No Copa Final for Pizarro
Fifty Glorious Years in the Top Flight
Friday marks the fiftieth anniversary of FC Bayern’s promotion to the Bundesliga. After a failed attempt in the summer of 1964, Munich achieved the long-awaited promotion with an 8-0 victory in the final play-off match against Tennis Borussia Berlin. The Bundesliga had been founded two years before that. Original members Hamburg SV, in the top division since 1963, are the only club to be in the Bundesliga longer than FCB.
FC Bayern have developed into the biggest sports club in the world over the past five decades. Record Bundesliga champions and DFB Cup winners, Champions League winners and World Club champions - FCB have won every possible title at club level. To mark this fiftieth anniversary fcbayern.de brings you facts and figures to highlight the club’s achievements in that period.
Record champions FC Bayern
24 of the 52 Bundesliga titles have been won by FC Bayern - no other club has won more than five German league titles since 1963. The first German championship title came in 1932 - FCB are clearly top of the list with 25 championships to date.
FC Bayern have held top spot in the Bundesliga 683 times - that is 39 per cent of all matchdays, far ahead of any other club. Borussia Dortmund are second with 137 matchdays at the top of the table.
FC Bayern have clocked up 990 wins in the Bundesliga with 629 at home and 361 on the road. FCB are clearly ahead of Werder Bremen in second with a total of 738 wins.
FC Bayern have played 1,704 games in the Bundesliga since promotion in the summer of 1965. That puts the record champions third in the all-time records behind Werder Bremen (1,730) and Bundesliga founder members HSV (1,764).
The fans of FC Bayern have seen 3,684goals since promotion to the Bundesliga - 2,271 at home and 1,413 away. Again, no other club can compete with that record with Werder Bremen second on 2,926 goals.
Goals, points, wins
In the five top European leagues no team has ever won their domestic title as quickly as FC Bayern. FCB secured the Bundesliga title with 7 games to play in 2013/14. To date, that is the only time the league has been won in March.
Conceding just 18 goals in 2012/13 campaign marks another record for FC Bayern. That was repeated in 2014/15 and also included 22 clean sheets - another unique record.
Between October 2013 and March 2014 FC Bayern won 19 Bundesliga games in succession, the longest run of wins in the history of the German league. FCB were unbeaten for 53 games between November 2012 and March 2014 - also unmatched by any club in Germany’s top flight.
FCB ended the 2012/13 campaign with 91 out of a possible 102 points. That is the highest number of points ever achieved in the league. Bayern recorded 29 wins along the way - a record that the Reds equalled the following year.
In 1971/72 FC Bayern netted 101 goals - another league record to date.
At the end of the 2014/15 season: 287consecutive Bayern matches in the Bundesliga were sold out both at home and away - another first in the history of the league. The last time there were empty seats was back in January 2007 when FCB drew 0-0 with VfL Bochum on a freezing Tuesday night in front of ‘only’ 64,000 fans.
Record-holding Bayern players
Three players have won 8 league titles with FC Bayern: Oliver Kahn, Mehmet Scholl and Bastian Schweinsteiger. Nobody else has achieved that level of success. They are followed by three players with seven titles each and another four players with six - all of them from FC Bayern.
The top scorer in the Bundesliga has been an FCB player 15 times - no other club can match that. Gerd Müller claimed the accolade seven times with no other Bundesliga player winning more than three times. Gerd leads Karl-Heinz Rummenigge (3), Roland Wohlfahrt (2) plus Giovane Elber, Luca Toni and Mario Gomez (1 each).
FC Bayern have produced the Footballer of the Year 20 times - that too is unparalleled in the Bundesliga. Franz Beckenbauer heads this list with four titles ahead of Sepp Maier with three. Gerd Müller, Oliver Kahn and Michael Ballack won it twice. Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, Paul Breitner, Lothar Matthäus, Franck Ribéry, Arjen Robben, Bastian Schweinsteger and Manuel Neuer have won once.
Gerd Müller scored 40 goals in 1971/72. That is still the best return for a player over the course of a Bundesliga season.
The Bomber found the back of the net 365times in 427 appearances. No other player has scored anywhere near that number of goals in the history of the Bundesliga.
Sepp Maier played 442 Bundesliga games in succession for FC Bayern between 1966 and 1979. That is still a record in the German league. The Cat from Anzing also holds the record number of Bundesliga appearances for Bayern Munich with 473 games in goal for the Reds.
Promotion Series, Part 1: FCB and the Bundesliga
26 June 1965, 17:42, full time at the Olympic Stadium in Berlin, FC Bayern beat Tennis Borussia Berlin 8-0 - done and dusted: FC Bayern are finally promoted to the Bundesliga.
Next Friday is the fiftieth anniversary of that promotion. Looking back at that great achievement, fcbayern.de brings you a five-part series on the rise of FC Bayern as they set out on the road to conquering the world of football, in Germany and across the globe.
Promotion series, part 1: Bayern and the Bundesliga
According to the FCB history published on the club’s 70th anniversary in 1970, 11 May 1963 was “one of FC Bayern’s darkest days.” The German Football Association (DFB) informed the Munich club they would not be in the newly founded Bundesliga. The DFB explained their decision as follows: “At least for the opening season of the Bundesliga” there would be no place for two clubs from the same town or city - and that meant 1860 Munich had priority as the champions of the regional Oberliga South.
“The crushing blow for FC Bayern contained in the letter from the DFB obviously led to a depressed mood at the club. The people of Munich could not make sense of their lot,” reports the FCB history. A 13-page protest letter from club president Wilhelm Neudecker had no effect. Bayern were one of the most successful teams in the Oberliga South, ahead of the Lions in the all-time records. They had also finished third twice in succession (1962 and 1963), and won the DFB Cup in 1957. “We players thought it was bad that the Bundesliga didn’t want us,” reported FCB striker Rainer Ohlhauser, “we felt like we were being overlooked.”
With fire in their bellies, Bayern fought to get into the Bundesliga. In 1963/64 they finished second in the Regional League South to qualify for the promotion play-offs only to lose out unexpectedly as Borussia Neunkirchen edged FCB out of the promotion race. Bayern were disappointed again as they finished one point short thanks to a 2-0 home defeat against Neunkirchen.
In retrospect, Franz Beckenbauer, in his autobiography ‘Gentleman on the Ball’, described the missed promotion as “perhaps being very fortunate” for FC Bayern. “Another season in the Regional League definitely did us young players a power of good.” Coach Zlatko TschikCajkovski explained how his players bounced back: “I kept telling them: You are good and nobody in the Bundesliga is playing better and the future belongs to you. The future really did belong to you.”
Part two of the promotion series on Tuesday looks at: FC Bayern 1964/65.
Capital Switch for Weiser
Bayern youngster Mitchell Weiser has found a new club. The 21-year-old, whose contract with Germany’s biggest club expires on 30 June this year, is to join FCB’s Bundesliga rivals Hertha BSC on a three-year deal keeping him in the German capital until 2018. After moving to Munich from FC Köln in the summer of 2012 Weiser made a total of 16 Bundesliga appearances and scored one goal for the Reds. FC Bayern wishes Mitch all the best for the next chapter of his career in Berlin!
All FCB Women at World Cup reach last 16
Nine FC Bayern Women players are representing their countries at the Women’s World Cup in Canada – and all nine will now feature in the last sixteen. Melanie Behringer, Melanie Leupolz, Lena Lotzen and Leonie Maier from group winners Germany face Sweden on 20 June in the first knockout round. Japan and Mana Iwabuchi also topped their group and will be favourites when they play the Netherlands with FCB striker Vivianne Miedema on 23 June. Nora Holstad and Norway came second in their group behind the Germans and have progressed to a last sixteen meeting with England on 22 June. Like Miedema, Caroline Abbé and Vanessa Bürki of Switzerland claimed a Round of 16 berth as one of the best third-placed teams. However, the Swiss face a tough hurdle when they take on hosts Canada on 21 June.
All FCB Woman at World Cup Reach Last 16
Nine FC Bayern Women players are representing their countries at the Women’s World Cup in Canada – and all nine will now feature in the last sixteen. Melanie Behringer, Melanie Leupolz, Lena Lotzen and Leonie Maier from group winners Germany face Sweden on 20 June in the first knockout round. Japan and Mana Iwabuchi also topped their group and will be favourites when they play the Netherlands with FCB striker Vivianne Miedema on 23 June. Nora Holstad and Norway came second in their group behind the Germans and have progressed to a last sixteen meeting with England on 22 June. Like Miedema, Caroline Abbé and Vanessa Bürki of Switzerland claimed a Round of 16 berth as one of the best third-placed teams. However, the Swiss face a tough hurdle when they take on hosts Canada on 21 June.
Capital switch for Weiser
Bayern youngster Mitchell Weiser has found a new club. The 21-year-old, whose contract with Germany’s biggest club expires on 30 June this year, is to join FCB’s Bundesliga rivals Hertha BSC on a three-year deal keeping him in the German capital until 2018. After moving to Munich from FC Köln in the summer of 2012 Weiser made a total of 16 Bundesliga appearances and scored one goal for the Reds. FC Bayern wishes Mitch all the best for the next chapter of his career in Berlin!
Neuer and Boateng Top Kickers Ranking
At the end of every season, specialist magazine kicker publishes its closely-observed “German football rankings”. In the latest edition of the roll of honour, the World’s Best Goalkeeper Manuel Neuer earns the “international class” label and leads the list of Bundesliga keepers ahead of Leverkusen’s Bernd Leno and Gladbach’s Yann Sommer. Among the centre-backs, Jérôme Boateng is also top of the ranking with an “international class” tag. The 26-year-old world champion finished ahead of Naldo, Martin Stranzl and Ömer Toprak.
Narrow victory for Bernat and Spain
European champions Spain remain on course for the Euro 2016 finals in France thanks to a narrow 1-0 victory away to Belarus on Sunday night. David Silva pounced on a mistake by the home keeper shortly before half-time to seal it for the Iberians, with FCB man Juan Bernat coming on in place of the goalscorer for the closing stages. With six matches played, Spain lie second in Group C on 15 points, three off leaders Slovakia.
Pizarro an unused sub for Copa opener
Claudio Pizarro and his Peru team-mates have lost their opening match at the Copa America. In their first Group C fixture, Pizza and his national team fell 2-1 at the death to Brazil. The Blaquirroja took a third-minute lead through Christian Cueva, but Neymar levelled just two minutes later. The contest seemed destined for a draw but Brazil sub Douglas Costa struck a stoppage time winner for A Selecao. Pizarro spent the 90 minutes on the bench.
FC Bayern Sign Keeper Sven Ulreich
Goalkeeper Sven Ulreich has joined FC Bayern from VfB Stuttgart. The 26-year-old signed a three-year contract at the Säbener Strasse on Monday evening, keeping him at the Munich club until 30 June 2018. He will take up his new role as a member of Pep Guardiola’s squad on 1 July. The player moves for an undisclosed fee. “We’re very pleased with the signing of Sven Ulreich, an experienced Bundesliga goalkeeper,” commented FC Bayern München AG deputy chairman Jan-Christian Dreesen.
Ulreich made 28 Bundesliga appearances for Stuttgart last term. “I was looking for a new challenge after many years with Stuttgart. FC Bayern is exactly the right place for me to be,” said the Schorndorf-born player, “I’m really looking forward to the whole team and all the new things I’m set to experience here. I want to make a contribution to our success and will always be there when called upon.”
Ulreich joined VfB Stuttgart in 1998. He won the German U-19 championship with VfB in 2005 and made his Bundesliga debut in 2008. All in all, he made 220 appearances for the Swabian. “Sven Ulreich is a good fit to FC Bayern both as a player and in terms of character. We’re delighted he’s chosen to join us,” continued Dreesen.
Unlucky Defeat
Paul Breitner, Phil Neville, Mark van Bommel, Ji-Sung Park, Daniel van Buyten, Paul Scholes, Roy Makaay, Dwight Yorke... a host of former world-class players gathered in Manchester on Sunday afternoon for a clash between some of the biggest names in the game when the Manchester United Legends faced the FC Bayern All-Stars. A vast 53,000 crowd at Old Trafford saw a highly entertaining encounter in which FCB were a shade unlucky to lose 4-2.
United made the brighter start and took a ninth-minute lead through Louis Saha. However, the Munich veterans upped the tempo and Alexander Zickler levelled after 16 minutes. The former FCB striker almost made it 2-0 on the half-hour after a superb dribble and shot but his effort came back off the post. The fans saw three more goals in the first period: Michael Tarnat powered a 43rd-minute free-kick past Edwin Van der Sar, but the Champions League winner’s strike was sandwiched by goals from Dwight Yorke (39) and Andy Cole (45), so that the sides turned round with United 3-2 in the lead.
Mexican waves rippled around Old Trafford in an equally enthralling second period, before Munich were out of luck for the second time when a Paulo Sergio free-kick on the hour crashed away to safety off the crossbar. The Bavarians pressed for an equaliser but Jesper Blomqvist rounded off the scoring at the other end with seven minutes to play. However, there were no real losers on the day as all proceeds from the match went to the Manchester United Foundation, a charity working on behalf of disadvantaged youths.
“The Manchester United Legends came to us at the Allianz Arena for a good cause last year [a 3-3 draw], and we’re here this year. This is how we breathe life into our partnership and friendship,” Breitner commented afterwards. “We’re very happy and proud of our fantastic friendship with Manchester United.”
Germany on track, Record for Lewandowski
A Germany team featuring Bastian Schweinsteiger, Mario Götze and Jérôme Boateng posted an ultimately routine Euro 2016 qualifying victory against minnows Gibraltar on Saturday night. After a patchy first-half performance, Joachim Löw’s side hit their stride in the second half of the final match of the season and signed off for the summer with a 7-0 victory.
Andre Schürrle (28, 65, 71), Max Kruse (47, 81), Ilkay Gündogan (51) and Karim Bellarabi (57) scored the goals in Faro, Portugal. Schweinsteiger captained the team but failed to add his name to the scoresheet when his tenth-minute penalty was saved. Boateng turned in a solid 90-minute display at centre-back and Götze sparkled at the start, but the forward had to be substituted with an injury on 36 minutes. “It’s only a dead leg,” Löw reported afterwards, ruling out a more serious problem.
“We weren’t determined enough in the first half, and I didn’t take my penalty well. But we were better after half-time. We can happily live with a 7-0 win,” commented Schweinsteiger.
Lewandowski’s record hat-trick
A fourth win in six qualifying fixtures takes Germany up to second in Group D behind leaders Poland, 4-0 winners at home to Georgia. The undisputed man of the match was Robert Lewandowski, as the Bayern striker exploded into form at the end of the contest and struck a hat-trick in the space of just four minutes (89, 90+1, 90+3). The feat goes down in the record books as the fastest hat-trick in European Championship qualifying history. Arkadiusz Milik opened for the Poles after 62 minutes.
The other FCB man on international duty at the weekend was Mehdi Benatia, who represented Morocco on Friday evening. The defender and his team-mates opened their Africa Cup of Nations qualifying campaign with a tight 1-0 victory over Libya.
Ribéry Ankle Immobilized
The conservative therapy pursued to date in the case of Franck Ribéry has unfortunately not led to the desired results. After a further medical examination by Prof. Dr. Walther, the player's right ankle has now been immobilised.
Sporting director Matthias Sammer commented: "We will be fully supporting Franck in every aspect of the healing process and hope he will soon be back on the field of play.“
Zickler: It Still Sends Shivers Down My Spine
FC Bayern’s veterans’ team, the FCB All-Stars, are deep into the build-up to a hugely prestigious game on 14 June when captain Paul Breitner and greats including Alexander Zickler, Giovane Elber, Roy Makaay, Jorginho, Mark van Bommel & Co travel to Old Trafford in Manchester for a clash with the United Legends.
“It’ll be a fantastic experience for us and the fans,” said Zickler prior to the meeting at the self-styled Theatre of Dreams. Twelve-year Munich stalwart Zico spoke exclusively to fcbayern.de.
Interview: Alexander Zickler
fcbayern.de: Hallo, Alex! Congratulations on a decade living in Austria. Do you feel like an Austrian now?
Alexander Zickler: I get to vote in the mayoral election this year so I’m well integrated (laughs). My wife is Austrian too – but when Germany play Austria we have his and hers sofas.
You work for RB Salzburg. What’s your job?
I’m U14 coach and U15 assistant coach. It’s time-consuming but I enjoy it, and fortunately my family are right behind me. We have a lot to do with football and my son plays for RB, but we do try and do other things away from the game as well.
How much are you looking forward to the All-Stars game at Old Trafford?
There are shivers running down my spine already! We had great games against United back in my playing days and the atmosphere there is amazing. We played them at the Allianz Arena last summer [a 3-3 draw], so I’m expecting a really cool return match. It’ll be a fantastic experience for us and the fans.
Are you still fit?
In the first couple of years after I hung up my boots I just enjoyed life and went for it at Christmas. But after the scales started showing me a three-figure number I knew it couldn’t carry on. I started running and now I’m a really good weight, I’m fit and I can still run.
Are you as quick as in the old days?
Nearly! I’ve not lost a lot of speed, as my All-Stars team-mates or our Monday kickabout group in Salzburg can testify. They prefer me to be on their team!
You’re still a Bundesliga record-holder with 18 goals as a sub, so is there a risk Paul Breitner might only bring you on in the second half?
His loss! (laughs) But seriously, it wouldn’t bother me. I’ve always given it my best shot, even if I came on late. Coaches knew I’d always have an impact after coming on.
Let’s briefly turn to the Champions League final against United in 1999. Sixteen years later, what do you now think about this agonising defeat?
It was one of most bitter moments you could ever experience as a player. We were so close to victory but threw it away in stoppage time. But it brought us closer together as a group…
…and you won the trophy two years later. Did winning in 2001 finally wipe away the pain of 1999?
It’s easier to cope with that kind of defeat if you come back a second time and win it. But you can’t plan these things and you need a lot of luck. We worked hard for it back then. We were all utterly determined to win it.
Was it the greatest success of your career?
It was one of the greatest because it’s the biggest prize in club football! However, my greatest personal success was coming back from two years out with injury when I’d already been written off. That was a huge achievement! My time in Salzburg has also left a lasting impression.
Your most important goal for FCB came on Matchday 33 in 2000/01, a last-minute strike to make it 2-1 against Kaiserslautern…
The situation was just crazy! We won late in Leverkusen on Matchday 32. I scored with basically the last kick against Kaiserslautern on Matchday 33, and our main rivals Schalke fell behind to VfB Stuttgart almost simultaneously. And then the 94th minute on the last day… Those few weeks pushed me beyond my mental limits. I was shattered afterwards.
What do you remember about your goal?
I warmed up and was told I was coming on in the 87th minute. I tried to get involved immediately, and then we counter-attacked. I cut in from the left and tried to shoot, but it was blocked and the ball looped into the air. I focused on the ball and opted for all or nothing. It could have gone out of the ground – and that’s tough at the Olympiastadion (laughs). But I hit it perfectly!
‘We tried to pull them out of shape’
And that wasn’t the end of it…
I was lying on the turf celebrating, buried by the rest of the team. Suddenly [media director] Markus Hörwick came over and told us Stuttgart were 1-0 up against Schalke! It was unbelievable. It still sends shivers down my spine when I talk about it. It was indescribable!
You then needed a draw at Hamburg on the last day to secure the title, but HSV took a 90th-minute lead…
Oliver Kahn was the only player who still believed we’d win the title. It took him ten seconds to persuade us we could still do it! A wave of energy gripped the team.
Patrik Andersson then took a 94th-minute free-kick...
It must have been two minutes before the ref signalled for the free-kick to be taken. We were trying to get at them and pull them out of shape. The idea was somehow to hit the target, find a gap. And then it hit the back of the net! Unbelievable. That’s when we knew we’d finally won the league.
How much did the dramatic title triumph set you up for the Champions League final in Milan a few days later?
If we’d lost in Hamburg the coach would have had a very tough job on his hands, so it was important we went there on a wave of euphoria.
How much are you still in touch with events at Bayern?
My job means I can’t be in Munich very often, but I watch all the games on TV – together with my son, a diehard Bayern fan. As for me personally, the club still has a big place in my heart.
Alexander Zickler profile
Date and place of birth | 28 February 1974 in Bad Salzungen |
Years at Bayern | 1993 - 2005 |
Position | Forward |
Appearances / goals for Bayern | 308/69 |
Major honours | Intercontinental Cup 2001 Champions League 2001 UEFA Cup 1996 German championship 1994, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2005 DFB Cup 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005 Austrian championship 2007, 2009, 2010 Austrian top scorer 2007, 2008 |
Current occupation | RB Salzburg U14 coach and U15 assistant coach |
Audi Cup 2015
The line-up for the Audi Cup 2015 has been finalised with two more top-quality contenders: Hosts FC Bayern and Spanish giants Real Madrid will be joined by AC Milan and Premier League high-flyers Tottenham Hotspur for the tournament at the Allianz Arena on 4 and 5 August 2015. Advance booking began last week and 60,000 tickets have already been sold.
The first clubs announced for this year’s line-up were FC Bayern and Real, the Champions League winners in 2013 and 2014. Audi has now completed the four-team starting field with 18-time Italian champions AC Milan, ever-present at all editions of the Audi Cup so far, and North London giants Tottenham, who make their debut appearance in Munich. The eight-time FA Cup winners boast a long a rich tradition and finished fifth in the 2014/15 Premier League campaign.
The semi-finals have also been arranged: Real Madrid and Tottenham Hotspur open the Audi Cup 2015 on Tuesday 4 August at 18.15 CET. German champions FC Bayern then take on AC Milan at 20.45. The losers meet in the match for third place on Wednesday 5 August at 18.15, before the winners contest the final at 20.45.
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