Max-Schmeling-Halle for the 2014/15 season .

Fans and fan culture

BFC fans remember Mike Polley with a banner (1990)

In the 1990s, parts of the BFC's fan base acquired a reputation for being particularly violent. One of the high points of violence was the riots on November 3, 1990 on the sidelines of the guest performance of the BFC Dynamo near Sachsen Leipzig . Here, the Berlin soccer fan Mike Polley was killed by a police bullet. Another five people were injured by police during the events. These incidents were the culmination of a series of riots by fan groups from various clubs, which the police could not cope with and which may a. had the consequence that the so-called " union game " was canceled. Investigations against ten police officers involved were discontinued in 1991. BFC fans remember the death of Mike Polley with the annual fan soccer tournament (Mike Polley Tournament).

Various subcultures can be found in the BFC fan scene . Parts of the BFC's fan scene are said to have a high, sometimes right-wing extremist , hooligan potential. According to the police, the hard core of the scene consists of 102 people belonging to " Category C " and 287 people from Category B. On the other hand, several ultra groups have formed within the BFC fan scene since the 2000s.

The BFC Dynamo has rivalries with 1. FC Union Berlin as well as Dynamo Dresden and Hansa Rostock . There are friendly relationships with VfL Bochum , 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig , FC Aberdeen , West Ham United , Lazio Rome and partly with Eintracht Braunschweig . Some BFC supporters maintain a friendship with those of 1. FC Magdeburg .

The best-known BFC book is probably the volume of stories The BFC was to blame for the building of the Wall by Andreas Gläser , which describes the East Berlin football scene in the late 1970s.

Musicians from the Renft group composed a hymn for the BFC in 1999, which, however, has little resonance in the fan scene.

The rap musician Joe Rilla ( Hagen Stoll ) dedicated a "street anthem" to the BFC in 2008, which was rejected by parts of the fan scene.

Master star discussion

On March 18, 2005, the DFB decided that ten championship titles entitle the club to wear three championship stars on their jerseys . This makes BFC Dynamo the only German team alongside FC Bayern Munich to have this right. However, if the DFL intervenes, the BFC Dynamo is only allowed to wear one star, with the 10 in the middle for the ten championships it has won.

successes

Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR DFV

league

GDR League

Cup

GermanyGermany DFB

league

Cup

European Cup balance sheet

season competition round opponent total To Back
1971/72 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 1 round WalesFlag of Wales (1959 – present) .svg Cardiff City 2: 2
(5: 4 on  account )
1: 1 (H) 1: 1 a.d. (A)
2nd round BelgiumBelgium K. Beerschot VAC 6: 2 3: 1 (A) 3: 1 (H)
Quarter finals SwedenSweden Åtvidabergs FF 4: 2 2: 0 (A) 2: 2 (H)
Semifinals Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union FK Dynamo Moscow 2: 2
(1: 4  i.E. )
1: 1 (H) 1: 1 a.d. (A)
1972/73 Uefa cup 1 round FranceFrance Angers SCO 3: 2 1: 1 (A) 2: 1 (H)
2nd round Bulgaria 1971Bulgaria Levski Sofia 3: 2 3: 0 (H) 0: 2 (A)
3rd round EnglandEngland Liverpool FC 1: 3 0: 0 (H) 1: 3 (A)
1976/77 Uefa cup 1 round Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union Shakhtar Donetsk 1: 4 0: 3 (A) 1: 1 (H)
1978/79 Uefa cup 1 round Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Red Star Belgrade (a)6: 6 ( a ) 5: 2 (H) 1: 4 (A)
1979/80 European Champions Cup 1 round Poland 1944Poland Ruch Chorzów 4: 1 4: 1 (H) 0: 0 (A)
2nd round SwitzerlandSwitzerland Servette FC Geneva 4: 3 2: 1 (H) 2: 2 (A)
Quarter finals EnglandEngland Nottingham Forest 2: 3 1: 0 (A) 1: 3 (H)
1980/81 European Champions Cup 1 round Cyprus RepublicRepublic of Cyprus APOEL Nicosia 4: 2 3: 0 (H) 1: 2 (A)
2nd round CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Baník Ostrava (a)1: 1 ( a ) 0: 0 (A) 1: 1 (H)
1981/82 European Champions Cup qualification FranceFrance AS Saint-Etienne 3: 1 1: 1 (A) 2: 0 (H)
1 round SwitzerlandSwitzerland FC Zurich ( a ) 3: 3(a) 2: 0 (H) 1: 3 (A)
2nd round EnglandEngland Aston Villa (a)2: 2 ( a ) 1: 2 (H) 1: 0 (A)
1982/83 European Champions Cup 1 round Germany Federal RepublicFederal Republic of Germany Hamburger SV 1: 3 1: 1 (H) 0: 2 (A)
1983/84 European Champions Cup 1 round LuxembourgLuxembourg Jeunesse Esch 6: 1 4: 1 (H) 2: 0 (A)
2nd round Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia FK Partizan Belgrade 2: 1 2: 0 (H) 0: 1 (A)
Quarter finals ItalyItaly AS Roma 2: 4 0: 3 (A) 2: 1 (H)
1984/85 European Champions Cup 1 round ScotlandScotland Aberdeen FC 3: 3
(5: 4 on  behalf )
1: 2 (A) 2: 1 a.d. (H)
2nd round AustriaAustria FK Austria Vienna 4: 5 3: 3 (H) 1: 2 (A)
1985/86 European Champions Cup 1 round AustriaAustria FK Austria Vienna 1: 4 0: 2 (H) 1: 2 (A)
1986/87 European Champions Cup 1 round SwedenSweden Örgryte IS Gothenburg 7: 3 3: 2 (A) 4: 1 (H)
2nd round DenmarkDenmark Brøndby IF Copenhagen 2: 3 1: 2 (A) 1: 1 (H)
1987/88 European Champions Cup 1 round FranceFrance Girondins de Bordeaux 0: 4 0: 2 (A) 0: 2 (H)
1988/89 European Champions Cup 1 round Germany Federal RepublicFederal Republic of Germany Werder Bremen 3: 5 3: 0 (H) 0: 5 (A)
1989/90 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 1 round IcelandIceland Valur Reykjavík 4: 2 2: 1 (A) 2: 1 (H)
2nd round FranceFrance AS Monaco (a)1: 1 ( a ) 0: 0 (A) 1: 1 a.d. (H)
Legend: (H) - home game, (A) - away game, (N) - neutral place, (a) - away goal rule , (i. E.) - on penalties , (n. V.) - after extra time

Overall record : 60 games, 23 wins, 18 draws, 19 defeats, 87:80 goals (goal difference +7)

Team squad

Squad for the 2019/20 season

As of October 6, 2019

No. player Date of birth Last club
goalkeeper
01 Damian Schobert June 4, 1999 1. FC Frankfurt / Oder
12 Michel Witte March 22, 1999 VfB Stuttgart II
79 Kevin Summers September 28, 1989 BFC Dynamo II
Defense
03 Max Grundmann August 16, 1998 Energy Cottbus
04th Michael Blum December 25, 1988 Chemnitzer FC
05 Kristian Taag November 19, 1999 Chemnitzer FC
06th Kosuke Hatta November 26, 1996 1. FC Kleve
20th Lucas Brumme September 25, 1999 BFC Dynamo U19
midfield
07th Philip Schulz September 11, 1992 TSG Neustrelitz
08th Andreas Pollasch March 4th 1993 FSV Frankfurt
09 Lukas Kruger January 20, 2000 RB Leipzig U19
10 Ronny Garbuschewski February 23, 1986 FSV Zwickau
14th Joey Breitfeld 5th October 1996 FC Ingolstadt 04
17th Marvin Kleihs March 19, 1994 Berlin AK 07
19th Daniel Schaal June 14, 1994 SC Wiedenbrück
22nd Bahadir Ozkan February 21, 1995 Umraniyespor
24 Deniz Citlak June 7, 1997 SV Empor Berlin U19
27 Andor Bolyki September 6, 1994 FSV Union Fürstenwalde
Storm
11 Will Siakam November 1, 1995 Hertha BSC II
13 Chris Reher April 7, 1994 FC Viktoria 1889 Berlin
16 Steve Braun January 19, 2000 BFC Dynamo U19
23 Mateusz Lewandowski March 4, 1999 SC Freiburg U 19
26th Apheze Moustoifa November 21, 1999 SV Arminia Hanover

Coaching team

As of October 6, 2019

function Surname Date of birth
Chief trainer Christian Benbennek 06/11/1969
Assistant coach Christof Reimann -

Functional team

function Surname
Team manager Jörn Lenz
Press officer Martin Richter

Well-known former players

In brackets: time of club membership as a player

Trainer

In brackets: time of club membership as a coach

Second team

Since the club could not reach professional football in the years after reunification with the first team and even started in the fifth-class association league Berlin as a low point until 2004 , there was no national attention worth mentioning for the reserve of the Weinroten . This was different in the times of the GDR, when the 2nd team was one of the top teams in the second-class league for many seasons . 1985/86 the second representation of the GDR champions with players like Oskar Kosche , Burkhard Reich , Thomas Grether , Jörg Fügner , Dirk Anders , Andreas Belka , Heiko Brestrich , René Deffke , Eike Küttner , Rainer Troppa and Norbert Trieloff even won the season A. , could not be promoted to the East German elite league due to the applicable regulations. Already in 1971/72 and 1972/73 , with Wolfgang Filohn , Rainer Rohde and Gerhard Krentz , among others , the BFC reserve had won the relay championship.

A total of 13 seasons was represented the BFC Dynamo II in the House of the East German football and topped with 459 points from 366 games in the eternal table in this division rank 27. As part of the re-spin - in 1976, the second teams were in the junior league transferred - of the reserve teams of the upper league clubs from the league in the early summer of 1989, whereupon the BSG Bergmann-Borsig Berlin took over the starting place of BFC II, this representation was dissolved. Their coaches in the past included Helmut Jäschke , Werner Voigt and Herbert Schoen .

literature

  • Marco Bertram: BFC Dynamo. Berlin 2015, ISBN 978-3-944068-38-1 (= Library of German Football , Volume 3)
  • Andreas Glasses: The BFC is to blame for building the wall! Structure of the Taschenbuch Verlag, Berlin 2002, ISBN 3-7466-1861-4 .
  • Jörn Luther, Frank Willmann: BFC Dynamo - The Master Club . Das Neue Berlin, Berlin 2003, ISBN 3-360-01227-5 .
  • Hanns Leske: Erich Mielke, the Stasi and the round leather: The influence of the SED and the Ministry for State Security on soccer in the GDR . The workshop, Göttingen 2004, ISBN 3-89533-448-0 .
  • Paul Bach (Ed.): Eastern Bloc - The BFC Fanzine . Self-published, Berlin 2006.
  • Holger Stark: The hooligan cartel . In: Der Tagesspiegel . November 18, 1999 (article on organized crime and references to the 1990s BFC Dynamo fan scene).

Web links

Commons : BFC Dynamo  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Remarks

  1. The Berlin political scientist Hanns Leske describes this in his book, but also presents referee manipulations as interpretations, as these still lack any evidence to this day.

Individual evidence

  1. Jörn Luther / Frank Willmann, Der Meisterclub, 2nd edition Berlin 2004, p. 18 ff.
  2. Holger Stark: Mielke's favorites and the gray mouse: BFC and CFC are 50. In: n-tv.de . January 15, 2016, accessed March 25, 2017.
  3. www.welt.de: 50 years of BFC Dynamo , accessed on April 16, 2016.
  4. Hanns Leske: Foul from the highest point . In: Der Tagesspiegel. March 22, 2006.
  5. ^ Mielke's favorite club before the end of October 1, 2001.
  6. Der Tagesspiegel "BFC Dynamo: Controversial New Logo" June 12, 2009.
  7. Christoph Romanowski: BFC DYNAMO e. V. - NEWS. bfc.com, August 14, 2017, accessed August 16, 2017 .
  8. Der Spiegel "Hundreds of hooligans storm the guest block" from July 30, 2011.
  9. ^ "BFC Dynamo two games without a spectator" RP Online from August 29, 2011.
  10. kicker.de
  11. http://www.triosfussballseite.de/haben2013-14.html Overall statistics for the 2013/14 season, Trios Fussballseite, accessed on April 12, 2014.
  12. BFC Dynamo rises to Der Tagesspiegel from April 14, 2014.
  13. Overview of the regional league team with contract extensions and new additions to Trio's football site, accessed on May 18, 2014.
  14. ^ Announcement of the Berlin Football Association from May 20, 2015.
  15. BFC in the Cup luck Berliner Kurier of 20 May 2015 accessed May 25, 2015.
  16. Rene Rydlewicz new BFC Dynamo Trainer , BZ from May 7, 2016, accessed on August 8, 2016.
  17. BFC Dynamo wins the Berlin Cup final from the Berliner Zeitung on May 25, 2017, accessed on August 1, 2017.
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