1999–2000 Tennis Borussia Berlin season

Tennis Borussia Berlin
1999–2000 season
Manager Winfried Schäfer
Stadium Mommsenstadion (11), Olympiastadion (6)
2. Bundesliga 13th (relegated)
DFB-Pokal Third round
Berliner Landespokal Winners (Reserve team)
Top goalscorer League:
Saša Ćirić (14)

All:
Saša Ćirić (16)
Highest home attendance 9,600 (vs.
FC Energie Cottbus)
Lowest home attendance 1,400 (vs.
SC Fortuna Köln)
Average home league attendance 3,576

The 1999–2000 season was the ninth time Tennis Borussia Berlin played in the 2. Fußball-Bundesliga, the second highest tier of the German football league system. After 34 league games, Tennis Borussia finished 13th. Saša Ćirić scored 14 of the club's 42 league goals. However, ten days following the last round of league games, the German Football Association revoked TeBe's license for the following season, and as a result, the club were relegated instead of the Stuttgarter Kickers.[1] The club made it to the third round of the DFB-Pokal where they lost 3–2 after extra time to Hertha BSC. The club's reserve team, Tennis Borussia Berlin (Amateure), won the Berliner Landespokal, beating Berliner FC Dynamo 2–0 in the final at the Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Sportpark.

1999–2000 Tennis Borussia Berlin squad

No. Position Player
30 Germany GK Thaddäus Bohne
36 Germany GK Nico Creutzmann
16 Germany GK Roman Görtz
1 Switzerland GK Andreas Hilfiker
15 Turkey DF Taşkın Aksoy
21 Germany DF Manuel Benthin
25 Germany DF Ansgar Brinkmann
22 Germany DF Matthias Hamann
6 Germany DF Olaf Kapagiannidis
4 Slovakia DF Ivan Kozák
5 Germany DF Jens Melzig
33 Czech Republic DF Jan Suchopárek
17 Germany DF Ifet Taljević
2 Germany DF Marko Tredup
3 Switzerland DF Marco Walker
35 Serbia and Montenegro MF Duško Adamović
No. Position Player
8 Bosnia and Herzegovina MF Bruno Akrapović
19 Croatia MF Tonči Boban
Turkey MF Müslüm Can
13 Germany MF Enrico Kern
Turkey MF Celaleddin Koçak
7 Morocco MF Abderrahim Ouakili
14 Republic of Macedonia MF Artim Šakiri
23 Poland MF Zbigniew Szewczyk
18 Germany MF Niclas Weiland
9 Republic of Macedonia FW Saša Ćirić
10 Spain FW Francisco Copado
11 Russia FW Sergei Kiriakov
26 Germany FW Mike Lünsmann
20 Germany FW Uwe Rösler
27 Germany FW Christian Tiffert

1999–2000 fixtures

Player statistics

Pos Player Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
2. Bundesliga DFB-Pokal Total
MF Serbia and Montenegro Duško Adamović 10 0 0 1 0
MF Bosnia and Herzegovina Bruno Akrapović 180 2 0 200
DF Turkey Taşkın Aksoy 10 0 0 1 0
DF Germany Manuel Benthin 40 0 0 4 0
MF Croatia Tonči Boban 40 0 0 4 0
GK Germany Thaddäus Bohne 20 0 0 2 0
DF Germany Ansgar Brinkmann 291 2 0 311
DF Turkey Müslüm Can 30 1 0 4 0
FW Republic of Macedonia Saša Ćirić 3214 2 2 3416
FW Spain Francisco Copado 212 2 0 232
GK Germany Nico Creutzmann 10 0 0 1 0
GK Germany Roman Görtz 20 0 0 2 0
DF Germany Matthias Hamann 251 2 0 271
GK Switzerland Andreas Hilfiker 320 2 0 340
DF Germany Olaf Kapagiannidis 70 0 0 7 0
MF Germany Enrico Kern 70 0 0 7 0
FW Russia Sergei Kiriakov 283 2 0 303
MF Turkey Celaleddin Koçak 30 1 0 4 0
MF Slovakia Ivan Kozák 300 2 0 320
FW Germany Mike Lünsmann 50 0 0 5 0
DF Germany Jens Melzig 160 0 0 160
MF Morocco Abderrahim Ouakili 257 2 0 277
FW Germany Uwe Rösler 286 2 3 309
MF Republic of Macedonia Artim Šakiri 140 0 0 140
DF Czech Republic Jan Suchopárek 231 2 0 251
MF Poland Zbigniew Szewczyk 200 0 0 200
DF Germany Ifet Taljević 10 0 0 1 0
FW Germany Christian Tiffert 82 0 0 8 2
DF Germany Marko Tredup 291 2 0 311
DF Switzerland Marco Walker 323 2 1 344
MF Germany Niclas Weiland 170 0 0 170

Final league position – 13th

1999–2000 2. Fußball-Bundesliga: extract from the final league table[2]
Pos
Team
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Points
1 1. FC Köln (C) 34 19 8 7 68 39 +29 65
12 SV Waldhof Mannheim 34 10 12 12 50 56 –6 42
13 Tennis Borussia Berlin (R) 34 10 10 14 42 50 –8 40
14 FC St. Pauli 34 8 15 11 37 45 –8 39
18 Karlsruher SC (R) 34 5 12 17 35 56 –21 27

References

  1. Bossmann, Berries (6 June 2000). "DFB verweigert TeBe die Lizenz". Die Welt (in German). Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  2. "Abschlusstabelle der 2. Bundesliga 1999/2000". fussballdaten.de (in German). 26 May 2000. Retrieved 7 December 2011.

External links

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