History
It was founded as the football and
cricket club
FuCC Eintracht
in 1895, became
FC Eintracht 1895 e.V.
in 1906 and took on the name
Eintracht Braunschweig
in 1920. The team was re-formed after
World War II as
TSV Braunschweig
in 1945 and reclaimed its current name in 1949.
The team has a colorful history and it quickly became one of northern Germany's favorite sides. They enjoyed success early on, playing in the upper tier league, winning the north German championship in 1908 and 1913, and placing three players on the German national team by 1914. Under the
Third Reich the team played in the
Gauliga Niedersachsen and managed an appearance in the national final rounds. They continued to play in the upper leagues after the war with the exception of a single season (1952-53) spent in tier II. The side was touched by tragedy in 1949 when goalkeeper Gustav Fähland died of internal bleeding a few days after being injured during a game in a collision with a Bremen striker. Another appearance in the final round of the national championship came in 1958 ending with a third place finish.
Eintracht Braunschweig's consistently high standard of play and financial stability helped it to become one of the sixteen teams selected out of a group of forty-six applicants for play in the
Bundesliga, the new federal professional league formed in 1963. Once again the side enjoyed early success, capturing the national title in the 1966-67 season with solid defensive play. That championship team gave up only 27 goals against, which stood as a Bundesliga record until bettered by
Werder Bremen in 1988.
The club just missed a second title in 1977 when they finished third, one point back of champion
Borussia Moenchengladbach and just behind second place finisher
Schalke 04 on goal difference. Another ten players joined the national side from the team, mostly through the 60's and 70's.
The club found itself embroiled in the Bundesliga scandal of 1971, but with a somewhat unusual twist. A number of players accepted payments totaling 40,000 DM – not to underperform and so lose or tie a game, but rather, to put out an extra effort to win. Ultimately, two players were suspended and another ten were fined.
In 1973, in the face of some opposition from the league, Braunschweig became the first Bundesliga side to sport a sponsor logo on their jerseys, although they did refuse a related attempt to re-name the team
Eintracht Jägermeister
. The move paid the team 100,000 DM and introduced a new way of doing business to football that is worth millions today. Other clubs quickly followed suit.
The club played in the Bundesliga through to the mid-80's having been relegated just twice, in 1973-74 and again in 1980-81. During their run of 322 games in the Bundesliga from 1963 to 1973 they set a record that still stands by not seeing a single player
red-carded. Since the 1985-86 season the side has played at the tier II and III levels and is currently competing in
3rd Liga. In 1987, Braunschweig managed to set a mark even as they were demoted. They are the only team ever to have been relegated with a positive goal differential: 52 goals for and 47 against.
The side counted a casualty in the
Cold War in the death of
Lutz Eigendorf, who fled East Germany in 1979, where he played for
Dynamo Berlin, to come to the west to play for
1. FC Kaiserslautern. Shortly after his transfer to Braunschweig in 1983, he died in a motor vehicle accident which was revealed in 2000 as the assassination of a "traitor" arranged by the
Stasi,
East Germany's secret police.
Recent seasons
Year
| Division
| Position
|
1999-2000
| Regionalliga Nord (III)
| 3rd
|
2000-01
| Regionalliga Nord
| 8th
|
2001-02
| Regionalliga Nord
| 2nd (promoted)
|
2002-03
| 2. Bundesliga (II)
| 15th (relegated)
|
2003-04
| Regionalliga Nord (III)
| 6th
|
2004-05
| Regionalliga Nord
| 1st (promoted)
|
2005-06
| 2. Bundesliga (II)
| 12th
|
2006-07
| 2. Bundesliga
| 18th (relegated)
|
2007-08
| Regionalliga Nord (III)
| 10th
|
2008-09
| 3. Liga (III)
| 13th
|
2009-10
| 3. Liga
| 1st
|
Honours
- German champions: 1967
- Gauliga Braunschweig-Südhannover champions: 1943, 1944
- North German champions: 1908, 1913
Current squad
s of
[]
No.
|
| Position
| Player
|
2
| {{flagicon
|
| Dennis Brinkmann
|
4
| {{flagicon
|
| Matthias Henn
|
5
| {{flagicon
|
| Jan Schanda
|
6
| {{flagicon
|
| Damir Vrancic
|
7
| {{flagicon
|
| Benjamin Fuchs
|
8
| {{flagicon
|
| Deniz Dogan
|
9
| {{flagicon
|
| Riley O'Neill
|
10
| {{flagicon
|
| Mirko Boland
|
11
| {{flagicon
|
| Marc Vucinovic
|
13
| {{flagicon
|
| Tim Danneberg
|
14
| {{flagicon
|
| Jan Washausen
|
|
|
No.
|
| Position
| Player
|
15
| {{flagicon
|
| Norman Theuerkauf
|
17
| {{flagicon
|
| Smail Morabit
|
18
| {{flagicon
|
| Marco Calamita
|
19
| {{flagicon
|
| Ken Reichel
|
20
| {{flagicon
|
| Kingsley Onuegbu
|
21
| {{flagicon
|
| Adrian Horn
|
22
| {{flagicon
|
| Marjan Petkovic
|
23
| {{flagicon
|
| Fatih Yilmaz
|
25
| {{flagicon
|
| Fait-Florian Banser
|
26
| {{flagicon
|
| Daniel Davari
|
31
| {{flagicon
|
| Marc Pfitzner
|
32
| {{flagicon
|
| Dennis Kruppke
|
|
Famous players
- Igor Belanov
- Hasse Borg
- Paul Breitner
- Wolfgang Frank
- Bernd Franke
- Bernd Gersdorff
- Mathias Hain
- Uwe Hain
- Franz Merkhoffer
- Viktor Pasulko
- Yahiro Kazama
- Danilo Popivoda
- Tobias Rau
- Aleksandar Ristic
- Lothar Ulsaß
- Horst Wolter
- Valentin Nastase
- André Schembri
- Jan Tauer