Sc freiburg

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Sc freiburg
Logo of the SC Freiburg
Basic data
Surname Sport-Club Freiburg e. V.
Seat Freiburg im Breisgau , Baden-Wuerttemberg
founding 1904
Colours White-red
Members 24,500 (May 2020)
president vacant
Board Oliver Leki (Finance, Organization & Marketing)
Jochen Saier (Sports)
Website scfreiburg.com
First soccer team
Head coach Christian Streich
Venue Black Forest Stadium
Places 24,000
(int .: 18,000)
league Bundesliga
2019/20 8th place
home
Away
Alternatively

The Sport-Club Freiburg e. V. ( SC Freiburg or SCF for short ) is a soccer club from Freiburg im Breisgau . It was founded on May 30, 1904. The SC men's team has been back in the Bundesliga since the 2016/17 season . In the all-time Bundesliga table, the club occupies 22nd place. The women's team also plays first class in the women's Bundesliga .

The club colors are white and red. The coat of arms has a griffin head on the left and the abbreviation SCF on the right . In February 2020, the association had over 24,500 members, making it the largest association in Baden .

history

Predecessor clubs

The oldest predecessor clubs of the SC were the Freiburg FV 04, founded in March 1904, and the two months younger FC Schwalbe Freiburg . On March 3, 1912, FV 04, now renamed SV 04 , and FC Schwalbe, renamed first to FC Mars , then to FC Union , merged to form SC Freiburg for the first time .

On December 13, 1919, the club joined the Freiburg Gymnastics Association from 1844 (formerly: Freiburger TV 1844 ). In the course of the dispute between gymnastics and sports associations, the footballers resigned in 1924 to re-form the SC Freiburg . In the nationwide reorganization of organized sport, the two clubs were merged again.

After the Second World War , the first successor club to the gymnastics club was VfL Freiburg , which got its old name back in 1949. In 1952, the footballers resigned and formed what is now SC Freiburg. Hubert Pfaff was the first chairman in the club's history.

The defining president of SC Freiburg was Achim Stocker , who was the club's first chairman from 1972 until his death on November 1, 2009. He was known for never watching his club's games live so as not to stress his circulation.

Historic logo of the SCF (1952 to 1958)

Early days

Logo from 1958 to today
League placements of SC Freiburg from 1978/79 (first season in the 2nd Bundesliga) to 2009/10

For a long time, SC Freiburg was in the shadow of the then top club Freiburg FC . Before the introduction of the Gauligen , the SC played no role nationwide . For the 1933/34 season, the SC qualified for the new Gauliga Baden , but rose immediately as a knocked-down bottom of the table. Four championships in the district class Oberbaden from 1934 to 1937 brought the SC four times into the promotion round, in which he missed promotion every time. Only during the Second World War did the Freiburg team make the leap into the increasingly fragmented Gauliga several times.

After the war, the club was represented in the top division, the South Zone League , for five years . From 1950 to 1978 his teams played in the third-class amateur league in South Baden . In 1965 and 1968 the SC had the opportunity to move up to the Regionalliga Süd, but failed in the promotion round.

In 1974, the SC placed as runner-up in the Amateur League South Baden in front of the local competitor FFC. In 1978, the SC rose to the 2nd Bundesliga and met again on the rival FFC, which had been represented in the second division since 1977. From the second season the SC consistently reached higher places in the table than the FFC. This was relegated in 1982, the SC remained in the middle of the second division table and has since been the highest ranked Freiburg football club.

In January 2001 the SC acquired the stadium of the FFC, the Möslestadion , in order to set up the Freiburg football school for the promotion of young talent.

The Finke era (1991-2007)

Volker Finke, coach of SC Freiburg from 1991 to 2007
season league space Gates Points
1991/92 2nd Bundesliga South 03 52:41 37:27
1992/93 2nd Bundesliga 01 102: 57 65:27
1993/94 Bundesliga 15th 54:57 28:40
1994/95 Bundesliga 03 66:44 46:22
1995/96 Bundesliga 11 30:41 42
1996/97 Bundesliga 17th 43:67 29
1997/98 2nd Bundesliga 02 57:36 61
1998/99 Bundesliga 12 36:44 39
1999/00 Bundesliga 12 45:50 40
2000/01 Bundesliga 06th 54:37 55
2001/02 Bundesliga 16 37:64 30th
2002/03 2nd Bundesliga 01 58:32 67
2003/04 Bundesliga 13 42:67 38
2004/05 Bundesliga 18th 30:75 18th
2005/06 2nd Bundesliga 04th 41:33 56
2006/07 2nd Bundesliga 04th 55:39 60
Green background: Promotion to the Bundesliga.
Red background: Relegation to the 2nd Bundesliga

In 1991 Volker Finke was hired as a trainer, who came from 1. SC Norderstedt after he had previously led TSV Havelse to the 2. Bundesliga in 1990 . With Stefan Beneking , Jens Todt and Thomas Vogel , he brought three other players from Havelse. Achim Sarstedt became assistant coach . For the first all-German season, the 2nd Bundesliga was divided into the North and South squadrons, each with twelve teams, the first of which were promoted to the Bundesliga. After SC Freiburg had first taken first place and was also autumn champion, 1. FC Saarbrücken pulled past him in the course of the promotion round , which narrowly missed promotion. In the following long 1992/93 season with a total of 24 teams and 46 match days, the Freiburg team took first place from the seventh match day and rose to the Bundesliga for the first time. The Breisgauer had scored 102 goals this season and were at the top of the table for a total of 39 weeks.

The first Bundesliga season was marked by the fight against relegation. Including a 4-0 win at VfB Stuttgart, SC Freiburg was able to win the last three games and thus still overtake 1. FC Nürnberg in the table , who only had to be relegated on equal points due to the worse goal difference. The Freiburg team showed a playful offensive style this season and thus gained nationwide sympathy.

The tight class stay in the first year was followed by the best Freiburg season ever in 1994/95 . Particularly noteworthy is the 5-1 victory of SC over FC Bayern Munich, trained by Giovanni Trapattoni , on the second match day. Freiburg remained strong throughout the season, recorded 20 wins and was third at the end of the season. On the 32nd matchday, the Finke-Elf had a mathematical chance at the German championship. Third place qualified for qualification for the 1995/96 UEFA Cup , in which the Freiburg team were eliminated in the first round against Slavia Prague . In the following season, the SC could not keep the good placements of the previous season. Above all, the departure of playmaker Rodolfo Cardoso turned out to be a great sporting loss. In 1997, the Freiburg team descended for the first time. After a year, the SC came back to the Bundesliga and in 2001 again reached the UEFA Cup . After successes against the Slovakian representative Matador Púchov and FC St. Gallen, the team was narrowly defeated in December 2001 by the eventual UEFA Cup winner Feyenoord Rotterdam .

In the league, the Freiburg team slipped into the lower half of the table. At the end of the season they were relegated. In 2003 the ascent was successful, in 2005 the third descent took place. This season, the SC only achieved three wins and 18 points and finished last at the end of the season. This was the worst season result for a Bundesliga club since the introduction of the three-point rule. In 2006, the SC did not make direct resurgence for the first time.

The 2006/07 season in the 2nd Bundesliga started with a weak first half. After the 4-0 defeat against Karlsruher SC on matchday 16, the SC had only 16 points and was in 14th place in the table. The club's management announced that a change of coach at the end of the 2007 season had been decided by mutual agreement. Before that, coach Volker Finke should prevent relegation.

This was followed by a series of 13 games without defeat (eleven wins, two draws). The SC had meanwhile been placed in fourth place, and the rise was within reach again. A 1: 3 defeat against Jena on the next matchday was a major setback in the promotion campaign. The sports club was now dependent on weaknesses of the competition. On matchday 32, the SC lost 1-0 at home against Paderborn by conceding a goal in stoppage time. The dream of promotion seemed to be over. But the direct competitors Duisburg , Rostock and Fürth also lost, so nothing changed in the table constellation for the time being. The SC won the last two games confidently, as did Rostock and Duisburg; However, due to the worse goal difference - as in the previous year - only fourth place was achieved and thus the promotion just missed out again.

This strong second half of the season (with 41 points the most successful that a club had ever scored in the 2nd Bundesliga) gave some SC fans the opportunity to found the “Wir sind Finke” initiative. Their aim was to initiate an extraordinary general meeting at which the coach question should be discussed in order to keep Finke in Freiburg after all. This request failed because the required 25% of the club members who were supposed to apply for an extraordinary general meeting were not reached.

The 16-year tenure of coach Volker Finke is the longest in German professional football to date. With him, assistant coach Achim Sarstedt left the sports club after 16 years. Andreas Bornemann ended his activity as SC manager. Several long-time regulars left the SC, including Aleksandre Iaschwili , Boubacar Diarra , Soumaila Coulibaly , Ibrahim Tanko , Sascha Riether and Roda Antar . Under Finke, SC Freiburg had its most successful time in the club's history.

Dutt and Sorg (2007–2012)

Robin Dutt, coach of SC Freiburg from 2007 to 2011
season league space Gates Points Bl squad
2007/08 2nd Bundesliga 05 49:44 55 -
2008/09 2nd Bundesliga 01 60:36 68 -
2009/10 Bundesliga 14th 35:59 35
2010/11 Bundesliga 09 41:50 44
2011/12 Bundesliga 12 45:61 40
2012/13 Bundesliga 05 45:40 51
2013/14 Bundesliga 14th 43:61 36
2014/15 Bundesliga 17th 36:47 34 BL squad
2015/16 2nd Bundesliga 01 75:39 72
2016/17 Bundesliga 07th 42:60 48 BL squad
2017/18 Bundesliga 15th 32:56 36 BL squad
2018/19 Bundesliga 13 46:61 36 BL squad
2019/20 Bundesliga 8th 48:47 48 BL squad
Green background: Promotion to the Bundesliga.
Red background: Relegation to the 2nd Bundesliga

Robin Dutt became the new head coach and Dirk Dufner became the new sports director . In the first season under the new coach, the club played for promotion, but reached fifth place due to a weak phase at the beginning of the second half of the season. The style of play changed noticeably under Dutt. While Volker Finke placed particular emphasis on possession and combination football, his successor prescribed a straightforward, results-oriented strategy for the sports club.

In 2008 SC Freiburg had a relatively good start to the season; In the first seven games, five wins were recorded with only one defeat, so that at the end of the first half of the season they finished third. After the team had achieved six wins in a row at the beginning of the second half, SC Freiburg took over the top of the table. On matchday 31, Freiburg made their fourth promotion to the Bundesliga and at the same time the second division championship with a 5-2 away win at TuS Koblenz . The SC Freiburg was thus also the first team to receive the newly introduced championship trophy of the 2nd Bundesliga.

In the 2009/10 season, SC Freiburg secured early relegation with a 2-2 draw at 1. FC Köln on matchday 33 and finished 14th in the final table with 35 points. The 2010/11 season was quite successful for the SC, in the end it was ranked 9th with 44 points. During this phase, the Breisgauers could particularly rely on their striker Papiss Demba Cissé , who scored a total of 22 goals and thus finished second in the Bundesliga scorers list behind Mario Gomez.

Before the end of the season, Robin Dutt announced that he would succeed Jupp Heyncke's coach at Bayer 04 Leverkusen at the beginning of the coming season . Marcus Sorg was introduced as the head coach and Christian Streich as his assistant as his successor . On September 10, 2011 SC Freiburg suffered the highest Bundesliga defeat in the club's history under coach Sorg; Freiburg lost 7-0 away at Bayern Munich. Due to the unsatisfactory situation in the winter break (18th place), the sports club announced that it had advised five players to change clubs because Marcus Sorg was planning the second half of the season without them. Were affected Maximilian Nicu , Manuel Salz , Felix Bastians , Kisho Yano and the longtime captain Heiko Butscher . A little later, SC Freiburg announced that Sorg had been relieved of all tasks with immediate effect. For the first time in his Bundesliga time, the SCF parted ways with a head coach.

The era of prank (since 2012)

The previous assistant coach Christian Streich was introduced as the successor to Marcus Sorg . During the winter break, the sports club separated for a million dollar transfer from Papiss Demba Cissé , who moved to Newcastle United . Freiburg was able to improve significantly under strike, so that on matchday 32 with a 0-0 win against Hanover, relegation could be secured. In the second half of the 2012 season, Freiburg scored 27 points, did not lose a home game and remained undefeated for 10 games in a row.

The success continued in the 2012/13 season , the first half of the season ended with two wins in a row in 5th place. This was the trigger for the second half of the season, in which the Freiburg team was able to stay in the top half of the table without any concerns about relegation. With away wins against Eintracht Braunschweig , Karlsruhe and 1. FSV Mainz 05 , the team reached the cup semi-finals for the first time in the club's history, in which SC Freiburg lost 2-1 to VfB Stuttgart.

On April 22nd, after almost six years, sports director Dirk Dufner separated ; the current contract was terminated by mutual agreement. Dufner's successors were Jochen Saier and Klemens Hartenbach from the Freiburg football school. On May 10th, Christian Streich extended his contract with SC Freiburg, which ran until 2014, "long-term".

On the last match day of the 2012/13 season, the club lost its home game against table neighbors FC Schalke 04 and thus narrowly missed participation in the Champions League qualification in fifth place. Since the DFB Cup winners FC Bayern Munich had already qualified as champions for the UEFA Champions League , SC Freiburg qualified directly for the group stage of the 2013/14 UEFA Europa League . For the first time, the SC played its fifth Bundesliga season in a row. This successful season was followed by significant interventions in the squad. The players Jan Rosenthal , Johannes Flum , Daniel Caligiuri , Max Kruse , Cédric Makiadi were lured away by Bundesliga clubs who were worse off than SC in the 2012/13 season.

In the 2013/14 season , the numerous players leaving and the triple burden of participating in the Europa League group stage made themselves felt. From the 4th matchday onwards, Freiburg did not get out of the relegation zone and ended the first half of the season on a relegation place. The results in the Europa League did not live up to their own expectations either, with six points out of the competition in third place. In the DFB-Pokal, Freiburg was able to return the favor in the first cup home game after four years for last year's cup at VfB Stuttgart. In the round of 16, the team failed to Bayer 04 Leverkusen , against which they surprisingly won the second half of the league. On matchday 32, SC Freiburg secured early relegation due to a 1: 3 away defeat by Hamburger SV at FC Augsburg .

The first half of the 2014/15 season was not very successful for Freiburg. It was noteworthy that the SC led in the games against Hertha BSC , TSG 1899 Hoffenheim , Mainz, Paderborn and Hanover at least until the 87th minute, but still conceded the equalizer in the final minutes or in stoppage time. In this way, the Freiburg team gambled away 10 points, so that they spent the winter break on the bottom of the table. In the second half of the season, SC Freiburg won against Eintracht Frankfurt , Hertha BSC, Augsburg and Cologne, so that after the 30th matchday the club was 10th in the second half of the season table and 14th in the overall table. When they lost the following game against their direct competitor Paderborn after a lead and received the equalizer a week later in Hamburg in the 90th minute, the relegation candidates in the table were close together, so that the SC only had the better goal difference from a direct one Relegation zone separated. Since the game against Bayern was still to come, against whom they had not won in 19 years, this was a rather unfavorable starting position for the last two game days. Against Bayern, the SC surprisingly won, but since Stuttgart and Hanover also brought in victories, the decision in the relegation battle was postponed to the last game day. Freiburg had the best starting position, because a draw in Hanover would have been sure to keep them up. And even in the event of a defeat, both Stuttgart and Hamburg would have had to win their games at the same time so that the SC could slip to a direct relegation zone. Exactly this scenario occurred, however, and so SC Freiburg ended the season penultimate and thus relegated to the 2nd Bundesliga after six years of membership in the Bundesliga. Throughout the season, the sports club had given away a win in the closing minutes in six games and missed a penalty in another three 0-0 games. Depending on the calculation, Christian Streich's team was "missing" between twelve and 18 points, which is why quite a few observers spoke of the "most unnecessary relegation of all time".

Due to the relegation there was another upheaval in the squad. The players Roman Bürki , Vladimír Darida , Felix Klaus , Admir Mehmedi , Sascha Riether , Oliver Sorg and Jonathan Schmid switched to various first division clubs.

In the following 2015/16 season , SC Freiburg secured a renewed promotion to the Bundesliga on the 32nd matchday after a 1: 2 away win against SC Paderborn 07. On the 33rd matchday, the team was defeated by a 2-0 win the 1. FC Heidenheim for the fourth time champion of the 2. Bundesliga . The core of the promotion team was retained in the following season , and the team reached 7th place in the final table of the Bundesliga, despite a strongly negative goal difference. Since third place in the table, Borussia Dortmund, won the DFB Cup, this 7th place entitled the SC to participate in the third qualifying round for the UEFA Europa League . There you met the NK Domžale from Slovenia. A 1-0 in the first leg was followed by a 0-2, so that qualification for the group stage of the Europa League was missed. The subsequent Bundesliga season turned out to be more difficult than the previous one, which was due, among other things, to the departures of Vincenzo Grifo and Maximilian Philipp . The latter moved to Borussia Dortmund for EUR 20 million , which is a club record in terms of transfer fees. In the first half of the season, the SC conceded at least three goals in every away game with one exception. The only away win of the season was against 1. FC Köln, when a 4-3 win was achieved despite a 3-0 deficit. In the second half of the season, the SC was more stable defensively, but with major problems on the offensive. Relegation was only secured on the last day of the match with a win against FC Augsburg. The outstanding player was Nils Petersen with 15 goals this season and 2nd place in the top scorer list. Petersen scored almost half of all Freiburg goals (15 of 32) and was the top German goalscorer in the league.

Successes and balance sheets

For a complete overview of detailed placements in the league and in the national and international cups, see SC Freiburg's seasonal balance sheets .

Placements between 1978 and 2020


Greatest successes

Success in the league

Successes in the cup

European Cup balance sheet

season competition round opponent total To Back
1995/96 Uefa cup 1 round Czech RepublicCzech Republic Slavia Prague 1: 2 1: 2 (H) 0: 0 (A)
2001/02 Uefa cup 1 round SlovakiaSlovakia ŠK Matador Púchov 2: 1 0: 0 (A) 2: 1 (H)
2nd round SwitzerlandSwitzerland FC St. Gallen 4: 2 0: 1 (H) 4: 1 (A)
3rd round NetherlandsNetherlands Feyenoord Rotterdam 2: 3 0: 1 (A) 2: 2 (H)
2013/14 UEFA Europa League Group stage Czech RepublicCzech Republic Slovan Liberec 4: 3 2: 2 (H) 2: 1 (A)
SpainSpain Sevilla FC 0: 4 0: 2 (A) 0: 2 (H)
PortugalPortugal DG Estoril Praia 1: 1 1: 1 (H) 0: 0 (A)
2017/18 UEFA Europa League 3rd qualifying round SloveniaSlovenia NK Domžale 1: 2 1: 0 (H) 0: 2 (A)
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: 16 games, 4 wins, 6 draws, 6 defeats, 15:18 goals (goal difference −3)

First team

The professional team of SC Freiburg plays in the Bundesliga .

Squad season 2020/21

(As of August 19, 2020)

No. Nat. player Born on the in the team since
goal
01 GermanyGermany Benjamin Uphoff 0Aug 8, 1993 2020
26th NetherlandsNetherlands Mark Flekken June 13, 1993 2018
40 GermanyGermany Niclas Thiede Apr. 14, 1999 2018
46 GermanyGermany Constantin Frommann II May 27, 1998 2010
Defense
03 AustriaAustria Philipp Lienhart July 11, 1996 2017
05 GermanyGermany Manuel Gulde Feb 12, 1991 2016
17th GermanyGermany Lukas Kübler Aug 30, 1992 2015
20th TunisiaTunisia Mohamed Dräger June 25, 1996 2009
23 GermanyGermany Dominique Heintz Aug 15, 1993 2018
24 GermanyGermany Gian-Luca Itter 0Jan. 5, 1999 2019
25th GermanyGermany Robin Koch July 17, 1996 2017
30th GermanyGermany Christian Günter Feb. 28, 1993 2006
31 GermanyGermany Keven Schlotterbeck Apr 28, 1997 2017
midfield
06th AlbaniaAlbania Amir Abrashi 27 Mar 1990 2015
07th FranceFrance Jonathan Schmid June 22, 1990 2019
19th GermanyGermany Janik Haberer 0Apr 2, 1994 2016
21st AustraliaAustralia Brandon Borrello July 25, 1995 2018
22nd HungaryHungary Roland Sallai May 22, 1997 2018
27 GermanyGermany Nicolas Höfler 09 Mar 1990 2005
28 Korea SouthSouth Korea Chang-Hoon Kwon June 30, 1994 2019
29 Korea SouthSouth Korea Woo-Yeong Jeong Sep 20 1999 2019
32 ItalyItaly Vincenzo Grifo 0Apr 7, 1993 2019
34 GermanyGermany Lino Tempelmann 0Feb. 2, 1999 2017
36 GermanyGermany Yannik Keitel Feb 15, 1999 2011
38 GermanyGermany Florian Kath Oct 21, 1994 2013
attack
09 GermanyGermany Lucas Höler July 10, 1994 2018
11 Bosnia and HerzegovinaBosnia and Herzegovina Ermedin Demirović 25th Mar 1998 2020
13 GermanyGermany Marco Terrazzino Apr 15, 1991 2017
18th GermanyGermany Nils Petersen 0Dec 6, 1988 2015

Transfers of the 2020/21 season

  • Status: August 14, 2020
Accesses
time player Transferring club
Summer 2020 Ermedin Demirović Deportivo Alavés
Mohamed Dräger SC Paderborn 07 (loanee)
Constantin Frommann SG Sonnenhof Großaspach (loanee)
Woo-Yeong Jeong FC Bayern Munich II (loanee)
Keven Schlotterbeck 1. FC Union Berlin (loanee)
Marco Terrazzino Dynamo Dresden (loanee)
Benjamin Uphoff Karlsruher SC
Departures
time player Receiving club
Summer 2020 Christoph Daferner Dynamo Dresden
Mike Frantz Hannover 96
Chima Okoroji SC Paderborn 07 (loan)
Yoric Ravet Grenoble Foot
Fabian Rudlin destination unknown
Nico Schlotterbeck 1. FC Union Berlin (loan)
Alexander Schwolow Hertha BSC
Luca Waldschmidt Benfica Lisbon
*Due to the postponement of the end of the 2019/20 season and the start of the 2020/21 season due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the DFB, together with the DFL and in consultation with FIFA, adjusted the summer transfer period (generally July 1 to August 31). The transfer window was on July 1 (changeover period I.1) and is open from July 15 to October 5, 2020 (changeover period I.2). The first, one-day phase was intended in particular for the registration of contracts that had already been concluded from July 1st.

Coaching staff

Christian Streich has been the head coach of the professionals since January 2nd, 2012

The head coach of the professional team has been 55-year-old Christian Streich since January 2, 2012. He took over as assistant coach Patrick Baier, who had been on the staff since 2009 under head coaches Robin Dutt and Marcus Sorg . Lars Voßler began his work as an assistant trainer with prank; Florian Bruns has been a member of the staff since the 2017/18 season. The goalkeeping coach is Andreas Kronenberg, who has been on the staff under Marcus Sorg since the 2011/12 season. The athletic trainer has been Daniel Wolf since the 2018/19 season, replacing Simon Ickert, who has been responsible for this area since 2007. The following are responsible:

function Surname since
Head coach Christian Streich 2012
Assistant coach Lars Vossler 2012
Assistant coach Patrick Baier 2009
Assistant coach Florian Bruns 2017
Goalkeeping coach Andreas Kronenberg 2011
Athletic trainer Daniel Wolf 2018

Former players and coaches

Known players (selection)

Interior view of the Dreisamstadion

For a complete list of all SC Freiburg players since their promotion to the second division in 1978, see the list of SC Freiburg players .

Coach and president

A chronological overview of all coaches since 1946 (before that mostly veteran players took over the training) and all presidents since the club was founded.

Term of office Nat. Trainer Events
1946 / 47-1948 / 49 GermanyGermany Andreas Munkert
1949 / 50-1949 / 50 GermanyGermany Arthur Mattes
1950 / 51–1952 / 53 GermanyGermany Andreas Munkert
1953 / 54-1954 / 55 GermanyGermany Willi Hornung
1956 / 57–1957 / 58 GermanyGermany Kurt Mannschott
1960 / 61–1962 / 63 GermanyGermany Hans Roggow
1963/64–1963/64 GermanyGermany Hanns Faber
1964 / 65–1968 / 69 GermanyGermany Hans Diehl
1969 / 70–1971 / 72 GermanyGermany Edgar Heilbrunner
0July 1, 1972 to September 30, 1978 GermanyGermany Manfred letter Promotion to the 2nd Bundesliga 1978/79
September 30, 1978– June 30, 1979 GermanyGermany Heinz Baas
0July 1, 1979 to June 30, 1980 GermanyGermany Jupp Becker
0July 1, 1980– January 24, 1981 GermanyGermany Norbert Wagner
January 25, 1981 to June 30, 1981 GermanyGermany Horst Zick
0July 1, 1981 to June 30, 1982 GermanyGermany Lutz Hangartner
07/1/1982 - 6/30/1983 GermanyGermany Werner Olk
0July 1, 1983 to June 30, 1984 GermanyGermany Fritz Fuchs
007/01/1984 0- 01/01/1986 Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Anton Rudinski
January 25, 1986– March 22, 1986 GermanyGermany Jupp Becker
March 23, 1986– June 30, 1986 GermanyGermany Horst Zick
07/1/1986–12/17/1988 GermanyGermany Jörg Berger
001/01/1989 0- 04/08/1989 GermanyGermany Fritz Fuchs
0April 9, 1989 to June 30, 1989 GermanyGermany Uwe Ehret
07/1/1989–8/26/1989 GermanyGermany Lorenz-Günther Köstner
08/27/1989–11/26/1989 GermanyGermany Uwe Ehret
01.12.1989-30.06.1990 GermanyGermany Bernd Hoss
0July 1, 1990 to June 30, 1991 GermanyGermany Eckhard Krautzun
0July 1, 1991 to June 30, 2007 GermanyGermany Volker Finke Promotion to the Bundesliga in 1993/94 , 1998/99 , 2003/04
0July 1, 2007 to June 30, 2011 GermanyGermany Robin Dutt Promotion to the Bundesliga in 2009/10
0July 1, 2011 to December 29, 2011 GermanyGermany Marcus Sorg
Since 001/02/2012 GermanyGermany Christian Streich Promotion to the Bundesliga in 2016/17
Term of office Nat. president
1912-1914 GermanyGermany Rohrer
1914-1933 GermanyGermany Oskar Mattes
1933-1952 GermanyGermany Ludwig Sieder
1952-1964 GermanyGermany Hubert Pfaff
1964-1967 GermanyGermany Friedrich Würmlin
1967-1968 GermanyGermany Ernst Schrempp
1968-1971 GermanyGermany Gundolf Fleischer
1971-1972 GermanyGermany Heinz Stoll
1972-2009 GermanyGermany Achim Stocker
2009-2019 GermanyGermany Fritz Keller

Honorary captain

SC Freiburg has appointed a total of seven honorary captains. Here is the list, the year of appointment in brackets:

  • Hermann Weber (1924)
  • Oskar Müller (1927)
  • Reinhold Henger (1931)
  • Willi Trapp (1951)
  • Erwin Kramer (1963)
  • Friedel Egle (1974)
  • Joachim Loew (2010)

More teams

Second team

SC Freiburg II
Surname SC Freiburg II
Venue Möslestadion
Places 5,400
Head coach Christian Preusser
league Regionalliga southwest
2019/20 13th place

The second team of SC Freiburg rose in the 1997/98 season from the Association League South Baden to the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg. In the 2007/08 season she made the leap into the Regionalliga Süd as first place, which has been run as the Regionalliga Südwest since the 2012/13 season. In 2013/14 , second place was reached, but they did not participate in the promotion games to the 3rd division. In the 2015/16 season , the second team took 15th place and was relegated to the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg. In the following season 2016/17 you could celebrate the direct return to the Regionalliga Südwest. The home arena is the Möslestadion .

Second team placements since 2007

season league space Gates Points
2007/08 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 01 62:36 73
2008/09 Regional league south 14th 46:63 38
2009/10 Regional league south 03 63:34 61
2010/11 Regional league south 06th 68:56 46
2011/12 Regional league south 08th 49:49 49
2012/13 Regionalliga southwest 07th 61:48 52
2013/14 Regionalliga southwest 02 69:37 67
2014/15 Regionalliga southwest 07th 66:46 53
2015/16 Regionalliga southwest 15th 50:60 34
2016/17 Oberliga Baden-Württemberg 01 78:20 79
2017/18 Regionalliga southwest 04th 50:32 66
2018/19 Regionalliga southwest 07th 50:38 55
2019/20 Regionalliga southwest 13 30:37 28
green background: ascent
red background: descent

Regional league squad 2020/21

(As of August 10, 2020)

goal Defense midfield attack
Noah Atubolu GermanyGermany NigeriaNigeria
Constantin Frommann GermanyGermany
Lars Hunn SwitzerlandSwitzerland
Bennet Schmidt GermanyGermany
Felix Bacher AustriaAustria
André Barbosa SwitzerlandSwitzerland PortugalPortugal
Jacob Engel GermanyGermany
Kimberly Ezekwem GermanyGermany NigeriaNigeria
Claudio Kammerknecht GermanyGermany
Kenneth Schmidt GermanyGermany
Kiliann Sildillia FranceFrance GuadeloupeGuadeloupe
Philipp Treu GermanyGermany
Carlo Boukhalfa GermanyGermany AlgeriaAlgeria
Sandrino Braun-Schumacher GermanyGermany
Konrad Faber GermanyGermany
Lars Gindorf GermanyGermany
Luca Herrmann GermanyGermany
Enzo Leopold GermanyGermany
Sascha Risch GermanyGermany
Felix Roth GermanyGermany
Julius Tauriainen FinlandFinland
Nishan Burkart SwitzerlandSwitzerland EnglandEngland
Guillaume Furrer SwitzerlandSwitzerland
David Nieland GermanyGermany
Marvin Pieringer GermanyGermany
Kevin Shame GermanyGermany
Noah Weisshaupt GermanyGermany

Regional league coaching team

Nat. Surname position
GermanyGermany Christian Preusser Trainer
GermanyGermany Uwe Staib Assistant coach
GermanyGermany Michael Mueller Goalkeeping coach
GermanyGermany Magnus Leible Athletic trainer

Entries and exits for the 2020/21 season

Accesses
Nat. Surname donating club Transfer period
AustriaAustria Felix Bacher FC Wacker Innsbruck Winter 2019/20
FranceFrance GuadeloupeGuadeloupe Kiliann Sildillia FC Metz B Summer 2020
GermanyGermany Jacob Engel Eintracht Frankfurt U-19
FinlandFinland Julius Tauriainen Club 04 Helsinki
SwitzerlandSwitzerland Guillaume Furrer own youth
GermanyGermany NigeriaNigeria Kimberly Ezekwem own youth
GermanyGermany NigeriaNigeria Noah Atubolu own youth
GermanyGermany Lars Gindorf own youth
GermanyGermany Noah Weisshaupt own youth
Departures
Nat. Surname receiving club Transfer period
GermanyGermany Tim Probst Bahlinger SC Winter 2019/20
GermanyGermany ItalyItaly Daniele Bruno FC 08 Villingen Summer 2020
SwitzerlandSwitzerland Rafael Zbinden unknown
GermanyGermany Jonas Busam SV Oberachern
GermanyGermany Lucas Torres unknown
AustriaAustria FranceFrance Anthony Schmid unknown
KazakhstanKazakhstan GermanyGermany Ivan Sachanenko unknown
GermanyGermany Kolja Herrmann unknown
GermanyGermany Nico Hug FC Vaduz
GermanyGermany Lukas Bohro Freiburg FC
Bosnia and HerzegovinaBosnia and Herzegovina GermanyGermany Elvin Kovač unknown
GermanyGermany Fabian Rudlin unknown
a. borrowed
wa was borrowed

Junior teams

In addition to the A teams, there are youth teams from U-12 to U-19. The center of the youth work is the Freiburg football school .

Successes:

Women's teams

The women's football department of SC Freiburg has existed since 1975. In the 2019/20 season, it comprises two women's and two girls' teams. The first team was relegated from the Bundesliga in 2010 , but managed to get promoted again in the following season. After 1998 and 2001 it was the third promotion to the top German league. The home ground of the first women's team is the Möslestadion , the training location is the Schönbergstadion of SV Blau-Weiß Wiehre Freiburg , which is also the home ground of the second women's team, the U-17 and U-15 juniors.

The best-known former player of SC Freiburg is the former national player Melanie Behringer , who played for the club between 2003 and 2008 and became world champion in 2007 and Olympic champion in 2016 . With Klara Bühl , Merle Frohms , Hasret Kayikçi and Lena Lotzen, SC Freiburg currently has four German national players in its squad as well as an Israeli player with Sharon Beck , an Austrian one with Virginia Kirchberger , a Swiss one with Naomi Mégroz , a Japanese with Hikaru Naomoto and Jana Vojteková a Slovak national player. The greatest success of the women's football department was the entry into the final of the DFB Cup 2018/19 , which was just lost 1-0 to VfL Wolfsburg .

Stadion

Dreisamstadion

Freiburg fan curve on the north stand, 2013
Back straight, 2013

The home stadium of the SC has been the Dreisamstadion since 1954 (officially since 2014 due to sponsorship Black Forest Stadium , briefly 2014 Stadium on Schwarzwaldstrasse , until 2014 Mage Solar Stadium , until 2012 Badenova Stadium ) with 24,000 seats, including 14,000 seats. Only in the first second division season did the Freiburg avoid the Möslestadion of Freiburg FC . The home stadium of the sports club is located in the eastern Freiburg district of Waldsee on the Schwarzwaldstraße.

In the first few years after it was founded, the club did not have its own sports field. In 1907 the application of the predecessor association FV 04 for a place of its own was rejected by the city council. When the sports club joined the gymnastics club, it played on the western part of the measuring site. In 1926 the club played on the grounds of PSV Freiburg, the parade ground.

The SC's first own arena was the Winterer Stadium, inaugurated in 1928 , which was built together with the police sports club on the site of today's Freiburg airfield . In 1936 the SC had to leave the stadium, in 1937 it was demolished because the area was needed as an airfield for the Luftwaffe. Until 1954, the club again used the facility of the gymnastics club on the measuring site. In September 1955 a new square was inaugurated on the Dreisam, where the club still holds its meetings today.

SC stadium

Since the Dreisamstadion barely meets the requirements of a modern stadium, a renovation of the stadium or a new building has been discussed for some time. In December 2012, the Freiburg municipal council voted to build a new stadium. On February 1, 2015, the citizens of Freiburg voted in a referendum with 58.2 percent in favor of the new stadium in Wolfswinkel in the Brühl district next to the airfield and the trade fair . In November 2018, construction work began on the new SC stadium , which will have 34,700 seats and will be the new home of SC Freiburg in 2020 - at the beginning of the 2020/21 football season. The cost should be 76 million euros.

Sponsors

The current main sponsor of SC Freiburg has been the milk processing group Schwarzwaldmilch since July 1, 2016 . The vehicle partner was Opel from 2012 to 2017 . The jersey sleeve sponsor has been the Freiburg energy supply company Badenova since March 2018 .

Previous main sponsors:

Spectators and fans

Large parts of the SC Freiburg fan scene are part of the umbrella association of fan clubs, the “fg” (fan community), and the “Supporters Crew Freiburg e. V. “(SCFR - Interest Group of Active Fans). The supporters crew distributes the flyer “Fanblock aktuell” for the home games, which provides information about the fan scene in Freiburg, Germany and events.

Association membership development

The list shows the membership development in the association.

date Club members
1925 over 1,000
2003 02,200
2009 02,644
September 2010 03,044
September 2011 04,040
September 2012 04,885
June 2013 06,000
October 2013 07.149
October 2014 08,200
October 2015 09,200
July 2016 10,000
August 2017 12,000
October 2017 14,000
December 2018 18,500
February 2020 24,000

Fan friendships and rivalries

In the 1990s there was a friendship between SC and BVB fans, but this was no longer cultivated. On the 34th matchday of the 2011/12 season , it was refreshed when Freiburg and Dortmund celebrated the Dortmund championship and the Freiburg relegation.

Fans of FC St. Pauli are also friends with SC supporters. Furthermore there is a friendship between the fan clubs Aachen Ultras ( Alemannia Aachen ) and Wilde Jungs Freiburg .

For a long time there was a rivalry between the supporters of the formerly more successful local competitor Freiburg FC (FFC) and those of the SC. The FFC was the club of the conservative upper classes in the university town, while the SC stood for the old working class and later for the left-wing alternative student body. With the relegation of the FFC from the 2nd league and the steady rise of SC Freiburg to the Bundesliga, this rivalry lost its importance.

Encounters between Karlsruher SC and SC Freiburg are often referred to as the "Badisches Derby". The almost alternating promotion and relegation of both clubs since the end of the 1990s ensured that only eight games have taken place in the 2nd Bundesliga since the last encounter in the Bundesliga on May 31, 1997 (most recently on March 21, 2016 in Freiburg, the game ended 1-0). So there were often positive feelings of reunion, a real rivalry never developed. In this context, there was also talk of a “Baden connection”.

By far the greatest rivalry is with the supporters of VfB Stuttgart. This situation can be explained in the context of the general “rivalry” between Baden and Württemberg residents. In addition, for many, SC Freiburg takes the place of KSC in the Baden-Württemberg derby after it was relegated in the 1997/98 season and was hardly present in the Bundesliga. These games are seen by many as the decisive derbies of the season.

Club songs

Before the home games of the SC, the fans traditionally sing the Badnerlied , as is customary at other Baden football clubs.

Well-known club songs are:

  • Bloody Zischdig - Full Throttle (1994 first official fan song)
  • Red Button - For Us Always Front (1997)
  • Blister - Whatever Happens (Winner of the SC Fansong Competition 2006)
  • Fisherman's Fall - SC Freiburg vor! (2008, current fan song, is sung before every home game)

Probably the first club song of the sports club comes from the 1920s. The text was written by Karl Ketterer, a SC player and public relations officer. Melody "Are we united at a good hour" from 1815.

Photo gallery

See also

literature

  • Gilles Mebes: The SC Freiburg and the seriousness of life. Freiburg 1999, ISBN 3-933483-18-2 .
  • Toni Nachbar, Otto Schnekenburger: SC Freiburg - The long way to the short pass. Göttingen 2002, ISBN 3-89533-335-2 .
  • Sport-Club Freiburg (Ed.): One hundred years 90 minutes: The history of SC Freiburg from 1904–2004. Documentation: Peter Martin. Freiburg 2004.
  • Sport-Club Freiburg (Ed.): 25 years Sport-Club Freiburg 1904–29. Festschrift. Freiburg 1929.
  • Robert Kauer (Hrsg.): Phenomenon Freiburg 1 - The rise. Freiburg 1993; The Freiburg phenomenon 2 - A never-ending story. Freiburg 1994; The phenomenon Freiburg 3 - in the middle of Europe. Freiburg 1995.
  • Clemens Geißler: 111 reasons to love SC Freiburg. Schwarzkopf & Schwarzkopf Verlag , 2013.
  • Eleven decades of SC Freiburg, 1904-2014 , ed. from SC Freiburg e. V., Freiburg 2014.

Documentary film

  • With a long run-up - 100 years of SC Freiburg ; DVD, 37 min., Ed. from SC Freiburg
  • Is that Europe already? - Season review 2012/13 ; DVD, 68 min., Ed. from Supporters Crew Freiburg e. V.

Web links

Commons : SC Freiburg  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Sascha Glunk: The founding date with many question marks. In: scfreiburg.com. Sport-Club Freiburg e. V., accessed on October 11, 2019 .
  2. a b membership. SC Freiburg, accessed on July 31, 2020 .
  3. § 1 Paragraph 5 of the Articles of Association (PDF) In: scfreiburg.com. Sport-Club Freiburg e. V., accessed on July 28, 2018 .
  4. Achim Stocker - a chronology. In: Badische Zeitung . November 2, 2009, accessed October 11, 2019 .
  5. a b René Kübler: Between lust and frustration . In: Badische Zeitung . May 22, 2007.
  6. René Kübler: The week of truth . In: Badische Zeitung . May 22, 2007.
  7. ^ SC Freiburg: Sorg must go. In: Frankfurter Rundschau . December 29, 2011, accessed October 11, 2019 .
  8. Papiss Demba Cissé moves to Newcastle. In: scfreiburg.com. Sport-Club Freiburg e. V., January 17, 2012, accessed October 11, 2019 .
  9. Match report: 96 fears for Europe - Freiburg already at the goal in the database of kicker.de . Retrieved October 11, 2019.
  10. Caliguiri shoots Freiburg for the first time in the semi-finals. In: Focus Online . February 26, 2013, accessed October 11, 2019 .
  11. Michael Dörfler, Oliver Huber, Markus Hofmann, Peter Disch: SC Freiburg and manager Dirk Dufner split up. In: Badische Zeitung. April 22, 2013, accessed October 11, 2019 .
  12. Michael Dörfler: Plea for the future. In: Badische Zeitung. May 11, 2013, accessed October 11, 2019 .
  13. Clemens Geißler: 111 reasons to love SC Freiburg. 2nd Edition. Schwarzkopf & Schwarzkopf Verlag, Berlin 2013, ISBN 978-3-86265-272-3 , pp. 103 ff .
  14. Squad. In: scfreiburg.com. Sport-Club Freiburg e. V., accessed on August 16, 2020 .
  15. Two changeover periods in summer - the first only lasts one day , kicker.de, June 29, 2020, accessed on June 29, 2020.
  16. Regionalliga squad. In: scfreiburg.com. Sport-Club Freiburg e. V., accessed on October 11, 2019 .
  17. a b c history. In: scfreiburg.com. Sport-Club Freiburg e. V., accessed on October 11, 2019 .
  18. Joachim Röderer: A clear majority of the council votes in favor of the new SC stadium. In: Badische Zeitung. December 11, 2012, accessed October 11, 2019 .
  19. ^ Result of the 2015 referendum. City of Freiburg, accessed on October 11, 2019 .
  20. This is the new SC stadium. Sport-Club Freiburg e. V., August 31, 2017, accessed June 12, 2019 .
  21. badenova becomes sleeve sponsor at SC Freiburg. In: scfreiburg.com. Sport-Club Freiburg e. V., accessed on March 3, 2018 .
  22. ^ Alfred Draxler: 40 years of the Bundesliga . 1st edition. Ullstein Verlag, Hamburg 2003, ISBN 3-548-42085-0 , pp. 197 .
  23. ^ A b Frank Zimmermann: SC Freiburg: Fritz Keller is now officially chairman. In: Badische Zeitung. September 27, 2010, accessed October 11, 2019 .
  24. Dirk Rohde: Fritz Keller confirmed as chairman. In: scfreiburg.com. Sport-Club Freiburg e. V., September 27, 2011, accessed on October 11, 2019 .
  25. Dirk Rohde: Another record result achieved. In: scfreiburg.com. Sport-Club Freiburg e. V., September 18, 2012, accessed October 11, 2019 .
  26. Joachim Röderer: The number of members increases by a third. In: Badische Zeitung. June 7, 2013, accessed October 11, 2019 .
  27. Frank Zimmermann: SC makes a profit of 6 million euros. In: Badische Zeitung. October 14, 2013, accessed October 11, 2019 .
  28. Great unity and new record result ( Memento from April 28, 2015 in the Internet Archive )
  29. ↑ Record results and increasing membership numbers. In: scfreiburg.com. Sport-Club Freiburg e. V., November 4, 2015, accessed October 11, 2019 .
  30. ^ SC Freiburg club information 2016/17 in the database of kicker.de . Retrieved October 11, 2019.
  31. ↑ Become a member of SC Freiburg. In: scfreiburg.com. Sport-Club Freiburg e. V., August 21, 2017, accessed on August 21, 2017 .
  32. ^ General meeting in the Konzerthaus. In: scfreiburg.com. Sport-Club Freiburg e. V., October 27, 2017, accessed on October 11, 2019 .
  33. ↑ Become a member of SC Freiburg. In: scfreiburg.com. Sport-Club Freiburg e. V., March 29, 2019, accessed on March 29, 2019 .
  34. ↑ Become a member of SC Freiburg. In: scfreiburg.com. Sport-Club Freiburg e. V., July 2, 2020, accessed on July 2, 2020 .
  35. "One, two, three, the friendship is over!" ( Memento from September 24, 2015 in the Internet Archive )
  36. Report from the pot: Borussia Dortmund vs. Sc freiburg. In: fudder.de. March 18, 2013, accessed October 11, 2019 .
  37. ^ Matthias Eisele: St. Pauli fans: "The Freiburg people are easy". In: Badische Zeitung. August 21, 2010, accessed October 11, 2019 .
  38. ^ Bausinger, Hermann: The better half. From people of Baden and Württemberg. DVA, 2002.
  39. A piece of sung history | Sc freiburg. Retrieved April 17, 2020 .

Coordinates: 47 ° 59 '20.7 "  N , 7 ° 53' 29.9"  E