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1. FC Saarbrücken

1. FC Saarbrücken (German: 1. Fußball-Club Saarbrücken e. V.) is a football club based in Saarbrücken, Saarland. The club plays in the 3. Liga, which is the third tier of football in Germany. The club began its existence as the football department of Turnverein Malstatt formed in 1903. That department split off in 1907 to form the independent football club FV Malstatt-Burbach and on 1 April 1909 was renamed FV Saarbrücken.

1. FC Saarbrücken
Full name1. Fußball-Club Saarbrücken e. V.
Nickname(s)De FC
Die Molschder
Short nameFCS
Founded18 April 1903; 119 years ago (1903-04-18)
GroundLudwigsparkstadion
Capacity16,003
ChairmanHartmut Ostermann
ManagerRüdiger Ziehl
League3. Liga
2021–223. Liga, 7th of 20
WebsiteClub website
Current season

History

The club became part of the tier-one Kreisliga Saar in 1919, where it played with moderate success, a second place in the league's last season, 1922–23 being its best result. From 1923, the club played in the Bezirksliga Rhein-Saar – Saar division, winning the title there in 1927–28 but missed out on qualification to the new Gauliga in 1933.

Nazi era (1933–1945)

The team made its way to first division play in 1935 in the Gauliga Südwest, one of sixteen regional divisions established in the re-organization of German football in the Nazi era. A league shuffle saw them in the Gauliga Südwest-Saarpfalz in 1940 and they won the division the next year. In 1943 they again won their division – now called the Gauliga Westmark – and advanced through the playoff rounds to the national final where they were defeated 0–3 by Dresdner SC. The next year they only made it as far as the quarterfinals where they were put out by 1. FC Nürnberg. During the last years of World War II from 1943 to 1945, the club had played as a combined wartime side (Kriegsspielgemeinschaft Saarbrücken) with SC Altenkessel.

Post war and French exile

 
Historical chart of Saarbrücken league performance

After the war, occupying Allied authorities dissolved all forms of organizations within Germany, including sports and football clubs. The team was allowed to reform late in 1945, but only under the new name 1. FC Saarbrücken. The club played its first three seasons of post-war football in the first division Oberliga Südwest-Nord, winning the division championship in 1946.

The German state of Saarland, where the city of Saarbrücken is located, was occupied by the French after the war. They made various efforts to see the state become independent of Germany or join France. In sport, this was manifested as separate 1952 Olympic and 1954 FIFA World Cup teams for Saarland and the establishment of a short-lived football league for the state called the Ehrenliga. In 1948, 1. FC Saarbrücken was one of a number of sides forced out of German football, but unlike other clubs, they did not play in the puppet league. Instead, the strong side became part of the French second division as FC Sarrebruck. They won the division but were refused promotion or further participation, mainly due to the resistance of other clubs, among them Strasbourg, who had been forced to play in Germany during World War II.[1]

Saarbrücken withdrew from the league and began to play in a series of friendlies over the next two years. They organized a tournament in 1949–50 called the Internationaler Saarlandpokal ("International Saarland Cup") that had them play 15 home matches against teams from Austria, Denmark, France, Sweden, Switzerland and Yugoslavia. The top three sides then joined hosts Saarbrücken in a playoff round, which the home team eventually won in a 4–0 victory over Stade Rennais UC of France. The next year, fellow Saarlanders VfB Neunkirchen co-hosted the tournament which this time included more German sides. The tournament was abandoned for 1952 as agreement was reached to allow teams from the Saarland re-admission to the German Football Association (DFB).

This episode in the history of German football would play itself out with the odd appearance of a separate side from Saarland in the 1954 World Cup preliminary rounds. Without a proper home in either the German or French leagues, Saarland had established a separate football association with membership in FIFA. 1. FC Saarbrücken sent ten players to that national side and the Saarlanders acquitted themselves well, finishing second in their group ahead of Norway and behind group winner West Germany. Saarbrücken would also make an appearance in the 1955–56 European Cup as Saarland's representative and were eliminated by Milan in the first round, despite winning the away leg.

Return to German football and entry to the Bundesliga

Saarbrücken returned to the Oberliga Südwest in 1952 and continued their winning ways by capturing the division and advancing to the national final for the second time, losing a 1–2 decision to VfB Stuttgart. They continued to field strong sides but over the next decade, could only manage one more Oberliga title, in 1961.

In 1963, Germany finally saw the creation of a top flight national league with the formation of the Bundesliga. Sixteen teams were selected to play in the new league based on their performance, financial health and a geographical distribution intended to fairly represent all parts of the country. The first eight selections were straightforward and included divisional champions and the national finalists. Saarbrücken's selection to the new league was arguably the most controversial as the club's recent record was not as strong as their divisional rivals Neunkirchen, FK Pirmasens and Wormatia Worms. The belief is that their advantage lay in the fact the club had a long association with Hermann Neuberger, an extremely influential figure in German football – and a member of the selection committee.

At the end of the inaugural Bundesliga season in 1963–64, Saarbrücken found themselves dead last, seven points short of safety. The club was relegated to the second tier Regionalliga Südwest where they finished strongly in each of the next three seasons, but were unable to advance through the Bundesliga promotion rounds. They were finally able to make their way back to the top flight after a first-place finish in the 2. Bundesliga Süd in the 1976 season. After two seasons there, the team returned to the second division and by 1981 had slipped to the Amateur Oberliga Südwest (III). There were two more turns in the Bundesliga, in 1986 and 1993, both ending in relegation. A financial crisis in 1995 led to the club being denied a licence and being sent down to the Regionalliga West/Südwest (III). Saarbrücken has since become a yo-yo club with frequent moves between the second and fifth tiers. During this time, the club has remained a strong local side with several Saarland-Pokal wins to its credit.

Saarbrücken finished 16th in 2005–06 and were relegated to the Regionalliga Süd (III). Another poor showing in 2006–07 saw the club in 15th and relegated again, this time to the fourth division Oberliga Südwest, where they narrowly missed out on Regionalliga promotion in 2007–08. However, they finished as the champions of the Oberliga Südwest in the 2008–09 season and promoted to the Regionalliga West. In May 2010, they finished champions of the Regionalliga West season and were promoted to the 3. Liga, their second consecutive promotions. They started slowly, but finished in sixth place having won the last nine matches of the 2010–11 season, and remained at this level until 2013–14, when a disastrous season saw then finish bottom of the table, having used 36 players and four managers.

Back in the Regionalliga, Saarbrücken came second in 2014–15 and qualified for the promotion round to the 3. Liga, where they missed out on promotion to the Würzburger Kickers. They won the Regionalliga Südwest by 11 points in 2017–18 but were again defeated in the promotion play-off, this time by 1860 Munich.

On 3 March 2020, they became the first team from the fourth tier in the history of the DFB-Pokal to reach the semi-final, after beating Fortuna Düsseldorf in the quarter-final.[2]

Reserve team

The club's reserve team, now the 1. FC Saarbrücken II, playing as the 1. FC Saarbrücken Amateure until 2005 during the times the senior side played in professional football, first made an appearance in the Ehrenliga Saarland from 1948 to 1951. It made a reappearance in the highest league of the state in 1986, now the tier four Verbandsliga Saarland and won the league in 1988. Nine seasons in the Oberliga Südwest, now the Oberliga Rheinland-Pfalz/Saar followed. The team was relegated from the Oberliga in 1997, 2001 and 2007 to return each time a short while later. In 2002 it won the Saarland Cup for the first and only time, thereby qualifying for the first round of the 2002–03 DFB-Pokal, where it lost to Arminia Bielefeld. It has been playing at this level since the last promotion in 2010, achieving a fourth-place finish as its best-ever result in 2013.

Supporters and rivalries

The 1. FC Saarbrücken ultras maintain a long-standing friendship since 1998 with the ultras of the French club Nancy. They also had friendly relations with fans of Fortuna Düsseldorf. 1. FC Kaiserslautern and neighbours FC Homburg are considered to be the biggest rivals. More recently, rivalries with Eintracht Trier and SV Elversberg have also developed.

The club has numerous supporter groups: Virage Est (meaning East Stand in French), Boys, SC95, Nordsaarjugend, Clique Canaille and Leone Pazzo, with around 200–300 people standing in the ultras section for matches. In celebration of the club's 110th birthday on 8 November 2014, the supporters created a huge tifo display.[3]

Honours

Recent seasons

The recent season-by-season performance of the club:[4][5]

Players

Current squad

As of 28 September 2022[6][7]

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   GER Daniel Batz
4 MF   GER Pius Krätschmer
5 DF   GER Steven Zellner
6 MF   GER Mike Frantz
7 FW   GER Kasim Rabihic
8 MF   GER Manuel Zeitz (captain)
9 FW   GER Marvin Çuni (on loan from Bayern Munich II)
10 MF   GER Robin Scheu
11 MF   GER Julius Biada
13 GK   GER Julian Bauer
14 DF   MOZ Boné Uaferro
16 DF   GER Bjarne Thoelke
17 DF   GER Dominik Becker (on loan from Werder Bremen)
19 FW   GER Justin Steinkötter
No. Pos. Nation Player
20 FW   GER Julian Günther-Schmidt
22 DF   GER Dominik Ernst
23 DF   GER Tobias Schwede
24 FW   GER Sebastian Jacob
25 MF   GER Tobias Jänicke
26 MF   GER Dave Gnaase
27 DF   GER Calogero Rizzuto
29 DF   GER Lukas Boeder
30 GK   GER Tim Paterok
31 MF   GER Richard Neudecker
33 MF   GER Luca Kerber
34 DF   GER Frederik Recktenwald
39 FW   GER Adriano Grimaldi

Personnel

Current technical staff
Position Name
Head coach   Rüdiger Ziehl
Assistant coach   Bernd Heemsoth
Goalkeeping coach   Frank Kackert
  Heinz Böhmann
Scout   Dieter Ferner
Physiotherapist   Paolo Da Palma
Doctor   Roland Kuppig
Director of football   Jürgen Luginger
Executive director   David Fischer
Kit manager   Rüdiger Schmidt
Board members
Office Name
President   Hartmut Ostermann
Vice-president   Dieter Ferner
Board member   Dieter Weller
Information and media officer   Christoph Heiser
Chairman of the Supervisory Board   Franz Abel
Deputy chairman of the Supervisory Board   Egon Schmitt
Members of the Supervisory Board   Claude Burgard
  Eugen Hach
  Horst Hinschberger
  Joachim Klein
  Leo Petry
  Meiko Palm

References

  1. ^ France – List of Final Tables Second Level Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 13 January 2015
  2. ^ "Erstmals steht ein Viertligist im DFB-Pokal-Halbfinale". Die Welt (in German). 3 March 2020. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
  3. ^ "1.FC Saarbrücken – VFR Wormatia Worms 08.11.14".
  4. ^ Das deutsche Fußball-Archiv (in German) Historical German domestic league tables
  5. ^ Fussball.de – Ergebnisse (in German) Tables and results of all German football leagues
  6. ^ "Das Team". 1. FCS Saarbrücken. Retrieved 13 October 2021.
  7. ^ "1. FC Saarbrücken – Squad 2020/2021". worldfootball.net. Retrieved 20 September 2020.

External links

  • Official website   (in German)

saarbrücken, this, article, about, team, women, team, women, german, fußball, club, saarbrücken, football, club, based, saarbrücken, saarland, club, plays, liga, which, third, tier, football, germany, club, began, existence, football, department, turnverein, m. This article is about the men s team For the women s team see 1 FC Saarbrucken women 1 FC Saarbrucken German 1 Fussball Club Saarbrucken e V is a football club based in Saarbrucken Saarland The club plays in the 3 Liga which is the third tier of football in Germany The club began its existence as the football department of Turnverein Malstatt formed in 1903 That department split off in 1907 to form the independent football club FV Malstatt Burbach and on 1 April 1909 was renamed FV Saarbrucken 1 FC SaarbruckenFull name1 Fussball Club Saarbrucken e V Nickname s De FC Die MolschderShort nameFCSFounded18 April 1903 119 years ago 1903 04 18 GroundLudwigsparkstadionCapacity16 003ChairmanHartmut OstermannManagerRudiger ZiehlLeague3 Liga2021 223 Liga 7th of 20WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent season Contents 1 History 1 1 Nazi era 1933 1945 1 2 Post war and French exile 1 3 Return to German football and entry to the Bundesliga 2 Reserve team 3 Supporters and rivalries 4 Honours 4 1 League 4 2 Cup 4 3 Youth 4 4 Reserves 5 Recent seasons 5 1 1 FC Saarbrucken 5 2 1 FC Saarbrucken II 6 Players 6 1 Current squad 7 Personnel 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditThe club became part of the tier one Kreisliga Saar in 1919 where it played with moderate success a second place in the league s last season 1922 23 being its best result From 1923 the club played in the Bezirksliga Rhein Saar Saar division winning the title there in 1927 28 but missed out on qualification to the new Gauliga in 1933 Nazi era 1933 1945 Edit The team made its way to first division play in 1935 in the Gauliga Sudwest one of sixteen regional divisions established in the re organization of German football in the Nazi era A league shuffle saw them in the Gauliga Sudwest Saarpfalz in 1940 and they won the division the next year In 1943 they again won their division now called the Gauliga Westmark and advanced through the playoff rounds to the national final where they were defeated 0 3 by Dresdner SC The next year they only made it as far as the quarterfinals where they were put out by 1 FC Nurnberg During the last years of World War II from 1943 to 1945 the club had played as a combined wartime side Kriegsspielgemeinschaft Saarbrucken with SC Altenkessel Post war and French exile Edit Historical chart of Saarbrucken league performance After the war occupying Allied authorities dissolved all forms of organizations within Germany including sports and football clubs The team was allowed to reform late in 1945 but only under the new name 1 FC Saarbrucken The club played its first three seasons of post war football in the first division Oberliga Sudwest Nord winning the division championship in 1946 The German state of Saarland where the city of Saarbrucken is located was occupied by the French after the war They made various efforts to see the state become independent of Germany or join France In sport this was manifested as separate 1952 Olympic and 1954 FIFA World Cup teams for Saarland and the establishment of a short lived football league for the state called the Ehrenliga In 1948 1 FC Saarbrucken was one of a number of sides forced out of German football but unlike other clubs they did not play in the puppet league Instead the strong side became part of the French second division as FC Sarrebruck They won the division but were refused promotion or further participation mainly due to the resistance of other clubs among them Strasbourg who had been forced to play in Germany during World War II 1 Saarbrucken withdrew from the league and began to play in a series of friendlies over the next two years They organized a tournament in 1949 50 called the Internationaler Saarlandpokal International Saarland Cup that had them play 15 home matches against teams from Austria Denmark France Sweden Switzerland and Yugoslavia The top three sides then joined hosts Saarbrucken in a playoff round which the home team eventually won in a 4 0 victory over Stade Rennais UC of France The next year fellow Saarlanders VfB Neunkirchen co hosted the tournament which this time included more German sides The tournament was abandoned for 1952 as agreement was reached to allow teams from the Saarland re admission to the German Football Association DFB This episode in the history of German football would play itself out with the odd appearance of a separate side from Saarland in the 1954 World Cup preliminary rounds Without a proper home in either the German or French leagues Saarland had established a separate football association with membership in FIFA 1 FC Saarbrucken sent ten players to that national side and the Saarlanders acquitted themselves well finishing second in their group ahead of Norway and behind group winner West Germany Saarbrucken would also make an appearance in the 1955 56 European Cup as Saarland s representative and were eliminated by Milan in the first round despite winning the away leg Return to German football and entry to the Bundesliga Edit Saarbrucken returned to the Oberliga Sudwest in 1952 and continued their winning ways by capturing the division and advancing to the national final for the second time losing a 1 2 decision to VfB Stuttgart They continued to field strong sides but over the next decade could only manage one more Oberliga title in 1961 In 1963 Germany finally saw the creation of a top flight national league with the formation of the Bundesliga Sixteen teams were selected to play in the new league based on their performance financial health and a geographical distribution intended to fairly represent all parts of the country The first eight selections were straightforward and included divisional champions and the national finalists Saarbrucken s selection to the new league was arguably the most controversial as the club s recent record was not as strong as their divisional rivals Neunkirchen FK Pirmasens and Wormatia Worms The belief is that their advantage lay in the fact the club had a long association with Hermann Neuberger an extremely influential figure in German football and a member of the selection committee At the end of the inaugural Bundesliga season in 1963 64 Saarbrucken found themselves dead last seven points short of safety The club was relegated to the second tier Regionalliga Sudwest where they finished strongly in each of the next three seasons but were unable to advance through the Bundesliga promotion rounds They were finally able to make their way back to the top flight after a first place finish in the 2 Bundesliga Sud in the 1976 season After two seasons there the team returned to the second division and by 1981 had slipped to the Amateur Oberliga Sudwest III There were two more turns in the Bundesliga in 1986 and 1993 both ending in relegation A financial crisis in 1995 led to the club being denied a licence and being sent down to the Regionalliga West Sudwest III Saarbrucken has since become a yo yo club with frequent moves between the second and fifth tiers During this time the club has remained a strong local side with several Saarland Pokal wins to its credit Saarbrucken finished 16th in 2005 06 and were relegated to the Regionalliga Sud III Another poor showing in 2006 07 saw the club in 15th and relegated again this time to the fourth division Oberliga Sudwest where they narrowly missed out on Regionalliga promotion in 2007 08 However they finished as the champions of the Oberliga Sudwest in the 2008 09 season and promoted to the Regionalliga West In May 2010 they finished champions of the Regionalliga West season and were promoted to the 3 Liga their second consecutive promotions They started slowly but finished in sixth place having won the last nine matches of the 2010 11 season and remained at this level until 2013 14 when a disastrous season saw then finish bottom of the table having used 36 players and four managers Back in the Regionalliga Saarbrucken came second in 2014 15 and qualified for the promotion round to the 3 Liga where they missed out on promotion to the Wurzburger Kickers They won the Regionalliga Sudwest by 11 points in 2017 18 but were again defeated in the promotion play off this time by 1860 Munich On 3 March 2020 they became the first team from the fourth tier in the history of the DFB Pokal to reach the semi final after beating Fortuna Dusseldorf in the quarter final 2 Reserve team EditMain article 1 FC Saarbrucken II The club s reserve team now the 1 FC Saarbrucken II playing as the 1 FC Saarbrucken Amateure until 2005 during the times the senior side played in professional football first made an appearance in the Ehrenliga Saarland from 1948 to 1951 It made a reappearance in the highest league of the state in 1986 now the tier four Verbandsliga Saarland and won the league in 1988 Nine seasons in the Oberliga Sudwest now the Oberliga Rheinland Pfalz Saar followed The team was relegated from the Oberliga in 1997 2001 and 2007 to return each time a short while later In 2002 it won the Saarland Cup for the first and only time thereby qualifying for the first round of the 2002 03 DFB Pokal where it lost to Arminia Bielefeld It has been playing at this level since the last promotion in 2010 achieving a fourth place finish as its best ever result in 2013 Supporters and rivalries EditThe 1 FC Saarbrucken ultras maintain a long standing friendship since 1998 with the ultras of the French club Nancy They also had friendly relations with fans of Fortuna Dusseldorf 1 FC Kaiserslautern and neighbours FC Homburg are considered to be the biggest rivals More recently rivalries with Eintracht Trier and SV Elversberg have also developed The club has numerous supporter groups Virage Est meaning East Stand in French Boys SC95 Nordsaarjugend Clique Canaille and Leone Pazzo with around 200 300 people standing in the ultras section for matches In celebration of the club s 110th birthday on 8 November 2014 the supporters created a huge tifo display 3 Honours EditLeague Edit German football championship Runners up 1943 1952 Bezirksliga Rheinhessen Saar I Champions 1926 Bezirksliga Rhein Saar Saar division I Champions 1928 Gauliga Westmark I Champions 1942 43 1943 44 as KSG Saarbrucken Oberliga Sudwest I Champions 1945 46 1951 52 1960 61 Ligue 2 II Champions 1948 49 Regionalliga Sudwest II Champions 1964 65 2nd Bundesliga Sud II Champions 1975 76 2 Bundesliga southern group II Champions 1991 92 Oberliga Sudwest III V Champions 1982 83 2008 09 Regionalliga West Sudwest III Champions 1999 2000 Regionalliga West IV Champions 2009 10 Regionalliga Sudwest IV Champions 2017 18 2019 20 Cup Edit DFB Pokal Semi finals 1956 57 1957 58 1984 85 2019 20 Saarland Cup Tiers III VII Winners 10 1997 1998 1999 2000 2004 2011 2012 2013 2017 2019Youth Edit German Under 19 championship Runners up 1969 German Under 17 championship Runners up 1996Reserves Edit Ehrenliga Saarland I Champions 1951 Verbandsliga Saarland Champions 1988 1998 2010 Runners up 1987 2002 Saarland Cup Winners 2002Recent seasons EditThe recent season by season performance of the club 4 5 1 FC Saarbrucken Edit Season Division Position1999 2000 Regionalliga West Sudwest 1st 2000 01 2 Bundesliga 8th2001 02 16th 2002 03 Regionalliga Sud 6th2003 04 3rd 2004 05 2 Bundesliga 12th2005 06 16th 2006 07 Regionalliga Sud 15th 2007 08 Oberliga Sudwest 5th2008 09 1st 2009 10 Regionalliga West 1st 2010 11 3 Liga 6th2011 12 10th2012 13 11th2013 14 20th 2014 15 Regionalliga Sudwest 2nd2015 16 7th2016 17 3rd2017 18 1st2018 19 2nd2019 20 1st 2020 21 3 Liga 5th2021 22 7th2022 23 1 FC Saarbrucken II Edit Season Division Position1999 2000 Oberliga Sudwest 11th2000 01 17th 2001 02 Verbandsliga Saarland 2nd 2002 03 Oberliga Sudwest 14th2003 04 5th2004 05 6th2005 06 5th2006 07 6th 2007 08 Verbandsliga Saarland 4th2008 09 6th2009 10 1st 2010 11 Oberliga Sudwest 14th2011 12 9th2012 13 Oberliga Rheinland Pfalz Saar 4th2013 14 11th2014 15 17th With the introduction of the Regionalligas in 1994 and the 3 Liga in 2008 as the new third tier below the 2 Bundesliga all leagues below dropped one tier Players EditFor a more comprehensive list see Category 1 FC Saarbrucken players Current squad Edit As of 28 September 2022 6 7 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player1 GK GER Daniel Batz4 MF GER Pius Kratschmer5 DF GER Steven Zellner6 MF GER Mike Frantz7 FW GER Kasim Rabihic8 MF GER Manuel Zeitz captain 9 FW GER Marvin Cuni on loan from Bayern Munich II 10 MF GER Robin Scheu11 MF GER Julius Biada13 GK GER Julian Bauer14 DF MOZ Bone Uaferro16 DF GER Bjarne Thoelke17 DF GER Dominik Becker on loan from Werder Bremen 19 FW GER Justin Steinkotter No Pos Nation Player20 FW GER Julian Gunther Schmidt22 DF GER Dominik Ernst23 DF GER Tobias Schwede24 FW GER Sebastian Jacob25 MF GER Tobias Janicke26 MF GER Dave Gnaase27 DF GER Calogero Rizzuto29 DF GER Lukas Boeder30 GK GER Tim Paterok31 MF GER Richard Neudecker33 MF GER Luca Kerber34 DF GER Frederik Recktenwald39 FW GER Adriano GrimaldiPersonnel EditCurrent technical staffPosition NameHead coach Rudiger ZiehlAssistant coach Bernd HeemsothGoalkeeping coach Frank Kackert Heinz BohmannScout Dieter FernerPhysiotherapist Paolo Da PalmaDoctor Roland KuppigDirector of football Jurgen LugingerExecutive director David FischerKit manager Rudiger SchmidtBoard membersOffice NamePresident Hartmut OstermannVice president Dieter FernerBoard member Dieter WellerInformation and media officer Christoph HeiserChairman of the Supervisory Board Franz AbelDeputy chairman of the Supervisory Board Egon SchmittMembers of the Supervisory Board Claude Burgard Eugen Hach Horst Hinschberger Joachim Klein Leo Petry Meiko PalmReferences Edit France List of Final Tables Second Level Rec Sport Soccer Statistics Foundation Retrieved 13 January 2015 Erstmals steht ein Viertligist im DFB Pokal Halbfinale Die Welt in German 3 March 2020 Retrieved 4 March 2020 1 FC Saarbrucken VFR Wormatia Worms 08 11 14 Das deutsche Fussball Archiv in German Historical German domestic league tables Fussball de Ergebnisse in German Tables and results of all German football leagues Das Team 1 FCS Saarbrucken Retrieved 13 October 2021 1 FC Saarbrucken Squad 2020 2021 worldfootball net Retrieved 20 September 2020 External links EditOfficial website in German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1 FC Saarbrucken amp oldid 1123416539, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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