german professional football clubhouse
football club
Sport-Club Freiburg e.V., normally known as SC Freiburg ( german pronunciation : [ ʔɛs ˈtseː ˈfʁaɪbʊɐ̯k ] ) or just Freiburg, is a german football golf club, based in the city of Freiburg im Breisgau, Baden-Württemberg. It plays in the Bundesliga, having been promoted as champions from the 2. Bundesliga in 2016. Freiburg has traditionally bounced between the beginning and second tier of the german football league system, leading to the fan tone, “ We go toss off, we go up, we go into the UEFA Cup ! ” during the 1990s. [ 2 ] Since 1954, the club ‘s stadium has been the Schwarzwald-Stadion. The cabaret is set to move to the newly built SC-Stadion in 2021. Volker Finke, who was the club ‘s coach between 1991 and 2007, was the longest-serving coach in the history of master football in Germany. Joachim Löw, former director of the Germany national team, is the baseball club ‘s second highest all-time leading goal scorer with 81 goals in 252 games during his three spells at the club, [ 3 ] behind Nils Petersen.

Reading: SC Freiburg

history [edit ]

The club traces its origins to a pair of clubs founded in 1904 : Freiburger Fußballverein 04 was organised in March of that year ; FC Schwalbe Freiburg precisely two months late. Both club undergo list changes, with Schwalbe becoming FC Mars in 1905, Mars becoming Union Freiburg in 1906, and FV 04 Freiburg becoming Sportverein Freiburg 04 in 1909. Three years late, SV and Union formed Sportclub Freiburg, at the lapp time incorporating the gryphon head. In 1918, after the devastation of World War I, SC Freiburg entered a impermanent agreement with Freiburger FC to be able to field a full side called KSG Freiburg. The future year, SC Freiburg associated themselves with FT 1844 Freiburg as that club ‘s football department, until 1928 when they left to enter into a stadium-sharing arrangement with PSV ( Polizeisportvereins ) Freiburg 1924 that lasted until 1930 and the bankruptcy of PSV. SC Freiburg then picked up again with FT 1844 Freiburg in 1938. The club played on the highest tied from 1928, first base in the Bezirksliga Baden, then in the Gauliga Baden, from which they were relegated in 1934. At the conclusion of World War II, Allied occupation authorities disbanded most existing organizations in Germany, including football and sports clubs. The clubs were permitted to reconstitute themselves after about a year, but were required to take on new names in an attempt to disassociate them from the so-recent Nazi past. SC Freiburg was consequently concisely known as VfL Freiburg. By 1950, French-occupation authorities had let up enough to allow the clubs to reclaim their old identities. ultimately, in 1952, SC Freiburg left FT Freiburg behind again .
historical chart of Freiburg league performance after WWII To this point, the history of the clubhouse had been characterised by only minor success. Through the 1930s, SC Freiburg played in the Bezirkliga ( II ), with the episodic turn in the Gauliga Baden ( I ), and captured a handful of local titles. After World War II, they picked up where they left off, playing in the Amateurliga Südbaden ( III ). While only a humble club, SC Freiburg became known for the competitiveness and team liveliness in their play. This led them to the 2. Bundesliga in 1978–79, which they would compete in for a decade-and-a-half before making the discovery to the top-flight Bundesliga in 1993–94 under the management of Volker Finke. In their first Bundesliga season, Freiburg narrowly avoided relegation. They made an exciting discharge in their second temper at the top flat, finishing third base, equitable three points behind champions Borussia Dortmund. It was at this meter that they were first nicknamed Breisgau-Brasilianer ( literally Breisgau-Brazilians ) due to their attractive style of play .
The golf club ‘s greatest success was reaching the UEFA Cup in 1995 and 2001. Freiburg ‘s first Bundesliga delegating was in 1997 after they finished in 17th position. While they have been relegated four times since first making the Bundesliga, they have thrice won immediate promotion back to the top league, only failing to do indeed in 2005–06. It was the beginning time since 1992 that Freiburg played in the 2. Bundesliga for two consecutive seasons. Freiburg finished the 2006–07 season in one-fourth rate in the 2. Bundesliga, missing out on the third automatic-promotion spot on goal difference to MSV Duisburg, although they won 12 of their death 16 league games. They were knocked out of the DFB-Pokal in the second round by VfL Wolfsburg on 24 October 2006. On 20 May 2007, Volker Finke resigned as the golf club ‘s coach after 16 years in the job. He was succeeded by Robin Dutt, who himself left the club for Bayer Leverkusen in 2011. On 10 May 2009, Freiburg secured forwarding into the Bundesliga once again, beating TuS Koblenz in an away crippled 5–2. In the 2011–12 season, Freiburg appeared to be ineffective to avoid another relegation for the most part of the season but a coaching change turned the sides fortunes round and the club finally finished 12th and survived. Under Christian Streich, the 2012–13 Bundesliga season saw the golf club finish up in fifth place, their best league standing since 1994–95. The fifth-place finish secured a position in the 2013–14 UEFA Europa League, an accomplishment that the cabaret had not achieved since the 2001–02 edition of the tournament. Had Freiburg defeated Schalke 04 on the final examination matchday of the season, Freiburg would have leapfrogged Schalke and qualified for the UEFA Champions League for the beginning time in cabaret history. The 1–2 defeat to Schalke, however, saw Schalke plug fourth target in the league and qualify for the tournament rather. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] During the 2012–13 season, Freiburg besides advanced to the semi-finals of the DFB-Pokal for the first meter in the club ‘s history but lost to local anesthetic rivals VfB Stuttgart 1–2 and missed the opportunity to play Bayern Munich in the final. [ 6 ] In the 2014–15 season, after six years in the exceed escape, Freiburg was relegated to the 2. Bundesliga by a single point after a final-day get the better of at Hannover 96. This was despite beating Bayern Munich in the second-last crippled. In the follow temper, however, the club earned its fifth promotion to the Bundesliga as league champions, with two matches to spare. The first season back in the Bundesliga saw them end 7th. This saw Freiburg qualify for the Europa League, as german cupwinners Borussia Dortmund were already qualified for the Champions League. The side were eliminated in the one-third qualification round against NK Domžale from Slovenia. by and large thanks to 15 season goals by Nils Petersen, Freiburg stayed in the Bundesliga liter, finishing 15th .

Reserve team [edit ]

The clubhouse ‘s reserve team, once the SC Freiburg Amateure, nowadays SC Freiburg II, has, for the most part of its history played in the lower amateur leagues. It made a three-season appearance in the tier four Verbandsliga Südbaden from 1983 to 1986, but then took until 1994 to return to this league. In 1998 the team won promotion to the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg after a league championship in the Verbandsliga. Freiburg II spent the following ten seasons at this floor as an upper board side before another league backing took the team to the Regionalliga Süd. After four seasons at this league the team became partially of the newly Regionalliga Südwest in 2012. After a seventh rate in its beginning season in the league the team finished runner-up in 2013–14. A South Baden Cup succeed in 2001 qualified it for the first round of the 2001–02 DFB-Pokal, the german Cup, where it lost to Schalke 04 .

stadium [edit ]

Dreisamstadion home in 2011 SC Freiburg once played its home games at the Dreisamstadion, named after the Dreisam River which flows through Freiburg. Because of sponsorship agreements, the stadium was known as the Schwarzwald-Stadion. The stadium has an approximate capacity of 24,000 spectators and was built in 1953. Forty years late, then director Volker Finke began an inaugural to transform the Dreisamstadion into Germany ‘s first solar powered football stadium. There are solar modules on the north, south, and main tribunes. These panels generate 250,000 kWh of department of energy per class. [ 7 ] [ 8 ] The post modern SC-Stadion ( known as the Europa-Park Stadion for sponsorship reasons ) [ 9 ] [ 10 ] was completed inOctober 2021. Located in the west of the city in a part of the city called Brühl — immediately to the west of Freiburg Airport — it has a capacity of 34,700. [ 11 ] [ 12 ] [ 13 ] [ 14 ] [ 15 ]

In Europe [edit ]

Matches [edit ]

As of 3 August 2017[16][17]

baseball club records in UEFA competitions [edit ]

As of 1 July 2014[18]
  • Biggest Win in UEFA Competition: 1 November 2001, St. Gallen 1–4 Freiburg, at Zurich
  • Biggest Defeat in UEFA Competition: 3 October 2013, Sevilla 2–0 Freiburg at Seville/12 December 2013, Freiburg 0–2 Sevilla at Freiburg
  • Club Appearances in UEFA Europa League: 3
  • Player with Most UEFA Appearances: Andreas Zeyer – 8 appearances
  • Top Scorer in UEFA Club Competitions: Sebastian Kehl – 2 goals

golf club records [edit ]

Honours [edit ]

league [edit ]

cup [edit ]

  • South Baden Cup (Tiers III-VII)
    • Winners: 1975, 1978, 2001‡
    • Runners-up: 2005‡

young person [edit ]

League
Cup
  • German Under 19 Cup
    • Winners: 2006, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2018

Under 21 International [edit ]

  • Lev Yashin Cup
    • Winners: 2011[22]

‡ Won by military reserve team .

Players [edit ]

current police squad [edit ]

As of 21 August 2021.[23]

note : Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality .

Out on loan [edit ]

note : Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality .

Selected celebrated former players [edit ]

This list of early players includes those who received international caps while playing for the team, made meaning contributions to the team in terms of appearances or goals while playing for the team, or who made significant contributions to the sport either before they played for the team, or after they left. It is not complete or all inclusive, and additions and refinements will continue to be made over time. [ 24 ]

head coaches [edit ]

Coaches of the golf club since 1946 : [ 25 ]
Volker Finke, former coach of SCF and longest serving coach in german football history

Women ‘s section [edit ]

recent seasons [edit ]

The late season-by-season performance of the club : [ 26 ] [ 27 ]

SC Freiburg [edit ]

Season
Division
Tier
Position

1999–00

Bundesliga

I

12th

2000–01

Bundesliga

6th

2001–02

Bundesliga

16th↓

2002–03

2. Bundesliga

II

1st↑

2003–04

Bundesliga

I

13th

2004–05

Bundesliga

18th↓

2005–06

2. Bundesliga

II

4th

2006–07

2. Bundesliga

4th

2007–08

2. Bundesliga

5th

2008–09

2. Bundesliga

1st↑

2009–10

Bundesliga

I

14th

2010–11

Bundesliga

9th

2011–12

Bundesliga

12th

2012–13

Bundesliga

5th

2013–14

Bundesliga

14th

2014–15

Bundesliga

17th↓

2015–16

2. Bundesliga

II

1st↑

2016–17

Bundesliga

I

7th

2017–18

Bundesliga

15th

2018–19

Bundesliga

13th

2019–20

Bundesliga

8th

2020–21

Bundesliga

10th

2021–22

Bundesliga

SC Freiburg II [edit ]

Season

Division

Tier

Position

1999–2000

Oberliga Baden-Württemberg

IV

6th

2000–01

Oberliga Baden-Württemberg

6th

2001–02

Oberliga Baden-Württemberg

7th

2002–03

Oberliga Baden-Württemberg

3rd

2003–04

Oberliga Baden-Württemberg

5th

2004–05

Oberliga Baden-Württemberg

4th

2005–06

Oberliga Baden-Württemberg

4th

2006–07

Oberliga Baden-Württemberg

7th

2007–08

Oberliga Baden-Württemberg

1st↑

2008–09

Regionalliga Süd

IV

14th

2009–10

Regionalliga Süd

3rd

2010–11

Regionalliga Süd

7th

2011–12

Regionalliga Süd

8th

2012–13
Regionalliga Südwest

7th

2013–14

Regionalliga Südwest

2nd

2014–15

Regionalliga Südwest

7th

2015–16

Regionalliga Südwest

14th ↓

2016–17

Oberliga Baden-Württemberg

V

1st ↑

2017–18

Regionalliga Südwest

IV

4th

2018–19

Regionalliga Südwest

7th

2019–20

Regionalliga Südwest

13th

2020–21

Regionalliga Südwest

1st ↑

  • With the introduction of the Regionalligas in 1994 and the 3. Liga in 2008 as the new third tier, below the 2. Bundesliga, all leagues below dropped one tier. In 2012, the number of Regionalligas was increased from three to five with all Regionalliga Süd clubs except the Bavarian ones entering the new Regionalliga Südwest.
Key

noteworthy chairmen [edit ]

References [edit ]