Alemannia Aachen
is a German football club from the western city of Aachen, North Rhine-Westphalia. A long term fixture of the country's second division, Alemannia
enjoyed a three-year turn in the top flight in the late 1960s and, after a successful 2005-06 campaign, returned to first division play for a single season.
|
ALEMANNIA AACHEN TICKETS
|
History
Foundation to World War II
The club was founded on
December 16,
1900 by a group of eighteen high school students. Knowing that another team had already taken the name
1. FC Aachen
the new club was christened
FC Alemannia
using the old Latin name for Germany. The
First World War devastated the club: the pre-war membership of 200 was reduced to just 37 by the conflict. In early 1919
Alemannia
merged with
Aachener Turnverein 1847
to become
TSV Alemannia Aachen 1900
. Their new partner's interest was primarily in gymnastics and the union was short-lived, with the clubs splitting again in 1924.
The city of Aachen is near the
Belgian and
Dutch borders and as a result
Alemannia
has had frequent contact with clubs from those countries. Their first game was against the Belgian side
R. Dolhain F.C.
, one of that country's earliest clubs. The team played in the Rhineland-Westphalia FA and won its first championship there in 1907, before joining the newly formed Westdeutsche Fussball Verband in 1909. The club grew steadily as interest in football increased. They qualified for the Rheingauliga in 1921, built their own stadium in 1928, and earned admittance to the Oberliga the following year.
The club enjoyed some success in the early 30s by advancing to the final four of the Westdeutsche championship playoffs. In 1933, German football was re-organized under the
Third Reich into sixteen top-flight
Gauligen.
Alemannia
played several seasons in the
Gauliga Mittelrhein in the late 30s and early 40s. They finished atop their division in 1938 and advanced to the national final rounds. This was in spite of a protest by
SV Beuel 06
which ultimately saw that club awarded the division championship, but too late to allow
Beuel
to play in the national playoff in
Aachen
s stead.
Alemannia
is known as one of the few of this dark era to offer any challenge to the
Nazi regime's purge of Jews from the country's sports organizations by demanding the release of a jailed Jewish member.
Postwar and entry to the Bundesliga
In 1946, after
World War II and the lifting of the ban placed by Allied occupation authorities on most types of organizations in Germany,
Alemannia
re-constituted itself and began play in second tier Rheinbezirk. They returned to first division play in the Oberliga West the next year, but ran into financial difficulty. They remained a steady, but unspectacular second division side, generally finishing mid-table.
''Aachen
s first measure of success came with an advance to the German Cup final in 1953 where they lost a 1:2 decision to
Rot-Weiss Essen''.
After the formation of the
Bundesliga, Germany's new professional football league, in 1963,
Alemannia
found themselves in Regionalliga West (II). In 1965, they had another good run in German Cup competition, earning another final appearance – but were once again unsuccessful – this time losing 0:2 to
Borussia Dortmund
.
The club captured their division in 1967 and were promoted to the Bundesliga (I) for the 1967-68 season. They enjoyed their best ever result the next year with a second place finish behind champion
Bayern Munich
. However, the following season was a disaster: the team earned only one point in play away from home and toppled to an 18th place finish. They returned to play in the Regionalliga West (II), and in 1990 fell still further to the third division.
Road to recovery
After several mediocre seasons in the second half of the 1990s, trainer
Werner Fuchs rejuvenated the
Alemannia
squad by playing 4-4-2 without a
libero (sweeper), creating a side that played an attractive, fluid offense. In 1999, the team played well and delivered an especially strong second half. They were atop the table, just weeks away from the end of the season, when tragedy struck with the unexpected death of Fuchs. The whole city was in shock, but the club managed to pull through, dedicating their promotion to their late trainer and winning the
Regionalliga West/Südwest (III).
[1]
The first years in the
2.Bundesliga were tough for
Aachen
, both on the field and financially. The club struggled for several seasons and the situation was worsened when financial irregularities were uncovered showing the club was near bankruptcy.
The turnaround came with a new executive board under president Horst Heinrichs, trainer
Dieter Hecking and manager
Jörg Schmadtke. Through improved financial management, shrewd player signings, and clever game tactics,
Aachen
became a power once again in the 2003-04 season. They played their way to their third German Cup final appearance, knocking off
1860 München
,
Bayern Munich
, and
Borussia Mönchengladbach
, before losing 2:3 to Bundesliga champions
Werder Bremen
. As league champions
Bremen
already held a place in the
UEFA Champions League, thereby making room for
Aachen
to take part in the
UEFA Cup competition. They delivered a decent performance, advancing to the Round of 16 before going out to eventual semi-finalists
AZ Alkmaar
. The club's participation in the German Cup and UEFA Cup play helped to significantly improve their financial situation.
Current
On April 16th, 2006
Alemannia
became the first team to earn promotion to the Bundesliga in 2005-06, ending Aachen's 36-year absence from top-flight football. However, they stayed up only a single season as they took only one point from their last eight matches of the campaign. In summer 2007, the club appointed former German international defender and 1990 FIFA-World-Champion
Guido Buchwald as manager trainer, who was curiously fired after only 14 matches. After a short interim with Alemannias Sportsmanger Jörg Schmadtke as headcoach, he was then replaced by
Jürgen Seeberger, hardly known in Germany, in the winter break of the season.
Recent seasons
Year
| Division
| Position
|
1999-2000
| 2. Bundesliga (II)
| 8th
|
2000-01
| 2. Bundesliga
| 10th
|
2001-02
| 2. Bundesliga
| 14th
|
2002-03
| 2. Bundesliga
| 6th
|
2003-04
| 2. Bundesliga
| 6th
|
2004-05
| 2. Bundesliga
| 6th
|
2005-06
| 2. Bundesliga
| 2nd (promoted)
|
2006-07
| Bundesliga (I)
| 17th (relegated)
|
2007-08
| 2. Bundesliga (II)
| 7th
|
2008-09
| 2. Bundesliga
| 4th
|
2009-10
| 2. Bundesliga
|
|
Current squad 2009-2010
No.
|
| Position
| Player
|
1
| {{flagicon
|
| Thorsten Stuckmann
|
2
| {{flagicon
|
| Nico Herzig
|
5
| {{flagicon
|
| Lukasz Szukala
|
6
| {{flagicon
|
| Jérôme Polenz
|
7
| {{flagicon
|
| Reiner Plaßhenrich
|
8
| {{flagicon
|
| Szilárd Németh
|
9
| {{flagicon
|
| Benjamin Auer
|
10
| {{flagicon
|
| Thorsten Burkhardt
|
11
| {{flagicon
|
| Markus Daun
|
12
| {{flagicon
|
| Aïmen Demai
|
13
| {{flagicon
|
| Thomas Unger
|
14
| {{flagicon
|
| Babacar Gueye
|
15
| {{flagicon
|
| Kevin Kratz
|
16
| {{flagicon
|
| Florian Müller (footballer)
|
|
|
No.
|
| Position
| Player
|
17
| {{flagicon
|
| Thomas Stehle
|
19
| {{flagicon
|
| Seyi Olajengbesi
|
21
| {{flagicon
|
| Cristian Fiel (Captain)
|
22
| {{flagicon
|
| David Hohs
|
23
| {{flagicon
|
| Hervé Oussalé
|
24
| {{flagicon
|
| Daniel Adlung
|
25
| {{flagicon
|
| Manuel Junglas
|
26
| {{flagicon
|
| Patrick Milchraum
|
27
| {{flagicon
|
| Faton Popova
|
28
| {{flagicon
|
| Mirko Casper
|
30
| {{flagicon
|
| Andreas Lasnik
|
32
| {{flagicon
|
| Timo Achenbach
|
33
| {{flagicon
|
| Abdulkadir Özgen
|
|
For recent transfers, see List of German football transfers summer 2008 and List of German football transfers winter 2008-09.
Alemannia Aachen II squad
As of January 5, 2009
Manager:
Eric van der Luer
No.
|
| Position
| Player
|
| {{flagicon
|
| David Hohs
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Tim Krumpen
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Tevfik Furucu
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Felix Haas
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Nicola Kaiser
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Andreas Korte
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Stefan Oventrop
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Thomas Sabacinski
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Waldemar Schattner
|
|
|
No.
|
| Position
| Player
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Alper Uludag
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Konstantinos David
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Tibor Heber
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Marco Höger
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Nico Schmied
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Robert Wilschrey
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Marcel Arling
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Michael Rentmeister
|
|
Staff
- Jürgen Seeberger (Head coach)
- Jörg Jakobs (Assistant coach)
- Christian Schmidt (Goalkeeping coach)
- Ben Manga-Ubenga (Scout)
- Andreas Bornemann (Manager)
- Herbert Becker (Advisor)
- Hermann Grümmer (Advisor)
- Oliver Dipper (Advisor)
- Nils Haacke (Advisor)
Honours
- German League: Runner-up 1968-69
- 2. Fußball-Bundesliga: Runner-up 2005-06
- German Cup: Runner-up 1952-53, 1964-65, 2003-04
Former players
- Jupp Derwall (West German national team coach, 1978-84)
- Torsten Frings
- Willi Landgraf (holds the record for most German second division games)
- Reinhold Münzenberg (dubbed "Iron Reinhold", the club's first call-up to the national team)
- Karlheinz Pflipsen
- Mark Rudan
- Erik Meijer
- Eric van der Luer
- Chris Iwelumo
- Ivan Petrovic
- Joaquín Montañés
- Horacio Troche
- Ion Ionescu
- Laurentiu Reghecampf
- Vedad Ibiševic
Former managers
- Diethelm Ferner - 1987-1987
- Peter Neururer - 1987-1989
- Rolf Grünther - 1989-1989
- Mustafa Denizli - 1989-1990
- Eckhard Krautzun - 1990-1990
- Norbert Wagner - 1990-1991
- Mateusz Lafi - 1991-1991
- Michael Schleiden - 1991
- Wilfried Hannes - 1991-1994
- Helmut Graf - 1994-1994
- Gerd vom Bruch - 1994-1996
- Werner Fuchs - 1996-1999
- André Winkhold - 1999-1999
- Eugen Hach - 1999-2001
- Jörg Berger - 2001-2004
- Dieter Hecking - 2004-2006
- Michael Frontzeck - 2006-2007
- Guido Buchwald - 2007
- Jörg Schmadtke - 2007
- Jürgen Seeberger - 2008-
Stadium
Alemannia Aachen
plays in the Stadion Tivoli which has a capacity of 21,632 spectators (3,632 seats). One of Germany's better known stadiums, it was built in 1908 and has been renovated several times. The club played its 2004 UEFA Cup matches in
Cologne's Rhein Energie Stadion in order to meet the stadium capacity requirements in place for the competition.
Aachen
is building a
new stadium that will open in 2009.
Team trivia
- Alemannia
carries the strange nickname "the Potato Beetles" (Kartoffelkäfer) because of their striped yellow-black jerseys, which make them look like the particular insects.
- Both Aachen
and SV Beuel 06
lay claim to the 1938 Gauliga Mittelrhein championship. A late decision by the DFB (Deutsche Fussball Bund) awarded Beuel
points that would have given them the title, but by that time Aachen
had already moved on to compete in the national final rounds.
References
- Im memoriam Werner Fuchs {{de icon}}