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Borussia Dortmund

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07.03.

U23s: DFB precisely schedules four 3. Liga matchdays

06.03.

Ian Maatsen: half a year, full throttle

06.03.

Legends travel to Celtic in May

05.03.

Impressions of team training

05.03.

Hockenjos re-elected as chair of stadium operators' association

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SV Werder - Borussia Dortmund

German Bundesliga

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09.03.2024 18:30

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Union Berlin - Borussia Dortmund

German Bundesliga

24. matchday

02.03.2024 15:30

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SV Werder Bremen - Borussia Dortmund

13.03.

Borussia Dortmund - PSV

17.03.

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30.03.

Bayern München - Borussia Dortmund

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SV Werder Bremen - Borussia Dortmund

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30.03.

Bayern München - Borussia Dortmund

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SV Werder - Borussia Dortmund

German Bundesliga

25. matchday

09.03.2024 18:30

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Union Berlin - Borussia Dortmund

German Bundesliga

24. matchday

02.03.2024 15:30

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Our fans' representatives are the first point of contact for any fan-related topics. They are eager to develop new ideas and always open for suggestions.

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Borussia Dortmund stands for intensity, authenticity, cohesion and ambition. There's an intense character to everything we do. Our stadium is the epicentre. This is where all of BVB's energy is released.

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half a year, full throttle

06.03.2024

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BVB News

10:00 am

U23s: DFB precisely schedules four 3. Liga matchdays

The German Football Association (DFB) has precisely scheduled Matchdays 31-34 in the 3. Liga. Borussia Dortmund's U23s will play all their matches in this timeframe at 14:00 CET…

05/03/2024

Impressions of team training

Borussia Dortmund's first team have started the new training week and have commenced their preparations for the match away to Werder Bremen next Saturday. Here are the pictures from the training…

05/03/2024

Hockenjos re-elected as chair of stadium operators' association

Dr Christian Hockenjos, director of organisation at Borussia Dortmund, has been re-elected as chair of the board of the Association of…

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05/03/2024

Women's handballers sign Deborah Lassource

Deborah Lassource is moving to the Borussia Dortmund women's handball team in the summer. The reigning world champion has signed a contract until 2026.

04/03/2024

Advance sale for the game against Bayern Munich to start on Tuesday

The advance sale of tickets for the Bundesliga away game against Bayern Munich (Saturday 30/03, 18:30 CET) at 12:00 CET on Tuesday…

03/03/2024

BVB lose 2-1 away to MSV Duisburg

Borussia Dortmund's U23s suffered a 2-1 defeat away to relegation-threatened MSV Duisburg. The Zebras caused the Black & Yellows major problems from the beginning. But because MSV squandered…

03/03/2024

2-0 away victory in Herten for the BVB women

Borussia Dortmund's women's footballers have won their opening Landesliga fixture of 2024 2-0 (2-0) away to Spvgg Herten. Top goalscorers Mandy Reinhardt and Marie Grothe sealed the…

03/03/2024

50 years of the world's most beautiful stadium – BVB invite you to join in

The world's most beautiful stadium is celebrating its birthday. Opened as the Westfalenstadion in 1974, SIGNAL IDUNA PARK…

02/03/2024

Adeyemi: "We deservedly won a solid game"

In addition to head coach Edin Terzic, goalscorers Karim Adeyemi and Ian Maatsen plus goalkeeper Alexander Meyer shared their thoughts. The match reactions.

02/03/2024

Terzic: "Karim was the mirror image of the first half"

At the press conference, Edin Terzic spoke not only about the 90 minutes at the Alte Försterei but also about Karim Adeyemi and the central…

02/03/2024

Adeyemi: This time left-footed...

The BVB victory was ultimately a fair result despite the initial difficulties. The Black & Yellows had the upper hand in terms of xG (1.8-1.3) and had much more possession (59%). Union did…

02/03/2024

Meyer: "We embraced the fight"

After the 2-0 away victory against 1. FC Union Berlin, goalkeeper Alexander Meyer shared his view of the match.

02/03/2024

Celebrations in Berlin as Adeyemi and Maatsen seal 2-0 win

Borussia Dortmund won 2-0 (1-0) away to 1. FC Union Berlin on Bundesliga Matchday 24 and picked up three important points in the race for…

01/03/2024

Meyer: "We have everything in our own hands"

Alexander Meyer is currently in great demand once again. After Borussia's regular No. 1 Gregor Kobel sustained an injury in a collision during the match against VfL Wolfsburg, Meyer…

01/03/2024

U23s looking to pick up more points in Duisburg

Borussia Dortmund's U23s, who currently lie fourth in the 3. Liga table, will travel to face 18th-placed MSV Duisburg on Sunday (kick-off: 19:30 CET). Both teams feature players who…

01/03/2024

BVB open office in the USA

Borussia Dortmund celebrated the opening of their permanent representation in New York City by inviting 300 guests from the fields of politics, business and sport to the One World Trade Centre – the…

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Different from Day One:

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06/03/2024

Malen vs. Maatsen: Higher or lower?

05/03/2024

BVB U23s: Crossbar crash in the 90th! - Setback in Duisburg

05/03/2024

FCU vs. BVB - Recap

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Stay up to date - with the BVB newsletter! Want to subscribe? Then simply enter your e-mail address and click on the mail symbol! Enjoy!

By subscribing I agree that BVB (Borussia Dortmund GmbH & Co. KGaA, Ballspielverein Borussia 09 e.V. Dortmund; BVB Merchandising GmbH; BVB Event & Catering GmbH; besttravel Dortmund GmbH) may share my data between the aforementioned organisational divisions, jointly process my data and use it for communication purposes, analytical purposes, and advertising purposes via E-Mail. Advertisements may contain, for example, ticket offers, special offers and other products and/or business services (e.g. fan items and events) provided by BVB, as well as by BVB’s official partners. This agreement can be revoked at any time in the newsletter, by an informal letter in the post or by an e-mail sent to datenschutz@bvb.de.

1&1

EVONIK

SIGNAL IDUNA PARK

PUMA

1&1

Der führende Anbieter von Breitband und Mobilfunkprodukten 1&1 und der BVB starten heute ihre gemeinsame Partnerschaft. Als neuer Hauptsponsor wird 1&1 künftig nicht nur auf der Trikotbrust präsent sein, wo das Logo in schwarz und weiß abgebildet wird, sondern auch umfangreiche On- und Offline-Werbemaßnahmen durchführen. Anlässlich der beginnenden Partnerschaft geht der neue Trikotsponsor mit einem Fan-Special direkt auf die schwarzgelben Anhänger zu. Zu dem besonderen Angebot, das sich ausschließlich an BVB-Fans richtet, gehört ein ganz besonderes Stück Stoff: Zum Saisonauftakt gibt 1&1 das neue BVB-Heimtrikot gratis zu einer 1&1 All-Net-Flat oder einem 1&1 DSL-Anschluss dazu und der Fan profitiert zusätzlich von sechs Freimonaten und der 1&1 Service Card.

„Wir freuen uns, dass die Partnerschaft mit 1&1 endlich losgeht. 1&1 ist ein innovatives Unternehmen, das mit seinem exklusiven Angebot ein tolles Zeichen an unsere Fans sendet“, erklärt BVB-Geschäftsführer Carsten Cramer.

„Der BVB ist ein sympathischer, ambitionierter Verein, der für einen begeisternden Fußball steht und leidenschaftliche Fans im Rücken hat. Wir freuen uns sehr über die Partnerschaft, von der auch der BVB-Fan im Rahmen vieler Aktionen profitieren wird“, ergänzt Robin Harries, 1&1 Vorstand für Online-Marketing und Vertrieb.

1&1 im Netz

EVONIK

„Die beiden Marken Evonik und BVB ergänzen sich in idealer Weise. Der BVB steht für das intensive Fußballerlebnis, also für Emotionalität, die für uns Brücken zu vielen Menschen baut, die sich gewöhnlich nicht für Spezialchemie interessieren würden. Und Evonik steht für Kreativität. In unserem Kerngeschäft finden wir damit Lösungen für die unterschiedlichsten Kunden. Und im Fußball helfen wir damit dem BVB, als ungewöhnlichster Club Europas wahrgenommen zu werden.“

Christian Kullmann

 

EVONIK im Netz

PUMA

„Moderner Fußball mit schnellen Spielzügen, ein leidenschaftliches Trainerteam, eine faszinierende Mannschaft und nicht zuletzt die Fans im Signal Iduna Park – das alles macht den BVB zu einem Club, der Fußballer, Fußballfreunde und sogar Nicht-Fußballer weltweit begeistert. Diese Euphorie wird durch die Partnerschaft getragen und bietet uns die perfekte Möglichkeit, PUMAs Glaubwürdigkeit als Sportmarke zu unterstreichen. Wir wünschen dem BVB eine erfolgreiche Saison und freuen uns auf bewegenden und mitreißenden Fußball.“

Matthias Bäumer, General Manager BU Teamsport

PUMA im Netz

SIGNAL IDUNA PARK

Für die einen ist es "das schönste Stadion der Welt", für die anderen schlicht "der Tempel" oder auch so etwas wie das zweite Wohnzimmer - der SIGNAL IDUNA PARK. Voller Stolz sind wir Namensgeber der Heimspieltätte des BVB und Partner von Borussia Dortmund. In dieser Eigenschaft haben wir für das Stadion eine Website geschaffen, die mit Infomationen, Aktionen und einzigartigen Bildern das Herz eines jeden Borussen höherschlagen lässt: www.signal-iduna-park.de

Signal Iduna Park im Netz

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多特蒙德足球俱乐部_百度百科

足球俱乐部_百度百科 网页新闻贴吧知道网盘图片视频地图文库资讯采购百科百度首页登录注册进入词条全站搜索帮助首页秒懂百科特色百科知识专题加入百科百科团队权威合作下载百科APP个人中心多特蒙德足球俱乐部播报讨论上传视频德国足球俱乐部收藏查看我的收藏0有用+10多特蒙德足球俱乐部(Borussia Dortmund)是一家位于德国北莱茵-威斯特法伦(北威)州多特蒙德市的足球俱乐部,绰号“大黄蜂”。二战后崛起的多特蒙德和同处北威州鲁尔工业区(鲁尔区)的沙尔克04之间的比赛因紧邻的地理位置、相同的工人阶层文化而火爆异常 ,被称为“鲁尔区德比(鲁尔德比、矿区德比)”;球队在国内近些年实力强劲,和拜仁慕尼黑之间的比赛也被不少球迷称作“德国国家德比”。多特蒙德曾获得1次欧洲冠军联赛冠军,1次欧洲优胜者杯冠军,1次丰田杯冠军和8次德国顶级联赛冠军。中文名多特蒙德足球俱乐部外文名Borussia Dortmund成立时间1909年12月19日所属地区德国北莱茵-威斯特法伦多特蒙德运动项目足球角逐赛事德国足球甲级联赛主场馆伊杜纳信号公园球场现任主教练泰尔齐奇 [46]知名人物萨默尔、安德雷斯·穆勒、哈斯勒、莱曼、里肯、凯尔、扬·科勒、罗伊斯、哈兰德主要荣誉德国足球顶级联赛冠军8次德国杯冠军5次德国超级杯冠军7次欧洲冠军联赛冠军1次欧洲优胜者杯冠军1次展开主要荣誉德国足球顶级联赛冠军8次德国杯冠军5次德国超级杯冠军7次欧洲冠军联赛冠军1次欧洲优胜者杯冠军1次丰田杯冠军1次收起容纳人数80,552人现任队长埃姆雷·詹 [2]主    席劳巴尔体育经理佐尔克绰    号蜜蜂兵团、大黄蜂队    歌Das Vereinslied目录1球队历史▪起源▪蛰伏▪巅峰▪低谷▪复兴2球队球员▪球员列表▪著名球员3球队主场4球队文化▪队歌▪队徽▪球衣5球队战绩6球队荣誉7球队纪录▪主场大胜▪客场大胜▪主场大败▪客场大败▪出场纪录球队历史播报编辑起源1909年12月19日在多特蒙德市东北部,波鲁西亚1909球类俱乐部(Ballspiel Verein Borussia 1909)成立。40多名天主教三位一体教区青年团的成员于出于对足球运动的热爱,也出于对负责青少年宗教工作的卡布朗-胡伯特-德瓦尔特(Kaplan Hubert Dewald)的不满,他们成立了波鲁希亚1909球类俱乐部。球队名字普鲁士来源于施泰格大街上的波鲁希亚酿酒厂。当时规定的俱乐部服装是蓝白相间加红色斜纹的运动衫和黑色短裤。新俱乐部的首个目标就是要加入西德意志赛事联合会。德瓦尔特神甫曾亲自出面试图阻止俱乐部的成立,但没有成功,不过,他的出现使二十多名“叛逆者”退出了俱乐部。最终只有十八名“波鲁森好汉”参与了俱乐部的筹建。弗朗兹·雅各比(Franz Jacobi)担任新成立的俱乐部副主席兼新闻发言人。这十八人分别是:海因利希·克莱弗(Heinrich Cleve),弗朗兹·保恩(Franz Braun),保尔·保恩(Paul Braun),汉斯·德贝斯特(Hans Debest),保尔·齐恩特齐拉(Paul Dziendziella),弗朗兹·雅各比(Franz Jacobi),尤里尤斯雅各比(Julius Jacobi),威廉·雅各比(Wihelm Jacobi),汉斯·卡恩(Hans Kahn),古斯塔沃·穆勒(Gustav Mueller),弗朗兹-里瑟(Franz Risse),弗里兹·舒尔特(Fritz Schulte),汉斯·希伯尔特(Hans Siebold),奥古斯特·特内斯曼(August Toennesmann),海因里希-欧俄(Heinrich Unger),弗里兹-韦伯(Fritz Weber),弗朗兹·维恩特(Franz Wendt)和罗伯特·欧俄(Robert Unger)共同创建了多特蒙德俱乐部。1910年12月初,俱乐部的足球运动员被接纳为会员。从1911年一月起,多特蒙德俱乐部开始参加WSV组织的正式比赛。第一场比赛(友谊赛):1911年1月15日,对阵多特蒙德VfB 2队,9:3获胜。第一场积分赛:1911年9月10日,在卡斯特罗普(Castrop)对阵劳克斯(Rauxel)体操协会竞赛部足球队,1:0获胜。球队的第一场正式比赛于1911年11月15日在白草坪体育场打响。球队原本的颜色为蓝白相间,但俱乐部在1913年将其改为黄色和黑色。多特蒙德队在二十年代开始逐渐斩露头角,在三十年代成为了多特蒙德市最具有号召力的球队,但在与同为鲁尔区的对手沙尔克04队交手中却屡屡铩羽而归。双方球迷之间一直剑拔弩张,双方之间的比赛被称为“鲁尔德比”。1912年2月25日,12:2 大胜劳克斯(Rauxel)队,俱乐部历史上首次晋级。(升入B级)1913年2月14日, WSV第四区在多特蒙德召开会议。会议表决允许多特蒙德使用柠檬黄的队服。从那以来,俱乐部的颜色一直是黄黑两色。1913/1914赛季后,多特蒙德俱乐部再度晋级。1926/27赛季,多特蒙德队首次参加德国最高级别足球赛事:第7级联赛。不过很快就降级了。1933年,和其他俱乐部一样,多特蒙德俱乐部也实行了所谓领导人负责制。1934年奥古斯特·布瑟作为俱乐部领导人代替了始终不肯加入国家社会主义党(纳粹党)的埃贡·潘图卢普。1935年,奥古斯特·伦茨成为俱乐部历史上第一名国家队队员。他一共参加了14场国家队比赛。1936年,奥古斯特·兰茨成为俱乐部历史上第一位参加奥运会的选手。蛰伏1937年,工业巨头赫施要扩张他的家业,多特蒙德队的体育场阻碍他的发展计划,多特蒙德队被驱逐到了国有体育场鲁特埃尔德球场,并且是与其余球队共同使用。在困境中诞生了多特蒙德队的伟大球星奥古斯特兰斯,他也成为了那个时代德国最为杰出的球员。1943年,多特蒙德俱乐部获得历史上第一个冠军称号。他们在红土地球场凭借兰茨的一粒金球1:0击败了老对手沙尔克04队。第二次世界大战的爆发使得沙尔克04队失去了地区霸主的地位,多特蒙德队趁机崛起并于1947年首次赢得了地区了联赛的冠军头衔,他们在决赛中3:2掀翻了沙尔克04队。1947年5月18日,多特蒙德以3:2 击败了沙尔克04。 ,打破了对方在威斯特法伦的霸主地位。让我们记住这支伟大的球队:克罗斯拜恩,鲁姆霍夫,哈尔芬,米夏莱克,克什米德,扬诺夫斯基,桑德曼,普莱斯勒,伦茨,伊贝尔和伯特戈尔斯基。进球功臣是:鲁姆霍夫、桑德曼和米夏莱克。1949年,多特蒙德队打进了当年的德国杯决赛,他们的对手是曼海姆队,大约有九万三千名球迷到现场观看了这场较量,在这场空前惨烈的角逐中多特蒙德队最终还是以2:3败落。在后来的几年内多特蒙德队逐渐推翻了沙尔克04队的统治地位,但在全国比赛中他们还是难敌像斯图加特和凯泽斯劳腾这样的强队而屡屡在联赛决赛中功亏一篑。1954年,多特蒙德队守门员海因里希·克瓦伊亚特科夫斯基成为俱乐部历史上第一个参加世界杯比赛的球员。尽管在小组赛与匈牙利的比赛中,他把守的大门八次被对手洞穿,但他最终还是和德国队一起夺得了世界冠军。1956年首次夺得全国冠军,次年卫冕成功。 1956年、1957年,多特蒙德队以相同阵容两次夺得德国冠军(4:2战胜卡尔斯鲁厄,进球队员是尼皮克罗、凯尔巴萨、佩特斯和普莱斯勒;4:1战胜HSV,凯尔巴萨和尼皮克罗各进两球)。1956年,多特蒙德队迎来中兴,在4:2击败卡尔斯鲁厄队之后,球队终于赢得了建队以来的首尊奖杯,二十五万名多特蒙德球迷赛后涌上街头庆祝这来之不易的胜利。在接下来的决赛中,多特蒙德队4:1大胜不可一世的汉堡队。1956年,多特蒙德队首次参加欧洲优胜者杯赛。球队名单如下:克瓦伊亚特科夫斯基,伯格斯穆勒,桑德曼,施莱伯罗夫斯基,米夏莱克,布拉赫特,佩特斯,普莱斯勒,凯尔巴萨,尼皮克罗,卡皮图尔斯基。1957年,多特蒙德队当选为年度德国最佳球队。1961年多特蒙德队打进了联赛决赛,但却遭到了纽伦堡队3:0的迎头痛击,再次屈居亚军。两年后,球队闯进了联赛和杯赛两项赛事的决赛。最终的结果是一喜一悲。多特蒙德3:1战胜了联赛的对手科隆队,而杯赛冠军却属于了乌维·席勒领衔的汉堡队。1963年夺得德甲联赛成立前的最后一个全国冠军。 多特蒙德队以3:1击败科隆队夺得德甲联赛开始前的最后一个冠军。进球的是库拉特、瓦萨伯和施密特。球队主力阵容:维瑟尔、博格斯穆勒、盖斯勒、库拉特、保尔、布拉赫特、瓦萨伯、施密特、舒茨、康尼茨卡和塞利亚克斯。1965-1966赛季,多特蒙德队的表现无疑是杰出的,他们在欧洲优胜者杯中先是5:0重创了夺冠大热门葡萄牙本菲卡队,然后在主教练埃本多夫的率领之下战胜了虎狼之师国际米兰队,接下来接连击溃了保加利亚索非亚CSKA队、西班牙马德里竞技队和英格兰西汉姆联队,闯进决赛。1966年5月5日,苏格兰格拉斯哥,多特蒙德队气势如虹地通过加时赛2:1击败了英格兰霸主利物浦队,这座分量极重的欧洲优胜者杯是德国球队第一座欧战奖杯,开创了德国球队赢得欧洲冠军的先河。当时球队的门将蒂尔科维奇当时与著名的英格兰传奇门将班克斯齐名于天下,前锋海尔德和埃莫里希得到了媒体“魔鬼搭档”的称号。1965年,多特蒙德队首次获得德国杯冠军。在决赛中,它们2:0击败了亚琛队。球队主力阵容是:提科夫斯基、艾梅里希、雷德、库拉特、保尔、斯特拉希茨、瓦萨伯、施密特、斯图穆、康尼茨卡和塞利亚克斯。入球施密特和艾梅里希。1965年,汉斯·提科夫斯基当选为1965年德国足球先生。1966年夺得欧洲优胜者杯。 2:1战胜利物浦队后捧得欧洲优胜者杯。夺冠阵容是:提科夫斯基、艾梅里希、雷德、库拉特、施密特、赫尔德、利布达、斯图穆、阿绍尔和帕克。进球功臣是赫尔德和利布达。然而1966年之后,多特蒙德队开始逐渐走上了下坡路。俱乐部没有能够挽留住功勋教练穆尔图豪普并大肆出售了球队的多名主力球员,伤筋动骨的球队却没有能够及时得到新鲜血液的补充。病入膏肓的球队终于在1972年跌入了乙级联赛。足球骄子竟然身陷囹圄!1972年联赛排名第17位,降入西区联赛。1974年5月2日和沙尔克04队的比赛为新建成的威斯特法球场揭幕。1974年世界杯在联邦德国的主办为多特蒙德队的复兴提供了一个大好契机,多特蒙德被德国足协选定为比赛场地之一,新建的威斯特法伦体育场极大的刺激了球迷们的看球欲望,多特蒙德队比赛的平均上座人数也由8900大幅上涨到25400。重新赢得球迷支持的多特蒙德队也在两年之后返回了甲级联赛的行列,而上座人数也飚升到了42400。1976年多特蒙德重返甲级联赛。1984年,莱因哈德·劳贝尔博士和杰尔德·涅博姆博士入主多特蒙德。在他们的共同努力下,球队摆脱财政危机和内斗的糟糕局面,战绩也有了明显的起色,他们连续三次打进联赛的决赛,当时的对手竟然都是科隆队。1989年,多特蒙德队4:1击败不莱梅队,再夺德国杯,并再接再厉以3:2击败德甲冠军拜仁慕尼黑队,夺得超级杯。德国杯决赛多特蒙德队出场阵容:德·拜尔、科洛特、库托夫斯基、赫尔姆、布莱茨克(72分钟鲁希替补)、佐尔科、麦克莱昂德、穆勒、鲁梅尼格、狄克尔和米尔。该场比赛的英雄是:梅开二度的诺尔伯特·迪克尔,米尔和鲁希也锦上添花。1989年多特蒙德队赢得了德国杯,终于结束了23年的冠军真空,涅博姆将当时默默无闻的主教练希斯菲尔德引入了多特蒙德队。深谙经营的涅博姆抓住了联邦德国队夺取1990年世界杯冠军的大好契机推动了俱乐部的进一步发展。当时在国内能够做到这一点的除了多特蒙德外只有拜仁慕尼黑。涅博姆购入了年轻球员,包括穆勒、朱里奥·赛萨尔、科勒、萨莫尔以及里德尔。事后证明,这些球员对于多特蒙德队今后的成功都是非常重要的。巅峰9年之后重回巅峰1995年多特蒙德俱乐部扩建了自己的球场,将容纳量增加到了68600名,球队也终于迎来全盛时期。90年代中期,多特蒙德队的黄金时期在九十年代终于来临,他们于1995年、1996年两夺德甲冠军银盘,并为德甲贡献了又一位欧洲金球奖得主萨默尔。多特蒙德已不满足于在国内称王称霸,在1997年欧洲冠军杯的决赛中,阵中拥有萨默尔、安德烈斯·穆勒、卡尔·海因茨·里德尔等巨星的多特蒙德在冠军杯决赛中3:1击败了拥有德尚、齐达内、维耶里和皮耶罗的意甲豪门尤文图斯,登上欧洲之巅。并在丰田杯中2:0战胜巴西克鲁塞罗一统天下。1991年希斯菲尔德执教多特蒙德。1995、96年,多特蒙德队两夺联赛冠军。夺冠庆典在和平体育场举行。此外,1995年多特蒙德队还以1:0击败门兴格拉德巴赫队捧起德国超级杯。1996年,点球大战5:4淘汰凯泽斯劳滕队(120分钟双方战成1:1),再夺德国超级杯。1996年夺得德甲冠军,次年卫冕成功。1996/97赛季,马蒂亚斯·萨默尔当选为1996/97赛季欧洲足球先生。1997年5月,多特蒙德队在慕尼黑奥林匹克体育场3:1击败尤文图斯队,首次夺得欧洲冠军杯。多特蒙德队的首发阵容是:克罗斯、萨默尔、克莱尔、路特、拉姆贝尔特、索萨、海因里希、穆勒(88分钟佐尔克替补)、里德尔(64分钟赫尔里希替补)、夏丕萨(70分钟里肯替补)。进球功臣:里德尔 (29和34分钟)里肯(71分钟)1997年12月,多特蒙德队在东京以2:0击败巴西克鲁塞罗,捧得丰田杯。多特蒙德队出场名单:克罗斯、法亚辛厄、路特、塞萨尔、弗洛伊德、索萨、佐尔克(80分钟季罗夫斯基替补)、海因里希、穆勒、赫尔里希和夏丕萨(75分钟德切沃替补)。进球功臣是:佐尔克(第34分钟)和赫尔里希(第85分钟)。1997年多特蒙德首夺欧冠冠军(3张)1998年,多特蒙德成为欧洲豪门G14联盟首批14个成员之一。球队功勋队长佐尔克功成引退,里德尔、弗伦德、海因里希、索萨四散离去,萨默尔身受重伤有心无力,首席射手查普伊萨特状态低迷,多特蒙德元气受创。然而球队陆续引进了罗西基、阿萨莫阿、扬-科勒、埃韦顿等新一批当打之年的新兴球星,补进实力。世纪之交,俱乐部高层决定上市,多特蒙德成为在德国股票市场上市的第一家俱乐部。从股市上筹集的资金使得他们能够购买罗西基等大牌,挥金如土的金元政策使得多特蒙德成为欧洲足坛一股不容忽视的强大力量,球队也在01/02赛季再次夺得德甲冠军。2000年10月31日俱乐部在法兰克福证券交易所上市。2001年萨默尔开始执教多特蒙德。俱乐部花费1亿4千万马克买来罗西基、科勒、阿莫鲁索,其中阿莫鲁索的转会费2500万欧元是当时德国俱乐部转会费的最高纪录(后被马里奥·戈麦斯和哈维·马丁内斯相继打破)。次年俱乐部夺冠。低谷盛极必衰是永恒的规律。由于球队管理层挥霍无度引进大牌球星,导致俱乐部入不敷出欠下1.25亿英镑债务,财政状况日益恶化,已经有近百年历史的多特蒙德俱乐部逐渐走向低谷。2005年,俱乐部甚至已经到了破产边缘,对成功的渴望却让曾经的德甲豪门到了穷困潦倒、濒临倒闭的地步,同上世纪90年代后期的鼎盛时期相比,球队几近崩溃。2005-2008年是俱乐部历史上最为艰难的时期,虽然俱乐部决心要让已经“病入膏肓的病人”重新复活,但窘困的财政状况一直没有好转;主教练也很有野心,但是他的愿望常常由于俱乐部糟糕的经营状况而不能实现;球迷们总是期待着球队的成功,但他们也只能情不自愿地习惯于球队在德甲中游的成绩。俱乐部为了平衡财政做出了一系列大清洗,导致球队一直只能在联赛积分榜中游徘徊。当托马斯-多尔在07-08赛季率队拿到20年来球队的联赛最差战绩——第13名后,看似多特蒙德会就这样沉沦下去,再无抬头之日。复兴2008年,被看作是大黄蜂重生的纪元年。这一年夏天,新的营运团队进驻,也带来了节省支出,增加商业活动的新理念。在经历了多尔带队的失败后,董事明白,他们真正需要的是一位能不断激励球队及球迷,一位能让俱乐部恢复往日声望的帅才。他们选择了尤尔根·克洛普,一位刚刚带领美因茨历史性地冲入德甲并广受外界褒奖的少帅。他手下球队华丽而又不失严谨的球风得到了德国足球界的诸多夸赞。带着要重现多特蒙德昔日辉煌的承诺,克洛普得到了最初的两年合同。克洛普心中自然明白,要想在多特有所作为,他必须运用一套不会让俱乐部再陷债务泥潭的运营体系。正因如此,克洛普把更多的目光投向了青训,并开始重用球队青训球员。每一笔引援都必须是不需花费重金的年轻球员。克洛普的目标是培养一群如狼似虎、野心勃勃的年轻人,而随着年轻人的逐渐成熟,他们的身价也会上升,走持续增长又可持续发展的青训模式。 [3]10/11赛季,在克洛普的带领下,青春风暴多特蒙德以令人赏心悦目的打法和稳固的后防赢得德甲冠军,宣告大黄蜂正式从破产危机中走出,浴火重生。2011年尤尔根·克洛普率队第七次获得称雄德甲,时隔9年重回巅峰。多特蒙德在11/12赛季拿到81分,创下德甲积分纪录,进球80,失球仅25个,并在德国杯5:2击败拜仁慕尼黑,拿到国内双冠王。2012年克洛普率队提前两轮卫冕成功,多特蒙德历史上第八次制霸德甲。并宣布球队射手巴里奥斯赛季末离队,他将前往中国广州恒大。 [4]13/14赛季全家福12/13赛季欧洲冠军联赛,多特蒙德在死亡之组表现出色,淘汰曼城、阿贾克斯,以4胜2平不败战绩力压皇家马德里获得小组头名。在1/8和1/4决赛中接连淘汰顿涅茨克矿工和马拉加后,时隔15年重返欧冠半决赛,半决赛抽签再次遭遇皇马,首回合莱万多夫斯基上演大四喜,以4:1的比分在主场血洗皇马,最终以两回合4:3比分淘汰对手,16年后再度闯入欧冠决赛,这是队史第2次杀入欧冠决赛。北京时间5月26日,在伦敦温布利大球场进行的巅峰对决中,最后时刻被老对手拜仁慕尼黑绝杀,以1:2的比分憾负而屈居亚军。2013年7月27日,多特蒙德4:2击败三冠王拜仁慕尼黑,成功为2个月前的欧冠决赛失利复仇,夺得2013赛季德国超级杯。2013年8月,多特蒙德俱乐部召开年会发布了2012/13赛季财政报告,数据显示俱乐部上赛季总收入达到了3.05亿欧元,较前一赛季(2.15亿欧元)大涨了42%,利润达到了6150万欧元,较前一赛季(3430万欧元)上涨了79.3%,税后净利润达到了5330万欧元。这主要得益于多特蒙德在上赛季欧冠杀入决赛,在欧冠这一块的收入就超过了7000万欧元。多特蒙德的债务也进一步大幅削减,总负债从5600万欧元下降到了2400万欧元。俱乐部CEO瓦茨克在会上高兴地说:“过去的一年,我们成功取得了竞技上和经济上的双重胜利,过去几年我们的成长快速而充满活力,对俱乐部进行不可避免的结构和组织调整对我们来说也是巨大的挑战,最重要的是我们与此同时保持了竞技上的稳定性。”瓦茨克也在此大力赞扬了体育经理佐尔克和主教练克洛普以及教练组对球队做出的巨大贡献。2013-14赛季开始,在欧冠决赛上失利后,上个赛季两手空空的多特蒙德在威斯特法伦球场4-2击败拜仁慕尼黑,拿到德国超级杯,报了欧冠决赛失利的一箭之仇。但是面对新帅瓜迪奥拉带领下的拜仁,多特蒙德挑战其霸主地位的路才刚刚开始。该赛季,多特蒙德再次深陷欧冠死亡之组,并力压阿森纳、那不勒斯连续2年取得死亡之组小组头名,在全队深陷伤病困扰的大半替补阵容下,1/4决赛两回合2:3不敌皇马,止步欧冠8强。 [5]赛季末,当家前锋莱万多夫斯基以自由球员身份加盟拜仁 [6]。2017年4月11日,多特蒙德在主场对阵法甲摩纳哥的欧冠4/1决赛首回合比赛开始前遭遇了4·11多特蒙德大巴爆炸事件,多特蒙德中后卫马克·巴特拉被大巴震碎的玻璃划伤了手臂,事后,经欧足联与双方俱乐部协定比赛将延期进行。 [7]北京时间2017年5月20日21时30分(德国当地时间15时30分),德甲最后1轮多特蒙德主场4比3逆转不来梅,获得季军并直接进军下赛季欧冠小组赛 [8]。多特前锋奥巴梅扬以31球,职业生涯首次夺得德甲金靴 [9]。5月28日,2016-17赛季德国杯决赛,多特蒙德2比1击败法兰克福,历史上第4次获得冠军 [10]。5月30日,图赫尔在社交媒体上宣布卸任多特蒙德主帅职务,多特随后在官网上宣布了与图赫尔解约的消息 [11]。图赫尔是在2015年夏天成为多特主帅的,执教大黄蜂2个赛季他带队踢了108场比赛,战绩是68胜23平17负 [11]。2017年6月6日,彼得·博斯出任主帅 [12]。2017-18赛季,博斯在多特蒙德取得了良好开局,7场德甲6胜1平。2017年9月30日多特蒙德击败奥格斯堡后领先拜仁5分居德甲联赛头名,但此后他们再未取胜,8轮不胜过后已落后领头羊拜仁13分,居第7名。2017年12月9日,德甲第15轮主场1:2败给处于降级边缘的不来梅。次日,多特蒙德以科隆前主帅斯托格尔代替博斯 [13]。随后多特蒙德在斯托格尔的带领下实现12轮不败 [14],赛季末多特蒙德积55分排名德甲第4。2018年5月,法夫尔成为球队新任主教练 [15]。2018-19赛季,法夫尔带领多特蒙德开局15轮不败 [16],一度以领先9分的优势在积分榜排名第一,但最终积76分以2分差距无缘德甲冠军 [17]。在欧冠赛场上,法夫尔也帮助球队拿下了小组头名出线,最后在淘汰赛惜败于欧冠亚军托特纳姆热刺 [18]。2019-20赛季初,多特蒙德击败拜仁夺得德国超级杯 [19]。在德甲联赛中,尽管球队打破了队史单赛季进球纪录 [20],但仍落后拜仁屈居亚军 [21]。德国杯更是早早被不来梅淘汰出局 [22]。在欧冠中,多特蒙德与巴塞罗那、国际米兰分到了“死亡之组”,最终球队以小组第二的成绩力压国米晋级淘汰赛 [23],并于1/8决赛首回合主场击败巴黎圣日耳曼 [24],但在次回合被逆转,无缘八强 [25]。2020-21赛季夺得队史第5座德国杯冠军2020年夏窗,球队从巴黎圣日耳曼引进后卫托马斯·默尼耶,从皇家马德里租借小将雷尼尔 [26],从伯明翰买入小将贝林厄姆,将青训新星穆科科提拔至一线队。德甲11轮过后,球队在积分榜仅列第五名 [27]。在主场1-5惨败于升班马斯图加特后,俱乐部解雇了法夫尔 [28],由助理教练泰尔齐奇接管帅印至赛季结束 [27]。2020-21赛季,球队最终在德甲以7连胜收官 [37],并以20胜4平10负积64分的成绩位列积分榜第三,成为德甲季军 [36]。在德国杯决赛上,多特蒙德4-1力克莱比锡,队史第5次夺冠 [35]。2021年7月,马尔科·罗泽出任球队主帅 [1]。夏季转会窗,多特蒙德送走桑乔、皮什切克,引入马伦、科贝尔 [42]。2021-22赛季,在季初的德国超级杯中,球队1-3负于拜仁屈居亚军 [33]。在欧冠小组赛中,球队在5轮过后以2胜3负的战绩提前锁定小组第三,进入欧联附加赛 [38-39],但在欧联附加赛中以4-6的总比分被格拉斯哥流浪者淘汰出局 [41]。在德国杯中,球队于第3轮被圣保利淘汰出局 [40]。德甲第33轮,球队在客场3-1战胜菲尔特,获得联赛亚军 [43]。赛季结束后,主教练罗泽下课 [44],泰尔齐奇再度出任球队主教练,双方签约至2025年 [46]。2022年夏窗,哈兰德、阿坎吉、蒂格斯、维特塞尔、布尔基等人离队 [51],俱乐部从科隆签下中场厄兹詹 [45]、前锋莫德斯特 [49],从曼城签下前锋布拉夫 [47],从阿贾克斯签下前锋阿莱 [48],从萨尔茨堡签下前锋阿德耶米,从弗赖堡签下后卫尼科·施洛特贝克 [51]。2023年1月,俱乐部从柏林联合签下后卫莱尔森 [52]。自从进入2023年之后,多特蒙德在各项赛事的10场比赛中取得全胜的战绩 [54],直至欧冠1/8决赛次回合,多特蒙德客场0-2不敌切尔西,总比分1-2无缘八强 [53],全胜战绩也就此遭到终结 [54]。在德国杯中,多特蒙德在四分之一决赛中客场0-2不敌莱比锡,无缘进入德国杯四强 [55-56]。德甲第29轮,多特蒙德主场4-0大胜法兰克福,取得联赛主场9连胜,创造队史联赛主场最长连胜纪录 [57]。德甲第33轮,多特蒙德客场3-0击败奥格斯堡,反超拜仁两分,再登德甲榜首 [58]。德甲末轮,多特蒙德主场2-2战平美因茨,在手握争冠主动权的情况下将冠军拱手相让,最终积71分列德甲次席 [59]。2023年夏,格雷罗、达胡德、帕斯拉克、乌本豪恩和莫德斯特自由身离队 [60],舒尔茨与球队解约 [64],索尔根·阿扎尔正式离队 [67];球队签下后卫本塞拜尼 [61]、中场费利克斯·恩梅查 [62]、萨比策 [65];球队名宿施梅尔策进入青年队任职 [63]。在欧冠中,球队在小组赛提前一轮出线 [68],以小组第一晋级 [70];在德国杯中,球队在第三轮以0-2不敌斯图加特,无缘八强 [69]。2024年初之前,球队对教练组进行调整,沙欣和斯文·本德将担任球队的助理教练 [71]。1月,桑乔回归球队 [73]、伊恩·马特森加盟球队 [74];多特蒙德官方宣布,瓦茨克将于2025年秋季离开董事会 [72]。2月,雷纳租借离队 [75],默尼耶、朱利安·赖克霍夫正式离队 [76-77]。球队球员播报编辑球员列表号码FIFA国籍姓名出生日期门将1瑞士格雷戈尔·科贝尔1997年12月6日33德国亚历山大·迈尔1991年4月13日35波兰马塞尔·洛特卡2001年5月25日38德国卢卡·翁贝豪恩2001年2月27日后卫2西班牙马特乌·莫雷2000年3月2日4德国尼科·施洛特贝克1999年12月1日13葡萄牙拉斐尔·格雷罗1993年12月22日14德国尼科·舒尔茨1993年4月1日15德国马茨·胡梅尔斯1988年12月16日25德国尼克拉斯·聚勒1995年9月3日44法国苏迈拉·库利巴利2003年10月14日中场6土耳其萨利赫·厄兹詹1998年1月11日7美国乔瓦尼·雷纳2002年11月13日8德国马哈茂德·达胡德1996年1月1日10比利时托尔冈·阿扎尔1993年3月29日17德国马里乌斯·沃尔夫1995年5月27日19德国尤利安·布兰特1996年5月2日22英格兰祖德·贝林厄姆2003年6月29日23德国埃姆雷·詹1994年1月12日24比利时托马斯·默尼耶1991年9月12日30德国 费利克斯·帕斯拉克1998年5月29日32几内亚阿卜杜拉耶·卡马拉2004年11月6日36德国汤姆·罗特2004年10月29日前锋9科特迪瓦塞巴斯蒂安·阿莱1994年6月22日11德国马尔科·罗伊斯1989年5月31日18德国优素法·穆科科2004年11月20日20法国安东尼·莫德斯特1988年4月14日21荷兰唐耶尔·马伦1999年1月19日27德国卡里姆·阿德耶米2002年1月18日43英格兰杰米·拜诺-吉滕斯2004年8月8日2022-23赛季一线队名单,更新于2022年9月27日。 [29] [50]著名球员队史著名球员中文名外文名国籍效力时间沃尔夫冈·德贝尔Wolfgang de Beer德国1986-01年托尔斯滕·弗林斯Torsten Frings德国2002-04年托马斯·哈斯勒Thomas Hassler德国1998-99年海克·海尔里希Heiko Herrlich德国1995-04年艾克·伊梅尔Eike Immel德国1978-86年斯蒂凡·克罗斯Stefan Klos苏格兰1990-98年延斯·莱曼Jens Lehmann德国1999-03年安德雷斯·穆勒Andreas Moller德国1988-90年、1994-00年斯蒂芬·鲁伊特Stefan Reuter德国1992-04年卡尔-海茵茨·里德尔Karl-Heinz Riedle德国1993-97年米夏埃尔·鲁梅尼格Michael Rummenigge德国1988-93年马蒂亚斯·萨默尔Matthias Sammer德国1993-98年马西奥·阿莫鲁索Marcio Amoroso巴西2001-04年埃韦顿Ewerthon巴西2001-05年扬·科勒Jan Koller捷克2001-06年托马斯·罗西基Tomas Rosicky捷克2001-06年弗莱明·波夫尔森Flemming Povlsen丹麦1990-95年保罗·兰伯特Paul Lambert苏格兰1996-97年德德Leonardo de Deus Santos巴西1998-11年克里斯托弗·梅策尔德Christoph Metzelder德国2000-07年球队主场播报编辑西格纳伊度纳公园(Signal Iduna Park)是“威斯法伦体育场”(Westfalen stadion)由2005年12月至2021年6月的冠名赞助名称,属于德甲球队多特蒙德的主场球场。国内联赛时容量包含座席及立席为81,264人,当举行国际赛时改为全座席可容纳67,000人。球场原名以前普鲁士省份威斯法伦(Westphalia)命名,是全德国最大的球场,于2004/05赛季以140万观众人次创下欧洲足球入场观众人次新纪录。60年代多特蒙德已开始筹备建立一个新球场以取代古旧的“红地球球场”(Stadion Rote Erde),但庞大的工程计划因资金问题而被中止。1971年科隆市因财政问题退出举办1974年世界杯城市,多特蒙德成为替补城市,原订兴建新球场的资金亦一并转移到多特蒙德,但资金仍然紧拙,建筑商采用造价低廉以预制组件为基础可容54,000观众的新型设计方案,1971年10月19日获批准开展工程,仅用了一年便落成启用。1974年4月2日多特蒙德正式迁入威斯法伦体育场,揭幕赛与沙尔克04进行友谊赛,以0-3落败。15日后迎来第一场正式国际赛,由西德队对匈牙利队,结果国家队以5-0大捷。1974年世界杯威斯法伦体育场进行了三场分组初赛及巴西对荷兰的第二轮分组赛。多特蒙德于1972年降级乙组,是德乙主办1974年世界杯的球队。1976年回升德甲,多特蒙德终可将顶级联赛带到威斯法伦体育场。上个世纪九十年代,经过两次扩建,威斯法伦体育场外观极具现代风格:球场北面外墙采用全钢结构框架悬挂铝合金的玻璃幕墙。两次扩建共耗资1亿1千万马克。当德国在2000年获得2006年世界杯主办权时,被称为“德国足球大剧院”(Opera House of German Football)的威斯法伦体育场虽然是德国投标的重点球场,但并不符合国际足联的世界杯半决赛球场规定。威斯法伦体育场需要进行第三次扩建,在原有四面看台的四角加建,将国际赛容量提升到67,000人。2005年,威斯法伦体育场的命名权以2,000万欧元出售给一家保险和投资公司西格纳伊度纳(Signal Iduna),于12月更名为西格纳伊度纳公园。威斯特法伦球场上座率为全欧洲最高球队文化播报编辑队歌VereinsliedWir halten fest und treu zusammen, 我们坚定忠诚在一起Ball-Heil-Hurra! Borussia! 为足球欢呼!多特蒙德!Vor keinem Gegner wir verzagen, 在任何对手面前都不会丧失勇气和信心Ball-Heil-Hurra! Borussia! 为足球欢呼!多特蒙德!Wir zieh'n vergnügt und froh dahin, 我们从中获得欢乐schwarz-gelb ist unsere Tracht. 黑黄是我们的颜色Wir haben stets einen heiteren Sinn, 我们从中感受生机sind lustig, nie verzagt. 这里有欢乐,这里永不放弃Wir kennen eine Feindschaft nicht, 我们没有仇恨wir schaffen Hand in Hand. 我们手牵手Stets ruhig Blut, ein froh' Gesicht 满怀热情,洋溢笑脸ist jedem wohlbekannt. 我们早已彼此熟知Wohl auf dem ganzen Erdenkreis ist unser Sport bekannt. 我们的球队闻名于世Borussia-Spieler, wie man weiß, 所有人都知道,多特蒙德的队员die halten dem Stärksten stand. 永远最坚强Und wenn die Fußballflöte schrillt, 当哨声响起Borussia tritt hervor, 多特蒙德开始前行zum Wettspiel sind wir stets bereit, 我们为每场比赛做好准备verteidigen unser Tor. 我们时刻捍卫我们的球门Aber eins, aber eins, das bleibt bestehn, 还有一点,还有一点,那就是Borussia Dortmund wird nie untergehn,多特蒙德永远不会沉沦队徽多特蒙德队徽演变BVB意为普鲁士球类比赛俱乐部,全称BV. Borussia 09 e.V. Dortmund(普鲁士多特蒙德1909球类比赛俱乐部合资股份有限公司),09是指成立的那一年。(BV就是Ballspiel-Verein即球类比赛俱乐部的缩写,B是Borussia即普鲁士的缩写。)多特蒙德队徽的款式只有过1次较大程度的转型,左上角是多特蒙德1945-1964年使用的队徽,款式与如今已非常近似、只是黄色略暗;右上角是1964-1974使用的队徽,主色调为黑;左下角为球队1976-1978年队徽,加入狮子图案彰显霸气;1993年至今多特蒙德一直使用现有队徽。 [30-31]球衣2023-24赛季客场球衣球衣整体以黑色作为主色,并将俱乐部1909年的诞生地博尔西希广场(Borsigplatz)鸟瞰图以全灰色纹理印于全身。 [66]球队战绩播报编辑2000年以来一线队在德甲联赛中的战绩赛季场次胜平负进球失球净胜积分排名2022/233422578344397122021/223422398552336922020/2134204107546296432019/203421678441436922018/193423748144377622017/1834151096447175542016/1734181067240326432015/163424648234487822014/153413714474254672013/143421577638386822012/133419968142396622011/123425638025558112010/113423656722457512009/103416995442125752008/0934151456037235962007/08341010145062-1240132006/0734128144143-24492005/0634111310454234672004/053415109474435572003/0434167115948115562002/0334151365127245832001/023421766233297012000/013416108624220583数据来源: [32]球队荣誉播报编辑国内赛事冠军德国足球顶级联赛8次1955/56、1956/57、1962/63、1994/951995/96、2001/02、2010/11、2011/12德国杯5次1964/65、1988/89 、2011/12、2016/17、2020/21德国超级杯7次1989、1995、1996、2008、2013、2014、2019德国电信杯1次2011德国联赛杯1次1993(富士杯)欧洲赛事冠军欧洲冠军联赛1次1996/97欧洲优胜者杯1次1965/66洲际赛事冠军丰田杯1次1997球队纪录播报编辑主场大胜6:1门兴格拉德巴赫(2017年9月24日)6:1斯图加特(2013年11月2日)11:1 胜比勒菲尔德(1982年11月6日)7:0 胜柏林蓝白90(1986年9月2 6日)7:0 胜汉堡(1967年5月20日)7:0 胜沙尔克04(1966年2月26日)客场大胜6:1 胜菲尔特(2013年4月14日)6:1 胜科隆(1994年8月23日)5:0 胜斯图加特(1996年3月16日)5:0 胜杜塞尔多夫(1967年1月7日)5:0 胜不莱梅(2013年1月19日)主场大败1:5 负不莱梅(1971年9月4日)0:4 负沙尔克04(1971年9月23日)0:4 负斯图加特(1993年5月14日)0:4 负科隆(1988年10月29日)0:4 负斯图加特(1971年11月12日)客场大败0:12 负门兴格拉德巴赫(1978年4月29日)1:11 负拜仁慕尼黑(1971年11月27日)1:9 负柏林赫塔(1970年4月18日)出场纪录佐尔克(463),库托斯基(288),胡贝尔(254),克劳斯(254),伊莫尔(247),库拉特(247),赫尔德(230),穆勒(228),伯格斯米勒(224),查普斯萨特(218) [34]新手上路成长任务编辑入门编辑规则本人编辑我有疑问内容质疑在线客服官方贴吧意见反馈投诉建议举报不良信息未通过词条申诉投诉侵权信息封禁查询与解封©2024 Baidu 使用百度前必读 | 百科协议 | 隐私政策 | 百度百科合作平台 | 京ICP证030173号 京公网安备110000020000

Borussia Dortmund News and Fan Community - BVB Buzz

Borussia Dortmund News and Fan Community - BVB Buzz

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Brian Szlenk Straub|Mar 5, 2024Report: Borussia Dortmund willing to let Donyell Malen leave for €40-50 millionFeb 28, 2024Report: Samuel Bamba set to leave Borussia Dortmund when his contract expires in the summerFeb 27, 2024Report: Borussia Dortmund pull out of the race to sign Can UzunTushar Bahl|Feb 15, 2024InjuriesSebastien Haller sidelined for several weeks with ankle injuryTushar BahlScheduleSee moreBorussia Dortmund vs TSG Hoffenheim live stream info: How to watch Bundesliga onlineWolfsburg vs Borussia Dortmund live stream info: How to watch Bundesliga online

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Borussia Dortmund - Wikipedia

Borussia Dortmund - Wikipedia

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1History

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1.1Foundation and early years

1.2First national titles

1.3Bundesliga debut

1.4Golden age – the 1990s

1.521st century and Borussia "goes public"

1.6Klopp era and return to prominence

1.7Post-Klopp era

2Crest

3Grounds

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3.1Stadiums

3.2Training ground

4Organisation and finance

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4.1Current management and board

5Kits and sponsorship

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5.1Sponsors

6Charity

7Players

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7.1Current squad

7.2Out on loan

7.3Reserves and Youth Sector

7.4Club captains

8Non-playing staff

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8.1Head coaches

9Records

10Honours

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10.1International

10.2European

10.3Domestic

10.4Regional

11UEFA club coefficient ranking

12Affiliated clubs

13See also

14References

15External links

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

German professional sports club based in Dortmund

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: "Borussia Dortmund" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (December 2014) (Learn how and when to remove this template message)

Football clubBorussia DortmundFull nameBallspielverein Borussia 09 e. V. DortmundNickname(s)Die Borussen (The Prussians)[1]Die Schwarzgelben (The Black and Yellow)[2]Der BVB (The BVB)[citation needed]Short nameBVBFounded19 December 1909; 114 years ago (1909-12-19)GroundSignal Iduna ParkCapacity81,365[contradictory][3]PresidentReinhold Lunow[4]CEOHans-Joachim WatzkeHead coachEdin Terzić[5]LeagueBundesliga2022–23Bundesliga, 2nd of 18WebsiteClub website

Home colours

Away colours

Cup / Europe colours

Current season

Active teams of Borussia Dortmund

Football Football II U17/U19 Football (Canada) Handball(women)

Ballspielverein Borussia 09 e. V. Dortmund, commonly known as Borussia Dortmund (German pronunciation: [boˈʁʊsi̯aː ˈdɔɐ̯tmʊnt] ⓘ),[6] BVB (pronounced [beːfaʊ̯ˈbeː] ⓘ), or simply Dortmund (pronounced [ˈdɔʁtmʊnt] ⓘ), is a German professional sports club based in Dortmund, North Rhine-Westphalia. It is best known for its men's professional football team, which plays in the Bundesliga, the top tier of the German football league system. The club have won eight league championship, five DFB-Pokal, one UEFA Champions League, one Intercontinental Cup, and one UEFA Cup Winners' Cup.

Founded in 1909 by eighteen football players from Dortmund, the football team is part of a large membership-based sports club with more than 189,000 members in 2023,[7] making Borussia Dortmund the fifth largest sports club by membership in the world. The club has active departments in other sports, namely in women's handball. Since 1974, Dortmund have played their home games at Westfalenstadion; the stadium is the largest in Germany, and Dortmund has the highest average attendance of any association football club in the world.[8]

Borussia Dortmund's colours are black and yellow, giving the club its nickname die Schwarzgelben.[9][10] They hold a long-standing rivalry with Ruhr neighbours Schalke 04, with whom they contest the Revierderby. They also contest Der Klassiker with Bayern Munich.

In terms of Deloitte's annual Football Money League, Dortmund was in 2021 ranked as the second richest sports club in Germany, and the 12th richest football team in the world.[11] Moreover, under the directorship of Michael Zorc in the 2010s, Dortmund have cultivated a reputation for spotting and developing young talent, and have remained focused on developing a youth system.[12] They have also received plaudits[from whom?] for generally adhering to an attacking footballing philosophy.[13]

History

Foundation and early years

Borussia Dortmund in 1913

The club was founded on 19 December 1909 by a group of young men unhappy with the Catholic church-sponsored Trinity Youth, where they played football under the stern and unsympathetic eye[tone] of the local parish priest. The priest, Father Dewald was blocked at the door when he tried to break up the organising meeting being held in a room of the local pub, Zum Wildschütz. The founders were Franz and Paul Braun, Henry Cleve, Hans Debest, Paul Dziendzielle, Franz, Julius and Wilhelm Jacobi, Hans Kahn, Gustav Müller, Franz Risse, Fritz Schulte, Hans Siebold, August Tönnesmann, Heinrich and Robert Unger, Fritz Weber and Franz Wendt. The name Borussia is Latin for Prussia but was taken from Borussia beer from the nearby Borussia brewery in Dortmund.[14] The team began playing in blue and white striped shirts with a red sash, and black shorts.[citation needed] In 1913, they donned the black and yellow stripes for the first time.

Over the next decades the club had only modest success playing in local leagues. They had a brush[tone] with bankruptcy in 1929 when an attempt to boost the club's fortunes by signing some paid professional footballers failed miserably and left the team deep in debt. They survived only through the generosity of a local supporter who covered the team's shortfall out of his own pocket.

The 1930s saw the rise of the Third Reich, which restructured sports and football organisations throughout the nation to suit the regime's goals. Borussia's president was replaced when he refused to join the Nazi Party, and a couple of members who surreptitiously used the club's offices to produce anti-Nazi pamphlets were executed in the last days of the war. The club did have greater success in the newly established Gauliga Westfalen, but would have to wait until after the Second World War to make a breakthrough. It was during this time that Borussia developed its intense rivalry with Schalke 04 of suburban Gelsenkirchen, the most successful side of the era (see Revierderby). Like every other organisation in Germany, Borussia was dissolved by the Allied occupation authorities after the war in an attempt to distance the country's institutions from its recent Nazi past. There was a short-lived attempt to merge the club with two others – Werksportgemeinschaft Hoesch and Freier Sportverein 98 – as Sportgemeinschaft Borussia von 1898, but it was as Ballspiel-Verein Borussia (BVB) that they made their first appearance in the national league final in 1949, where they lost 2–3 to VfR Mannheim.[citation needed]

First national titles

Historical chart of Borussia Dortmund league performance

Between 1946 and 1963, Borussia featured in the Oberliga West, a first division league which dominated German football through the late 1950s. In 1949, Borussia reached the final in Stuttgart against VfR Mannheim, which they lost 2–3 after extra time. The club claimed its first national title in 1956 with a 4–2 win against Karlsruher SC. One year later, Borussia defeated Hamburger SV 4–1 to win their second national title. After this coup,[tone] the three Alfredos (Alfred Preißler, Alfred Kelbassa and Alfred Niepieklo) were legends[tone] in Dortmund. In 1963, Borussia won the last edition of the German Football Championship (before the introduction of the new Bundesliga) to secure their third national title.

Bundesliga debut

In 1962, the DFB met in Dortmund and voted to establish a professional football league in Germany, to begin play in August 1963 as the Bundesliga. Borussia Dortmund earned its place among the first sixteen clubs to play in the league by winning the last pre-Bundesliga national championship. Runners-up 1. FC Köln also earned an automatic berth. Dortmund's Friedhelm Konietzka scored the first-ever Bundesliga goal a minute into the match, which they would eventually lose 2–3 to Werder Bremen.

In 1965, Dortmund won its first DFB-Pokal. In 1966, Dortmund won the European Cup Winners' Cup 2–1 against Liverpool in extra time, with the goals coming from Sigfried Held and Reinhard Libuda. In the same year, however, the team surrendered a commanding position atop[tone] the Bundesliga by losing four of their last five league games and finishing second, three points behind champions 1860 München. Ironically,[according to whom?] much of 1860 München's success came on the strength of the play of Konietzka, recently transferred from Dortmund.

The 1970s were characterised by financial problems, relegation from the Bundesliga in 1972, and the opening of the Westfalenstadion, named after its home region Westphalia in 1974. The club returned to the Bundesliga in 1976.

Dortmund continued to have financial problems through the 1980s. BVB avoided being relegated in 1986 by winning a third decisive playoff game against Fortuna Köln after finishing the regular season in 16th place. Dortmund did not enjoy[tone] any significant success again until a 4–1 DFB-Pokal win in 1989 against Werder Bremen. It was Horst Köppel's first trophy as a manager.[citation needed] Dortmund then won the 1989 DFL-Supercup 4–3 against rivals Bayern Munich.

Golden age – the 1990s

After a tenth-place finish in the Bundesliga in 1991, manager Horst Köppel was sacked and manager Ottmar Hitzfeld was hired.

In 1992, Hitzfeld led Borussia Dortmund to a second-place finish in the Bundesliga, and would have won the title had VfB Stuttgart not won their last game to become champions instead.

Along with a fourth-place finish in the Bundesliga, Dortmund made it to the 1993 UEFA Cup final, which they lost 6–1 on aggregate to Juventus. In spite of this result, Borussia walked away with DM25 million under the prize money pool system in place at the time for German sides participating in the Cup. Cash flush,[tone] Dortmund was able to sign players who later brought them numerous honours in the 1990s.

Under the captaincy of 1996 European Footballer of the Year Matthias Sammer, Borussia Dortmund won back-to-back Bundesliga titles in 1995 and 1996. Dortmund also won the DFL-Supercup against Mönchengladbach in 1995 and 1. FC Kaiserslautern in 1996.

In 1996–97 the team reached its first European Cup final. In a memorable match at the Olympiastadion in Munich, Dortmund faced the holders Juventus. Karl-Heinz Riedle put Dortmund ahead, shooting under goalkeeper Angelo Peruzzi from a cross by Paul Lambert. Riedle then made it two with a bullet header from a corner kick. In the second half, Alessandro Del Piero pulled one back for Juventus with a back heel. Then 20-year-old substitute and Dortmund-born Lars Ricken latched onto a through pass by Andreas Möller. Only 16 seconds after coming on to the pitch, Ricken chipped Peruzzi in the Juventus goal from over 20 yards out with his first touch of the ball. With Zinedine Zidane unable to make an impression for Juventus against the close marking of Lambert,[15][16][17] Dortmund lifted the trophy with a 3–1 victory.

Dortmund then beat Brazilian club Cruzeiro 2–0 in the 1997 Intercontinental Cup final to become world club champions.[18] Borussia Dortmund were the second German club to win the Intercontinental Cup, after Bayern Munich in 1976.[19]

As defending champions, Dortmund reached the Champions League semi-final in 1998. The team was missing key players from the start of the season when they played Real Madrid in the 1998 semi-final.[vague] Sammer's career was shortened by injury and only played three first team games after the 1997 Champions League win. Lambert had left in November to return to play in Scotland. Möller missed the first leg as did Kohler who missed both games in the tie. Real won the first leg 2–0 at home. Dortmund played better in the second leg, but did not take their chances. The club exited 2–0 on aggregate.[20]

21st century and Borussia "goes public"

Borussia Dortmund in 2007

In October 2000, Borussia Dortmund became the first publicly traded club on the German stock market.[21]

In 2002, Borussia Dortmund won their third Bundesliga title. Dortmund had a remarkable run at the end of the season to overtake Bayer Leverkusen, securing the title on the final day. Manager Matthias Sammer became the first person in Borussia Dortmund history to win the Bundesliga as both a player and manager.[22] In the same season, Borussia lost the final of the 2001–02 UEFA Cup to the Dutch club Feyenoord.

Dortmund's fortunes then steadily declined for several years. Poor financial management led to a heavy debt load and the sale of their Westfalenstadion grounds. The situation was compounded by failure to advance in the 2003–04 UEFA Champions League, when the team was eliminated on penalties in the qualifying rounds by Club Brugge. In 2003, Bayern Munich loaned €2 million to Dortmund for several months to pay their payroll. Borussia was again driven to the brink of bankruptcy in 2005, the original €11 value of its shares having plummeted[tone] by over 80% on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.

At this time Hans-Joachim Watzke was appointed CEO and streamlined the club. The response to the crisis included a 20% pay cut for all players.[23] In 2006, in order to reduce debt, the Westfalenstadion was renamed "Signal Iduna Park" after a local insurance company. The naming rights agreement runs until 2021.

Dortmund suffered a miserable start to the 2005–06 season, but rallied to finish seventh. The club was unable gain a place in the UEFA Cup via the Fair Play draw. The club's management indicated that the club again showed a profit; this was largely related to the sale of David Odonkor to Real Betis and Tomáš Rosický to Arsenal.

In the 2006–07 season, Dortmund unexpectedly faced serious relegation trouble for the first time in years. Dortmund went through three coaches, and appointed Thomas Doll on 13 March 2007, after dropping to just one point above the relegation zone. Christoph Metzelder also left Borussia Dortmund on a free transfer.

In the 2007–08 season, Dortmund finished 13th in the Bundesliga table, but reached the DFB-Pokal final against Bayern Munich, where they lost 2–1 in extra time. The final appearance qualified Dortmund for the UEFA Cup, because Bayern had already qualified for the Champions League.[citation needed] Thomas Doll resigned on 19 May 2008 and was replaced by Jürgen Klopp.

Klopp era and return to prominence

Borussia Dortmund players celebrate winning the Bundesliga in 2011.

In the 2009–10 season, Klopp's Dortmund improved on the season before, finishing fifth in the Bundesliga to qualify for the UEFA Europa League. The team missed an opportunity to qualify for the Champions League when they did not beat eighth-place VfL Wolfsburg and 14th-place SC Freiburg in the final two matches of the campaign.

Entering the 2010–11 season, Dortmund fielded a young and vibrant roster. On 4 December 2010, Borussia became Herbstmeister ("Autumn Champion"), an unofficial accolade going to the league leader at the winter break. They did this three matches before the break, sharing the record for having achieved this earliest with Eintracht Frankfurt (1993–94) and 1. FC Kaiserslautern (1997–98).[24] On 30 April 2011, the club beat 1. FC Nürnberg 2–0 at home, while second-place Bayer Leverkusen lost, leaving Dortmund eight points clear with two games to play. This championship equalled the seven national titles held by rivals Schalke 04, and guaranteed a spot in the 2011–12 Champions League group stages.[25]

One year later, Dortmund successfully defended of its Bundesliga title with a win over Borussia Mönchengladbach, again on the 32nd match day. By the 34th and final match day, Dortmund had set a new record with the most points—81—gained by a club in one Bundesliga season.[26][27] This was surpassed the following season by Bayern Munich's 91 points.[28] The club's fifth Bundesliga title and eighth German championship overall placed it third in total national titles, allowing the club to wear two stars above its crest in recognition of the team's five Bundesliga titles. The club capped its successful 2011–12 season by winning the double for the first time, beating Bayern 5–2 in the final of the DFB-Pokal. Borussia Dortmund are one of four German clubs to win the Bundesliga and DFB-Pokal double, along with Bayern Munich, 1. FC Köln and Werder Bremen.[29] The club was voted Team of the Year 2011 at the annual Sportler des Jahres (German Sports Personality of the Year) awards.

Borussia Dortmund fans at Wembley Stadium during the 2013 Champions League final

Borussia Dortmund ended the 2012–13 season in second place in the Bundesliga. Dortmund played in their second UEFA Champions League final against Bayern Munich in the first ever all-German club final at Wembley Stadium on 25 May 2013, which they lost 2–1.[30]

In the 2013–14 season, Borussia Dortmund won the 2013 DFL-Supercup 4–2 against rivals Bayern Munich.[31] The 2013–14 season started with a five-game winning streak for Dortmund, their best start to a season. Despite a promising start, however, their season was hampered by[tone] injuries to several key players, seeing them stoop as low as fourth place in the table, and with a depleted squad could go only as far as the quarter-finals of the Champions League, losing 3–2 on aggregate to Real Madrid. Nevertheless, Dortmund ended their season on a high note by finishing second in the Bundesliga and reaching the 2014 DFB-Pokal final, losing 0–2 to Bayern in extra time.[32] They then began their 2014–15 season by defeating Bayern in the 2014 DFL-Supercup 2–0. However, this victory did not affect the squad's solidity in performance at the start of the ensuing season, with Dortmund recording various[vague] results such as a 0–1 loss to Hamburger SV and two 2–2 draws against VfB Stuttgart and Bundesliga newcomers Paderborn 07.[33] During the winter, Dortmund fell to the bottom of the table on multiple occasions, but escaped the relegation zone after four consecutive wins in February.[34] On 15 April 2015, Jürgen Klopp announced that after seven years, he would be leaving Dortmund.[35] Four days later, Dortmund announced that Thomas Tuchel would replace Klopp at the end of the season.[36] Klopp's final season, however, ended on high note,[tone] rising and finishing seventh after facing relegation, gaining a DFB-Pokal final with VfL Wolfsburg and qualifying for the 2015–16 Europa League.

Post-Klopp era

In the 2015–16 season, Dortmund started off on a high,[tone] winning 4–0 against Borussia Mönchengladbach on the opening day, followed by five-straight wins which took them to the top of the Bundesliga. After the eighth matchday, they were surpassed by Bayern Munich following an unlucky draw with 1899 Hoffenheim.[37][38] Dortmund kept their performances up, winning 24 out of 34 league games and becoming the best Bundesliga runner-up team of all time.[39] In the Europa League, they advanced to the quarter-finals, getting knocked out by a Jürgen Klopp-led Liverpool in a dramatic comeback at Anfield, where defender Dejan Lovren scored a late goal to make it 4–3 to Liverpool and 5–4 on aggregate.[40] In the 2015–16 DFB-Pokal, for the third-straight year, Dortmund made it to the competition final, but lost to Bayern Munich on penalties.[41]

On 11 April 2017, three explosions occurred near the team's bus on its way to a Champions League match against AS Monaco at the Signal Iduna Park. Defender Marc Bartra was injured, and taken to hospital.[42][43] Dortmund lost the game 2–3 to AS Monaco. Dortmund manager Tuchel blamed the loss on the ignorant decision by UEFA. UEFA said that the team made no objection to playing, and that the decision was made in compliance with the club and local law enforcement.[44] In the second leg, Dortmund lost 1–3, leaving the aggregate score at 3–6, causing them to be eliminated from that year's UEFA Champions League. On 26 April, Dortmund defeated Bayern Munich 3–2 in Munich to advance to the 2017 DFB-Pokal final, Dortmund's fourth consecutive final and fifth in six seasons. On 27 May, Dortmund won the 2016–17 DFB-Pokal 2–1 over Eintracht Frankfurt with the winner coming from a penalty converted by Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang.[45]

Ahead of the 2017–18 season, Thomas Tuchel stepped down as manager. The Dortmund board made a decision to hire Peter Bosz as the new manager and head coach. Although Bosz got off to a record-breaking start in the team's first 7 games, what followed was 20 games without a win, after which he was relieved of his staff role.[vague][46] Peter Stöger was announced as the interim coach.[47] During the January window of the same season, Aubameyang and Bartra both left the club.[48][49] Stöger bought Manuel Akanji of FC Basel for a fee of €21.5 million and Michy Batshuayi on a six-month loan from Chelsea.[50][51] Stöger coached Dortmund for the rest of the season, granting them a fourth-place finish in the Bundesliga before stepping down at the end of the season.[52]

In the summer of 2018, Dortmund appointed former OGC Nice coach, Lucien Favre as their manager/head coach. After a very busy transfer window for the team, seeing eight new players arrive at the club for the first team squad, Dortmund performed strongly, chasing Bayern Munich for the title race down to the last matchday, narrowly missing out on the league title by two points and earning Lucien Favre a contract extension. A four-part Amazon Prime Video documentary series was created, about the same season, named Inside Borussia Dortmund.

The next season, Dortmund pulled off[tone] a few big-name signings with the intent of winning the Bundesliga title. Although they won the DFL Supercup, this was their only silverware of the season. After a scrappy first half of the season, they changed their tactics and made a few more transfers in the January Window. They were eliminated in both the DFB-Pokal and the UEFA Champions League as well. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany, the season stopped abruptly. Once the season restarted, Dortmund looked better,[according to whom?] but their performances were not enough to stop a dominant Bayern Munich side from grasping[tone] the Bundesliga title. They finished the 2019–20 season in second place after beating RB Leipzig in matchweek 33 due to a brace from Erling Haaland.

Dortmund got off to a rather shaky start in the 2020–21 season. They lost the DFL-Supercup and had an inconsistent set of results in the Champions League and the Bundesliga. After a humiliating[tone] 5–1 defeat to Stuttgart in Matchday 11, Lucien Favre was relieved of his managerial duties. Assistant manager Edin Terzić was placed as the caretaker for the rest of the season. Under Terzić, Dortmund finished third on the final matchday of the Bundesliga and was eliminated in the quarter-finals of the Champions League in a clash[tone] against Manchester City. The team then won the DFB-Pokal, defeating RB Leipzig 4–1 in the final. Marco Rose was appointed manager for the 2021–22 season, with Terzić being appointed as the club's new technical director.[53] Terzić was later reappointed as manager ahead of the 2022–23 season.[54] Before the final matchday of that season, Dortmund were top of the league table, though they later lost the Bundesliga title on goal difference to Bayern Munich after a disappointing[tone] 2–2 home draw against Mainz.[55]

Crest

1945–1964

1964–1974

1974–1976 and 1978–1993

1976–1978

1993–present

2012–present

Grounds

Main articles: Westfalenstadion and Stadion Rote Erde

Signal Iduna Park is the biggest stadium in Germany.

The Borusseum, a museum about Borussia Dortmund

Stadiums

The Westfalenstadion is the home stadium of Borussia Dortmund, Germany's largest stadium and the seventh-largest in Europe.[56] The stadium was named "Signal Iduna Park" after insurance company Signal Iduna purchased the rights to name the stadium until 2021.[57] This name, however, could not be used when hosting FIFA and UEFA events, since these governing bodies have policies forbidding corporate sponsorship from companies that are not official tournament partners. During the 2006 World Cup, the stadium was referred to as "FIFA World Cup Stadium, Dortmund", while in UEFA club matches, it is known as "BVB Stadion Dortmund". The stadium currently[when?] hosts up to 81,359 spectators (standing and seated) for league matches and 65,829 seated spectators for international matches.[contradictory][58][59] For these, the characteristic southern grandstand is re-equipped with seats to conform to FIFA regulations.

In 1974, the Westfalenstadion replaced the Stadion Rote Erde, which is located next door and serves now as the stadium of Borussia Dortmund II.[citation needed] After the increasing popularity of Borussia Dortmund in the 1960s, it became obvious that the traditional ground was too small for the increasing number of Borussia Dortmund supporters. The city of Dortmund, however, was not able to finance a new stadium and federal institutions were unwilling to help. But in 1971, Dortmund was selected to replace the city of Cologne, which was forced to withdraw its plans to host games in the 1974 World Cup. The funds originally set aside for the projected stadium in Cologne were thus re-allocated to Dortmund, and a new stadium became reality.

The Westfalenstadion has undergone several renovations throughout the years to increase the size of the stadium, including an expansion of the stadium for the 2006 World Cup. In 2008, the Borusseum, a museum about Borussia Dortmund, opened in the stadium.[60] In 2011, Borussia Dortmund agreed to a partnership with Q-Cells. The company installed 8,768 solar cells on the roof of the Westfalenstadion to generate up to 860,000 kWh per year.[61]

Borussia Dortmund has the highest average attendance of any football club worldwide.[62] In 2014, it was estimated that each of the club's home games was attended by around 1,000 British spectators, drawn to the team by its low ticket prices compared to the Premier League.[63]

Training ground

Borussia Dortmund's training ground and academy base Hohenbuschei is located in Brackel, a district of Dortmund.[64] Inside the complex, there are physical fitness and rehabilitation robotics areas, physiotherapy and massage rooms, and remedial and hydrotherapy pools. The facility also includes sauna rooms, steam rooms and weight rooms, classrooms, conference halls, offices for the BVB front office, a restaurant, and a TV studio to interview the BVB professional footballers and coaching staff for BVB total!, the channel owned by the club.[65] On the grounds, there are five grass pitches, two of which have under-soil heating, one artificial grass field, three small grass pitches and a multi-functional sports arena.[66] The site covers a total area of 18,000 m2 (190,000 sq ft).[64] In addition, the club owns a Footbonaut, a training robot, which is effectively a 14 m2 (150 sq ft) training cage.[67][68]

The training complex and youth performance centre, located in Hohenbuschei, will be expanded in stages until 2021.[vague] In addition, the Sports Business Office will be entirely rebuilt from scratch. The planned construction, which will cost up to 20 million euros, will make BVB the best-equipped football club in the country with regards to infrastructure.[69]

In the Strobelallee Training Centre, the BVB Evonik Football Academy has an outstanding[tone] training venue exclusively at its disposal. Among others, the Bundesliga-team used to prepare for their matches on the club's former training ground.[70]

Organisation and finance

The Borussia Dortmund team bus provided by sponsor MAN

Borussia Dortmund e.V. is represented by its management board and a board of directors consisting of president Dr. Reinhard Rauball, his proxy and vice-president Gerd Pieper, and treasurer Dr. Reinhold Lunow.[71]

Professional football at Dortmund is run by the organisation Borussia Dortmund GmbH & Co. KGaA. This corporation model has two types of participators: at least one partner with unlimited liability and at least one partner with limited liability. The investment of the latter is divided into stocks. The organisation Borussia Dortmund GmbH is the partner with unlimited liability and is responsible for the management and representation of Borussia Dortmund GmbH & Co. KGaA. Borussia Dortmund GmbH is fully owned by the sports club, Borussia Dortmund e.V. This organizational structure was designed to ensure that the sports club has full control over the professional squad.[72]

The stock of Borussia Dortmund GmbH & Co. KGaA was floated on the stock market in October 2000 and is listed in the General Standard of Deutsche Börse AG. Borussia Dortmund GmbH & Co. KGaA became the first and, so far, the only publicly traded sports club on the German stock market. 5.53% of Borussia Dortmund GmbH & Co. KGaA is owned by the sports club, Borussia Dortmund e.V.; 9.33% by Bernd Geske; and 59.93% widely spread shareholdings.[73] Hans-Joachim Watzke is the CEO and Thomas Treß is the CFO of the GmbH & Co. KGaA. Michael Zorc as sporting director is responsible for the first team, the coaching staff, the youth and junior section, and scouting.[74] The supervisory board consists, among others, of politicians Werner Müller and Peer Steinbrück.[75]

According to the 2015 Deloitte's annual Football Money League, BVB generated revenues of €262 million during the 2013–14 season. This figure excludes player transfer fees, VAT and other sales-related taxes.[76]

The shareholder structure of Borussia Dortmund GmbH & Co. KGaA[73]

  Free float (59.93%)  Evonik Industries AG (14.78%)  Bernd Geske (9.33%)  BVB 09 e.V. Dortmund (5.53%)  SIGNAL IDUNA (5.43%)  PUMA SE (5.0%)

Current management and board

As of 1 January 2023[74][75]

Chairman Aki Watzke

Borussia Dortmund GmbH & Co. KGaA

Member

Position

Hans-Joachim Watzke

Chairman of the managementmanaging director for sport, communications and human resources

Carsten Cramer

Managing director for sales, marketing and digitalization

Thomas Treß

Managing director for organisation, finance and facilities

Sebastian Kehl

Segment director for sport

Sascha Fligge

Segment director for communications

Corinna Timmermann

Segment director for human resources

Dr. Christian Hockenjos

Segment director for organisation

Mark Stahlschmidt

Segment director for finance and facilities

Supervisory board

Member

Note

Christian Kullmann

Chairman of the supervisory boardChairman of the executive board of Evonik Industries, Essen

Ulrich Leitermann

Vice chairman and chairman of the managing boards of group parent companies of the Signal Iduna Group

Judith Dommermuth

Managing partner of JUVIA Verwaltungs GmbH, Cologne

Bernd Geske

Managing partner of Bernd Geske Lean Communication, MeerbuschMajor shareholder of Borussia Dortmund GmbH & Co. KGaA[73]

Bodo Löttgen

Member in the state parliament (Landtag) of North Rhine-Westphalia

Dr. Reinhold Lunow

Internist, medical director and partner of Internistische Naturheilkundliche Gemeinschaftspraxis, Bornheimtreasurer of Ballspielverein Borussia 09 e. V. Dortmund since 20 November 2005

Dr. Bernhard Pellens

Professor of International Corporate Accounting at Ruhr University BochumAcademic Director of the Institute of Management (ifu) at Ruhr University BochumHonorary Professor at Tongji University in Shanghai, China

Silke Seidel

Chief executive officer of Dortmunder Stadtwerke AktiengesellschaftManaging Director of Hohenbuschei Beteiligungsgesellschaft mbH, Westfalentor 1 GmbH and Dortmund Logistik GmbH

Kits and sponsorship

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Borussia Dortmund kits.

Dortmund's main advertising partner and current[when?] shirt sponsor is Evonik.[77] Since the 2012–13 season, the main equipment supplier has been Puma.[78] The contract is currently[when?] valid. The club announced a deal with Opel to be the first-ever sleeve sponsor from the 2017–18 season.[79]

In addition, there are three different levels of partners: BVBChampionPartner includes, among others,[vague] Opel, bwin, Brinkhoff's, Wilo, Hankook and EA Sports; BVBPartner includes, among others, MAN, Eurowings, Coca-Cola, Ruhr Nachrichten, REWE and Aral; and BVBProduktPartner includes, among others, ofo, Westfalenhallen and TEDi.[80]

Since 2012, Brixental in the Kitzbühel Alps in Austria is a BVB sponsor as well; furthermore, the region is host of one of the annual summer training camps.[81]

Sponsors

Manufacturer

Period

Brand

Source

1974–1990

Adidas

[82]

1990–2000

Nike

[82]

2000–2004

Goool.de

[83]

2004–2009

Nike

[84]

2009–2012

Kappa

[85]

2012–

Puma

[78]

Shirt Sponsor

Period

Sponsor

Source

1974–1976

City of Dortmund

[86]

1976–1978

Samson

[86]

1978–1980

Prestolith

[86]

1980–1983

UHU

[86]

1983–1986

Arctic

[87]

1986–1997

Continentale

[86]

1997–2000

s.Oliver

[86]

2000–2006

E.ON

[86]

2006–2007

!

[86][1]

2007–2020

Evonik

[77][1]

2020–

1&1 Ionos (Bundesliga matches only)Evonik (DFB Pokal and UEFA competitions only)

[88]

Sleeve Sponsor

Period

Sponsor

Source

2017–2022

Opel

[79][89]

2022 –

GLS

[90]

^ 1: As a result of restructuring, the RAG business areas of chemicals, energy and real estate were transferred to a new business entity, but the company name was still unknown at that time. Placeholder in 2005–2006 was an artwork of an exclamation mark of the painter Otmar Alt.[91]

Charity

Borussia Dortmund has raised money for charity for various causes. On 17 May 2011, Borussia Dortmund held a charity game for the 2011 Japan earthquake and tsunami against "Team Japan". Ticket sales from the game and €1 million from Dortmund's main sponsor Evonik went to charity for Japan earthquake and tsunami victims.[92] In November 2012, Borussia Dortmund KGaA founded a charitable trust called leuchte auf, to give important social projects financial help.[93] The trust's logo is a star consisting of the streets which meet at Dortmund's Borsigplatz, where the club was founded. On 6 July 2013, Borussia Dortmund held a charity game to raise money for 2013 German flood victims in the German states of Saxony and Saxony-Anhalt.[94]

In March 2020, Borussia Dortmund, Bayern Munich, RB Leipzig, and Bayer Leverkusen, the four German UEFA Champions League teams for the 2019–20 season, collectively gave €20 million to Bundesliga and 2. Bundesliga teams that were struggling financially during the COVID-19 pandemic.[95]

Since 1996, during Advent, Borussia Dortmund players visit the children's hospital in Dortmund where the players meet with the patients and give them gifts.[96]

Players

See also: List of Borussia Dortmund players

Current squad

As of 7 February 2024[97]

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

No.

Pos.

Nation

Player

1

GK

 SUI

Gregor Kobel (vice-captain)

2

DF

 ESP

Mateu Morey

4

DF

 GER

Nico Schlotterbeck

5

DF

 ALG

Ramy Bensebaini

6

MF

 TUR

Salih Özcan

8

MF

 GER

Felix Nmecha

9

FW

 CIV

Sébastien Haller

10

FW

 ENG

Jadon Sancho (on loan from Manchester United)

11

FW

 GER

Marco Reus

14

FW

 GER

Niclas Füllkrug

15

DF

 GER

Mats Hummels

16

FW

 BEL

Julien Duranville

17

MF

 GER

Marius Wolf

18

FW

 GER

Youssoufa Moukoko

19

MF

 GER

Julian Brandt

No.

Pos.

Nation

Player

20

MF

 AUT

Marcel Sabitzer

21

FW

 NED

Donyell Malen

22

DF

 NED

Ian Maatsen (on loan from Chelsea)

23

MF

 GER

Emre Can (captain)

25

DF

 GER

Niklas Süle (3rd captain)

26

DF

 NOR

Julian Ryerson

27

FW

 GER

Karim Adeyemi

29

FW

 GER

Paris Brunner

30

MF

 GER

Ole Pohlmann

31

GK

 GER

Silas Ostrzinski

32

MF

 GUI

Abdoulaye Kamara

33

GK

 GER

Alexander Meyer

35

GK

 POL

Marcel Lotka

43

FW

 ENG

Jamie Bynoe-Gittens

47

DF

 GER

Antonios Papadopoulos

Out on loan

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

No.

Pos.

Nation

Player

7

MF

 USA

Giovanni Reyna (at Nottingham Forest until 30 June 2024)

36

MF

 GER

Tom Rothe (at Holstein Kiel until 30 June 2024)

No.

Pos.

Nation

Player

44

DF

 FRA

Soumaïla Coulibaly (at Royal Antwerp until 30 June 2024)

Reserves and Youth Sector

Further information: Borussia Dortmund II and Borussia Dortmund Youth Sector

Club captains

Since 1963, 19 players have held the position of club captain for Borussia Dortmund.[98][99] The first club captain after the introduction of the Bundesliga was Alfred Schmidt, who was captain from 1963 to 1965.[98] The longest-serving captain Michael Zorc, who was club captain from 1988 to 1997, has the distinction of[tone] having won the most trophies as captain; he won two Bundesliga titles, one DFB-Pokal, three DFL-Supercups and one UEFA Champions League.[98]

The current club captain is Emre Can, who took over after Marco Reus stepped down from his role as the club's captain for the 2023–24 season.[100][101]

Emre Can, the current club captain

Dates[98]

Name

Notes

1963–1965

Alfred Schmidt

First club captain in the Bundesliga era

1965–1968

Wolfgang Paul

1968–1971

Sigfried Held

1971–1974

Dieter Kurrat

1974–1977

Klaus Ackermann

1977–1979

Lothar Huber

1979–1983

Manfred Burgsmüller

1983–1985

Rolf Rüssmann

1985–1987

Dirk Hupe

1987–1988

Frank Mill

1988–1998

Michael Zorc

Longest-serving captain in Borussia Dortmund's history

1998–2003

Stefan Reuter

2003–2004

Christoph Metzelder

2004–2008

Christian Wörns

2008–2014

Sebastian Kehl

2014–2016

Mats Hummels

2016–2018

Marcel Schmelzer

2018–2023

Marco Reus

[100]

2023–

Emre Can

[101]

Non-playing staff

Head coach Edin Terzić

Director of football Sebastian Kehl

As of 1 January 2023

Name

Position

Source

Coaching staff

Edin Terzić

Head coach

[102]

Sebastian Geppert

Assistant coach

[102]

Nuri Şahin

Assistant coach

[102]

Armin Reutershahn

Assistant coach

[102]

Matthias Kleinsteiber

Goalkeeping coach

[102]

Athletic department

Shad Forsythe

Head of department

[102]

Mathias Kolodziej

Athletic coach

[102]

Dennis Morschel

Athletic coach

[102]

Florian Wangler

Athletic coach

[102]

Johannes Wieber

Athletic coach

[102]

Medical department

Dr. Markus Braun

First team doctor

[103]

Thorben Voeste

Rehabilitation coach

[102]

Olaf Wehmer

Rehabilitation coach

[102]

Dr. Philipp Laux

Sport psychologist

[102]

Scouting & recruitment

Kai-Norman Schulz

Coordinator sports technology

[104]

Serdar Ayar

Video analyst

[105]

Markus Pilawa

Chief scout

[106]

Laurent Busser

Scout

[107]

Benjamin Frank

Scout

[108]

Sebastian Frank

Scout

[108]

Jan Heidermann

Scout

[108]

Artur Płatek

Scout

[109]

Waldemar Wrobel

Scout

[110]

Organisation & management

Sebastian Kehl

Director of football

[111]

Ingo Preuß

Head of reserve-team football

[112]

Wolfgang Springer

Head of youth department

[113]

Lars Ricken

Youth coordinator

[114]

Matthias Sammer

External advisor

[115]

Suresh Letchmanan

Head of BVB Asia Pacific Pte. Ltd.

[116]

Benjamin Wahl

Head of BVB China

[117]

Patrick Owomoyela

International ambassador

[118]

Karl-Heinz Riedle

International ambassador

[119]

Roman Weidenfeller

International ambassador

[120]

Norbert Dickel

Stadium announcer

[121]

Teddy de Beer

Fan relations manager

[122]

Sigfried Held

Fan relations manager

[123]

Frank Gräfen

Kit manager

[102]

Head coaches

Main article: List of Borussia Dortmund records and statistics § Head coaches

In July 1935, Fritz Thelen became the club's first full-time head coach, but was not available in the first months of the season, forcing Dortmund player and Germany international Ernst Kuzorra to take over instead.[124][125] In 1966, Willi Multhaup led his side to the European Cup Winners' Cup, the first German team to win a European trophy. Horst Köppel was the coach to bring major silverware to the club for the first time in over 20 years, winning the DFB-Pokal in 1989.

Ottmar Hitzfeld is the club's most successful coach, having won both the Bundesliga and Supercup twice. In 1997, Dortmund had waited for continental success for over 30 years; Hitzfeld crowned his period with an unexpected triumph and won the Champions League. Dortmund won the Intercontinental Cup in 1997 and head coach Nevio Scala became the first and, so far, only non-native speaker to win a major title. In 2001–02, Matthias Sammer, a former BVB player, brought the league title back to Dortmund. In 2008–09, the club approached Mainz 05 head coach Jürgen Klopp. He won the club's seventh championship title in 2010–11. In his fourth season, Dortmund won the Bundesliga and the DFB-Pokal to complete the first league and cup double in the club's history.[126] Successor Thomas Tuchel won the 2016–17 DFB-Pokal.[citation needed]

On 22 May 2018, Lucien Favre was confirmed as the new head coach of the club for the 2018–19 season.[127] He won the 2019 DFL-Supercup on 3 August 2019.[citation needed]

On 12 December 2020, Dortmund suffered a 5–1 defeat against VfB Stuttgart. Favre was fired the next day.[128]

No.

Nationality

Head coach

From

Until

Honours won

1

Ernst Kuzorra (interim)

July 1935

Aug 1935

2

Fritz Thelen

Sept 1935

June 1936

3

Ferdinand Swatosch

July 1936

May 1939

4

Willi Sevcik

June 1939

unknown

5

Fritz Thelen

10 January 1946

31 July 1946

6

Ferdinand Fabra

1 August 1946

31 July 1948

1 Oberliga West

7

Eduard Havlicek

1 August 1948

31 July 1950

2 Oberliga West

8

Hans-Josef Kretschmann

1 August 1950

31 July 1951

9

Hans Schmidt

1 August 1951

31 July 1955

1 Oberliga West

10

Helmut Schneider

1 August 1955

31 July 1957

2 Oberliga West, 2 Championships

11

Hans Tauchert

1 August 1957

24 June 1958

12

Max Merkel

14 July 1958

31 July 1961

13

Hermann Eppenhoff

1 August 1961

30 June 1965

1 Championship, 1 Cup

14

Willi Multhaup

1 July 1965

30 June 1966

1 European Cup Winners' Cup

15

Heinz Murach

1 July 1966

10 April 1968

16

Oswald Pfau

18 April 1968

16 December 1968

17

Helmut Schneider

17 December 1968

17 March 1969

18

Hermann Lindemann

21 March 1969

30 June 1970

19

Horst Witzler

1 July 1970

21 December 1971

20

Herbert Burdenski

3 January 1972

30 June 1972

21

Detlev Brüggemann

1 July 1972

31 October 1972

22

Max Michallek

1 November 1972

1 March 1973

23

Dieter Kurrat

1 March 1973

30 June 1973

24

János Bédl

1 July 1973

14 February 1974

25

Dieter Kurrat

14 February 1974

30 June 1974

26

Otto Knefler

1 July 1974

1 February 1976

27

Horst Buhtz

1 February 1976

30 June 1976

28

Otto Rehhagel

1 July 1976

30 April 1978

29

Carl-Heinz Rühl

1 July 1978

29 April 1979

30

Uli Maslo

30 April 1979

30 June 1979

31

Udo Lattek

1 July 1979

10 May 1981

32

Rolf Bock (interim)

11 May 1981

30 June 1981

33

Branko Zebec

1 July 1981

30 June 1982

34

Karl-Heinz Feldkamp

1 July 1982

5 April 1983

35

Helmut Witte (interim)

6 April 1983

30 June 1983

36

Uli Maslo

1 July 1983

23 October 1983

37

Helmut Witte (interim)

23 October 1983

31 October 1983

38

Heinz-Dieter Tippenhauer

31 October 1983

15 November 1983

39

Horst Franz

16 November 1983

30 June 1984

40

Timo Konietzka

1 July 1984

24 October 1984

41

Reinhard Saftig (interim)

25 October 1984

27 October 1984

42

Erich Ribbeck

28 October 1984

30 June 1985

43

Pál Csernai

1 July 1985

20 April 1986

44

Reinhard Saftig

21 April 1986

30 June 1988

45

Horst Köppel

1 July 1988

30 June 1991

1 Cup, 1 Supercup

46

Ottmar Hitzfeld

1 July 1991

30 June 1997

2 Championships, 2 Supercups, 1 Champions League

47

Nevio Scala

1 July 1997

30 June 1998

1 Intercontinental Cup

48

Michael Skibbe

1 July 1998

4 February 2000

49

Bernd Krauss

6 February 2000

13 April 2000

50

Udo Lattek (interim)

14 April 2000

30 June 2000

51

Matthias Sammer

1 July 2000

30 June 2004

1 Championship

52

Bert van Marwijk

1 July 2004

18 December 2006

53

Jürgen Röber

19 December 2006

12 March 2007

54

Thomas Doll

13 March 2007

19 May 2008

55

Jürgen Klopp

1 July 2008

30 June 2015

2 Championships, 1 Cup, 2 Supercups

56

Thomas Tuchel

1 July 2015

30 May 2017

1 Cup

57

Peter Bosz

1 July 2017

10 December 2017

58

Peter Stöger

10 December 2017

30 June 2018

59

Lucien Favre

1 July 2018

13 December 2020

1 Supercup

60

Edin Terzić (interim)

13 December 2020

30 June 2021

1 Cup

61

Marco Rose

1 July 2021

20 May 2022

62

Edin Terzić

23 May 2022

Records

Main article: List of Borussia Dortmund records and statistics

Michael Zorc has the most appearances for the club.

Borussia Dortmund's name is attached to a number of Bundesliga and European records:

The Borussia Dortmund player with the most appearances is Michael Zorc, with 572 in all competitions.[129]

The Borussia Dortmund player with the most goals is Alfred Preissler, with 177 in all competitions.[129]

The most goals ever in a UEFA Champions League match (12) occurred when Dortmund beat Legia Warsaw 8–4 in the 2016–17 season.[citation needed]

Youssoufa Moukoko became the youngest player in Bundesliga history (aged 16 years and 1 day) when he appeared for Borussia Dortmund against Hertha BSC on 21 November 2020.[130]

Moukoko also became the youngest player in UEFA Champions League history (aged 16 years and 18 days) when he was subbed on for Dortmund against Zenit Saint Petersburg on 8 December 2020.[131]

Moukoko became both the youngest goalscorer in Bundesliga history and the youngest player to score for Dortmund (aged 16 years and 28 days) after netting against Union Berlin on 18 December 2020.[132]

Dortmund was on the receiving end of the worst loss ever in a Bundesliga match when they suffered a 12–0 defeat away to Borussia Mönchengladbach on 29 April 1978.[133]

BVB and Bayern Munich were carded a record of 15 times (3 for Dortmund, 12 for Bayern) in a match played on 7 April 2001.[134]

The most penalties given in a Bundesliga match was five, in a game played between Borussia Mönchengladbach and Dortmund on 9 November 1965.[citation needed]

The first goal ever scored in Bundesliga play was by Dortmund's Friedhelm Konietzka against Werder Bremen; however, Werder Bremen won 3–2.[135]

Former Borussia Dortmund striker Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang is one of only three players, the others being Klaus Allofs and Robert Lewandowski, to have scored at least once in ten straight Bundesliga matchdays.[136] He was also the first player ever to score at least once in the first eight matchdays of a Bundesliga season,[citation needed] and formerly held the record for most Bundesliga goals in a single season by a foreign player (31 in 2016–17).

Honours

International

Intercontinental Cup:

Winners: 1997

European

UEFA Champions League:

Winners: 1996–97

Runners-up: 2012–13

European Cup Winners' Cup:

Winners: 1965–66

UEFA Cup:

Runners-up: 1992–93, 2001–02

UEFA Super Cup:

Runners-up: 1997

Domestic

German Championship/Bundesliga:

Winners: 1956, 1957, 1963, 1994–95, 1995–96, 2001–02, 2010–11, 2011–12

Runners-up: 1949, 1961, 1965–66, 1991–92, 2012–13, 2013–14, 2015–16, 2018–19, 2019–20, 2021–22, 2022–23 (record)

2. Bundesliga North:

Runners-up: 1975–76

DFB-Pokal:

Winners: 1964–65, 1988–89, 2011–12, 2016–17, 2020–21

Runners-up: 1962–63, 2007–08, 2013–14, 2014–15, 2015–16

DFB/DFL-Supercup:

Winners: 1989, 1995, 1996, 2013, 2014, 2019

Runners-up: 2011, 2012, 2016, 2017, 2020, 2021

DFB-Ligapokal:

Runners-up: 2003

Regional

Oberliga West/West German Championship:

Winners: 1947–48, 1948–49, 1949–50, 1952–53, 1955–56, 1956–57 (record)

Runners-up: 1960–61, 1962–63

Westphalia Cup:

Winners: 1947

UEFA club coefficient ranking

As of 10 June 2023[137]

Rank

Nation

Team

Points

10

Roma

97.000

11

Inter Milan

96.000

12

Sevilla

91.000

13

Ajax

89.000

14

Borussia Dortmund

86.000

15

Atlético Madrid

85.000

16

RB Leipzig

84.000

17

Benfica

82.000

Villarreal

Affiliated clubs

The following clubs are currently affiliated with Borussia Dortmund:

Hyderabad FC[138]

Buriram United[139]

Marconi Stallions FC[139]

Iwate Grulla Morioka[139]

Hoa Binh[140]

BVB International Academy Waterloo[141][142]

Shonan Bellmare[citation needed]

Aris Thessalonikis[citation needed]

See also

Borussia Dortmund II

Borussia Dortmund Youth Sector

List of Borussia Dortmund seasons

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^ a b c "BVB holt Klopp-Scout aus Liverpool" (in German). Sport1. Archived from the original on 1 July 2018. Retrieved 26 June 2018.

^ "Artur Płatek, skaut Borussii w długim wywiadzie" (in Polish). Weszło. 21 November 2013. Archived from the original on 1 July 2018. Retrieved 21 November 2013.

^ "Ex-RWE-Coach Wrobel geht für den BVB auf Talentsuche" (in German). Funke Mediengruppe. Archived from the original on 12 January 2020. Retrieved 9 September 2014.

^ "Organisation and Management". Borussia Dortmund. Archived from the original on 16 October 2018. Retrieved 1 July 2018.

^ "Der neue BVB II-Manager Ingo Preuß über seine Arbeit" (in German). Ruhr Nachrichten. Archived from the original on 1 July 2018. Retrieved 4 May 2011.

^ "Organisation" (in German). Borussia Dortmund. Archived from the original on 14 June 2018. Retrieved 1 July 2018.

^ "Lars Ricken Is Borussia's New Youth Coordinator". Borussia Dortmund. Archived from the original on 1 July 2018. Retrieved 1 July 2018.

^ "Externer Berater: Sammer kehrt zum BVB zurück" (in German). Kicker. Archived from the original on 30 March 2018. Retrieved 30 March 2018.

^ "Suresh Letchmanan to head Singapore office". Borussia Dortmund. Archived from the original on 10 April 2016. Retrieved 20 August 2014.

^ "Chinese office – German soccer side increase their presence in Asia with a second outlet". 5 December 2017. Archived from the original on 8 December 2017. Retrieved 5 December 2017.

^ "Patrick Owomoyela returns to the BVB family". Borussia Dortmund. Archived from the original on 1 July 2018. Retrieved 6 March 2018.

^ "Riedle takes on international ambassador role for BVB". Borussia Dortmund. Archived from the original on 1 July 2018. Retrieved 22 November 2014.

^ "Weidenfellers erste Reise als Markenbotschafter" (in German). Borussia Dortmund. Archived from the original on 19 July 2018. Retrieved 16 July 2018.

^ "Norbert Dickel: Der Held am Mikro" (in German). Borussia Dortmund. Archived from the original on 4 September 2017. Retrieved 2 September 2017.

^ "Fanbeauftragte – Teddy de Beer" (in German). Borussia Dortmund. Archived from the original on 3 July 2019. Retrieved 1 July 2018.

^ "Fanbeauftragte – Sigfried Held" (in German). Borussia Dortmund. Archived from the original on 1 July 2018. Retrieved 1 July 2018.

^ "Die Geschichte des BVB – Teil 4: Die BVB-Historie von 1929 bis 1938" (in German). schwatzgelb.de. Archived from the original on 30 March 2014. Retrieved 23 July 2013.

^ "Die BVB Trainer-Datenbank" (in German). schwatzgelb.de. Archived from the original on 15 May 2013. Retrieved 23 July 2013.

^ "Dortmund at the Double: history in the making in 2012". Borussia Dortmund. Archived from the original on 2 February 2016. Retrieved 27 January 2016.

^ "Lucien Favre to become Borussia Dortmund head coach". Borussia Dortmund. Archived from the original on 22 May 2018. Retrieved 22 May 2018.

^ Mendola, Nicholas (13 December 2020). "Dortmund fires Favre, American boss Marsch mentioned as candidate". ProSoccerTalk | NBC Sports. Archived from the original on 13 December 2020. Retrieved 15 December 2020.

^ a b "Borussia Dortmund". UEFA. 22 August 2012. Archived from the original on 19 August 2013. Retrieved 18 March 2013.

^ "Youssoufa Moukoko becomes youngest Bundesliga player ever for Borussia Dortmund against Hertha Berlin". bundesliga.com. 21 November 2020. Archived from the original on 30 November 2020. Retrieved 26 November 2020.

^ "Moukoko becomes UEFA Champions League's youngest player". UEFA. 8 December 2020. Archived from the original on 9 December 2020. Retrieved 8 December 2020.

^ "Youssoufa Moukoko becomes youngest ever Bundesliga scorer for Borussia Dortmund against Union Berlin". bundesliga.com. 18 December 2020. Archived from the original on 17 September 2021. Retrieved 18 December 2020.

^ "Darf's ein Törchen mehr sein?". Der Spiegel (in German). 28 April 2008. Archived from the original on 27 August 2012. Retrieved 17 April 2013.

^ "Die Spielstatistik Borussia Dortmund – FC Bayern München" (in German). fussballdaten.de. Archived from the original on 1 April 2014. Retrieved 24 April 2014.

^ "The First Ever Bundesliga Goal * Fastest ever Bundesliga goal scored by a substitute Miloš Jojić". theoffside.com. – Bundesliga blog. Archived from the original on 25 October 2012. Retrieved 17 April 2013.

^ "Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang jagt Uralt-Tor-Rekord von Klaus Allofs". 16 October 2015. Archived from the original on 21 September 2016. Retrieved 8 August 2016.

^ UEFA.com. "Member associations – UEFA Coefficients – Club coefficients". UEFA. Retrieved 14 June 2023.

^ Goal.com. "Borussia Dortmund looking to plant their flag in India with Hyderabad partnership". retrieved 21 August 2020.

^ a b c insidesport.co (16 August 2020). "Hyderabad enter into multi-year partnership with Borussia Dortmund". retrieved 21 August 2020. Archived from the original on 27 September 2021. Retrieved 21 August 2020.

^ "NÓNG: CLB Borussia Dortmund hợp tác với Việt Nam thành lập CLB bóng đá Hoà Bình". sports442.com (in Vietnamese). 10 March 2021. Archived from the original on 10 October 2021. Retrieved 10 October 2021.

^ Brown, Josh (16 February 2022). "Waterloo Minor Soccer Club strikes affiliation deal with Borussia Dortmund". Waterloo Region Record. Archived from the original on 6 February 2023. Retrieved 6 February 2023.

^ "Waterloo United Partners With Borussia Dortmund". Waterloo United SC. 14 December 2021. Archived from the original on 6 February 2023. Retrieved 6 February 2023.

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vteBorussia Dortmund – current squad

1 Kobel

2 Morey

4 Schlotterbeck

5 Bensebaini

6 Özcan

8 Nmecha

9 Haller

10 Sancho

11 Reus

14 Füllkrug

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Manager: Terzić

vteBorussia Dortmund – managers

Kuzorra (a.i.) (1935–36)

Thelen (1936)

Swatosch (1936–39)

Sevcic (1939)

Thelen (1946)

Fabra (1946–48)

Havlicek (1948–50)

Kretschmann (1950–51)

Schmidt (1951–55)

Schneider (1955–57)

Tauchert (1957–58)

Merkel (1958–61)

Eppenhoff (1961–65)

Kwiatkowski (1964)

Multhaup (1965–66)

Murach (1966–68)

Pfau (1968)

Schneider (1968–69)

Lindemann (1969–70)

Bracht (1970)

Witzler (1970–71)

Burdenski (1972)

Brüggemann (1972)

Michallek (1972–73)

Kurrat (1973)

Bédl (1973–74)

Kurrat (1974)

Knefler (1974–76)

Buhtz (1976)

Rehhagel (1976–78)

Rühl (1978–79)

Maslo (1979)

Lattek (1979–81)

Bock (a.i.) (1981)

Zebec (1981–82)

Feldkamp (1982–83)

Witte (a.i.) (1983)

Maslo (1983)

Witte (a.i.) (1983)

Tippenhauer (1983)

Franz (1983–84)

Konietzka (1984)

Saftig (a.i.) (1984)

Ribbeck (1984–85)

Csernai (1985–86)

Saftig (1986–88)

Köppel (1988–91)

Hitzfeld (1991–97)

Scala (1997–98)

Skibbe (1998–2000)

Krauss (2000)

Lattek (a.i.) (2000)

Sammer (2000–04)

Van Marwijk (2004–06)

Röber (2006–07)

Doll (2007–08)

Klopp (2008–15)

Tuchel (2015–17)

Bosz (2017)

Stöger (2017–18)

Favre (2018–20)

Terzić (a.i.) (2020–21)

Rose (2021–22)

Terzić (2022–)

vteEuropean Cup and UEFA Champions League winnersEuropean Cup era, 1955–19921950s

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1986–87: Porto

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1989–90: AC Milan

1990s

1990–91: Red Star Belgrade

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UEFA Champions League era, 1992–present1990s

1992–93: Marseille

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2000s

2000–01: Bayern Munich

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2002–03: AC Milan

2003–04: Porto

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2013–14: Real Madrid

2014–15: Barcelona

2015–16: Real Madrid

2016–17: Real Madrid

2017–18: Real Madrid

2018–19: Liverpool

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2020s

2020–21: Chelsea

2021–22: Real Madrid

2022–23: Manchester City

Finals

Winning managers

vteUEFA Cup Winners' Cup winners1960s

1960–61: Fiorentina

1961–62: Atlético Madrid

1962–63: Tottenham Hotspur

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1964–65: West Ham United

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1967–68: AC Milan

1968–69: Slovan Bratislava

1969–70: Manchester City

1970s

1970–71: Chelsea

1971–72: Rangers

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1974–75: Dynamo Kyiv

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1977–78: Anderlecht

1978–79: Barcelona

1979–80: Valencia

1980s

1980–81: Dinamo Tbilisi

1981–82: Barcelona

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1983–84: Juventus

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1986–87: Ajax

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1990s

1990–91: Manchester United

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1994–95: Zaragoza

1995–96: Paris Saint-Germain

1996–97: Barcelona

1997–98: Chelsea

1998–99: Lazio

vteIntercontinental Cup winners1960s

1960: Real Madrid

1961: Peñarol

1962: Santos

1963: Santos

1964: Inter Milan

1965: Inter Milan

1966: Peñarol

1967: Racing

1968: Estudiantes de La Plata

1969: AC Milan

1970s

1970: Feyenoord

1971: Nacional

1972: Ajax

1973: Independiente

1974: Atlético Madrid

1976: Bayern Munich

1977: Boca Juniors

1979: Olimpia

1980s

1980: Nacional

1981: Flamengo

1982: Peñarol

1983: Grêmio

1984: Independiente

1985: Juventus

1986: River Plate

1987: Porto

1988: Nacional

1989: AC Milan

1990s

1990: AC Milan

1991: Red Star Belgrade

1992: São Paulo

1993: São Paulo

1994: Vélez Sársfield

1995: Ajax

1996: Juventus

1997: Borussia Dortmund

1998: Real Madrid

1999: Manchester United

2000s

2000: Boca Juniors

2001: Bayern Munich

2002: Real Madrid

2003: Boca Juniors

2004: Porto

vteBundesliga2023–24 clubs

FC Augsburg

Bayer Leverkusen

Bayern Munich

VfL Bochum

Borussia Mönchengladbach

Borussia Dortmund

Darmstadt 98

Eintracht Frankfurt

SC Freiburg

1. FC Heidenheim

TSG Hoffenheim

1. FC Köln

RB Leipzig

Mainz 05

VfB Stuttgart

Union Berlin

Werder Bremen

VfL Wolfsburg

Former clubs

1860 Munich

Alemannia Aachen

Arminia Bielefeld

Bayer 05 Uerdingen/KFC Uerdingen 05

Blau-Weiß 90 Berlin

Borussia Neunkirchen

Dynamo Dresden

Fortuna Düsseldorf

Eintracht Braunschweig

Energie Cottbus

Fortuna Köln

Greuther Fürth

Hamburger SV

Hannover 96

Hansa Rostock

Hertha BSC

FC 08 Homburg

FC Ingolstadt

1. FC Kaiserslautern

Karlsruher SC

Kickers Offenbach

VfB Leipzig

Meidericher SV/MSV Duisburg

Preußen Münster

1. FC Nürnberg

Rot-Weiss Essen

Rot-Weiß Oberhausen

SC Paderborn

1. FC Saarbrücken

Schalke 04

FC St. Pauli

Stuttgarter Kickers

Tasmania Berlin

Tennis Borussia Berlin

SSV Ulm

SpVgg Unterhaching

Waldhof Mannheim

Wattenscheid 09

Wuppertaler SV

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Borussia Mönchengladbach 12–0 Borussia Dortmund

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Seasons

1963–64

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1969–70

1970–71

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2009–10

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2016–17

2017–18

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2020–21

2021–22

2022–23

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2024–25

Category

Managers

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vte2. BundesligaSeasons

1974–75

1975–76

1976–77

1977–78

1978–79

1979–80

1980–81

1981–82

1982–83

1983–84

1984–85

1985–86

1986–87

1987–88

1988–89

1989–90

1990–91

1991–92

1992–93

1993–94

1994–95

1995–96

1996–97

1997–98

1998–99

1999–2000

2000–01

2001–02

2002–03

2003–04

2004–05

2005–06

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2007–08

2008–09

2009–10

2010–11

2011–12

2012–13

2013–14

2014–15

2015–16

2016–17

2017–18

2018–19

2019–20

2020–21

2021–22

2022–23

2023–24

2023–24 clubs

Eintracht Braunschweig

Fortuna Düsseldorf

SV Elversberg

Greuther Fürth

Hamburger SV

Hannover 96

Hertha BSC

1. FC Kaiserslautern

Karlsruher SC

Holstein Kiel

1. FC Magdeburg

1. FC Nürnberg

SC Paderborn

VfL Osnabrück

Hansa Rostock

Schalke 04

FC St. Pauli

Wehen Wiesbaden

Former clubs2. Bundesliga (1981–present)

Alemannia Aachen

VfR Aalen

Rot Weiss Ahlen

Viktoria Aschaffenburg

Erzgebirge Aue

FC Augsburg

SV Babelsberg 03

SpVgg Bayreuth

Blau-Weiß 90 Berlin

Tennis Borussia Berlin

Union Berlin

Arminia Bielefeld

VfL Bochum

Stahl Brandenburg

Werder Bremen

Wacker Burghausen

VfR Bürstadt

SC Charlottenburg

Chemnitzer FC

Energie Cottbus

Darmstadt 98

Dynamo Dresden

MSV Duisburg

Rot-Weiß Erfurt

Rot-Weiss Essen

Eintracht Frankfurt

FSV Frankfurt

Freiburger FC

SC Freiburg

FC Gütersloh

Hallescher FC

TSV Havelse

1. FC Heidenheim

1899 Hoffenheim

FC Homburg

FC Ingolstadt

Carl Zeiss Jena

Hessen Kassel

TuS Koblenz

1. FC Köln

Fortuna Köln

RB Leipzig

VfB Leipzig

VfB Lübeck

1. FSV Mainz 05

Waldhof Mannheim

SV Meppen

Borussia Mönchengladbach

TSV 1860 Munich

Preußen Münster

Kickers Offenbach

Rot-Weiß Oberhausen

VfB Oldenburg

Jahn Regensburg

FC Remscheid

SSV Reutlingen

Hansa Rostock

1. FC Saarbrücken

FSV Salmrohr

SV Sandhausen

TuS Schloß Neuhaus

1. FC Schweinfurt 05

Sportfreunde Siegen

Union Solingen

VfB Stuttgart

Stuttgarter Kickers

Eintracht Trier

KFC Uerdingen 05

SSV Ulm 1846

SpVgg Unterhaching

Wattenscheid 09

VfL Wolfsburg

Wormatia Worms

Wuppertaler SV

Würzburger Kickers

FSV Zwickau

2. Bundesliga Nord (1974–1981)

HSV Barmbek-Uhlenhorst

Wacker 04 Berlin

1. FC Bocholt

Bonner SC

OSC Bremerhaven

Borussia Dortmund

SpVgg Erkenschwick

Schwarz-Weiß Essen

1. SC Göttingen 05

DJK Gütersloh

Arminia Hannover

OSV Hannover

SC Herford

Westfalia Herne

Viktoria Köln

Bayer Leverkusen

Rot-Weiß Lüdenscheid

1. FC Mülheim

Spandauer SV

DSC Wanne-Eickel

Olympia Wilhelmshaven

2. Bundesliga Süd (1974–1981)

Eintracht Bad Kreuznach

KSV Baunatal

VfB Eppingen

FC Hanau 93

VfR Heilbronn

Bayern Hof

ESV Ingolstadt

MTV Ingolstadt

VfR Mannheim

Borussia Neunkirchen

FK Pirmasens

BSV 07 Schwenningen

Röchling Völklingen

Würzburger FV

Clubs

Introduction

Promotion to 2. Bundesliga

Promotion to Bundesliga

Top scorers

vteFormer members of the G-14 (2000–2008)2000–2008

Ajax

Barcelona

Bayern Munich

Borussia Dortmund

Inter Milan

Juventus

Liverpool

Manchester United

Marseille

AC Milan

Paris Saint-Germain

Porto

PSV Eindhoven

Real Madrid

2002–2008

Arsenal

Bayer Leverkusen

Lyon

Valencia

Authority control databases International

VIAF

National

Germany

Israel

United States

Czech Republic

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Borussia Dortmund | Bundesliga

Borussia Dortmund | Bundesliga

BLBL2VBLBroadcasters Bundesliga App Fantasy Manager DFL Home Table Clubs Fixtures & Results Live 60 Years of Bundesliga Videos Legends Stats Table predictor Awards FAQ Players US Barfinder More Home Table Clubs Fixtures & Results Live 60 Years of Bundesliga Videos Legends Stats Table predictor Awards FAQ Players US Barfinder Broadcasters Bundesliga App Fantasy Manager DFL Choose languageEnglishDisplay Mode Login Borussia DortmundSIGNAL IDUNA PARKClubTicketsSquadTableFixtures & ResultsStatsNews & VideosProfileAll goals of Borussia DortmundShow allMd 2490’ Maatsen FCU0 - 2BVBMd 2441’ Adeyemi FCU0 - 1BVBMd 2325’ Schlotterbeck BVB2 - 1TSGMd 2321’ Malen BVB1 - 1TSGMd 228’ Füllkrug WOB0 - 1BVBMd 2187’ Füllkrug BVB3 - 0SCFMd 2152’ Malen BVB2 - 0SCFMd 2116’ Malen BVB1 - 0SCFMd 1990’ +1 Füllkrug BVB3 - 1BOCMd 1972’ Füllkrug BVB2 - 1BOC Borussia Dortmund Squad Goalkeeper1GregorKobel31SilasOstrzinski33AlexanderMeyer35MarcelLotkaDefender2MateuMorey Bauza4NicoSchlotterbeck5RamyBensebaini15MatsHummels22IanMaatsen25NiklasSüle26JulianRyerson45GuilleBueno47AntoniosPapadopoulosMidfielder6SalihÖzcan8FelixNmecha11MarcoReus17MariusWolf19JulianBrandt20MarcelSabitzer23EmreCan30OlePohlmann32AbdoulayeKamara38KjellWätjen43JamieBynoe-Gittens48SamuelBambaStriker9SébastienHaller10JadonSancho14NiclasFüllkrug16JulienDuranville18YoussoufaMoukoko21DonyellMalen27KarimAdeyemi29ParisBrunner Borussia Dortmund Table MatchesMWonWDrawDLostLGoalsG+/-PointsP2FCBBayernFC Bayern München24173465:28+37543VFBStuttgartVfB Stuttgart24162655:31+24504BVBDortmundBorussia Dortmund24128448:30+18445RBLLeipzigRB Leipzig24134753:31+22436SGEFrankfurtEintracht Frankfurt24910538:31+7377TSGHoffenheimTSG Hoffenheim2496943:44-133View full table Borussia Dortmund Fixtures & Results Sunday 25-Feb-2024 16:30 DortmundBorussia DortmundBVB 2 TSG 3 HoffenheimTSG Hoffenheim Saturday 02-Mar-2024 14:30 Union Berlin1. FC Union BerlinFCU 0 BVB 2 DortmundBorussia Dortmund Saturday 09-Mar-2024 17:30 BremenSV Werder BremenSVW BVB DortmundBorussia Dortmund Tickets Sunday 17-Mar-2024 16:30 DortmundBorussia DortmundBVB SGE FrankfurtEintracht Frankfurt Tickets Saturday 30-Mar-2024 17:30 BayernFC Bayern MünchenFCB BVB DortmundBorussia Dortmund Tickets All fixtures Borussia Dortmund Stats Season stats 2023/2024 Possession (%) 57 Cards 42 Yellow cards 40 Crosses from open play 200 Distance covered (km) 2816.7 Fouls committed 223 Goals 48 Intensive runs 17068 Own goals 2 Successful passes from open play (%) 86.5 Penalties 4 Penalties scored 4 Shots 358 Shots against post and bar 5 Sprints 5713 Aerial duels won 374 Duels won 2326Borussia Dortmund News & VideosVideos2:14 Watch: Niclas Füllkrug - a Dortmund striker born and born again in Bremen 06.03.20240:19 Watch: Terzić: "Everything's still in our own hands" 02.03.20242:03 Watch: Union Berlin 0-2 Borussia Dortmund - highlights 02.03.20240:37 Watch: Borussia Dortmund open New York office 01.03.20243:13 Watch: Goal of the Month contenders for February 2024 27.02.20240:31 Watch: Edin Terzic says Dortmund "gave away the win" 25.02.20242:03 Watch: Borussia Dortmund 2-3 Hoffenheim - highlights 25.02.20240:14 Watch: Edin Terzić frustrated with Wolfsburg draw 17.02.20240:17 Watch: Gregor Kobel on Wolfsburg draw 17.02.20243:58 Watch: Wolfsburg 1-1 Borussia Dortmund - highlights 17.02.2024 Profile StadiumSIGNAL IDUNA PARKCapacity81 365Full nameBorussia Dortmund GmbH & Co. KGaAFounded1909Club colorsStreetRheinlanddamm 207-209City44137 DortmundDirectionsOpen with mapsPhone0231-90200Fax0231-90204105Websitewww.bvb.deEmailservice@bvb.deFootball as it's meant to beOur AppsBundesliga AppFantasy ManagerPowered byAdvertisingLegal NoticesCookie settingsPrivacy StatementTerms of UseBroadcastersJobsImprintContactPartnerPlayer© 2023 DFL Deutsche Fußball Liga GmbHChoose languageEnglishDisplay Mode

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Borussia Dortmund - Club profile | Transfermarkt

Borussia Dortmund - Club profile | Transfermarkt

News

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Borussia Dortmund

1

8

1

5

6

Bundesliga

League level:

First Tier

Table position:

4

In league since:

48 years

€464.90m

Total market value

Squad size:

28

Average age:

25.5

Foreigners:

13  46.4 %

National team players:

16

Stadium:

SIGNAL IDUNA PARK  81.365 Seats

Current transfer record:

+€48.85m

+

Borussia Dortmund

Borussia Dortmund II

Borussia Dortmund U19

Borussia Dortmund U17

Borussia Dortmund U16

Borussia Dortmund UEFA U19

Borussia Dortmund Youth

Squad Borussia Dortmund

Filter by season

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47/48

45/46

CompactDetailedGallery

#PlayerDate of birth/AgeNat.Market value

1

Gregor Kobel 

Goalkeeper

Dec 6, 1997 (26)€40.00m

35

Marcel Lotka

Goalkeeper

May 25, 2001 (22)€1.30m

33

Alexander Meyer

Goalkeeper

Apr 13, 1991 (32)€800k

4

Nico Schlotterbeck

Centre-Back

Dec 1, 1999 (24)€35.00m

25

Niklas Süle

Centre-Back

Sep 3, 1995 (28)€22.00m

15

Mats Hummels

Centre-Back

Dec 16, 1988 (35)€6.00m

47

Antonios Papadopoulos

Centre-Back

Sep 10, 1999 (24)€800k

22

Ian Maatsen

Left-Back

Mar 10, 2002 (21)€20.00m

5

Ramy Bensebaini

Left-Back

Apr 16, 1995 (28)€12.00m

26

Julian Ryerson

Right-Back

Nov 17, 1997 (26)€15.00m

17

Marius Wolf

Right-Back

May 27, 1995 (28)€6.50m

2

Mateu Morey

Right-Back

Mar 2, 2000 (24)€800k

6

Salih Özcan

Defensive Midfield

Jan 11, 1998 (26)€13.00m

23

Emre Can 

Defensive Midfield

Jan 12, 1994 (30)€12.00m

32

Abdoulaye Kamara

Defensive Midfield

Nov 6, 2004 (19)€1.50m

8

Felix Nmecha 

Central Midfield

Oct 10, 2000 (23)€25.00m

20

Marcel Sabitzer

Central Midfield

Mar 17, 1994 (29)€20.00m

30

Ole Pohlmann 

Central Midfield

Apr 5, 2001 (22)€700k

19

Julian Brandt

Attacking Midfield

May 2, 1996 (27)€40.00m

11

Marco Reus

Attacking Midfield

May 31, 1989 (34)€7.00m

27

Karim Adeyemi

Left Winger

Jan 18, 2002 (22)€28.00m

43

Jamie Bynoe-Gittens

Left Winger

Aug 8, 2004 (19)€28.00m

10

Jadon Sancho

Left Winger

Mar 25, 2000 (23)€25.00m

21

Donyell Malen

Right Winger

Jan 19, 1999 (25)€35.00m

16

Julien Duranville

Right Winger

May 5, 2006 (17)€8.50m

18

Youssoufa Moukoko

Centre-Forward

Nov 20, 2004 (19)€30.00m

9

Sébastien Haller 

Centre-Forward

Jun 22, 1994 (29)€18.00m

14

Niclas Füllkrug

Centre-Forward

Feb 9, 1993 (31)€13.00m

1353342515472252617262332820301911274310211618914

Detailed squad

Top arrivals

player/ position

club

transfer fee

Felix Nmecha

Central Midfield

€30.00m

Jadon Sancho

Left Winger

loan transfer

Ian Maatsen

Left-Back

loan transfer

Ramy Bensebaini

Left-Back

free transfer

Marcel Sabitzer

Central Midfield

€19.00m

All arrivals

Top departures

player/ position

club

transfer fee

Jude Bellingham

Attacking Midfield

€103.00m

Giovanni Reyna

Attacking Midfield

Loan fee€1.00m

Raphaël Guerreiro

Left-Back

free transfer

Mahmoud Dahoud

Central Midfield

free transfer

Ansgar Knauff

Right Winger

€5.00m

All departures

Top Goalscorers

player/ position

Goals

Niclas Füllkrug

Centre-Forward

11

Donyell Malen

Right Winger

10

Julian Brandt

Attacking Midfield

6

Marco Reus

Attacking Midfield

4

Julian Ryerson

Right-Back

3

All goalscorers

Most assists

player/ position

Assists

Niclas Füllkrug

Centre-Forward

8

Julian Brandt

Attacking Midfield

8

Marco Reus

Attacking Midfield

5

Jamie Bynoe-Gittens

Left Winger

4

Donyell Malen

Right Winger

2

Total ranking

Most recent formation

Bundesliga - 24. Matchday Sat, Mar 2, 2024 - 3:30 PM hours

14 . Union Berlin

0:2

Bor. Dortmund 4.

Starting Line-up: 4-2-3-1

Substitutes

33

Meyer

4

Schlotterb.

25

Süle

22

Maatsen

 

26

Ryerson

 

23

Can

 

20

Sabitzer

19

Brandt

 

10

Sancho

 

27

Adeyemi

 

 

14

Füllkrug

35

Marcel Lotka

GK

15

Mats Hummels

CB

5

Ramy Bensebaini  

LB

17

Marius Wolf

RB

6

Salih Özcan  

DM

11

Marco Reus

AM

43

Jamie Bynoe-Gittens  

LW

16

Julien Duranville

RW

18

Youssoufa Moukoko

CF

Manager:

Edin Terzic

 

To the match sheet

All fixtures

Table section Bundesliga 23/24

#

Club

Matches

+/-

Pts

1

B. Leverkusen

24

45

64

2

Bayern Munich

24

37

54

3

VfB Stuttgart

24

24

50

4

Bor. Dortmund

24

18

44

5

RB Leipzig

24

22

43

6

E. Frankfurt

24

7

37

7

TSG Hoffenheim

24

-1

33

To complete table

Transfer record

Arrivals/Departures

Fee

Income

13

€113.35m

Expenditure

9

€64.50m

Overall balance

+€48.85m

All transfers

Stats & facts

Official club name:

Borussia Dortmund

Address:

Rheinlanddamm 207-209

44137 Dortmund

Germany

Tel:

+49 231 9020-0

Fax:

+49 231 9020-4105

Website:

www.bvb.de

Founded:

Dec 19, 1909

Members:

189.532

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Borussia Dortmund

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Borussia Dortmund stands for intensity, authenticity, cohesion and ambition. There's an intense character to everything we do. Our stadium is the epicentre. This is where all of BVB's energy is released.

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Der BVB

Borussia Dortmund is the intense football experience

Borussia Dortmund stands for intensity, authenticity, cohesion and ambition. There's an intense character to everything we do. Our stadium is the epicentre. This is where all of BVB's energy is released. We enjoy a special place in the hearts of all our fans: their unconditional loyalty has carried us through the good times and the bad for more than 100 years. We are determined to give them something back. Be it through sporting success, or through our promise to remain true to our traditional ethos and be as we've always been: sincere, candid, battling and grounded in the values of Dortmund – the city and its people. 

Intensity

Authenticity

Cohesion

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Intensity

Borussia Dortmund is a uniquely intensive footballing experience. Everything about the club is charged with maximum energy and deep emotion. The club colours black and yellow are a visual expression of this intensity. It makes BVB unique and ensures that the club captivates so many people.

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Authenticity

Borussia Dortmund is wholeheartedly loved by its fans. Like them, BVB is deeply connected to the values that characterise its home city Dortmund and the Westfalian region: candour, sincerity and grit. We wear this authenticity as a badge of honour but also bear the scars and worry lines that come with it. It makes BVB endearing and ensures the club is supported by its fans through thick and thin.

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Cohesion

Borussia Dortmund is a spiritual home and extended family for many people. BVB carries enormous appeal: for the people of Dortmund, it is the one constant that provides happiness and solidarity in a city that has experienced so much upheaval. The fans' unconditional loyalty is a visible expression of this cohesion. It has made BVB a crowd magnet and ensures that the club can always rely on its fans even during difficult times.

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Ambition

Borussia Dortmund is an important and successful club. BVB has won many hearts in its long history and delivered many major honours: the UEFA Champions League, European trophies and German championships. The willingness to always give everything for the cause and get up time and again after falling is the visual expression of this ambition. It has made BVB a permanent fixture in the Bundesliga and ensures that it can face its opponents full of confidence and pride.

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1&1

EVONIK

SIGNAL IDUNA PARK

PUMA

1&1

Der führende Anbieter von Breitband und Mobilfunkprodukten 1&1 und der BVB starten heute ihre gemeinsame Partnerschaft. Als neuer Hauptsponsor wird 1&1 künftig nicht nur auf der Trikotbrust präsent sein, wo das Logo in schwarz und weiß abgebildet wird, sondern auch umfangreiche On- und Offline-Werbemaßnahmen durchführen. Anlässlich der beginnenden Partnerschaft geht der neue Trikotsponsor mit einem Fan-Special direkt auf die schwarzgelben Anhänger zu. Zu dem besonderen Angebot, das sich ausschließlich an BVB-Fans richtet, gehört ein ganz besonderes Stück Stoff: Zum Saisonauftakt gibt 1&1 das neue BVB-Heimtrikot gratis zu einer 1&1 All-Net-Flat oder einem 1&1 DSL-Anschluss dazu und der Fan profitiert zusätzlich von sechs Freimonaten und der 1&1 Service Card.

„Wir freuen uns, dass die Partnerschaft mit 1&1 endlich losgeht. 1&1 ist ein innovatives Unternehmen, das mit seinem exklusiven Angebot ein tolles Zeichen an unsere Fans sendet“, erklärt BVB-Geschäftsführer Carsten Cramer.

„Der BVB ist ein sympathischer, ambitionierter Verein, der für einen begeisternden Fußball steht und leidenschaftliche Fans im Rücken hat. Wir freuen uns sehr über die Partnerschaft, von der auch der BVB-Fan im Rahmen vieler Aktionen profitieren wird“, ergänzt Robin Harries, 1&1 Vorstand für Online-Marketing und Vertrieb.

1&1 im Netz

EVONIK

„Die beiden Marken Evonik und BVB ergänzen sich in idealer Weise. Der BVB steht für das intensive Fußballerlebnis, also für Emotionalität, die für uns Brücken zu vielen Menschen baut, die sich gewöhnlich nicht für Spezialchemie interessieren würden. Und Evonik steht für Kreativität. In unserem Kerngeschäft finden wir damit Lösungen für die unterschiedlichsten Kunden. Und im Fußball helfen wir damit dem BVB, als ungewöhnlichster Club Europas wahrgenommen zu werden.“

Christian Kullmann

 

EVONIK im Netz

PUMA

„Moderner Fußball mit schnellen Spielzügen, ein leidenschaftliches Trainerteam, eine faszinierende Mannschaft und nicht zuletzt die Fans im Signal Iduna Park – das alles macht den BVB zu einem Club, der Fußballer, Fußballfreunde und sogar Nicht-Fußballer weltweit begeistert. Diese Euphorie wird durch die Partnerschaft getragen und bietet uns die perfekte Möglichkeit, PUMAs Glaubwürdigkeit als Sportmarke zu unterstreichen. Wir wünschen dem BVB eine erfolgreiche Saison und freuen uns auf bewegenden und mitreißenden Fußball.“

Matthias Bäumer, General Manager BU Teamsport

PUMA im Netz

SIGNAL IDUNA PARK

Für die einen ist es "das schönste Stadion der Welt", für die anderen schlicht "der Tempel" oder auch so etwas wie das zweite Wohnzimmer - der SIGNAL IDUNA PARK. Voller Stolz sind wir Namensgeber der Heimspieltätte des BVB und Partner von Borussia Dortmund. In dieser Eigenschaft haben wir für das Stadion eine Website geschaffen, die mit Infomationen, Aktionen und einzigartigen Bildern das Herz eines jeden Borussen höherschlagen lässt: www.signal-iduna-park.de

Signal Iduna Park im Netz

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Borussia Dortmund - Detailed squad 23/24 | Transfermarkt

Borussia Dortmund - Detailed squad 23/24 | Transfermarkt

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Borussia Dortmund

1

8

1

5

6

Bundesliga

League level:

First Tier

Table position:

4

In league since:

48 years

€464.90m

Total market value

Squad size:

28

Average age:

25.5

Foreigners:

13  46.4 %

National team players:

16

Stadium:

SIGNAL IDUNA PARK  81.365 Seats

Current transfer record:

+€48.85m

+

Borussia Dortmund

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Squad Borussia Dortmund

This page displays a detailed overview of the club's current squad. It shows all personal information about the players, including age, nationality, contract duration and market value. It also contains a table with average age, cumulative market value and average market value for each player position and overall.

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45/46

CompactDetailedGallery

#PlayerAgeNat.ContractMarket value

1

Gregor Kobel 

Goalkeeper

26Jun 30, 2028€40.00m

35

Marcel Lotka

Goalkeeper

22Jun 30, 2025€1.30m

33

Alexander Meyer

Goalkeeper

32Jun 30, 2025€800k

4

Nico Schlotterbeck

Centre-Back

24Jun 30, 2027€35.00m

25

Niklas Süle

Centre-Back

28Jun 30, 2026€22.00m

15

Mats Hummels

Centre-Back

35Jun 30, 2024€6.00m

47

Antonios Papadopoulos

Centre-Back

24Jun 30, 2024€800k

22

Ian Maatsen

Left-Back

21Jun 30, 2024€20.00m

5

Ramy Bensebaini

Left-Back

28Jun 30, 2027€12.00m

26

Julian Ryerson

Right-Back

26Jun 30, 2026€15.00m

17

Marius Wolf

Right-Back

28Jun 30, 2024€6.50m

2

Mateu Morey

Right-Back

24Jun 30, 2024€800k

6

Salih Özcan

Defensive Midfield

26Jun 30, 2026€13.00m

23

Emre Can 

Defensive Midfield

30Jun 30, 2026€12.00m

32

Abdoulaye Kamara

Defensive Midfield

19Jun 30, 2025€1.50m

8

Felix Nmecha 

Central Midfield

23Jun 30, 2028€25.00m

20

Marcel Sabitzer

Central Midfield

29Jun 30, 2027€20.00m

30

Ole Pohlmann 

Central Midfield

22Jun 30, 2025€700k

19

Julian Brandt

Attacking Midfield

27Jun 30, 2026€40.00m

11

Marco Reus

Attacking Midfield

34Jun 30, 2024€7.00m

27

Karim Adeyemi

Left Winger

22Jun 30, 2027€28.00m

43

Jamie Bynoe-Gittens

Left Winger

19Jun 30, 2028€28.00m

10

Jadon Sancho

Left Winger

23Jun 30, 2024€25.00m

21

Donyell Malen

Right Winger

25Jun 30, 2026€35.00m

16

Julien Duranville

Right Winger

17-€8.50m

18

Youssoufa Moukoko

Centre-Forward

19Jun 30, 2026€30.00m

9

Sébastien Haller 

Centre-Forward

29Jun 30, 2026€18.00m

14

Niclas Füllkrug

Centre-Forward

31Jun 30, 2026€13.00m

1353342515472252617262332820301911274310211618914

Squad details by position

Position

ø-Age

Market value

ø-Market value

 

Goalkeeper

26.67

€42.10m

€14.03m

 

Defender

26.44

€118.10m

€13.12m

 

midfield

26.25

€119.20m

€14.90m

 

Attack

23.13

€185.50m

€23.19m

Total:

25.46

€464.90m

€16.60m

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