German football clubs in European competitions

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Points by season
(UEFA coefficient)[1]
Season Points
1998-99 6.357
1999-00 11.071
2000-01 11.062
2001-02 13.500
2002-03 9.142
2003-04 4.714
2004-05 10.571
2005-06 10.437
2006-07 9.500
2007-08 13.500
2008-09 12.687
2009-10 18.083
2010-11 15.666
2011-12 15.250
2012-13 17.928
2013-14 14.714
2014-15 15.857

German football clubs hold the 3rd place in UEFA ranking and represented by 4 clubs in UEFA Champions League and 3 clubs in UEFA Europa League.[2] The last years the German football has risen and that can be confirmed from the appearance two German clubs in the final of 2013-14 Champions League. The German football has won the interest all of Europe because the majority of associations are financially healthy and the spectators in stadiums have been rising.[3][4]

During first years of European competitions Germany was divided to West and East Germany. So initially the German football represented by two countries and two different championships, the Bundesliga and the DDR-Oberliga. After the German reunified on October 1990, Bundesliga became the league for all of Germany. West German football clubs have entered European association football competitions since season 1955-56, when Rot-Weiss Essen took part in European Cup competition. East German football clubs have entered European association football competitions two years later, since season 1957-58, when FC Erzgebirge Aue took part in European Cup competition.

So far, the German clubs have won 7 times the Champions League/European Cup (Bayern, Dortmund and Hamburg), 6 times the Europa League/Uefa cup (Mönchengladbach, Bayern, Eintracht Frankfurt, Leverkusen, Schalke), 5 times the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup (Bayern, Bremen, Dortmund, Hamburg, Magdeburg), 1 times the UEFA Super Cup (Bayern), 9 times the UEFA Intertoto Cup (Karlsruhe, Schalke,Stuttgart, Bremen, Hamburg and Hertha).[5]

Finals and cups

Champions League/European Cup

Club Won Runner-up Years won Years runner-up
Bayern Munich 5 5 1974, 1975, 1976, 2001, 2013 1982, 1987, 1999, 2010, 2012
Hamburg 1 1 1983 1980
Borussia Dortmund 1 1 1997 2013
Eintracht Frankfurt 0 1 &
1960
Borussia Mönchengladbach 0 1 &
1977
Bayer Leverkusen 0 1 &
2002

Europa League/UEFA Cup

Team Winners Runners-up Years won Years runner-up
Borussia Mönchengladbach 2 2 1975, 1979 1973, 1980
Eintracht Frankfurt 1 0 1980
Bayer Leverkusen 1 0 1988
Bayern Munich 1 0 1996
Schalke 04 1 0 1997
Borussia Dortmund 0 2 1993, 2002
Hamburg 0 1 1982
Köln 0 1 1986
Stuttgart 0 1 1989
Werder Bremen 0 1 2009

UEFA Cup Winner's Cup

Team Winners Runners-Up Years Won Years Runners-Up
Hamburg 1 1 (1977) (1968)
Borussia Dortmund 1 0 (1966) -
Bayern Munich 1 0 (1967) -
Magdeburg East Germany 1 0 (1974) -
Werder Bremen 1 0 (1992) -
1860 Munich 0 1 - (1965)
Fortuna Düsseldorf 0 1 - (1979)
Carl Zeiss Jena East Germany 0 1 - (1981)
Lokomotive Leipzig East Germany 0 1 - (1987)
Stuttgart 0 1 - (1998)

Full European record

UEFA Champions League/European Cup

After German reunification
Year Team Progress Score Opponents Venue(s)
1992–93 VfB Stuttgart First round 4–4 a England Leeds United 3-0 home, 1-4 away
1993–94 Werder Bremen 3rd in Group Stage N/A Italy Milan, Portugal Porto, Belgium Anderlecht
1994–95 Bayern Munich Semi-finals 2–5 Netherlands Ajax 0-0 home, 2-5 away
1995–96 Borussia Dortmund Quarter-finals 0–3 Netherlands Ajax 0-2 home, 0-1 away
1996–97 Borussia Dortmund Winner 3–1 Italy Juventus
1997–98 Bayern Munich Quarter-finals 0–1 Germany Borussia Dortmund 0-0 home, 0-1 away
Bayer Leverkusen Quarter-finals 1–4 Spain Real Madrid 1-1 home, 0-3 away
Borussia Dortmund Semi-finals 0–2 Spain Real Madrid 0-0 home, 0-2 away
1998–99 Kaiserslautern Quarter-finals 0–6 Germany Bayern Munich 0-2 home, 0-4 away
Bayern Munich Final 1–2 England Manchester United
1999–00 Bayern Munich Semi-finals 2–3 Spain Real Madrid 2-1 home, 0-2 away
Bayer Leverkusen 3rd in first Group Stage N/A Italy Lazio, Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv, Slovenia Maribor
Hertha BSC 4th in second Group Stage N/A Spain Barcelona, Portugal Porto, Czech Republic Sparta Prague
Borussia Dortmund 3rd in first Group Stage N/A Norway Rosenborg, Netherlands Feyenoord, Portugal Boavista
2000–01 Bayern Munich Winner 1–1 (3–1 p) Spain Valencia
Bayer Leverkusen 3rd in first Group Stage N/A Spain Real Madrid, Russia Spartak Moscow, Portugal Sporting CP
Hamburger SV 3rd in first Group Stage N/A Spain Deportivo La Coruña, Greece Panathinaikos, Italy Juventus
Munich 1860 Third qualifying round 1–3 England Leeds United 0-1 home, 1-2 away
2001–02 Bayern Munich Quarter-finals 2–3 Spain Real Madrid 2-1 home, 0-2 away
Schalke 04 4th in first Group Stage N/A Greece Panathinaikos, England Liverpool, Spain Mallorca
Borussia Dortmund 3rd in first Group Stage N/A England Liverpool, Portugal Boavista, Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv
Bayer Leverkusen Final 1–2 Spain Real Madrid
2002–03 Borussia Dortmund 3rd in second Group Stage N/A Italy Milan, Spain Real Madrid, Russia Lokomotiv Moscow
Bayer Leverkusen 4th in second Group Stage N/A Spain Barcelona, Italy Inter Milan, England Newcastle United
Bayern Munich 4th in first Group Stage N/A Italy Milan, Spain Deportivo La Coruña, France RC Lens
2003–04 Bayern Munich Round of 16 1–2 Spain Real Madrid 1-1 home, 0-1 away
VfB Stuttgart Round of 16 0–1 England Chelsea 0-1 home, 0-0 away
Borussia Dortmund Third qualifying round 3–3 (2–4 p) Belgium Club Brugge 2-1 home, 1-2 away
2004–05 Werder Bremen Round of 16 2–10 France Lyon 0-3 home, 2-7 away
Bayern Munich Quarter finals 5–6 England Chelsea 3-2 home, 2-4 away
Bayer Leverkusen Round of 16 2–6 England Liverpool 1-3 home, 1-3 away
2005–06 Bayern Munich Round of 16 2–5 Italy Milan 1-1 home, 1-4 away
Schalke 04 3rd in Group Stage N/A Italy Milan, Netherlands PSV Eindhoven, Turkey Fenerbahçe S.K.
Werder Bremen Round of 16 4–4 Italy Juventus 3-2 home, 1-2 away
2006–07 Bayern Munich Quarter-finals 2–4 Italy Milan 2-2 home, 0-2 away
Werder Bremen 3rd in Group Stage N/A England Chelsea, Spain Barcelona, Bulgaria Levski Sofia
Hamburger SV 4th in Group Stage N/A England Arsenal, Portugal Porto, Russia CSKA Moscow
2007–08 VfB Stuttgart 4th in Group Stage N/A Spain Barcelona, France Lyon, Scotland Rangers
Schalke 04 Quarter-finals 0–2 Spain Barcelona 0-1 home, 0-1 away
Werder Bremen 3rd in Group Stage N/A Spain Real Madrid, Greece Olympiacos, Italy Lazio
2008–09 Bayern Munich Quarter-finals 1–5 Spain Barcelona 1-1 home, 0-4 away
Werder Bremen 3rd in Group Stage N/A Greece Panathinaikos, Italy Internazionale, Cyprus Anorthosis
Schalke 04 Third qualifying round 1–4 Spain Atlético Madrid 1-0 home, 0-4 away
2009–10 VfL Wolfsburg 3rd in Group Stage N/A England Manchester United, Russia CSKA Moscow, Turkey Beşiktaş
Bayern Munich Final 0–2 Italy Internazionale
VfB Stuttgart Round of 16 1–5 Spain Barcelona 1-1 home, 0-4 away
2010–11 Bayern Munich Round of 16 3–3 Italy Internazionale 2-3 home, 1-0 away
Schalke 04 Semi-finals 1–6 England Manchester United 0-2 home, 1-4 away
Werder Bremen 4th in Group Stage N/A England Tottenham Hotspur, Italy Internazionale, Netherlands Twente
2011–12 Borussia Dortmund 4th in Group Stage N/A England Arsenal, France Marseille, Greece Olympiacos F.C.
Bayer Leverkusen Round of 16 2–10 Spain Barcelona 1-3 home, 1-7 away
Bayern Munich Final 1–1 (3–4 p) England Chelsea
2012–13 Borussia Dortmund Final 1–2 Germany Bayern Munich
Bayern Munich Winner 2–1 Germany Borussia Dortmund
Schalke 04 Round of 16 3–4 Turkey Galatasaray 2-3 home, 1-1 away
Borussia Mönchengladbach Play-off round 3–3 Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv 1-3 home, 2-1 away
2013–14 Bayern Munich Semi-finals 0–5 Spain Real Madrid 0-4 home, 0-1 away
Borussia Dortmund Quarter-finals 2–3 Spain Real Madrid 2-0 home, 0-3 away
Bayer Leverkusen Round of 16 1–6 France Paris Saint-Germain 0-4 home, 1-2 away
Schalke 04 Round of 16 2–9 Spain Real Madrid 1-6 home, 1-3 away
2014–15 Bayern Munich Semi-finals 3–5 Spain Barcelona 3-2 home, 0-3 away
Borussia Dortmund Round of 16 1–5 Italy Juventus 1-2 home, 0-3 away
Bayer Leverkusen Round of 16 1–1 (2–3 p) Spain Atletico Madrid 1-0 home, 0-1 away
Schalke 04 Round of 16 4–5 Spain Real Madrid 0-2 home, 4-3 away

Notes

  • ^a Stuttgart would have won on away goals; however, it was realised that in the second leg between Leeds United and Stuttgart, Stuttgart had substituted a fourth foreign player. At the time, a maximum of three foreign players was allowed. The game was awarded to Leeds United with a score of 3–0, making it 3–3 on aggregate with no difference in away goals. A play-off match in Barcelona was ordered, which Leeds United won 2–1.

References

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External links

  • rsssf German Clubs In European Cups