Borussia Dortmund Full name Ballspielverein Borussia 09 e.V. Dortmund Nickname(s) Die Borussen Die Schwarzgelben (The Black and Yellows)Der BVB (The BVB)Short name BVB Founded 19 December 1909; 114 years ago (1909-12-19 ) Ground Signal Iduna Park Capacity 81,365[1] President Reinhard Rauball Chairman Hans-Joachim Watzke (CEO) Head Coach Marco Rose League Bundesliga 2020–21 3rd Website Club website
Current season
Borussia Dortmund (BVB ) is a German Sports club in Dortmund . It is most noted for its football team that plays in the Bundesliga . Dortmund is one of the most successful clubs in German football history.
Besides football, the club has handball and table tennis departments since the end of 2004, the club also has a fan section, which represents the interests of the team supporters. In the 2010/11 season the matches were visited by an average of 79.151 people. This means that 98,1 percent of the seats were sold.
The official name reads ball play association Borussia 1909 registered association Dortmund and frequently shortened with BVB or BVB 09. The club was the first German team to win an international title (1965 Cup Winners Cup against Liverpool FC ) and also the first to win the newly installed UEFA Champions League (1997, final 3-1 win about Juventus ).
The football (soccer) team plays their home games in the Signal Iduna Park (formerly Westfalen Stadion) in Dortmund . Borussia Dortmund competes in the highest German league, the Bundesliga .
As of 10 January 2022(Source: https://www.transfermarkt.de/borussia-dortmund/kader/verein/16 ) Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Manager Ottmar Hitzfeld led Borussia Dortmund to their first UEFA Champions League title in 1997
Start
End
Manager
1 July 1963
30 June 1965
Hermann Eppenhoff
1 July 1965
30 June 1966
Willi Multhaup
1 July 1966
10 April 1968
Heinz Murach
18 April 1968
16 December 1968
Oßwald Pfau
7 December 1968
17 March 1969
Helmut Schneider
21 March 1969
30 June 1970
Hermann Lindemann
1 July 1970
21 December 1971
Horst Witzler
3 January 1972
30 June 1972
Herbert Burdenski
1 July 1972
30 October 1972
Detlev Brüggemann
1 November 1972
1 March 1973
Max Michallek
2 March 1973
30 June 1973
Dieter Kurrat
1 July 1973
30 June 1974
Janos Bedl
1 July 1974
1 February 1976
Otto Knefler
1 February 1976
18 June 1976
Horst Buhtz
18 June 1976
30 April 1978
Otto Rehhagel
21 May 1978
29 April 1979
Carl-Heinz Rühl
30 April 1979
30 June 1979
Uli Maslo
1 July 1979
10 May 1981
Udo Lattek
11 May 1981
30 June 1981
Rolf Bock
1 July 1981
30 June 1982
Branko Zebec
1 July 1982
5 April 1983
Karl-Heinz Feldkamp
6 April 1983
30 June 1983
Helmut Witte
1 July 1983
23 October 1983
Uli Maslo
31 October
15 November 1983
Heinz-Dieter Tippenhauer
16 November 1983
30 June 1984
Horst Franz
1 July 1984
24 October 1984
Friedhelm Konietzka
28 October 1984
30 June 1985
Erich Ribbeck
1 July 1985
20 April 1986
Pál Csernai
20 April 1986
26 June 1988
Reinhard Saftig
27 June 1988
30 June 1991
Horst Köppel
1 July 1991
30 June 1997
Ottmar Hitzfeld
1 July 1997
30 June 1998
Nevio Scala
1 July 1998
4 February 2000
Michael Skibbe
5 February 2000
12 April 2000
Bernd Krauss
16 April 2000
30 June 2000
Udo Lattek
1 July 2000
30 June 2004
Matthias Sammer
1 July 2004
18 December 2006
Bert van Marwijk
19 December 2006
12 March 2007
Jürgen Röber
12 March 2007
19 May 2008
Thomas Doll
1 July 2008
30 June 2015
Jürgen Klopp
1 July 2015
30 May 2017
Thomas Tuchel
1 July 2017
9 December 2017
Peter Bosz
10 Dezember 2017
30 June 2018
Peter Stöger
1 July 2018
12 December 2020
Lucien Favre
13 December 2020
30 June 2021
Edin Terzić
1 July 2021
May, 2022
Marco Rose
Jul 1, 2022
present
Edin Terzic[3]
*Bundesliga:
Winners (8): 1955–56, 1956–57, 1962–63, 1994–95, 1995–96, 2001–02, 2010–11 , 2011–12
Runners-up (4): 1948–49, 1960–61, 1965–66, 1991–92, 2012-13, 2013-14, 2015-16, 2018-19, 2019-20Winners (2): 1964–65, 1988–89, 2011-12, 2016-17, 2020-21
Runners-up (2): 1962–63, 2007–08, 2013-2014, 2014-15, 2015-16Winners (3): 1989, 1995, 1996, 2013, 2014, 2019
Runners-up (1): 2011, 2012, 2016, 2017, 2020, 2021Runners-up (1): 2003Winners (1): 1996–97
Runners-Up (1): 2012-13Winners (1) : 1965–66Runners-up (2) : 1992–93, 2001–02Runners-up (1) : 1997Winners (1) : 1997 Media related to Borussia Dortmund at Wikimedia Commons
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Borussia Mönchengladbach 12–0 Borussia Dortmund
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