Going to watch Armenia Bielefeld

DSC Armenia Bielefeld – the club and the town

Bielefeld is on the eastern edge of North Rhine Westphalia, beside an ancient forest called the Teutoburger Wald. Hannover is about 70 kilometres to the north-east and Dortmund is the same distance to the south-west. The city has 327,000 inhabitants is the home of the international baking products company Dr Oetker and the manufacturing giant Schüco.

DSC Armenia Bielefeld - flag with logo
It is also home to DSC Armenia Bielefeld, one of Germany’s oldest football clubs. Although its golden age was in the 1920s and 1930s, Bielefeld has spent 16 seasons in the Bundesliga and currently plays in the second division. The club has retained a large and loyal fanbase and average attendance in 2017/18 was 18,002.

In the early 1980s, I was fortunate to spend two years in Bielefeld. And I lived just around the corner from the Alm – Armenia’s ground.  This is where I first experienced German football.

Bielefeld had just been promoted back into the Bundesliga and was about to embark on a five-year stint in the top tier. The previous season the club had won the 2 Bundesliga in record-breaking style. They scored 120 goals, achieved a 28 match unbeaten run and won 30 of the 38 games. There was a confident a buzz about the club. Attendance and expectations were high.

Since those exciting days, fans have endured a lot for their club. At one point Bielefeld fell right out of the professional leagues. A gradual climb back to the top preceded full-time membership of the “elevator group” – those teams that continually move up and down the divisions.

Despite repeated financial difficulties and the occasional threat of bankruptcy, the club has survived. Long-suffering fans are currently enjoying a period of success. In 2014/15 a run of thrilling victories over bigger clubs took them to the semi-final of the German Cup. Bielefeld were 3. Liga champions the same year and moved up to the 2. Bundesliga. A draw on the last day of the season secured a 15th place finish in 2016/17, which just enough for a further year in the second division. The current season has started well for Bielefeld and the promotion places are still within reach.

Tickets

You can buy them at the fan shop in the Osttribüne of the stadium. There is also an online ticket shop.

Getting to Bielefeld

There are frequent direct trains from Hannover and Dortmund to Bielefeld. The journey will take about an hour from either city.

Getting to the ground

The simplest way to get to the ground from the station is on foot. It will take you about 15 minutes. If you don’t feel like walking, it’s also easy to reach by public transport.

Exactly how you travel depends on where you are sitting or standing in the stadium.

Block 1 – 4 (Südtribüne) and Block M – T (Osttribüne)

Take the tram (Stadtbahn) 4 towards “Universität/Lohmanshof” and get off at “Rudolf-Oetker Halle”.

Block B – J (West-/Nordtribüne)

Take the tram (Stadtbahn) 4 towards “Universität/Lohmanshof” and get off at Graf-von-Stauffenberg-Straße.

Block A1 & A2 (Away end)

Take tram 3 towards Babenhausen Süd and get off at Wittekindstraße.

Inside the ground

The SchücoArena is named after the club’s main sponsor.  It has a capacity of 26,515, with 8,000 standing places. Thanks to a phased ten-year modernisation programme it is a comfortable and modern venue with great visibility throughout.

Key information

  • Website
  • Facebook  Twitter 
  • Email info@arminia-bielefeld.de
  • Telephone +49 (0)1806 – 51 53 02
  • Online Ticket Shop 
  • Ground: SchucoArena
  • Capacity: 26,515
  • Average attendance 17/18: 18,002
  • Address: Melanchtonstraße, 33615 Bielefeld
  • Colours: White and blue
  • Nickname: Die Blauen (the blues)

A few numbers

  • Seasons in the Bundesliga: 16  
  • Position in the all-time Bundesliga table: 21  
  • Biggest home win: 5:0 against Borussia Mönchenglabdbach (8.5.82) and Darmstadt (21.4.79)
  • Stadium capacity: 26.515
  • Highest attendance: 26,329(78/79)
  • 2 Bundesliga champions: 1999
  • 2 Bundesliga Nord champions: 1978 1980
  • West German Champions: 1921/22, 1922/23
  • Westfalen Champions: 1912, 1921-1927, 1933, 1962, 1990
  • West German Cup Winners: 1966
  • Westphalian Cup Winners: 1908, 1932
  • Westfalen Cup: 1991, 2012
  • Bundesliga promotion years: 1970, 1978, 1980, 1996, 1999, 2002, 2004

DSC Armenia Bielefeld – A short history

The early days

At the beginning of the 20th century the nearest thing to sporting clubs in Bielefeld were two social clubs called Teutonia and Terpsichore whose members played a variety bof sports.

In 1904 two Terpsichore members, Alwin Bohlen and Jonny Hennigstein, put forward the idea of starting a football section1904. The club hierarchy turned this down. Their proposal did, however, inspire Emil Schröder to join them in setting up their own club and put an advert in the local paper.

On 14 April 1905 fourteen men met in Restaurant Modershohn, in the cellar of the town hall, and decided to form a club. On 3 May 1905 1. Bielefelder Fußballklub Armenia was founded.

Members paid a monthly fee of one mark and the club colours were blue white and black.

The new team played its first game two weeks later on Kaiser Wilhelm Platz in the town centre against a team from Osnabrück. Armenia players wore orange. We don’t know the result. 

Soon new members started to join and in the autumn Arminia made contact with DFB and played its first league games in Bezirksliga Westfalen in the 1906/07 season. Bielefeld played against Osnabrück teams Teutonia, Olympia 1903 and FC 1899 and came third.

By now other clubs had started to form in the town and in 1907 the Bielefeld Sportverband (Sports Union) was founded. In same year FC Siegfried joined Armenia and the club moved to a new ground in Kaiserstraße (August Bebel Straße today).

Unfortunately, the land was taken over by the town after five months and at the same time, the club found itself beset with financial problems. After a new president improved finances stabilised and in 1910 Armenia moved to Pottenau.

First success and a new home

Bielefeld’s first big success came in the 1912/13 season when they were crowned as Westfalen champions and lost the regional semifinal to Düsseldorf SC.

The outbreak of war stopped the progress of the club which was reduced to playing at district level and won the 1916 and 1917 championships. 1919/20 was first real post-war football season. Unfortunately, travel restrictions imposed by the victorious allies meant the championship could only be played in part (Armenia played 17 out of 18 games. FC Osnabrück 99 only managed 8).

That year Armenia merged with Bielefelder Turngemeinde 1848 with the aim of establishing a big sporting club with many sections. One later DSC won the eastern section of Kreisliga Westfalen, but they had signed an ineligible new player (Friemauth). This led to a 3-month ban and they missed the Westfalen final against Preussen Münster

Next year Bielefeld ended on equal points with Kölner BC 01. A deciding game was played in München Gladbach (now Mönchengladbach). Armenia lost 2:1, but the result was reversed because Cologne had played an ineligible player (Scottish defender Gregor Smith) in a league game against Essen. As a result, points were deducted from Cologne and Armenia won the league. This meant they competed for the first time in the German championship, but lost 0:5 to FC Wacker München

In 1922, as in other towns across Germany, the football and gymnastics clubs separated. In 1922/23, as league champions, Bielefeld played in the regional final against TuRU Düsseldorf, coming back from being 3:1 down at halftime to win in extra time, qualifying for the national finals for the second time. The club booked a special train to transport fans to games. The quarter final in Bochum against SC Union Oberschöneweide was abandoned after 2.5 hours at 0:0. The replay was played in in Berlin. Bielefeld lost 1:2 aftyer conceding a goal in added time.

Walter Claus-Oehler was Bielefeld’s first national player. He made is debut on 10 May 23 against Netherlands. The club would then have to wait 75 years for the next nation callup.

After this the glory days on the national stage were over. Armenia won the Wesfalian championships four times but did not progress from West German to the national championships.

Bielefeld was involved in the first live broadcast of a football match which covered a game against Preußen Münster at Münstermannplatz on 1 November 1925.

On 30 January 1926, the club changed its name to Deutscher Sportclub Armenia Bielefeld and also made the move to the Alm which remains home today.

The new ground opened on 1 May 1926, but success continued to elude DSC, which for a time was eclipsed by another local side – VfB 03 Bielefeld. Attendance dropped and finance worries returned. DSC was saved by lucrative friendlies against Hamburger SV and 1. FC Nürnberg. Bielefeld fans had to wait until 1932 before they could celebrate the club’s  next sporting success – defeating Osnabrück to win the Westfalia Cup. 

There were many reasons for Bielfeld’s lack of success.

One of the greatest was complacency. The 1920s and 1930s saw the dramatic rise of the Arbeitervereine (working class clubs like Schalke, Dortmund), but many Bielefelders did not consider them ‘proper’ football teams or worthy opponents One of these clubs wrote suggesting a friendly. The reply from Bielefeld proposed they learn to play football first. The club was called FC Schalke, who went on to dominate regional and national football throughout the 1930s.

Bielefeld under the Nazis

During the war years players called up for military service, making it impossible to get a team together. Leading members of the club strongly supported the politics of the Nazi regime. Jewish members were expelled and banned from the ground. Fritz Günewald, a former board member had to return an Ehrennadel (badge of honour) He died in the Warsaw ghetto. His badge was returned in 2003.

After the war

The club reformed after the war and joined Landesliga Westfalen, but was relegated to Bezirksliga in 1947, placing Bielefeld in the third tier for the first time. The next season (1947/48) DSC looked set for promotion but were docked 14 points for fielding an ineligible player

The next year the regional  Landesliga was expanded to include Armenia, who won the league and got promotion to Oberliga West

Relegation followed at the end of the next season and a further drop in 1954 returned Bielefeld to the third tier.

Performances then gradually improved and by 1962 Bielefeld was back in the second division. The club didn’t qualify for Bundesliga when it was formed in 63 and only just made it into the league below (Regionalliga)

Back to the top

Bielefeld just missed promotion in 1967 and finally made it to the top tier in 1970.

In 1970 Bielefeld was involved in a match-fixing scandal. As a result, two players were banned for life. Although the club was allowed to play 1971/72 in the Bundesliga it was demoted at the end of the season. Left with massive debts, its very existence at risk.

But by the end of 1978 Armenia wasback in the Bundesliga. Demotion the next year was followed by promotion the year after. This was one of Bielefeld’s most successful seasons ever. Key statistics include. 30 wins out of 38 games, 28 game unbeaten streak and 11:0 win over Hannover.

Despite struggling to avoid relegation the club remained in the Bundesliga for the next five years

Gradual decline

But falling attendance compounded ongoing financial problems led eventually to relegation in 1985. The club then went into free fall, dropping out of the professional leagues altogether and continued to face horrendous financial difficulties.

Between 1994 and 2005 Bielefeld enjoyed steady improvement. Veterans Thomas van Helen, Armin Eck and Fritz Walter signed. The club was promoted to Regionalliga West/Südwest, then the 2 Bundesliga and eventually back to the Bundesliga for 1995/96

Ups and downs

Despite signing international star Stefan Kuntz the club finished 14th and was relegated in 1997/98.

The 1998/99 was another promotion season and Bruno Labbadia was the league top scorer with 28 goals

In 1999/00 a run of 10 successive defeats was the low point of a miserable season which ended in yet another relegation. And Bielefeld just avoided a further drop in 2000/01.

Promotion and relegation were to be the pattern for the next decade.

The glory days return

2014/15 was a brilliant season. They reached the semi-final of the cup by beating Hertha BSC, SV Werder Bremen and Borussia Mönchengladbach) and emerged as 3 Liga champions.

2015/16 was stable but it 2016/17 relegation was only narrowly avoided. The battle to secure second division status went right down to last two games – 6:1 win over Eintracht Braunschweig and 1:1 draw against Dresden

The club still has carries debts from the 2000s and being a Bielefeld fan continues to have low as well as high points. But the 2017/18 season was a good one and a times promotion to the Bundesliga appeared to be within grasp.

Famous players

Born in nearby Schloß Holte Ewald Lienen began his professional career with Arminia in 1974. He left the club in 1977 for Borussia Mönchengladbach. His second spell from 1981 to 1983 coincided with the most successful period in the club’s recent history. He had a second term at Borussia before ending his career with MSV Duisburg. Since then he has managed 14 clubs in Germany and abroad and is currently with FC St Pauli.

Uli Stein began his professional career with Bielefeld, making 124 appearances between 1976 and 1980. He also played for Hamburger SV (1980-87 and 1994-95), Eintracht Frankfurt (1987-94) before a second spell with Armenia (1995-97). He also played six times for the national side between 1983 and 1986.

He was known for his tempestuous nature and sometimes his actions had negative consequences. For example, in 1986 he was dropped from the national team after calling Franz Beckenbauer a Suppenkasper (laughing stock). In 1987 he was sacked by Hamburger SV after punching Bayern player Jürgen Wegman after he scored a goal during a super cup final.

Bruno Labbadia played for SV Darmstadt, Hamburger SV, 1 FC Kaiserslautern, Bayern Munich, 1. FC Köln, Werder Bremen, and Karlsruher SC. He also made 98 appearances and scored 50 goals or Arminia Bielefeld between 1998 and 2001. Since 2003 he has managed 6 Bundesliga clubs, most recently Hamburger SV.

Werner Hellwig (1925 – 2008) was a defender.

He began his career during the war with Kriegspielgemeinschaft Bielefeld  and joined Armenia in 1944.

He was badly injured and lost arm 1944 but continued to play in the early post-war years

For one year he was given special permission to take throw-ins with one arm

Walter Claus-Oehler (1887-1941) was a left half. He played for Armenia from 1918 to 1935 and was the first Bielefelder to play for Germany. He died in Paris during the war.

Stefan Kuntz was a striker who scored 179 Bundesliga goals. He began his career with Borussia Neunkirchen before signing for VfL Bochum in 1983. Between 1980 and 2005 he played for 9 clubs. He played for Bielefeld from 1996 to 1998, making 65 appearances and scoring 25 goals. With Kaiserslautern he won the cup in 1990 and the league in 1991.

He played for Germany 25 times and scored 6 goals and was a member of the squad which won the 1996 European Championship.

Find out more about German football

Discovering German football
Are you planning a football trip to Germany?

This short guide will help you plan your trip and decide which clubs to visit. There is also key information on every club in the top three divisions as well as links to the best books, websites, blogs and podcasts.

Buy now from Amazon UK

Buy now from Amazon US

Going to watch SC Paderborn

SC Paderborn

The British Army of the Rhine once had a huge barracks at Paderborn, and over the years thousands of young Brits have gone to SC Paderborn 07 for their football while away from home.

The club can trace its roots rights back to 1907 when one of its many predecessor clubs was founded. The club we know today was formed in 1985 following a merger of two local sides and adopted its current name in 1997. Between then and 2005 Paderborn played in regional leagues and for the last 12 years, apart from one season in the Bundesliga, has moved between the 2nd and 3rd divisions.

The wrong kind of record

In 2016/17 the club came very close to making history as the first football club to drop from the Bundesliga to the fourth division in three successive seasons. Having earned promotion to the Bundesliga for the first time in 2013/14 Paderborn endured a miserable season in the top division, finished bottom and dropped straight back into the 2 Bundesliga. In 2015/16 the misery continued, and Paderborn came bottom again. A third successive relegation in 2016/17 was avoided despite finishing in 18th place yet again because 1860 München, having been relegated from 2 Bundesliga, failed to meet DFB financial deadlines. As a result, the Bavarian club was refused a professional license and put into a Regionalliga. This allowed Paderborn to hang onto league status.

Moving on up

Paderborn fans have enjoyed the 2017/18 season. Strong performances before and after the winter break meant their club had secured promotion with three games still to play. All that remained for the final stages of the season was a battle with Magdeburg for first place.

SC Paderborn at a glance

Website: http://www.scp07.de/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/meinSCP

Twitter: https://twitter.com/SCPaderborn07

Email: info@scpaderborn07.de

Telephone: +49(0) 5251 8771907

Online Ticket Shop: https://www.eventimsports.de/ols/scp07/

Ground: Benteler Arena

Capacity: 15,000

Average attendance 17/18: 8,035

Address: Paderborner Straße 89, 33104 Paderborn

Colours: Black white blue

Getting to Paderborn

Paderborn has its own airport, but there are no longer any flights to and from the UK. The city is 60 miles to the east of the Ruhr conurbation and 90 miles south-west of Hanover. It has good rail links, so the simplest way to get there is to fly either to Dortmund Düsseldorf or Hanover and then get the train.

Dortmund Airport

There are flights here from London Stansted and London Luton. You need to catch a shuttle bus to Dortmund station where you can catch a train to Paderborn.

Düsseldorf Airport

There are flights here from Birmingham, London Stanstead, London Heathrow, London Gatwick, Manchester, Cardiff, Glasgow and Newcastle. The airport has a station where you can continue your journey to Paderborn.

Hanover Airport

There are flights here from Birmingham, Manchester, London City and London Heathrow. When you arrive you take a local train (S5) from the airport to Hanover station. These trains run every 30 minutes and the journey takes 18 minutes. There are frequent trains between Hanover and Paderborn, and it takes about 2 hours to get there.

If you are not in a hurry

A more leisurely way to get here would be by train – take the Eurostar from London St Pancras to Brussels, change there for Cologne and then continue to Paderborn. This costs about £150.

If you have plenty of time, National Express will take you from London to the region by bus for about £40 return. But be prepared for a very long journey!

 

Getting to the ground

Your match ticket entitles you to free local bus travel from the town centre to the stadium. The number 68 towards “Schöne Aussicht” will take there from the station in about 15 minutes. You get off at “Arena/Almeaue”.

Find out more about German football

2 Bundesliga – a great advert for German football

The opening game of Germany’s 2017/18 second division campaign was broadcast live on BT Sport, presumably in response to growing interest in the UK in the 2 Bundesliga. If you managed to catch this game between VfL Bochum and 1 FC St Pauli you will have seen a pulsating, hard-fought game played in front of a capacity crowd of noisy, passionate fans. If you were lucky enough to be there you will have experienced the thrill, excitement and sense of occasion of a German football match.

You don’t have to limit yourself to Bundesliga to have a great time watching football in Germany. You can also have memorable experiences in the second division. It will cost you less than the Bundesliga and tickets will be easier to come by. The crowds might be a bit smaller, but the atmosphere will be just as thrilling as in the top tier.

Who to watch

Where you go depends very much on where you want to stay in Germany, the kind of club you are interested in and they sort of experience you are looking for.

Location

The ideal base for a football visit to Germany is a city that has a large airport and good transport links is surrounded by a range of clubs. Football is played in Germany on Friday, Saturday and Sunday – so if you come over for a long weekend and if the fixtures work out right, you could treat yourself to a game from all three top divisions.

Crowd size

The average attendance at 2 Bundesliga games last season was 21,735, but this figure conceals a very wide range. At 55,515 average attendance at VfB Stuttgart was higher than that of many Bundesliga clubs. At the other extreme, 6,731 fans came on average to see SV Sandhausen. So if you want to experience a Bundesliga-sized crowd you need to look for the clubs with the highest attendance figures. If you prefer something smaller look further down the table. Another factor might be the number of season tickets sold.

Type of club

There are several kinds of club in the second division – all worth a visit, but for very different reasons.

First, there are the teams that have just dropped out of the Bundesliga and are fighting for a return to the top flight. Sometimes these are very big clubs with Bundesliga levels of attendance and the atmosphere to match. This season’s newly-relegated teams are FC Ingolstadt and SV Darmstadt.

Then there are the so-called sleeping giants. These are the clubs that were once highly successful, whose fans dream that a return to the glory days is just around the corner. I am thinking of clubs like 1 FC Nürnberg, 1 FC Kaiserslautern, Fortuna Düsseldorf, Dynamo Dresden, Eintracht Braunschweig and VfL Bochum.

There are also clubs with a long and proud history, with armies of loyal and passionate fans, but with much less financial security. I mean clubs like MSV Duisburg and Armenia Bielefeld whose fans endure a double life of hope and despair. For them, exhilarating promotion campaigns seem to be followed by demoralising relegations battles.

You can use this table to help you decide. Click on the name of the club for more information.

Club

Average attendance 2016/17

Season tickets sold

Convenient Airport

FC St Pauli

29,401

15,000

Hamburg

1 FC Nürnberg

28,834

18,000

Nürnberg/Munich

Dynamo Dresden

20,859

18,000

Berlin/Leipzig

1 FC Kaiserslautern

26,368

11,971

Frankfurt

Fortuna Düsseldorf

25,978

12,000

Cologne/Düsseldorf/Dortmund

Eintracht Braunschweig

21,419

16,000

Hannover

1 FC Union Berlin

20,859

11,266

Berlin

Armenia Bielefeld

17,504

8,300

Düsseldorf/Hannover

Bochum

16,933

6,659

Düsseldorf/Dortmund

FC Ingolstadt

14,601

6,800

Munich

SC Darmstadt

16,753

10,900

Frankfurt

Duisburg

14,175

6,659

Düsseldorf/Dortmund

1 FC Heidenheim

12,518

7,100

Stuttgart

SpVgg Greuther Fürth

9,525

5,250

Munich

Erzgebirge Aue

8,588

3,110

Leipzig

Jahn Regensburg

6,320

3,600

Munich

SV Sandhausen

6,731

2,500

Stuttgart

Holstein Kiel

5,711

4,200

Hamburg

Getting around

Travel in Germany is a joy. Trains are quick, reliable and comfortable. Public transport in towns and cities is integrated so that you can use the same ticket on train, tram, bus or underground. And if you get the right ticket you can travel long distances relatively cheaply. The transport organisations in big towns and cities usually have an English section on their website to help you plan journeys and get the best possible deals. So if I am in the Ruhr area, for example, I would go to the VRR website. If I am travelling further afield I use these three websites:

Loco2 is an online company that specialises in train travel. You can use them to buy tickets to and from anywhere in Europe. You simply provide departure, destination, date and time and they do the rest in seconds.

You can also plan your trips and buy Print@Home or e-tickets at the Deutsche Bahn (German Railway) website. They also give information and advice on the best deals.

My favourite travel website is The Man in Seat 61. Its author, Mark Smith, knows everything there is to know about train travel in Europe and beyond. If you go to the Germany section you will find advice on buying tickets, interactive maps to help you plan routes, general information about travel in Germany and links to other helpful sites.

At many clubs your ticket includes free travel by local public transport(except ICE trains) to and from the game. This is definitely worth investigating if you buy your ticket in advance.

What have I missed?

I have done my very best to check all my information, to include every club and to organise them conveniently. But I have not been able to visit every single club in person and am certain to have made mistakes. There may also be better ways of getting to and from particular places and other lower league clubs that could be included. If you spot anything, I would really appreciate it if you could let me know.

Find out more about German football

Borussia Mönchengladbach’s great escape

Five years ago this month marks the final chapter of one of the most exciting Bundesliga comeback stories ever.  It’s the story of how  Borussia Mönchengladbach stepped back from the brink of relegation.

 A dreadful season

The 2010/11 season had begun disastrously for the Borussen.  By February 2011 they had collected only 16 points from 22 games and had conceded 56 goals.  They hadn’t won at home for 9 games.They were bottom of the league and 7 points from safety.  The transfer window was closed and relegation seemed unavoidable. In February 2011 a new coach was appointed who was to bring about a remarkable transformation in fortunes.  His name was Lucien  Favre.

Last minute fightback

His appointment led to an immediate improvement in form.  In the next 12 games the team accrued 20 points, conceded a paltry 9 goals and won five of the last 8 home games.  It was enough to shift them to third from bottom and avoid automatic relegation. 

Although they had to do now to secure top tier status was to beat local rivals VfL Bochum over two relegation/promotion games.

Last gasp winner

On 19 May 2011 Borussia faced Bochum in front of a capacity home crowd.  The score remained 0:0 for the full 90 minutes.  It was only in the 3rd minute of added time that the home side eventually broke the deadlock.  A long throw into the box was carried on by a header. A second header from Camargo  was parried to the side by the keeper with a fingertip save.  The cross back across goal was mis-controlled  by players from both sides until finally a shot at point blank range from Camargo put the ball over the line. The crowd went wild, the Bochum players sank to the ground in despair.  A few seconds later the first leg was over – Borussia had won 1:0.  There is a video of the dramatic last seconds of this game on Facebook.

In the second leg Borussia trailed for most of the match following an own-goal in the 24th minute from Nordweidt.  But with 18 minutes remaining Marco Reus scored.  Borussia Mönchengladbach  won  2:1 on aggregate and remained in the top tier.

Click below to find out more about Borussia Mönchengladbach

bm-coverv3

Pin It on Pinterest