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Arminia Bielefeld

DSC Arminia Bielefeld (pronounced [ˌdeːʔɛsˈtseː ʔaʁˈmiːni̯a ˈbiːləfɛlt]; full name: Deutscher Sportclub Arminia Bielefeld e.V. [ˈdɔʏtʃɐ ˈʃpɔʁtklʊp ʔaʁˈmiːni̯a ˈbiːləfɛlt]; commonly known as Arminia Bielefeld (German pronunciation: [aʁˌmiːnia ˈbiːləfɛlt] ), also known as Die Arminen [diː ˈʔaʁmiːnən] or Die Blauen [diː ˈblaʊən]), or just Arminia (pronounced [aʁˌmiːnia] ), is a German sports club from Bielefeld, North Rhine-Westphalia. Arminia is most well known as a professional football club, having participated in the first tier of German Football, the Bundesliga, for a total of 19 seasons. In addition to football, the club offers field hockey, figure skating, and cue sports departments. The club has over 15,000 members and the club colours are black, white and blue.[5] Arminia's name derives from the Cheruscan chieftain Arminius, who defeated a Roman army in the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest.

Arminia Bielefeld
Full nameDeutscher Sport-Club Arminia Bielefeld
Nickname(s)Die Arminen,[1] Die Blauen (The Blues)[2]
Founded3 May 1905; 118 years ago (1905-05-03) as 1. Bielefelder FC Arminia
GroundBielefelder Alm (SchücoArena),
Bielefeld
Capacity27,332[3]
PresidentRainer Schütte[4]
Head coachMichél Kniat
League3. Liga
2022–232. Bundesliga, 16th of 18 (relegated)
WebsiteClub website
Current season

The club currently participates in the 3. Liga, the third tier of German Football. Arminia has earned a reputation as a Yo-yo club, or Fahrstuhlmannschaft in German, for its regular promotions and relegations. The club tied the record for most promotions to the Bundesliga in 2020 with their eighth promotion, a record they hold jointly with 1. FC Nürnberg.[6] In the 2010s, the club primarily participated in the 2. Bundesliga, the second tier, with two relegations into the third tier. Notable successful periods for the club include the 1980s and 2000s; two separate eras when the club played for five consecutive years in the Bundesliga. In addition, the 1920s were successful for the club, during which two West German Championships were won in 1922 and 1923. Unsuccessful eras for the club include the 1950s and early 1990s, wherein the club participated in the regional third tier of German football for eight and seven consecutive seasons, respectively.[7][8]

Arminia has played their home games at the Bielefelder Alm Stadium since 1926. The stadium has been entirely rebuilt since the club first played there, with the last major renovations being completed in 2008.[9] The stadiums current capacity of 27,332 consists of space for 7,940 in terracing and 19,392 seats. Since 2004, the stadium has been named SchücoArena through a sponsorship deal.[10]

Arminia's fans primarily originate from the Eastern Westphalia and Lippe regions, or Ostwestfalen-Lippe region in German. As of 2020, the club had 241 active Supporters' groups. The first organized supporters group formed in 1974, influenced by similar groups in English Football. Organized support from such groups at home matches is provided by fans in the south stand of the stadium.[11]

History edit

 
Logo of founding side 1. FC Arminia Bielefeld

Founding and early years (1905-1918) edit

Arminia Bielefeld was founded on 3 May 1905 as 1. Bielefelder FC Arminia.[12] The fourteen men who founded the club were from the local bourgeoisie. Two weeks later, the club played its first match against a team from Osnabrück. Neither the name of the opponent nor the result are known. The club was admitted to the German Football Association in the same year and started to play in a league (in one consisting only of Arminia and three teams from Osnabrück, at first) in 1906.[13] In 1907, local rivals FC Siegfried joined Arminia, a move which strengthened Arminia's squad.[14] Soon other clubs from Bielefeld joined League football.

After playing on various grounds, Arminia moved to a new home at the Pottenau in 1910. Their first league championship came during the 1912-13 season, when they won the Westphalian championship beating BV 04 Dortmund 5–1 in the final.[15] The outbreak of World War I interrupted Arminia's rise, and between 1914 and 1918 the club played at the district level.

West German Champions and "The Alm" (1918-1933) edit

In 1919, Arminia merged with Bielefelder Turngemeinde 1848 to form TG Arminia Bielefeld. However, the two merged teams dissolved the merger in 1922 and both parent clubs were formed again. Arminia won the West German championship in 1922. Originally, they were level on points with Kölner BC 01, but Köln fielded an ineligible player in one match.[citation needed] Arminia played for the first time in the German Championships, but were eliminated in the quarter-finals after losing 0–5 to FC Wacker München. In 1923, Arminia won their second West German championship in a dramatic way.[according to whom?] They trailed TuRU Düsseldorf 1–3 at half time of the final, but came from behind to win 4–3 after extra time. Arminia faced Union Oberschöneweide in the quarter-finals of the German championships. The match ended goalless, so a replay was held. Arminia led 1–0 and conceded the equalizer in injury time. The Berlin side won the match after extra time.[16] Walter Claus-Oehler became Arminia's first player to win a cap in the German national team. Arminia won further Westphalian titles from 1924 to 1927, but were unable to repeat their success in the West German Championships. A match between SC Preußen Münster and Arminia in November 1925 was the first football match to be broadcast on German Radio.[17] On 30 January 1926, the club took its current name Deutscher Sportclub Arminia Bielefeld. Their next piece of silverware was won in 1932 by winning the Westphalian cup.

Arminia during the Nazi regime (1933-1945) edit

In 1933, Arminia qualified for the Gauliga Westfalen,[18] from which they were relegated after the inaugural season. Three attempts of gaining promotion failed before their return to the top flight was won in 1938. Their best performance in the Gauliga was the 1939–40 campaign, where Arminia finished second. Two years later, Arminia was one of only two teams to win a match at Schalke 04. On 25 July 1943 Arminia merged with local rivals VfB 03 Bielefeld. The merger finished the 1943–44 season in last place.

Post World War II years (1945-1962) edit

 
Historical chart of Arminia Bielefeld league performance

After World War II, a new league with all teams who competed in the Gauliga Westfalen was formed. Arminia were relegated and were unable to win re-promotion. In 1947–48, Arminia were a third division side for the first time in their history. After a dominating season in the Bezirksklasse,[according to whom?] Arminia was docked 14 points because they fielded an ineligible player.[19] The next season was already under way when the Landesliga (II) was expanded by two teams. Arminia took their chance,[tone] won the league and gained promotion to the Oberliga West.[20]

Arminia's time in the Oberliga lasted only one season. Arminia beat Schalke 04 4–2 at home but finished only second from the bottom.[21] In 1954, Arminia were even relegated to the third tier, the "Landesliga Westfalen, Gruppe Ostwestfalen", a league only covering the north-eastern part of Westphalia. In 1956, Arminia qualified for a new third tier, the "Verbandsliga Westfalen, Gruppe Ostwestfalen", which encompassed a slightly larger area.

Promotion to the Bundesliga (1962-1970) edit

In 1962 Arminia become a second division side again (then: 2. Liga West, covering the whole of North Rhine-Westphalia). In 1962–63 they finished in seventh place to secure a spot in the newly formed Regionalliga West, which was situated directly below the new Bundesliga.[22]

Arminia finished their first season in mid-table, but recorded a top-half finish in 4 of the following 5 seasons. In 1966, Arminia beat Alemannia Aachen to win the West German Cup for the first time. A year later, forward Ernst Kuster joined the team; he would become the club's all-time leading goal scorer (more than half a century later, Fabian Klos would beat his record). A 0–1 loss to Wuppertaler SV on the last day of the 1966–67 season stopped Arminia entering the Bundesliga promotion play-offs.[23] Arminia were runners-up in the 1969–70 season, and won their first promotion to the Bundesliga after a 2–0 win at Tennis Borussia Berlin in the play-offs.

Bundesliga scandal and return (1970-1980) edit

Halfway through their first Bundesliga season, Arminia was in 17th place, a relegation position, but went on to finish the season in 14th.[24] However, near the end of the season, Horst-Gregorio Canellas revealed that Arminia had engaged in match-fixing; three of the ten Bundesliga games proven by the DFB to have been manipulated through bribery directly involved Arminia.[citation needed] Two players at the club were banned from football for life (Waldemar Slomiany and Jürgen Neumann).[citation needed] Arminia participated in the 1971–72 Bundesliga season while the investigation was ongoing, but were ultimately found guilty of match fixing by the DFB and were denied a license and forcibly relegated at the conclusion.[25] Arminia finished mid-table in the following seasons, but did qualify for the newly formed 2. Bundesliga in 1974.

After two seasons in mid-table, Arminia became Herbstmeister, during the 1976–77 2. Bundesliga season, but ultimately finished as runner-up behind FC St. Pauli. They faced TSV 1860 München in a two-legged play-off whose winner would win promotion to the top flight. Arminia won the first match at home 4–0, but lost the second leg in Munich 0–4. A third match had to be played in Frankfurt, which Munich won 2–0.[26]

The team returned to win promotion to the Bundesliga during the following 1977-78 season. Arminia started mid-table and on 10 March 1979, they won 4–0 at Bayern Munich.[27] However, Arminia finished the season in 16th place, unable to avoid relegation. The club kept the team together and were promoted back to the Bundesliga after a record-breaking 1979–80 season. They won 30 of 38 matches, scored 120 goals, had a 28 match unbeaten streak and set a league record by beating Arminia Hannover 11–0.[28]

Establishment in the Bundesliga (1980-1985) edit

Arminia had difficulty avoiding relegation, but stayed in the Bundesliga for five years, a period which included two eighth-place finishes at the end of the 1982–83 and 1983–84 seasons. Furthermore, Arminia took part in the UEFA Intertoto Cup three times.

Arminia Bielefeld midfielder Ewald Lienen was victim to what the press[29][30] referred to as "the most brutal foul in Bundesliga history" on August 14th, 1981. Werder Bremen defender Norbert Siegmann slashed Lienen's right thigh in a tackle, exposing his muscles and femur.[31] Despite the clubs' record high Bundesliga eighth place finish in 1983 and 1984, attendances declined in the mid-1980s enlarging the club's financial problems.[32] In 1984–85, Arminia finished third from the bottom, and lost the relegation play-offs against 1. FC Saarbrücken.

Decline to the Oberliga (1985-1994) edit

The team did not gain promotion and in the fall of 1987, Arminia had debts of 4.5 million Marks. In 1987–88 the club finished in last place in the 2. Bundesliga as a result of these debts and was relegated into the Oberliga Westfalen. Ernst Middendorp became the new manager and assembled a young team for the new season. Arminia led the way in the Oberliga, but finished in second position in 1988–89. They won the Oberliga a year later, but the promotion play-offs against VfB Oldenburg and TSV Havelse did not got their way. Four seasons of not qualifying for the 2. Bundesliga promotion playoffs followed, in which the team started well, but were unable to compete for the championship. In 1991, Arminia won the Westphalian Cup, the regional qualification cup for the DFB-Pokal, and beat FSV Mainz 05 in the first round of the 1991-92 DFB-Pokal.

Resurgence and yo-yo era (1994–2004) edit

In the spring of 1994, Arminia signed veteran Bundesliga players Thomas von Heesen, Armin Eck and Fritz Walter. Arminia struggled at first but went on to become champions of the newly formed Regionalliga West/Südwest and runners-up in the 1995–96 2. Bundesliga. Arminia signed Stefan Kuntz for the 1996–97 Bundesliga season, their first in 11 years and finished in 14th position.

The club signed the first two Iranian Bundesliga players in 1997 with the addition of Ali Daei and Karim Bagheri.[33] In addition, former SK Brann player Geirmund Brendesæterwas signed and played 13 matches for the club in 1997.[34] However, after a poor run after the winter break, Arminia were relegated shortly after Brendesæter had left the club.Bruno Labbadia became the league's top scorer with 28 goals during the 1998–99 season and the club immediately regained promotion to the Bundesliga by winning the 2. Bundesliga. The club entered the 1999–2000 season with a smaller budget due to financial problems and was subsequently relegated after becoming the third team in history to lose ten matches in a row.

Arminia struggled against relegation again the next season and avoided to drop into the Regionalliga with a 13th place finish.[35] In the following year, Arminia won their sixth promotion to the Bundesliga in 2001–02, with Artur Wichniarek scoring 18 goals. Arminia were unable to avoid relegation the following season, earning only two points from the last six matches.

Bundesliga reestablishment (2004-2009) edit

The team earned promotion to the Bundesliga again in 2003–04, with Ghanaian striker Isaac Boakye scoring 14 goals in his debut season.[36] They stayed in the top flight until 2009. In 2004–05, Patrick Owomoyela becamed Arminia's most capped German player with his third appearance for the national team.[37] Owomoyela went on to appear in 6 national team matches at Bielefeld, a club record that still stands as of 2024. Both Owomoyela and Delron Buckley, scorer of 15 Bundesliga goals during the 2004-05 season, departed the club. In the DFB-Pokal, Arminia reached the semi-finals in 2005 and 2006. In both seasons, Arminia also kept away from the relegation zone virtually the whole time (except the season's beginnings). The campaign "Aktion 5000 +" began to in an effort to increase club membership beyond their 5,000th member, after reaching the 5,000th member milestone at the end of 2005.[38] The 2007 demolition of the East Stand drew the attention of fans and the local media, with the club establishing a webcam to follow the project, as well as a daily attendance of roughly 300 fans to witness the works.[39] The East Stand was notable at the time as being the last terraced stand along the touch line.[40]

Players from the 2004–05 and the 2005–06 season departed the club, including Fatmir Vata and Heiko Westermann in 2007, Mathias Hain, Sibusiso Zuma and Petr Gabriel in 2008. Arminia avoided relegation during the 2006–07 season in part by winning four matches from the 30th to the 33rd matchday, led by manager Ernst Middendorp. The 2007–08 season began with the club winning 3 of its first 5 matches, resulting in the club being in second place by the fifth matchday.[41] Despite this second place start, Arminia recorded its second largest Bundesliga defeat three matchdays later with an 8:1 away loss to Werder Bremen.[42] Relegation was avoided only on the final matchday with 34 points due to 1. FC Nürnberg losing at home while Arminia drew against VfB Stuttgart.[41]

 
Ewald Lienen coached the team for most parts of the 2010–11 season.

The following season, Arminia finished in last place and were relegated to the 2. Bundesliga.

Financial trouble and 3. Liga (2009-2015) edit

Players Rüdiger Kauf, Dennis Eilhoff, Jonas Kamper and Radim Kučera remained a part of the squad for the 2009–10 2. Bundesliga season. On 16 March 2010, Arminia were deducted four points for breaching the DFL's licensing regulations.[43] Arminia were in 5th place prior to the point deduction, and finished the season in 7th place.[44] their chances of promotion. The financial situation worsened, especially as costs for constructing the East Stand had proven to be much higher than originally planned for in 2007.[45] The coach, the managing director and the club's president were replaced in the summer break. The 2010–11 season started with Arminia in last place after 11 matchdays, having earned only 4 points.[46] In November manager Christian Ziege was let go and replaced by Ewald Lienen, former Bielefeld player and member of the fan-voted "Best XI" of all time. However, Arminia picked up 16 points and won only four games all season resulting in a last place finish and relegation to the 3. Liga.

 
Stefan Ortega Moreno in the 2013–14 season

A new team had to be formed with players formerly unknown in Bielefeld who would leave their mark[according to whom?] on the following seasons: Patrick Platins, Manuel Hornig, Tom Schütz, Sebastian Hille, Thomas Hübener, Patrick Schönfeld, Johannes Rahn and from the second half of the season onwards[vague] especially Fabian Klos who would coin a whole era.[vague] Another formative player,[according to whom?] Stefan Ortega Moreno, joined from the club's youth. After a poor start,[according to whom?] they ended the 2011–12 season in 13th place. They also won the Westphalia Cup, in a final against arch rival SC Preußen Münster. By reaching the final, they also qualified for the 2012–13 DFB-Pokal, where they beat SC Paderborn 07, a team playing in the 2. Bundesliga, but lost in the second round in a close match against Bayer 04 Leverkusen, a Europa League participant. On 11 May 2013, Bielefeld beat VfL Osnabrück 1–0 to guarantee a top two finish and promotion back to the 2. Bundesliga for the 2013–14 season.

That season began quite hopeful:[according to whom?] Arminia qualified for the second round of the DFB-Pokal again and at the 8th matchday they had even climbed up to the 3rd rank in the league table. But after a disastrous[vague] autumn and a mediocre[vague] winter Arminia fell down onto the 17th rank and the popular[according to whom?] coach Stefan Krämer – the first manager having held office for more than two years since 2004 – had to leave. His successor Norbert Meier at first had only little more success:[vague] Arminia finished 16th in the 2. Bundesliga, and lost a playoff against SV Darmstadt 98 on away goals after a 122nd minute (extra time) goal gave Darmstadt the victory. Arminia had to go[vague] back into the 3. Liga.

But the next season could wipe out[tone] the bitterness[tone] of that disaster:[tone] In the 2014–15 DFB-Pokal, as a 3. Liga club, Arminia reached the semi-finals by defeating three Bundesliga teams (Hertha BSC, SV Werder Bremen and VfL Borussia Mönchengladbach). They also were the top team in the 3. Liga (after a bad beginning[according to whom?] with only four points from the first four matches) for most part of the season. After the loss against VfL Wolfsburg in the semi-final of the DFB-Pokal, Arminia seemed to have lost their ability[according to whom?] to win their matches in the 3. Liga as well. Even the qualification for the 2. Bundesliga seemed to become doubtful,[according to whom?] but was secured after a 2–2 draw against SSV Jahn Regensburg, the last team in the league table, at the 37th matchday. Liberated from the pressure of a possible non-qualification,[tone] they also won the 3. Liga with a final 1–0 victory at the last matchday.

Sporting and financial recovery (2015-2020) edit

A stable season[according to whom?] with a defeat in the first round of the DFB-Pokal, a lot of[quantify] draws in the league (especially in the beginning: eight out of ten matches; in the end Arminia reached a record of 18) and only very few[vague] goals scored at home (only eight until the 30th matchday) followed so that the 4–2 over Greuther Fürth at the 31st matchday which secured Arminia's staying up was only Arminia's third win at home. That season's highlights probably[according to whom?] were the draws against all three top teams away. In the league table Arminia never went deeper than rank 14 and finished 12th.

After the season, the coach Norbert Meier was bought by SV Darmstadt 98. A difficult[according to whom?] 2016–17 season with two manager sackings followed.[citation needed] Arminia found themselves[vague] among the lowest four teams in the league table from the fourth matchday onwards, mostly on the 16th or 17th rank. On the other hand, Arminia reached the quarter-final in the DFB-Pokal. They avoided relegation as they finished in 15th after a 6–0 win over promotion candidate Eintracht Braunschweig and a 1–1 against Dynamo Dresden at the last two matchdays.

The 2017–18 season turned out easier. Having gathered 10 points out of the first four matches, Arminia hardly ever left the upper half of the league table (only at the 19th matchday: rank 10) and finished on the 4th rank – though in that season's very close league table this never meant much.[according to whom?] In that season, Arminia also made a big step[tone] in lowering its debts through an alliance of sponsors[47] and Fabian Klos replaced Ernst Kuster as the club's all-time top scorer.[48]

In November 2018, Arminia were practically[vague] free of debt but had to sell its stadium.[49] The team faced a more difficult situation when December started: Having gained less than one point per match on average, only the weakness of the competing relegation candidates kept them up and they were already out of the DFB-Pokal after a 0–3 defeat at home against MSV Duisburg – another relegation candidate – in the second round. Thus, the popular[according to whom?] coach Jeff Saibene was replaced by Uwe Neuhaus, who managed Arminia back into mid table within four matchdays and into 7th place by the last matchday.

 
Uwe Neuhaus brought Arminia back into the Bundesliga.

The 2019–20 season would turn out even better.[according to whom?] When Arminia had climbed on the 3rd rank of the league table after a 2–0 victory away against Hannover 96 – who were originally regarded[by whom?] as a promotion candidate – at the 6th matchday, hardly anyone guessed[according to whom?] they would stay in the promotion area of the league table for the rest of the season. They had just reached the second rank of the league table when they met FC Schalke 04 in the 2nd round of the DFB-Pokal on 29 October. In spite of Schalke clearly dominating[according to whom?] the match in the first 70 minutes, Arminia thrilled[tone] the supporters in the last 20 minutes by scoring two goals and only closely missing extra time.[50] They finished the 15th matchday on 1 December on the first rank of the league table where they would stay for the rest of the season in spite of competing with Hamburger SV and VfB Stuttgart who were originally estimated[by whom?] as main promotion candidates. After Arminia's 1–1 draw in Stuttgart on 9 March 2020 (25th matchday) the season was interrupted because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Even this interruption did not affect them: they finished the season with 68 points – 10 points more than VfB Stuttgart who finished 2nd.[51]

Bundesliga return and double relegation (2020-present) edit

In the 2020–21 season, they were the team with the lowest budget in the Bundesliga. After a defeat in the first round of the DFB-Pokal they had a quite promising[vague] start in the Bundesliga season, but from the 4th matchday onwards they could be found among the last five teams in the league table, from the 6th matchday onwards amongst the last four teams. In March, the popular[according to whom?] manager Uwe Neuhaus was replaced by Frank Kramer.[52][53][54] A 2–0 win over VfB Stuttgart on the final matchday secured their spot in the 2021–22 Bundesliga.

That season turned out even more difficult. At the end of October, they were in danger of losing touch with the 16th rank. They started November with a 1–0 win away over VfB Stuttgart, their first win in the whole Bundesliga season. That match appeared to have stabilized Arminia's performance. In February they climbed up to 14th after a 1–0 win over 1. FC Union Berlin. However, this would be their last win of the season. They ended in 17th place and were relegated to the 2. Bundesliga. The following season, Arminia finished in 16th place, and lost the relegation playoff to Wehen Wiesbaden, thus suffering the indignity of suffering back-to-back relegations.

Colours and crest edit

Arminia took the club colours blue, white and black upon their foundation in 1905. The colours have not changed, though the current club colours are black, white and blue. Despite this, Arminia played their first match in an orange kit. Arminia's home kit was blue for most of the time, while their shorts and socks were white. The team that won promotion to the Bundesliga in 1970 wore a blue shirt with thick white stripes.[citation needed] The away kit was mostly all white, while green shirts were worn in the 1990s.[vague]

The crest consists of a flag with the club's colours black, white and blue from left to right. The white part of the flag includes the letter A for Arminia. The flag is surrounded by a wreath of oak.

Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors edit

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor (chest) Shirt sponsor (sleeve) Shirt sponsor (back)
Prior to 1975 None (In-House) None None None
1975–1979 Adidas granini
1979-1985 Seidensticker
1985-1988 granini
1988-1991 Schüco
1991-1993 Lotto Sportlepp
1993-1994 Forum Jahnplatz/NaturoKork
1994-1996 Westfalen Blatt
1996-1998 Reusch Gerry Weber
1998-2000 Herforder Pils
2000-2001 Uhlsport
2001-2002 Real
2002-2004 KiK
2004-2005 Krombacher
2005-2010 Saller
2010-2011 Schüco
2011-2014 getgoods.de
2014-2017 Alpecin JAB Anstoetz Group
2017-2020 Joma Schüco
2020-2023 Macron
2023-2024 holz4home

Sources:[55][56][57]

Stadium edit

 
The new eastern stand

Arminia played their first home matches at the Kesselbrink in downtown Bielefeld. They moved to a new ground at the Kaiserstraße (today: August-Bebel-Straße) in 1907, and to the Pottenau in 1910. In 1926, Arminia leased a ground from a farmer named Lohmann.[citation needed] The ground did not look like a football pitch. The club member Heinrich Pahl said that the area looks like an Alm (German for alpine grassland). The stadium was known as the Alm. Arminia played its first match against Victoria Hamburg on 1 May 1926. The first grandstands were constructed in 1954. When Arminia won promotion to the Bundesliga in 1970, the Alm underwent a general development. A main stand with seats was built and the northern and eastern stands were enlarged. The Alm had a capacity of 30,000 and floodlights were installed. In 1978, a roof was added to the main stands and the other stands were enlarged again. The stadium had a capacity of 35,000 then.

When Arminia was relegated to the Oberliga in 1988, the northern and the southern stand were torn down because both stands did not match the new safety regulations.[vague] The eastern stand was also made smaller and a roof was added. The capacity was reduced to about 15,000. After Arminia won promotion to the Bundesliga in 1996, the main and northern stands were demolished and completely rebuilt. The same happened to the south stand in 1999. In 2004, Arminia signed a sponsorship deal with Schüco and the stadium was named SchücoArena. The latest redevelopment saw the Eastern Stand being rebuilt in 2008.

The Bielefelder Alm has a capacity of 27,300, including 20,381 seats.[58] Bielefelder Alm was a candidate to host matches of the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup.

Supporters edit

 
Pitch invasion after securing promotion at Bielefelder Alm in 2013

Arminia have a large number of loyal supporters.[according to whom?] Even in 2011–12,[vague] Arminia had an average attendance of 8,930, which was the highest in the 3. Liga. In 2014–15, Arminia had an average attendance of 14,540, which was the second highest in that 3. Liga season. The numbers also show the risen popularity of the 3. Liga.[vague] Arminia's matches during the 2013–14 2. Bundesliga were attended by 16,890 on average.[59] These numbers only count league matches. Arminia's matches in the 2014–15 DFB-Pokal were attended by 21,763 on average. The core[according to whom?] of the fans can be found on the terraces of the Southern Stand.

Arminia's fans come primarily from the Ostwestfalen-Lippe region with a catchment area of about 100 kilometers around Bielefeld.[according to whom?] There are around 140 fanclubs, mostly from Ostwestfalen-Lippe.[according to whom?] However, there are fanclubs in Berlin, Stuttgart, London, Birmingham, Taunton, Austria and the Netherlands.

 
Arminia supporters backing their team during an away game at Millerntor-Stadion

There is a traditional rivalry with SC Preußen Münster. The match against them in March 2012, which was the first one taking place in Bielefeld after nearly 20 years, was attended by 21,203 spectators. No other match in the 3. Liga had such a high attendance.[according to whom?] One year later, the stadium was nearly sold out in that derby. An earlier rival was VfB 03 Bielefeld from the east of Bielefeld, but the rivalry lessened, and, nowadays,[when?] friendly matches between Arminia and VfB Fichte Bielefeld, as the club nowadays is called, take place every year. Another rival is VfL Bochum, especially since the late 90s, and there were "fashion rivalries" with other clubs from the Ruhr, because that area also belongs to Westphalia.[60] Many SC Paderborn 07 supporters consider Arminia as their main rival, but Arminia fans generally do not feel the same about them.[61][62] Also the matches against VfL Osnabrück are a small derby (somehow oscillating between friendship and rivalry).[vague] There are friendly relations to the supporters of the Hamburger SV,[vague] with both clubs sharing the same colours (black, white and blue), resulting in the chant "Schwarz, weiß, blau – Arminia und der HSV" (Black, white, blue – Arminia and HSV) among supporters of both clubs. For many fans this friendship also involves friendly ties to Hannover 96, whose fans share a friendship with Hamburg as well. All three clubs are sometimes dubbed the "Nordallianz" (Northern Alliance), despite the fact that Bielefeld (other than Hamburg and Hannover) is not located in what is considered Northern Germany.

Players edit

Current squad edit

As of 1 February 2024[63]

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 Jonas Kersken (on loan from Mönchengladbach)
4 DF   GER Louis Oppie
5 DF   GER Semi Belkahia
6 DF   GER Can Özkan
7 MF   GER Nicklas Shipnoski
8 MF   GER Sam Schreck
9 FW   GER Fabian Klos (captain)
10 MF   MAR Nassim Boujellab
11 FW   GER Aygün Yıldırım
14 FW   GER Thaddäus-Monju Momuluh (on loan from Hannover 96)
16 MF   USA Mael Corboz
17 MF   GER Merveille Biankadi
19 MF   GER Maximilian Großer
No. Pos. Nation Player
22 GK   GER Leo Oppermann (on loan from Hamburger SV)
23 DF   GER Leon Schneider
24 DF   GER Christopher Lannert
25 MF   JPN Kaito Mizuta
27 DF   GER Gerrit Gohlke
28 MF   GER Lucas Kiewitt
29 FW   GER Henrik Koch
30 MF   GER Henry Obermeyer
34 MF   GER Leandro Putaro (on loan from VfL Osnabrück)
37 FW   GER Noah Sarenren Bazee
38 MF   GER Marius Wörl (on loan from Hannover 96)
39 FW   GER Manuel Wintzheimer (on loan from Nürnberg)
40 GK   GER Jonah Busse

Out on loan edit

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
MF   GER Tom Geerkens (at Wuppertaler SV until 30 June 2024)
No. Pos. Nation Player
FW   GER Christopher Schepp (at SV Meppen until 30 June 2024)

100 year team edit

To celebrate the 100th anniversary of the club's formation, a fan poll was taken to determine the club's greatest starting XI, as well as seven substitutes and a manager. The following players were chosen:[64]

Arminia players in national teams edit

The player who has won the most international caps while at the club (from 1997 to 2000) is Karim Bagheri with 28 for Iran.[65] He and his team-mate Ali Daei were important Iranian players in the 1998 FIFA World Cup. They are the only footballers having taken part in a World Cup's final tournament while playing for Arminia. Other remarkable Arminia players who represented foreign countries while at the club are Pasi Rautiainen, Artur Wichniarek, Markus Weissenberger, Fatmir Vata, Isaac Boakye, Delron Buckley, Sibusiso Zuma, Rowen Fernández, Christopher Katongo, Jonas Kamper, Ritsu Dōan and Alessandro Schöpf.[66]

Four players were capped by Germany during their time with Arminia: Walter Claus-Oehler in 1923, Stefan Kuntz in 1996, Ronald Maul in 1999 and Patrick Owomoyela in 2004 and 2005. He played six matches for Germany in this time and thus holds the record. Some of the most famous former Arminia players played for their national teams only between their times with Arminia (Uli Stein and Jörg Böhme) or after their years with Arminia (Dieter Burdenski, Thomas Helmer, Arne Friedrich, Heiko Westermann and Jonathan Clauss).

Honours edit

  • Arminia Bielefeld has never won any major trophies, but they have won some silverware on a minor level.[67]

League titles edit

Regional titles edit

Cups edit

  • West German cup winner:
    • Winners: 1966, 1974
  • Westphalian cup winner:
    • Winners: 1908, 1932, 1991, 2012, 2013

Management and staff edit

Current staff edit

As of 19 March 2024[68]
Coaching staff
  Michél Kniat Manager
  Daniel Jara Assistant managers
  Oliver Döking
  Janik Steringer Assistant manager and Video-Analyst
  Steffan Süssner Goalkeeping coach
Fitness coaches
  Niklas Klasen Fitness Coach
  Malte Hornemann Rehabilitation Coach
Medical department
  Dr. Andreas Elsner Team doctors
  Dr. Tim Niedergassel
  Dr. Stefan Budde
  Mario Bertling Physiotherapists
  Arne Böker
Sport management and organisation
  Sandra Hausberger Team Manager
  Rainer Schonz Kit Manager
  Sebastian Wolf Bus Driver

Managers since 1922 edit

Coach Nationality from to Significant events
František Zoubek   1922 1923 West German Champion 1923
Gerd Wellhöfer   1923 1924 Westfalen Champion 1924
František Zoubek
Gerd Wellhöfer
 
 
1924 1925 Westfalen Champion 1925
Gerd Wellhöfer   1925 1926 Westfalen Champion 1926
František Zoubek   1926 1933 Westfalen Champion 1923, 1933
Westfälischer Cup Winner 1932
Qualification to the Gauliga Westfalen 1933
Otto Faist   1933 1935 Relegation from Gauliga 1934
Karl Willnecker   1935 1938 Promotion to Gauliga 1938
Erich Brochmeyer   1938 1939
Ferdinand Swatosch   1939 1940 Vice Champion of the Gauliga
Otto Kranefeld[69]   1940 1942
Karl Wunderlich   1942 1945
Erich Brochmeyer   1945 1946 Relegation to the Landesliga
Ferdinand Swatosch   1946 1947
Karl Wunderlich   1947 1948 Promotion to the Landesliga
Alois Münstermann   1948 1949 Promotion to the Oberliga
Friedrich Otto   1949 1950 Relegation to the 2. Liga West
Fritz Kaiser   1950 1951
Hellmut Meidt   1951 1953
Donndorf   1953 1955 Relegation to the Landesliga 1954
Otto Westphal   1955 1958
Arthur Gruber   1958 19 March 1961 first Coach sacking
Josef Rasselnberg   20 March 1961 1961
Jakob Wimmer   1961 April 1963 Promotion to the 2. Liga West 1962
Hellmut Meidt   April 1963 1965 Qualification to the Regionalliga 1963
Robert Gebhardt   1965 1966 Westdeutscher Cup Winner
Westfälischer Cup Winner
Hans Wendlandt   1966 November 1969
Egon Piechaczek   November 1969 December 1971 Promotion to the Bundesliga 1970
Hellmut Meidt   January 1972 January 1972
Jan Notermans   February 1972 October 1972 Relegation to the Regionalliga
Willi Nolting   October 1972 February 1973
Norbert Lessle   February 1973 September 1973
Karl-Heinz "Harry" Garstecki   September 1973 October 1973
Willi Nolting   October 1973 Januar 1974
Rudi Faßnacht   January 1974 1974 Qualification to the 2. Bundesliga
Westfälischer Cup Winner
Erhard Ahmann   1974 1976
Karl-Heinz Feldkamp   1976 1978 Promotion to the Bundesliga
Milovan Beljin   1978 October 1978
Otto Rehhagel   October 1978 October 1979 Relegation to the 2. Bundesliga 1978
Willi Nolting   October 1979 October 1979
Hans-Dieter Tippenhauer   October 1979 September 1980 Promotion to the Bundesliga
Willi Nolting   September 1980 December 1980
Horst Franz   December 1980 1982
Horst Köppel   1982 1983 Place 8 in the Bundesliga
Karl-Heinz Feldkamp   1983 March 1984
Gerd Roggensack   March 1984 February 1986 Place 8 in der Bundesliga 1984
Relegation to the 2. Bundesliga 1985
Horst Franz   February 1986 November 1986
Fritz Fuchs   November 1986 December 1987
Joachim Krug   December 1987 April 1988
Ernst Middendorp   April 1988 October 1990 Relegation to the Oberliga 1988
Champion of the Oberliga Westfalen 1990
Franz Raschid   October 1990 1991
Fritz Grösche   1991 1992
Ingo Peter   1 July 1992 1 February 1994
Theo Schneider   2 February 1994 30 June 1994 Qualification for the Regionalliga West/Südwest
Wolfgang Sidka   1994 September 1994
Ernst Middendorp   September 1994 16 August 1998 Promotion to the 2. Bundesliga 1995
Promotion to the Bundesliga 1996
Relegation to the 2. Bundesliga
Thomas von Heesen   17 August 1998 1999 Promotion to the Bundesliga
Hermann Gerland   1999 October 2000 Relegation to the 2. Bundesliga
Benno Möhlmann   October 2000 16 February 2004 Promotion to the Bundesliga
Relegation to the 2. Bundesliga
Thomas von Heesen   17 February 2004 29 February 2004
Uwe Rapolder   1 March 2004 10 May 2005 Promotion to the Bundesliga
Frank Geideck   11 May 2005 2005
Thomas von Heesen   2005 11 February 2007
Frank Geideck   11 February 2007 13 March 2007
Ernst Middendorp   14 March 2007 9 December 2007
Detlev Dammeier   10 December 2007 31 December 2007
Michael Frontzeck   1 January 2008 17 May 2009
Jörg Berger   19 May 2009 24 June 2009 Relegation to the 2. Bundesliga
Thomas Gerstner   24 June 2009 11 March 2010
Frank Eulberg & Jörg Böhme   11 March 2010 26 May 2010
Christian Ziege   26 May 2010 6 November 2010
Ewald Lienen   7 November 2010 30 June 2011 Relegated to the 3. Liga
Markus von Ahlen   1 July 2011 20 September 2011
Stefan Krämer   21 September 2011 23 February 2014 Promotion to the 2. Bundesliga
Norbert Meier   24 February 2014 10 June 2016 Promotion to the 2. Bundesliga
semi-final in the 2014–15 DFB-Pokal season
Rüdiger Rehm   15 June 2016 22 October 2016
Carsten Rump   23 October 2016 15 November 2016
Jürgen Kramny   15 November 2016 14 March 2017
Jeff Saibene   19 March 2017 10 December 2018
Uwe Neuhaus   10 December 2018 1 March 2021 Promotion to the Bundesliga
Frank Kramer   2 March 2021 20 April 2022
Marco Kostmann   20 April 2022 3 June 2022
Uli Forte   3 June 2022 17 August 2022
Daniel Scherning   18 August 2022 7 March 2023
Uwe Koschinat   9 March 2023 30 June 2023 Relegated to the 3. Liga
Michél Kniat   1 July 2023

Source:[70]

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External links edit

  • Official website  

arminia, bielefeld, pronounced, ˌdeːʔɛsˈtseː, ʔaʁˈmiːni, ˈbiːləfɛlt, full, name, deutscher, sportclub, ˈdɔʏtʃɐ, ˈʃpɔʁtklʊp, ʔaʁˈmiːni, ˈbiːləfɛlt, commonly, known, german, pronunciation, aʁˌmiːnia, ˈbiːləfɛlt, also, known, arminen, diː, ˈʔaʁmiːnən, blauen, diː. DSC Arminia Bielefeld pronounced ˌdeːʔɛsˈtseː ʔaʁˈmiːni a ˈbiːlefɛlt full name Deutscher Sportclub Arminia Bielefeld e V ˈdɔʏtʃɐ ˈʃpɔʁtklʊp ʔaʁˈmiːni a ˈbiːlefɛlt commonly known as Arminia Bielefeld German pronunciation aʁˌmiːnia ˈbiːlefɛlt also known as Die Arminen diː ˈʔaʁmiːnen or Die Blauen diː ˈblaʊen or just Arminia pronounced aʁˌmiːnia is a German sports club from Bielefeld North Rhine Westphalia Arminia is most well known as a professional football club having participated in the first tier of German Football the Bundesliga for a total of 19 seasons In addition to football the club offers field hockey figure skating and cue sports departments The club has over 15 000 members and the club colours are black white and blue 5 Arminia s name derives from the Cheruscan chieftain Arminius who defeated a Roman army in the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest Arminia BielefeldFull nameDeutscher Sport Club Arminia BielefeldNickname s Die Arminen 1 Die Blauen The Blues 2 Founded3 May 1905 118 years ago 1905 05 03 as 1 Bielefelder FC ArminiaGroundBielefelder Alm SchucoArena BielefeldCapacity27 332 3 PresidentRainer Schutte 4 Head coachMichel KniatLeague3 Liga2022 232 Bundesliga 16th of 18 relegated WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent season The club currently participates in the 3 Liga the third tier of German Football Arminia has earned a reputation as a Yo yo club or Fahrstuhlmannschaft in German for its regular promotions and relegations The club tied the record for most promotions to the Bundesliga in 2020 with their eighth promotion a record they hold jointly with 1 FC Nurnberg 6 In the 2010s the club primarily participated in the 2 Bundesliga the second tier with two relegations into the third tier Notable successful periods for the club include the 1980s and 2000s two separate eras when the club played for five consecutive years in the Bundesliga In addition the 1920s were successful for the club during which two West German Championships were won in 1922 and 1923 Unsuccessful eras for the club include the 1950s and early 1990s wherein the club participated in the regional third tier of German football for eight and seven consecutive seasons respectively 7 8 Arminia has played their home games at the Bielefelder Alm Stadium since 1926 The stadium has been entirely rebuilt since the club first played there with the last major renovations being completed in 2008 9 The stadiums current capacity of 27 332 consists of space for 7 940 in terracing and 19 392 seats Since 2004 the stadium has been named SchucoArena through a sponsorship deal 10 Arminia s fans primarily originate from the Eastern Westphalia and Lippe regions or Ostwestfalen Lippe region in German As of 2020 the club had 241 active Supporters groups The first organized supporters group formed in 1974 influenced by similar groups in English Football Organized support from such groups at home matches is provided by fans in the south stand of the stadium 11 Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding and early years 1905 1918 1 2 West German Champions and The Alm 1918 1933 1 3 Arminia during the Nazi regime 1933 1945 1 4 Post World War II years 1945 1962 1 5 Promotion to the Bundesliga 1962 1970 1 6 Bundesliga scandal and return 1970 1980 1 7 Establishment in the Bundesliga 1980 1985 1 8 Decline to the Oberliga 1985 1994 1 9 Resurgence and yo yo era 1994 2004 1 10 Bundesliga reestablishment 2004 2009 1 11 Financial trouble and 3 Liga 2009 2015 1 12 Sporting and financial recovery 2015 2020 1 13 Bundesliga return and double relegation 2020 present 2 Colours and crest 2 1 Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors 3 Stadium 4 Supporters 5 Players 5 1 Current squad 5 2 Out on loan 6 100 year team 7 Arminia players in national teams 8 Honours 8 1 League titles 8 2 Regional titles 8 3 Cups 9 Management and staff 9 1 Current staff 9 2 Managers since 1922 10 References 11 External linksHistory editMain article List of Arminia Bielefeld seasons nbsp Logo of founding side 1 FC Arminia Bielefeld Founding and early years 1905 1918 edit Arminia Bielefeld was founded on 3 May 1905 as 1 Bielefelder FC Arminia 12 The fourteen men who founded the club were from the local bourgeoisie Two weeks later the club played its first match against a team from Osnabruck Neither the name of the opponent nor the result are known The club was admitted to the German Football Association in the same year and started to play in a league in one consisting only of Arminia and three teams from Osnabruck at first in 1906 13 In 1907 local rivals FC Siegfried joined Arminia a move which strengthened Arminia s squad 14 Soon other clubs from Bielefeld joined League football After playing on various grounds Arminia moved to a new home at the Pottenau in 1910 Their first league championship came during the 1912 13 season when they won the Westphalian championship beating BV 04 Dortmund 5 1 in the final 15 The outbreak of World War I interrupted Arminia s rise and between 1914 and 1918 the club played at the district level West German Champions and The Alm 1918 1933 edit In 1919 Arminia merged with Bielefelder Turngemeinde 1848 to form TG Arminia Bielefeld However the two merged teams dissolved the merger in 1922 and both parent clubs were formed again Arminia won the West German championship in 1922 Originally they were level on points with Kolner BC 01 but Koln fielded an ineligible player in one match citation needed Arminia played for the first time in the German Championships but were eliminated in the quarter finals after losing 0 5 to FC Wacker Munchen In 1923 Arminia won their second West German championship in a dramatic way according to whom They trailed TuRU Dusseldorf 1 3 at half time of the final but came from behind to win 4 3 after extra time Arminia faced Union Oberschoneweide in the quarter finals of the German championships The match ended goalless so a replay was held Arminia led 1 0 and conceded the equalizer in injury time The Berlin side won the match after extra time 16 Walter Claus Oehler became Arminia s first player to win a cap in the German national team Arminia won further Westphalian titles from 1924 to 1927 but were unable to repeat their success in the West German Championships A match between SC Preussen Munster and Arminia in November 1925 was the first football match to be broadcast on German Radio 17 On 30 January 1926 the club took its current name Deutscher Sportclub Arminia Bielefeld Their next piece of silverware was won in 1932 by winning the Westphalian cup Arminia during the Nazi regime 1933 1945 edit In 1933 Arminia qualified for the Gauliga Westfalen 18 from which they were relegated after the inaugural season Three attempts of gaining promotion failed before their return to the top flight was won in 1938 Their best performance in the Gauliga was the 1939 40 campaign where Arminia finished second Two years later Arminia was one of only two teams to win a match at Schalke 04 On 25 July 1943 Arminia merged with local rivals VfB 03 Bielefeld The merger finished the 1943 44 season in last place Post World War II years 1945 1962 edit nbsp Historical chart of Arminia Bielefeld league performance After World War II a new league with all teams who competed in the Gauliga Westfalen was formed Arminia were relegated and were unable to win re promotion In 1947 48 Arminia were a third division side for the first time in their history After a dominating season in the Bezirksklasse according to whom Arminia was docked 14 points because they fielded an ineligible player 19 The next season was already under way when the Landesliga II was expanded by two teams Arminia took their chance tone won the league and gained promotion to the Oberliga West 20 Arminia s time in the Oberliga lasted only one season Arminia beat Schalke 04 4 2 at home but finished only second from the bottom 21 In 1954 Arminia were even relegated to the third tier the Landesliga Westfalen Gruppe Ostwestfalen a league only covering the north eastern part of Westphalia In 1956 Arminia qualified for a new third tier the Verbandsliga Westfalen Gruppe Ostwestfalen which encompassed a slightly larger area Promotion to the Bundesliga 1962 1970 edit In 1962 Arminia become a second division side again then 2 Liga West covering the whole of North Rhine Westphalia In 1962 63 they finished in seventh place to secure a spot in the newly formed Regionalliga West which was situated directly below the new Bundesliga 22 Arminia finished their first season in mid table but recorded a top half finish in 4 of the following 5 seasons In 1966 Arminia beat Alemannia Aachen to win the West German Cup for the first time A year later forward Ernst Kuster joined the team he would become the club s all time leading goal scorer more than half a century later Fabian Klos would beat his record A 0 1 loss to Wuppertaler SV on the last day of the 1966 67 season stopped Arminia entering the Bundesliga promotion play offs 23 Arminia were runners up in the 1969 70 season and won their first promotion to the Bundesliga after a 2 0 win at Tennis Borussia Berlin in the play offs Bundesliga scandal and return 1970 1980 edit See also Bundesliga scandal 1971 Halfway through their first Bundesliga season Arminia was in 17th place a relegation position but went on to finish the season in 14th 24 However near the end of the season Horst Gregorio Canellas revealed that Arminia had engaged in match fixing three of the ten Bundesliga games proven by the DFB to have been manipulated through bribery directly involved Arminia citation needed Two players at the club were banned from football for life Waldemar Slomiany and Jurgen Neumann citation needed Arminia participated in the 1971 72 Bundesliga season while the investigation was ongoing but were ultimately found guilty of match fixing by the DFB and were denied a license and forcibly relegated at the conclusion 25 Arminia finished mid table in the following seasons but did qualify for the newly formed 2 Bundesliga in 1974 After two seasons in mid table Arminia became Herbstmeister during the 1976 77 2 Bundesliga season but ultimately finished as runner up behind FC St Pauli They faced TSV 1860 Munchen in a two legged play off whose winner would win promotion to the top flight Arminia won the first match at home 4 0 but lost the second leg in Munich 0 4 A third match had to be played in Frankfurt which Munich won 2 0 26 The team returned to win promotion to the Bundesliga during the following 1977 78 season Arminia started mid table and on 10 March 1979 they won 4 0 at Bayern Munich 27 However Arminia finished the season in 16th place unable to avoid relegation The club kept the team together and were promoted back to the Bundesliga after a record breaking 1979 80 season They won 30 of 38 matches scored 120 goals had a 28 match unbeaten streak and set a league record by beating Arminia Hannover 11 0 28 Establishment in the Bundesliga 1980 1985 edit Arminia had difficulty avoiding relegation but stayed in the Bundesliga for five years a period which included two eighth place finishes at the end of the 1982 83 and 1983 84 seasons Furthermore Arminia took part in the UEFA Intertoto Cup three times Arminia Bielefeld midfielder Ewald Lienen was victim to what the press 29 30 referred to as the most brutal foul in Bundesliga history on August 14th 1981 Werder Bremen defender Norbert Siegmann slashed Lienen s right thigh in a tackle exposing his muscles and femur 31 Despite the clubs record high Bundesliga eighth place finish in 1983 and 1984 attendances declined in the mid 1980s enlarging the club s financial problems 32 In 1984 85 Arminia finished third from the bottom and lost the relegation play offs against 1 FC Saarbrucken Decline to the Oberliga 1985 1994 edit The team did not gain promotion and in the fall of 1987 Arminia had debts of 4 5 million Marks In 1987 88 the club finished in last place in the 2 Bundesliga as a result of these debts and was relegated into the Oberliga Westfalen Ernst Middendorp became the new manager and assembled a young team for the new season Arminia led the way in the Oberliga but finished in second position in 1988 89 They won the Oberliga a year later but the promotion play offs against VfB Oldenburg and TSV Havelse did not got their way Four seasons of not qualifying for the 2 Bundesliga promotion playoffs followed in which the team started well but were unable to compete for the championship In 1991 Arminia won the Westphalian Cup the regional qualification cup for the DFB Pokal and beat FSV Mainz 05 in the first round of the 1991 92 DFB Pokal Resurgence and yo yo era 1994 2004 edit In the spring of 1994 Arminia signed veteran Bundesliga players Thomas von Heesen Armin Eck and Fritz Walter Arminia struggled at first but went on to become champions of the newly formed Regionalliga West Sudwest and runners up in the 1995 96 2 Bundesliga Arminia signed Stefan Kuntz for the 1996 97 Bundesliga season their first in 11 years and finished in 14th position The club signed the first two Iranian Bundesliga players in 1997 with the addition of Ali Daei and Karim Bagheri 33 In addition former SK Brann player Geirmund Brendesaeterwas signed and played 13 matches for the club in 1997 34 However after a poor run after the winter break Arminia were relegated shortly after Brendesaeter had left the club Bruno Labbadia became the league s top scorer with 28 goals during the 1998 99 season and the club immediately regained promotion to the Bundesliga by winning the 2 Bundesliga The club entered the 1999 2000 season with a smaller budget due to financial problems and was subsequently relegated after becoming the third team in history to lose ten matches in a row Arminia struggled against relegation again the next season and avoided to drop into the Regionalliga with a 13th place finish 35 In the following year Arminia won their sixth promotion to the Bundesliga in 2001 02 with Artur Wichniarek scoring 18 goals Arminia were unable to avoid relegation the following season earning only two points from the last six matches Bundesliga reestablishment 2004 2009 edit The team earned promotion to the Bundesliga again in 2003 04 with Ghanaian striker Isaac Boakye scoring 14 goals in his debut season 36 They stayed in the top flight until 2009 In 2004 05 Patrick Owomoyela becamed Arminia s most capped German player with his third appearance for the national team 37 Owomoyela went on to appear in 6 national team matches at Bielefeld a club record that still stands as of 2024 Both Owomoyela and Delron Buckley scorer of 15 Bundesliga goals during the 2004 05 season departed the club In the DFB Pokal Arminia reached the semi finals in 2005 and 2006 In both seasons Arminia also kept away from the relegation zone virtually the whole time except the season s beginnings The campaign Aktion 5000 began to in an effort to increase club membership beyond their 5 000th member after reaching the 5 000th member milestone at the end of 2005 38 The 2007 demolition of the East Stand drew the attention of fans and the local media with the club establishing a webcam to follow the project as well as a daily attendance of roughly 300 fans to witness the works 39 The East Stand was notable at the time as being the last terraced stand along the touch line 40 Players from the 2004 05 and the 2005 06 season departed the club including Fatmir Vata and Heiko Westermann in 2007 Mathias Hain Sibusiso Zuma and Petr Gabriel in 2008 Arminia avoided relegation during the 2006 07 season in part by winning four matches from the 30th to the 33rd matchday led by manager Ernst Middendorp The 2007 08 season began with the club winning 3 of its first 5 matches resulting in the club being in second place by the fifth matchday 41 Despite this second place start Arminia recorded its second largest Bundesliga defeat three matchdays later with an 8 1 away loss to Werder Bremen 42 Relegation was avoided only on the final matchday with 34 points due to 1 FC Nurnberg losing at home while Arminia drew against VfB Stuttgart 41 nbsp Ewald Lienen coached the team for most parts of the 2010 11 season The following season Arminia finished in last place and were relegated to the 2 Bundesliga Financial trouble and 3 Liga 2009 2015 edit Players Rudiger Kauf Dennis Eilhoff Jonas Kamper and Radim Kucera remained a part of the squad for the 2009 10 2 Bundesliga season On 16 March 2010 Arminia were deducted four points for breaching the DFL s licensing regulations 43 Arminia were in 5th place prior to the point deduction and finished the season in 7th place 44 their chances of promotion The financial situation worsened especially as costs for constructing the East Stand had proven to be much higher than originally planned for in 2007 45 The coach the managing director and the club s president were replaced in the summer break The 2010 11 season started with Arminia in last place after 11 matchdays having earned only 4 points 46 In November manager Christian Ziege was let go and replaced by Ewald Lienen former Bielefeld player and member of the fan voted Best XI of all time However Arminia picked up 16 points and won only four games all season resulting in a last place finish and relegation to the 3 Liga nbsp Stefan Ortega Moreno in the 2013 14 season A new team had to be formed with players formerly unknown in Bielefeld who would leave their mark according to whom on the following seasons Patrick Platins Manuel Hornig Tom Schutz Sebastian Hille Thomas Hubener Patrick Schonfeld Johannes Rahn and from the second half of the season onwards vague especially Fabian Klos who would coin a whole era vague Another formative player according to whom Stefan Ortega Moreno joined from the club s youth After a poor start according to whom they ended the 2011 12 season in 13th place They also won the Westphalia Cup in a final against arch rival SC Preussen Munster By reaching the final they also qualified for the 2012 13 DFB Pokal where they beat SC Paderborn 07 a team playing in the 2 Bundesliga but lost in the second round in a close match against Bayer 04 Leverkusen a Europa League participant On 11 May 2013 Bielefeld beat VfL Osnabruck 1 0 to guarantee a top two finish and promotion back to the 2 Bundesliga for the 2013 14 season That season began quite hopeful according to whom Arminia qualified for the second round of the DFB Pokal again and at the 8th matchday they had even climbed up to the 3rd rank in the league table But after a disastrous vague autumn and a mediocre vague winter Arminia fell down onto the 17th rank and the popular according to whom coach Stefan Kramer the first manager having held office for more than two years since 2004 had to leave His successor Norbert Meier at first had only little more success vague Arminia finished 16th in the 2 Bundesliga and lost a playoff against SV Darmstadt 98 on away goals after a 122nd minute extra time goal gave Darmstadt the victory Arminia had to go vague back into the 3 Liga But the next season could wipe out tone the bitterness tone of that disaster tone In the 2014 15 DFB Pokal as a 3 Liga club Arminia reached the semi finals by defeating three Bundesliga teams Hertha BSC SV Werder Bremen and VfL Borussia Monchengladbach They also were the top team in the 3 Liga after a bad beginning according to whom with only four points from the first four matches for most part of the season After the loss against VfL Wolfsburg in the semi final of the DFB Pokal Arminia seemed to have lost their ability according to whom to win their matches in the 3 Liga as well Even the qualification for the 2 Bundesliga seemed to become doubtful according to whom but was secured after a 2 2 draw against SSV Jahn Regensburg the last team in the league table at the 37th matchday Liberated from the pressure of a possible non qualification tone they also won the 3 Liga with a final 1 0 victory at the last matchday Sporting and financial recovery 2015 2020 edit A stable season according to whom with a defeat in the first round of the DFB Pokal a lot of quantify draws in the league especially in the beginning eight out of ten matches in the end Arminia reached a record of 18 and only very few vague goals scored at home only eight until the 30th matchday followed so that the 4 2 over Greuther Furth at the 31st matchday which secured Arminia s staying up was only Arminia s third win at home That season s highlights probably according to whom were the draws against all three top teams away In the league table Arminia never went deeper than rank 14 and finished 12th After the season the coach Norbert Meier was bought by SV Darmstadt 98 A difficult according to whom 2016 17 season with two manager sackings followed citation needed Arminia found themselves vague among the lowest four teams in the league table from the fourth matchday onwards mostly on the 16th or 17th rank On the other hand Arminia reached the quarter final in the DFB Pokal They avoided relegation as they finished in 15th after a 6 0 win over promotion candidate Eintracht Braunschweig and a 1 1 against Dynamo Dresden at the last two matchdays The 2017 18 season turned out easier Having gathered 10 points out of the first four matches Arminia hardly ever left the upper half of the league table only at the 19th matchday rank 10 and finished on the 4th rank though in that season s very close league table this never meant much according to whom In that season Arminia also made a big step tone in lowering its debts through an alliance of sponsors 47 and Fabian Klos replaced Ernst Kuster as the club s all time top scorer 48 In November 2018 Arminia were practically vague free of debt but had to sell its stadium 49 The team faced a more difficult situation when December started Having gained less than one point per match on average only the weakness of the competing relegation candidates kept them up and they were already out of the DFB Pokal after a 0 3 defeat at home against MSV Duisburg another relegation candidate in the second round Thus the popular according to whom coach Jeff Saibene was replaced by Uwe Neuhaus who managed Arminia back into mid table within four matchdays and into 7th place by the last matchday nbsp Uwe Neuhaus brought Arminia back into the Bundesliga The 2019 20 season would turn out even better according to whom When Arminia had climbed on the 3rd rank of the league table after a 2 0 victory away against Hannover 96 who were originally regarded by whom as a promotion candidate at the 6th matchday hardly anyone guessed according to whom they would stay in the promotion area of the league table for the rest of the season They had just reached the second rank of the league table when they met FC Schalke 04 in the 2nd round of the DFB Pokal on 29 October In spite of Schalke clearly dominating according to whom the match in the first 70 minutes Arminia thrilled tone the supporters in the last 20 minutes by scoring two goals and only closely missing extra time 50 They finished the 15th matchday on 1 December on the first rank of the league table where they would stay for the rest of the season in spite of competing with Hamburger SV and VfB Stuttgart who were originally estimated by whom as main promotion candidates After Arminia s 1 1 draw in Stuttgart on 9 March 2020 25th matchday the season was interrupted because of the COVID 19 pandemic Even this interruption did not affect them they finished the season with 68 points 10 points more than VfB Stuttgart who finished 2nd 51 Bundesliga return and double relegation 2020 present edit In the 2020 21 season they were the team with the lowest budget in the Bundesliga After a defeat in the first round of the DFB Pokal they had a quite promising vague start in the Bundesliga season but from the 4th matchday onwards they could be found among the last five teams in the league table from the 6th matchday onwards amongst the last four teams In March the popular according to whom manager Uwe Neuhaus was replaced by Frank Kramer 52 53 54 A 2 0 win over VfB Stuttgart on the final matchday secured their spot in the 2021 22 Bundesliga That season turned out even more difficult At the end of October they were in danger of losing touch with the 16th rank They started November with a 1 0 win away over VfB Stuttgart their first win in the whole Bundesliga season That match appeared to have stabilized Arminia s performance In February they climbed up to 14th after a 1 0 win over 1 FC Union Berlin However this would be their last win of the season They ended in 17th place and were relegated to the 2 Bundesliga The following season Arminia finished in 16th place and lost the relegation playoff to Wehen Wiesbaden thus suffering the indignity of suffering back to back relegations Colours and crest editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message Arminia took the club colours blue white and black upon their foundation in 1905 The colours have not changed though the current club colours are black white and blue Despite this Arminia played their first match in an orange kit Arminia s home kit was blue for most of the time while their shorts and socks were white The team that won promotion to the Bundesliga in 1970 wore a blue shirt with thick white stripes citation needed The away kit was mostly all white while green shirts were worn in the 1990s vague The crest consists of a flag with the club s colours black white and blue from left to right The white part of the flag includes the letter A for Arminia The flag is surrounded by a wreath of oak nbsp Crest of 1 FC Arminia Bielefeld 1905 1922 nbsp Crest of Arminia Bielefeld 1922 1949 nbsp Crest of Arminia Bielefeld 1974 1985 nbsp Crest of Arminia Bielefeld 1985 1998 nbsp Crest of Arminia Bielefeld since 1998 Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors edit Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor chest Shirt sponsor sleeve Shirt sponsor back Prior to 1975 None In House None None None 1975 1979 Adidas granini 1979 1985 Seidensticker 1985 1988 granini 1988 1991 Schuco 1991 1993 Lotto Sportlepp 1993 1994 Forum Jahnplatz NaturoKork 1994 1996 Westfalen Blatt 1996 1998 Reusch Gerry Weber 1998 2000 Herforder Pils 2000 2001 Uhlsport 2001 2002 Real 2002 2004 KiK 2004 2005 Krombacher 2005 2010 Saller 2010 2011 Schuco 2011 2014 getgoods de 2014 2017 Alpecin JAB Anstoetz Group 2017 2020 Joma Schuco 2020 2023 Macron 2023 2024 holz4home Sources 55 56 57 Stadium editMain article Bielefelder Alm nbsp The new eastern stand This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message Arminia played their first home matches at the Kesselbrink in downtown Bielefeld They moved to a new ground at the Kaiserstrasse today August Bebel Strasse in 1907 and to the Pottenau in 1910 In 1926 Arminia leased a ground from a farmer named Lohmann citation needed The ground did not look like a football pitch The club member Heinrich Pahl said that the area looks like an Alm German for alpine grassland The stadium was known as the Alm Arminia played its first match against Victoria Hamburg on 1 May 1926 The first grandstands were constructed in 1954 When Arminia won promotion to the Bundesliga in 1970 the Alm underwent a general development A main stand with seats was built and the northern and eastern stands were enlarged The Alm had a capacity of 30 000 and floodlights were installed In 1978 a roof was added to the main stands and the other stands were enlarged again The stadium had a capacity of 35 000 then When Arminia was relegated to the Oberliga in 1988 the northern and the southern stand were torn down because both stands did not match the new safety regulations vague The eastern stand was also made smaller and a roof was added The capacity was reduced to about 15 000 After Arminia won promotion to the Bundesliga in 1996 the main and northern stands were demolished and completely rebuilt The same happened to the south stand in 1999 In 2004 Arminia signed a sponsorship deal with Schuco and the stadium was named SchucoArena The latest redevelopment saw the Eastern Stand being rebuilt in 2008 The Bielefelder Alm has a capacity of 27 300 including 20 381 seats 58 Bielefelder Alm was a candidate to host matches of the 2011 FIFA Women s World Cup Supporters edit nbsp Pitch invasion after securing promotion at Bielefelder Alm in 2013 This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message Arminia have a large number of loyal supporters according to whom Even in 2011 12 vague Arminia had an average attendance of 8 930 which was the highest in the 3 Liga In 2014 15 Arminia had an average attendance of 14 540 which was the second highest in that 3 Liga season The numbers also show the risen popularity of the 3 Liga vague Arminia s matches during the 2013 14 2 Bundesliga were attended by 16 890 on average 59 These numbers only count league matches Arminia s matches in the 2014 15 DFB Pokal were attended by 21 763 on average The core according to whom of the fans can be found on the terraces of the Southern Stand Arminia s fans come primarily from the Ostwestfalen Lippe region with a catchment area of about 100 kilometers around Bielefeld according to whom There are around 140 fanclubs mostly from Ostwestfalen Lippe according to whom However there are fanclubs in Berlin Stuttgart London Birmingham Taunton Austria and the Netherlands nbsp Arminia supporters backing their team during an away game at Millerntor Stadion There is a traditional rivalry with SC Preussen Munster The match against them in March 2012 which was the first one taking place in Bielefeld after nearly 20 years was attended by 21 203 spectators No other match in the 3 Liga had such a high attendance according to whom One year later the stadium was nearly sold out in that derby An earlier rival was VfB 03 Bielefeld from the east of Bielefeld but the rivalry lessened and nowadays when friendly matches between Arminia and VfB Fichte Bielefeld as the club nowadays is called take place every year Another rival is VfL Bochum especially since the late 90s and there were fashion rivalries with other clubs from the Ruhr because that area also belongs to Westphalia 60 Many SC Paderborn 07 supporters consider Arminia as their main rival but Arminia fans generally do not feel the same about them 61 62 Also the matches against VfL Osnabruck are a small derby somehow oscillating between friendship and rivalry vague There are friendly relations to the supporters of the Hamburger SV vague with both clubs sharing the same colours black white and blue resulting in the chant Schwarz weiss blau Arminia und der HSV Black white blue Arminia and HSV among supporters of both clubs For many fans this friendship also involves friendly ties to Hannover 96 whose fans share a friendship with Hamburg as well All three clubs are sometimes dubbed the Nordallianz Northern Alliance despite the fact that Bielefeld other than Hamburg and Hannover is not located in what is considered Northern Germany Players editCurrent squad edit As of 1 February 2024 63 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 nbsp GER Jonas Kersken on loan from Monchengladbach 4 DF nbsp GER Louis Oppie 5 DF nbsp GER Semi Belkahia 6 DF nbsp GER Can Ozkan 7 MF nbsp GER Nicklas Shipnoski 8 MF nbsp GER Sam Schreck 9 FW nbsp GER Fabian Klos captain 10 MF nbsp MAR Nassim Boujellab 11 FW nbsp GER Aygun Yildirim 14 FW nbsp GER Thaddaus Monju Momuluh on loan from Hannover 96 16 MF nbsp USA Mael Corboz 17 MF nbsp GER Merveille Biankadi 19 MF nbsp GER Maximilian Grosser No Pos Nation Player 22 GK nbsp GER Leo Oppermann on loan from Hamburger SV 23 DF nbsp GER Leon Schneider 24 DF nbsp GER Christopher Lannert 25 MF nbsp JPN Kaito Mizuta 27 DF nbsp GER Gerrit Gohlke 28 MF nbsp GER Lucas Kiewitt 29 FW nbsp GER Henrik Koch 30 MF nbsp GER Henry Obermeyer 34 MF nbsp GER Leandro Putaro on loan from VfL Osnabruck 37 FW nbsp GER Noah Sarenren Bazee 38 MF nbsp GER Marius Worl on loan from Hannover 96 39 FW nbsp GER Manuel Wintzheimer on loan from Nurnberg 40 GK nbsp GER Jonah Busse Out on loan edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player MF nbsp GER Tom Geerkens at Wuppertaler SV until 30 June 2024 No Pos Nation Player FW nbsp GER Christopher Schepp at SV Meppen until 30 June 2024 100 year team editTo celebrate the 100th anniversary of the club s formation a fan poll was taken to determine the club s greatest starting XI as well as seven substitutes and a manager The following players were chosen 64 Starting XI Uli Stein Gunther Schafer Dieter Schulz Thomas Stratos Walter Claus Oehler Frank Pagelsdorf Thomas von Heesen Norbert Eilenfeldt Bernd Kirchner Bruno Labbadia Ewald Lienen Substitutes Wolfgang Kneib Thomas Helmer Arne Friedrich Helmut Schroder Silvio Meissner Billy Reina Fritz Walter Manager Ernst Middendorp nbsp Arminia players in national teams editThe player who has won the most international caps while at the club from 1997 to 2000 is Karim Bagheri with 28 for Iran 65 He and his team mate Ali Daei were important Iranian players in the 1998 FIFA World Cup They are the only footballers having taken part in a World Cup s final tournament while playing for Arminia Other remarkable Arminia players who represented foreign countries while at the club are Pasi Rautiainen Artur Wichniarek Markus Weissenberger Fatmir Vata Isaac Boakye Delron Buckley Sibusiso Zuma Rowen Fernandez Christopher Katongo Jonas Kamper Ritsu Dōan and Alessandro Schopf 66 Four players were capped by Germany during their time with Arminia Walter Claus Oehler in 1923 Stefan Kuntz in 1996 Ronald Maul in 1999 and Patrick Owomoyela in 2004 and 2005 He played six matches for Germany in this time and thus holds the record Some of the most famous former Arminia players played for their national teams only between their times with Arminia Uli Stein and Jorg Bohme or after their years with Arminia Dieter Burdenski Thomas Helmer Arne Friedrich Heiko Westermann and Jonathan Clauss Honours editArminia Bielefeld has never won any major trophies but they have won some silverware on a minor level 67 League titles edit 2 Bundesliga II Champions 1998 99 2019 20 2 Bundesliga Nord II Champions 1977 78 1979 80 3 Liga III Champions 2014 15 Regionalliga West Sudwest III Champions 1994 95 Oberliga Westfalen III Champions 1989 90 Regional titles edit Western German football championship Winners 1922 1923 Cups edit West German cup winner Winners 1966 1974 Westphalian cup winner Winners 1908 1932 1991 2012 2013Management and staff editCurrent staff edit As of 19 March 2024 68 Coaching staff nbsp Michel Kniat Manager nbsp Daniel Jara Assistant managers nbsp Oliver Doking nbsp Janik Steringer Assistant manager and Video Analyst nbsp Steffan Sussner Goalkeeping coach Fitness coaches nbsp Niklas Klasen Fitness Coach nbsp Malte Hornemann Rehabilitation Coach Medical department nbsp Dr Andreas Elsner Team doctors nbsp Dr Tim Niedergassel nbsp Dr Stefan Budde nbsp Mario Bertling Physiotherapists nbsp Arne Boker Sport management and organisation nbsp Sandra Hausberger Team Manager nbsp Rainer Schonz Kit Manager nbsp Sebastian Wolf Bus Driver Managers since 1922 edit Coach Nationality from to Significant events Frantisek Zoubek nbsp 1922 1923 West German Champion 1923 Gerd Wellhofer nbsp 1923 1924 Westfalen Champion 1924 Frantisek Zoubek Gerd Wellhofer nbsp nbsp 1924 1925 Westfalen Champion 1925 Gerd Wellhofer nbsp 1925 1926 Westfalen Champion 1926 Frantisek Zoubek nbsp 1926 1933 Westfalen Champion 1923 1933 Westfalischer Cup Winner 1932 Qualification to the Gauliga Westfalen 1933 Otto Faist nbsp 1933 1935 Relegation from Gauliga 1934 Karl Willnecker nbsp 1935 1938 Promotion to Gauliga 1938 Erich Brochmeyer nbsp 1938 1939 Ferdinand Swatosch nbsp 1939 1940 Vice Champion of the Gauliga Otto Kranefeld 69 nbsp 1940 1942 Karl Wunderlich nbsp 1942 1945 Erich Brochmeyer nbsp 1945 1946 Relegation to the Landesliga Ferdinand Swatosch nbsp 1946 1947 Karl Wunderlich nbsp 1947 1948 Promotion to the Landesliga Alois Munstermann nbsp 1948 1949 Promotion to the Oberliga Friedrich Otto nbsp 1949 1950 Relegation to the 2 Liga West Fritz Kaiser nbsp 1950 1951 Hellmut Meidt nbsp 1951 1953 Donndorf nbsp 1953 1955 Relegation to the Landesliga 1954 Otto Westphal nbsp 1955 1958 Arthur Gruber nbsp 1958 19 March 1961 first Coach sacking Josef Rasselnberg nbsp 20 March 1961 1961 Jakob Wimmer nbsp 1961 April 1963 Promotion to the 2 Liga West 1962 Hellmut Meidt nbsp April 1963 1965 Qualification to the Regionalliga 1963 Robert Gebhardt nbsp 1965 1966 Westdeutscher Cup Winner Westfalischer Cup Winner Hans Wendlandt nbsp 1966 November 1969 Egon Piechaczek nbsp November 1969 December 1971 Promotion to the Bundesliga 1970 Hellmut Meidt nbsp January 1972 January 1972 Jan Notermans nbsp February 1972 October 1972 Relegation to the Regionalliga Willi Nolting nbsp October 1972 February 1973 Norbert Lessle nbsp February 1973 September 1973 Karl Heinz Harry Garstecki nbsp September 1973 October 1973 Willi Nolting nbsp October 1973 Januar 1974 Rudi Fassnacht nbsp January 1974 1974 Qualification to the 2 Bundesliga Westfalischer Cup Winner Erhard Ahmann nbsp 1974 1976 Karl Heinz Feldkamp nbsp 1976 1978 Promotion to the Bundesliga Milovan Beljin nbsp 1978 October 1978 Otto Rehhagel nbsp October 1978 October 1979 Relegation to the 2 Bundesliga 1978 Willi Nolting nbsp October 1979 October 1979 Hans Dieter Tippenhauer nbsp October 1979 September 1980 Promotion to the Bundesliga Willi Nolting nbsp September 1980 December 1980 Horst Franz nbsp December 1980 1982 Horst Koppel nbsp 1982 1983 Place 8 in the Bundesliga Karl Heinz Feldkamp nbsp 1983 March 1984 Gerd Roggensack nbsp March 1984 February 1986 Place 8 in der Bundesliga 1984 Relegation to the 2 Bundesliga 1985 Horst Franz nbsp February 1986 November 1986 Fritz Fuchs nbsp November 1986 December 1987 Joachim Krug nbsp December 1987 April 1988 Ernst Middendorp nbsp April 1988 October 1990 Relegation to the Oberliga 1988 Champion of the Oberliga Westfalen 1990 Franz Raschid nbsp October 1990 1991 Fritz Grosche nbsp 1991 1992 Ingo Peter nbsp 1 July 1992 1 February 1994 Theo Schneider nbsp 2 February 1994 30 June 1994 Qualification for the Regionalliga West Sudwest Wolfgang Sidka nbsp 1994 September 1994 Ernst Middendorp nbsp September 1994 16 August 1998 Promotion to the 2 Bundesliga 1995 Promotion to the Bundesliga 1996 Relegation to the 2 Bundesliga Thomas von Heesen nbsp 17 August 1998 1999 Promotion to the Bundesliga Hermann Gerland nbsp 1999 October 2000 Relegation to the 2 Bundesliga Benno Mohlmann nbsp October 2000 16 February 2004 Promotion to the Bundesliga Relegation to the 2 Bundesliga Thomas von Heesen nbsp 17 February 2004 29 February 2004 Uwe Rapolder nbsp 1 March 2004 10 May 2005 Promotion to the Bundesliga Frank Geideck nbsp 11 May 2005 2005 Thomas von Heesen nbsp 2005 11 February 2007 Frank Geideck nbsp 11 February 2007 13 March 2007 Ernst Middendorp nbsp 14 March 2007 9 December 2007 Detlev Dammeier nbsp 10 December 2007 31 December 2007 Michael Frontzeck nbsp 1 January 2008 17 May 2009 Jorg Berger nbsp 19 May 2009 24 June 2009 Relegation to the 2 Bundesliga Thomas Gerstner nbsp 24 June 2009 11 March 2010 Frank Eulberg amp Jorg Bohme nbsp 11 March 2010 26 May 2010 Christian Ziege nbsp 26 May 2010 6 November 2010 Ewald Lienen nbsp 7 November 2010 30 June 2011 Relegated to the 3 Liga Markus von Ahlen nbsp 1 July 2011 20 September 2011 Stefan Kramer nbsp 21 September 2011 23 February 2014 Promotion to the 2 Bundesliga Norbert Meier nbsp 24 February 2014 10 June 2016 Promotion to the 2 Bundesligasemi final in the 2014 15 DFB Pokal season Rudiger Rehm nbsp 15 June 2016 22 October 2016 Carsten Rump nbsp 23 October 2016 15 November 2016 Jurgen Kramny nbsp 15 November 2016 14 March 2017 Jeff Saibene nbsp 19 March 2017 10 December 2018 Uwe Neuhaus nbsp 10 December 2018 1 March 2021 Promotion to the Bundesliga Frank Kramer nbsp 2 March 2021 20 April 2022 Marco Kostmann nbsp 20 April 2022 3 June 2022 Uli Forte nbsp 3 June 2022 17 August 2022 Daniel Scherning nbsp 18 August 2022 7 March 2023 Uwe Koschinat nbsp 9 March 2023 30 June 2023 Relegated to the 3 Liga Michel Kniat nbsp 1 July 2023 Source 70 References edit ARMINIA BIELEFELD PRESENTS THREE NEW SHIRTS FOR THE 2023 2024 SEASON Macron Retrieved 12 March 2024 Chaffer Alex Five facts about Arminia Bielefeld Deutsche Welle Retrieved 12 March 2024 Arminia Bielefeld Stadion Kicker Retrieved 11 March 2024 DER DSC Arminia Bielefeld E V Retrieved 11 March 2024 Unser Verein DER DSC Arminia Bielefeld E V Retrieved 12 March 2024 Bundesliga club by club historical guide Arminia Bielefeld Bundesliga com ESPN Retrieved 12 March 2024 Alle Ligaplazierungen seit Grundung des Vereins Blaue Daten in German Retrieved 15 March 2024 Der DSC Historie Arminia Bielefeld in German Arminia Bielefeld E V Retrieved 15 March 2024 Neue Haupttribune fertiggestellt Neue Westfalische Retrieved 12 March 2024 SCHUCOARENA Arminia Bielefeld Arminia Bielefeld E V Retrieved 12 March 2024 Fanclubs Arminia Bielefeld Arminia Bielefeld E V Retrieved 12 March 2024 Kirschneck Uhlig Arminia 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01 Blaue Daten in German Retrieved 21 March 2024 2 Bundesliga 2003 2004 Torschutzenliste weltfussball de in German Archived from the original on 5 May 2016 Retrieved 19 May 2021 Bielefelds A Nationalspieler Blaue Daten in German Retrieved 21 March 2024 Rubenbauer wirbt fur Arminia Neue Westfalische in German Retrieved 21 March 2024 Der offentliche Abriss einer Tribune Neue Westfalische in German Retrieved 21 March 2024 Sitzen ist furs Gesass in German Blog5 Archived from the original on 15 April 2015 Retrieved 21 January 2013 a b Saisonverlauf in der Bundesliga 2007 08 Blaue Daten in German Retrieved 21 March 2024 Vermischtes Rekorde Hoechste SiegeNiederlagen Blaue Daten in German Retrieved 21 March 2024 DFL Strafe gegen Bielefeld in German Archived from the original on 12 March 2023 Retrieved 12 March 2023 Saisonverlauf in der 2 Liga 2009 10 Blaue Daten in German Retrieved 21 March 2024 Lizenz fur Arminia akut gefahrdet in German Focus 2 May 2010 Archived from the original on 22 August 2016 Retrieved 12 March 2023 Saisonverlauf in der 2 Liga 2010 11 Blaue Daten in German Retrieved 21 March 2024 Sanierungsplane Arminia soll in funf Jahren schuldenfrei sein Neue Westfalische in German 17 January 2018 Archived from the original on 20 January 2018 Retrieved 25 May 2018 90 3 Arminias Klos setzt dem Wahnsinn die Krone auf Lippische Landeszeitung in German 27 April 2018 Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 4 March 2023 Arminia schliesst Sanierung mit Stadionverkauf erfolgreich ab und ist netto finanzschuldenfrei Arminia Bielefeld in German 12 November 2018 Archived from the original on 13 November 2018 Retrieved 24 March 2019 3 2 in Bielefeld Schalke zittert sich ins Achtelfinale kicker in German 29 October 2019 Archived from the original on 12 October 2020 Retrieved 3 October 2020 34 Spieltag 2 Bundesliga 2019 2020 Kicker in German Archived from the original on 1 October 2020 Retrieved 3 October 2020 Michael Richter 1 March 2021 Arminia Bielefeld trennt sich von Trainer Neuhaus kicker in German Archived from the original on 12 March 2023 Retrieved 12 March 2023 DSC Arminia entbindet Neuhaus und Nemeth von ihren Aufgaben arminia bielefeld de in German 1 March 2021 Archived from the original on 1 March 2021 Retrieved 12 March 2023 Frank Kramer ist neuer Arminia Cheftrainer arminia bielefeld de in German 2 March 2021 Archived from the original on 3 March 2021 Retrieved 12 March 2023 Trikotsponsoren seit 1975 Blaue Daten in German Retrieved 18 March 2024 Arminia Bielefeld Trikot Historie Football Kit Archive in German Retrieved 18 March 2024 holz4home ist Ruckensponsor Arminia Bielefeld in German 3 August 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2024 Die SchucoArena in German Arminia Bielefeld Archived from the original on 23 August 2008 Retrieved 24 August 2008 Arminia Bielefeld Statistik Liga Zuschauer pro Saison blaue daten de in German Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 3 October 2015 Schuco Arena stadionsuche de Archived from the original on 6 June 2012 Retrieved 21 January 2013 Pommerenke Tim Stotz Patrick November 2018 Freunde und Rivalen Der Spiegel in German Spiegel Retrieved 13 March 2024 Jan H Grotevent Derby ohne Derby FANkultur com Archived from the original on 23 October 2012 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Das Team 2019 2020 DSC Arminia Bielefeld in German Archived from the original on 6 July 2020 Retrieved 22 September 2019 Die DSC Jahrhundertelf in German Arminia Bielefeld Archived from the original on 27 November 2016 Retrieved 3 October 2013 Kirschneck Uhlig et al Arminia Bielefeld 100 Jahre Leidenschaft 2005 p 222 Frank Muller Bielefelds auslandische Nationalspieler in German Blaue Daten Archived from the original on 5 March 2023 Retrieved 5 March 2023 Daten amp Statistik in German Arminia Bielefeld Archived from the original on 12 February 2012 Retrieved 12 August 2008 Unsere Mannschaft Arminia Bielefeld in German Retrieved 19 March 2024 as player coach Die Trainer seit 1922 Blaue Daten in German Retrieved 19 March 2024 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arminia Bielefeld Official website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arminia Bielefeld amp oldid 1221053865, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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