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FC Schalke 04

Fußballclub Gelsenkirchen-Schalke 04 e. V., commonly known as FC Schalke 04 (German: [ɛf tseː ˈʃalkə nʊl fiːɐ̯] (listen)), Schalke 04 (German: [ˌʃalkə nʊl ˈfiːɐ̯] (listen)), or abbreviated as S04 (German: [ˈɛs nʊl fiːɐ̯] (listen)), is a professional German football and multi-sports club originally from the Schalke district of Gelsenkirchen, North Rhine-Westphalia. The "04" in the club's name derives from its formation in 1904. Schalke have been one of the most popular professional football teams in Germany, even though the club's heyday was in the 1930s and 1940s. Schalke have played in the Bundesliga, the top tier of the German football league system, since 2022, following promotion from the 2. Bundesliga in 2021–22. As of 2022, the club has 160,000 members,[3] making it the second-largest football club in Germany and the fourth-largest club in the world in terms of membership.[4] Other activities offered by the club include athletics, basketball, handball, table tennis, winter sports and eSports.

Schalke 04
Full nameFußballclub Gelsenkirchen-Schalke 04 e. V.
Nickname(s)Die Königsblauen (The Royal Blues)
Die Knappen (The Miners)
Short nameS04
Founded4 May 1904; 118 years ago (1904-05-04) as Westfalia Schalke
GroundVeltins-Arena, Gelsenkirchen
Capacity62,271[1]
Executive boardAxel Hefer[2]
Head coachThomas Reis
LeagueBundesliga
2021–222. Bundesliga, 1st of 18 (promoted)
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Schalke have won seven German championships, five DFB-Pokals, one DFB Ligapokal, one DFL-Supercup and one UEFA Cup. In 1937, Schalke became the first German club to win the double. Since 2001, Schalke's stadium has been the Veltins-Arena. Schalke hold a long-standing rivalry with Ruhr neighbours Borussia Dortmund, known as the Revierderby.

History

1904–1927: Schalke's early years

 
1900s typical mining structure in the Ruhr, source of the Schalke nickname Die Knappen – from an old German word for "miners"– because the team drew so many of its players and supporters from the coalmine workers of Gelsenkirchen.

The club was founded on 4 May 1904 as Westfalia Schalke by a group of high school students and first wore the colours red and yellow. The team was unable to gain admittance to the Westdeutscher Spielverband (Western German Football Association) and played in one of the "wild associations" of early German football. In 1912, after years of failed attempts to join the official league, they merged with the gymnastic club Schalker Turnverein 1877 in order to facilitate their entry. This arrangement held up until 1915, when SV Westfalia Schalke was re-established as an independent club. The separation proved short-lived and the two came together again in 1919 as Turn- und Sportverein Schalke 1877. The new club won its first honours in 1923 as champions of the Schalke Kreisliga. It was around this time that Schalke picked up the nickname Die Knappen, from an old German word for "miners" because the team drew so many of its players and supporters from the coal miners of Gelsenkirchen.[citation needed]

In 1924, the football team parted ways with the gymnasts again, this time taking the club chairman along with them. They took the name FC Schalke 04 and adopted the now familiar blue and white kit from which their second nickname would derive, Die Königsblauen (English: The Royal Blues). The following year, the club became the dominant local side, based on a style of play that used short, sharp, man-to-man passing to move the ball. This system would later become famous as the Schalker Kreisel (English: spinning top; gyroscope). In 1927, it carried them into the top-flight Gauliga Ruhr, onto the league championship, and then into the opening rounds of the national finals.[citation needed]

1928–1933: Rise to dominance

The popular club built a new stadium, the Glückauf-Kampfbahn, in 1928, and acknowledged the city's support by renaming themselves FC Gelsenkirchen-Schalke 04. They won their first West German championship in 1929, but the following year were sanctioned for exceeding salary levels set by the league and, in an era that considered professionalism in sport to be anathema, found themselves banned from play for nearly half a year.

However, the ban had little impact on the team's popularity: in their first match after the ban against Fortuna Düsseldorf, in June 1931, the team drew 70,000 spectators to its home ground. The club's fortunes begun to rise from 1931 and they made a semi-final appearance in the 1932 German championship, losing 1–2 to Eintracht Frankfurt. The year after, the club went all the way to the final, where Fortuna Düsseldorf proved the better side, winning 3–0.[5]

1933–1945: The championship years

With the re-organisation of German football in 1933 under Nazi Germany, Schalke found themselves in the Gauliga Westfalen, 1 of 16 top-flight divisions established to replace the innumerable regional and local leagues, all claiming top status. This league saw Schalke's most successful decade in their history: from 1933 to 1942, the club would appear in 14 of 18 national finals (ten in the German championship and eight in the Tschammerpokal, the predecessor of today's DFB-Pokal) and win their league in every one of its eleven seasons.

The club never lost a home match in the Gauliga Westfalen in all these 11 seasons and only lost six away matches, while remaining unbeaten in the 1935–36, 1936–37, 1937–38, 1938–39, 1940–41 and 1942–43 seasons, a sign of the club's dominance.[6]

 
FC Schalke 04 supporters in 1941

Schalke's first national title came in 1934 with a 2–1 victory over favourites 1. FC Nürnberg. The next year, they successfully defended their title against VfB Stuttgart with a 6–4 win. The club missed the 1936 final, but would make appearances in the championship match in each of the next six years, coming away victorious in 1937, 1939, 1940 and 1942. Three of those national finals were against Austrian teams – Admira Wien, Rapid Wien and First Vienna – which played in Germany's Gauliga Ostmark after Austria's incorporation into the Reich through the 1938 Anschluss.

Die Königsblauen also made frequent appearances in the final of the Tschammerpokal, but enjoyed much less success there. They lost the inaugural Tschammerpokal 0–2 to 1. FC Nürnberg in 1935. They also made failed appearances in the 1936, 1941, and 1942 finals with their only victory coming in 1937 against Fortuna Düsseldorf.

Over a dozen seasons, from 1933 to 1945, Schalke won 162 of 189 Gauliga matches, drawing 21 and losing only 6. Within this period, they scored 924 goals and conceded just 145. From 1935 to 1939, they did not lose a single league match. The club's dominance throughout this period led them to be held up for propaganda purposes by the Nazi regime as an example of "new Germany".

1945–1959: Football after World War II

 
Commonly regarded as the greatest S04 player of all time alongside Fritz Szepan, Ernst Kuzorra is also commonly regarded as one of the greatest German forwards and led S04 to become the dominant team in German football winning six German championships and one DFB-Pokal from 1934 to 1942. Ernst Kuzorra was one of the main axes of what became known as the "Schalker Kreisel; a system that used quick and short passing", to confuse and overwhelm the opponent.

With Germany in chaos towards the end of World War II, Schalke played just two matches in 1945. They resumed regular play following the war and, for a time, continued to compete as a strong side. They set a record in a national championship round match with a 20–0 drubbing of SpVgg Herten, but that spoke more to the weakened condition of German football than to the ability of the team. Schalke's play fell off and the best they could manage in the new Oberliga West in 1947 was a sixth-place finish. Within two years, they slipped to 12th place.

It would take Schalke until the mid-1950s to recover their form. They finished third in a tight three-way race for the 1954 Oberliga West title, decided on the last day of the season. The following year, they appeared in the DFB-Pokal final, where they lost 2–3 to Karlsruher SC. The club's next, and to date last, German championship came in 1958 with a 3–0 victory over Hamburger SV. The strong fanbase of the club is as well documented in a local church, St. Joseph, in Gelsenkirchen. It was renovated shortly after the 1958 victory, where one of the glass windows shows Aloysius Gonzaga with a football and the dress and colors of Schalke.[7]

1960–2000: Entry to the Bundesliga and the Euro Fighters

Schalke continued to play well, delivering a number of top four finishes in the years leading up to the 1963 formation of the Bundesliga, West Germany's new federal, professional league. Those results earned them selection as 1 of 16 clubs admitted to the top-flight league.

Their first years in the Bundesliga were difficult. In 1964–65, they escaped relegation only through the expansion of the league to 18 teams. A number of finishes at the lower end of the league table followed, before a marked improvement in 1971–72, culminating in a second-place finish to Bayern Munich and after having led the league for much of the season. In the same season, Schalke won the DFB-Pokal for the second time in its history.

Despite their improved results, the seeds of a major reversal had already been sown. A number of the team's players and officials were accused of accepting bribes as part of the widespread Bundesliga scandal of 1971. Investigation showed that Schalke had deliberately played to lose their 17 May, 28th-round match against Arminia Bielefeld, 0–1. As a result, several Schalke players were banned for life, including three – Klaus Fischer, "Stan" Libuda and Klaus Fichtel – who regularly played for the West Germany national team at the time.[citation needed]

Even though the penalties were later commuted to bans ranging from six months to two years, the scandal had a profound effect on what might have possibly become one of the dominant German teams of the 1970s.[citation needed] In 1973, the club moved to the Parkstadion, newly built for the 1974 FIFA World Cup and having a capacity of 70,000 spectators. In the wake of the scandal, the club's performance was uneven. They managed another second-place result in 1976–77, finishing just one point behind champions Borussia Mönchengladbach.

In the early 1980s, Die Knappen ran into trouble and found themselves relegated to the second division of the Bundesliga for the 1981–82 season and, after promotion, again in 1983–84. They returned to the top flight in 1984 but slipped once more to the second tier in 1988. They returned to the Bundesliga in the 1991–92 season and stayed in the top flight until 2021.

 
FC Schalke 04 starting line-up in their victorious 1997 UEFA Cup Final.

The club earned their first honours since the DFB-Pokal win of 1972 with a victory in the final of the 1996–97 UEFA Cup over Inter Milan on penalties. Coached by the Dutch coach Huub Stevens, the 1997 Schalke squad earned the nickname "Euro Fighters", which is still in use among fans. Stevens, who was widely unknown in Germany at the time, quickly earned himself a cult following among the Schalke supporters.

Stevens successfully implemented a system of rigid discipline, especially in the defence. His motto "Die Null muß stehen" (in English, "It has to read nil"), which emphasized his importance on his side not conceding any goals, has found its way into everyday language in Germany.

2000–2019: Top-table mainstay, European semi-final

The turn of the millennium has seen much stronger performances from Schalke. During the 1990s and early 2000, the club underwent a successful transformation into a modern, commercial sports organization and established itself as one of the dominant teams of the Bundesliga. Schalke captured consecutive DFB-Pokals in 2000–01 and 2001–02, and earned second-place finishes in the Bundesliga in 2000–01, 2004–05 and 2006–07. The 2000–01 season finish was heartbreaking for Schalke's supporters as it took a goal in the fourth minute of injury time by Bayern Munich away to Hamburger SV to snatch the title from Die Königsblauen.

 
Fans displaying their colours at the Veltins-Arena.

The last few years have been more successful for Schalke, who finished in the second place in 2005, a result that led to Schalke making its second appearance in the UEFA Champions League. There, Schalke finished in third place during the group stage and continuing into the UEFA Cup, where they were eliminated by the eventual winners Sevilla in the semi-finals. In 2005–06, Schalke finished in fourth place in the Bundesliga and a year later they again finished as runners-up for the third time in seven seasons.

In the 2007–08 season, Schalke progressed past the Champions League group stage for the first time and advanced to the quarter-finals after defeating Porto on penalties in the round of 16. They were eliminated by Barcelona in the quarter-finals, losing both home and away matches 0–1.

On 9 October 2006, Russian oil company Gazprom became the club's new sponsor. The company stated it expected to invest as much as €125 million in the club over a five-and-a-half-year period.[8] Gazprom's sponsorship has been seen by some analysts as a politically motivated attempt to buy friendship in Germany.[9] Within this sponsorship, Schalke 04 and Zenit Saint Petersburg signed a "partnership agreement"; both clubs intend to work closely on improving football-related issues.

On 13 April 2008, the club announced the dismissal of manager Mirko Slomka after a heavy defeat at the hands of Werder Bremen and elimination from the Champions League. Former players Mike Büskens and Youri Mulder were put in charge of the first team on an interim basis. For the 2008–09 Bundesliga season, Schalke signed a new head coach, Fred Rutten, previously of Twente. Rutten signed a contract running until June 2010.[10] In March 2009, Rutten was sacked and, once more, Mike Büskens, Youri Mulder and Oliver Reck took over the helm.

 
Raúl, then all-time top goalscorer in European club competitions, played for Schalke from 2010 to 2012.

On 1 July 2009, Felix Magath, who had led VfL Wolfsburg to the top of the table in the Bundesliga, became head coach and general manager of the Königsblauen. The appointment of Magath as manager coincided with a multimillion-euro spending spree, allowing Schalke to acquire internationally known forwards Klaas-Jan Huntelaar and Raúl. Magath's tenure at the club was initially successful, seeing the side score a glut of goals in the first few months of the season, though defensive frailties and Magath's questionable squad selection had made him unpopular with Schalke supporters by December 2010.

On 16 March 2011, Magath was sacked and replaced with Ralf Rangnick, who previously, between 2004 and 2005, had a brief spell being in charge of the team. Within just weeks of his appointment, Rangnick masterminded a 5–2 victory over Inter Milan at the San Siro during the quarter-finals of the Champions League. Schalke advanced to the semi-final where they lost 2–0 to Manchester United in the first leg and 4–1 in the second leg.[11] However, Schalke 04 managed to win the 2010–11 DFB-Pokal after a thrashing victory 5–0 over MSV Duisburg.[12] On 1 June 2011, Schalke's captain, Manuel Neuer, made his move to Bayern Munich.[13]

On 22 September 2011, Ralf Rangnick announced his immediate resignation as head coach of Schalke 04 due to long-term exhaustion.[14] Assistant coach Seppo Eichkorn coached the team as interim manager until the appointment of Huub Stevens on 27 September 2011. Stevens' contract was to run until 30 June 2013.[15]

 
FC Schalke 04 in the UEFA Champions League line-up against FC Barcelona.

Despite having legendary status among Schalke supporters, Stevens' return to Schalke was met with some scepticism as fans feared that Stevens, who coached Schalke to the 1997 UEFA Cup win with a rigidly defensive system, could abandon Rangnick's system of attacking play in favour of returning to his 1997 defensive antics.[16] The doubts of the supporters proved unfounded. Although Schalke played a somewhat inconsistent season, they reached third place in the Bundesliga and therefore direct qualification for the UEFA Champions League.

Schalke had an excellent start to the 2012–13 Bundesliga season, and worked their way to second place in the league by November, just behind Bayern Munich. On 20 October, Schalke traveled to Borussia Dortmund for matchday 8, and were able to defeat the home side 2–1 to secure their first league Revierderby win since February 2010 while securing a Champions League place by finishing in fourth place. In the 2013–14 UEFA Champions League group stage, Schalke's opponents were FCSB, FC Basel and Chelsea. Schalke ultimately finished the group stage in second place, behind Chelsea, and was eliminated in the round of 16 by Real Madrid CF.

The most prominent Schalke addition was the arrival of Kevin-Prince Boateng from Milan.[17] After a disappointing first round of the 2013–14 Bundesliga that saw Schalke in seventh place in the Bundesliga table, as well as an early exit from the 2013–14 DFB-Pokal in the first knockout round, the club played their most successful second half of the season in club history. The season was marked by a glut of injuries to key squad players, including Jefferson Farfán and Klaas-Jan Huntelaar, for almost the entire season. It also led to performance related discussions about head coach Jens Keller. Partially, Schalke fielded up to ten young players with potential who played in the Schalke youth system throughout the season. Among the brightest young player discoveries of the 2013–14 season were Max Meyer and Leon Goretzka. The young Schalke squad won 11 out of 17 matches, totalling 36 points. At the end of the 2013–14 season, the club finished in third place in the Bundesliga table to qualify for their third-straight UEFA Champions League appearance, a feat Schalke had never before achieved.

On 7 October 2014, after a 1–2 defeat to 1899 Hoffenheim and after amassing just eight points from seven matches, Keller was sacked and succeeded by Roberto Di Matteo.[18]

 
Domenico Tedesco was the youngest coach in Schalke's club history.

In the 2014–15 UEFA Champions League, Schalke 04 finished second in a group with Chelsea, Sporting CP and Maribor. Later on, they played against the reigning champion Real Madrid again in the round of 16, where they lost the first leg at home 0–2, but they won 4–3 at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium.[19] After finishing sixth in the 2014–15 season, the club announced the resignation of head coach Roberto Di Matteo on 26 May 2015.[20] Schalke 04 then played in the Europa League, in the 2015–16 and 2016–17 seasons, and were eliminated by Shakhtar Donetsk and Ajax respectively.

Starting with the 2017–18 season, Domenico Tedesco took over the managerial spot for Schalke 04.[21] At the end of the season, he managed to lead the team to finish as runners-up to Bayern Munich. On 29 July 2018, the team's captain, Benedikt Höwedes, decided to leave after more than ten years at the club.[22]

2019–present: Financial crisis, relegation, and return to the Bundesliga

In the 2018–19 UEFA Champions League, Schalke 04 lost 2–10 in aggregate to Manchester City in the round of 16.[23] Two days later, on 14 March 2019, Tedesco was relieved of his duties. Huub Stevens and Mike Büskens took over as caretaker managers.[24] On 9 May 2019, David Wagner was appointed as head coach of Schalke 04 on a three-year contract until 30 June 2022.[25]

Schalke was hit particularly hard by the COVID-19 pandemic, and in April 2020 the club said that it was threatened by bankruptcy.[26] Against the backdrop of a worsened financial situation caused by a high level of debt and a decrease in revenue related to restrictions put in place to combat the COVID-19 pandemic, the club decided to introduce a player salary cap of €2.5 million per year.[27]

In the second half of the 2019–20 season, Schalke set a new club record of 16 league games without a win between 25 January and 27 June 2020.[28] Despite this losing streak, Wagner remained as manager,[29] with Clemens Tönnies stepping down from his role as the chairman of Schalke's supervisory board after 19 years in service instead.[30]

Schalke started with significant difficulties into the 2020–21 season. After 8–0[31] and 4–0[32] thrashings away at the hands of Bayern Munich and RB Leipzig and a 1–3[33] loss at home against Werder Bremen, Schalke was last in the league table after three games, with one goal scored and fifteen conceded. After only two match days, Schalke dismissed David Wagner as head coach on 27 September in the aftermath of the loss against Bremen.[34] At 1.08 average points per game, Wagner was then the lowest-scoring head coach in Schalke's recent history.[35]

Three days later, Manuel Baum was nominated as Wagner's successor, with Naldo, a former Schalke player, as assistant coach.[36] Baum, who had taken over from Wagner at a winless streak of 18 games, was unable to win a single Bundesliga game between the 3rd and 12th match days, and was dismissed ahead of the 13th match day against Arminia Bielefeld.[37] Huub Stevens once again returned as head coach, beginning his fourth tenure.[37] Baum's tenure had brought the winless streak up from 18 to 28 Bundesliga games, bringing Schalke to the brink of breaking the alltime record of 31 winless games, set by SC Tasmania 1900 Berlin in the 1965–66 season.[38][39] Stevens did not change Schalke's fortunes in his first game, losing the home game against Arminia Bielefeld, themselves in 16th place and thus threatened by relegation, with a 0–1 scoreline.[40]

On 27 December 2020, Schalke 04 announced that they signed a contract with Swiss manager Christian Gross to be the head coach of the club until the end of the season, making him the fourth head coach for Schalke 04 during the 2020–21 season.[41] Under Gross, Schalke's negative streak continued with a 3–0 loss to Hertha BSC, marking the 30th consecutive winless game, a losing streak of 358 days.[42][43] On 9 January 2021 Schalke finally recorded a victory over 1899 Hoffenheim, which meant they avoided matching Tasmania Berlin's record.[44] It remained Schalke's only victory under Gross, who was sacked as head coach after just eleven matches on 28 February 2021, following losses against rival Borussia Dortmund (0–4) and VFB Stuttgart (1–5). Alongside Gross, sporting director Jochen Schneider, team coordinator Sascha Riether, assistant coach Rainer Widmayer and fitness coach Werner Leuthard were also relieved of their duties.[45] At 0.45 average points per game, Gross was the least successful head coach at Schalke since Karl-Heinz Marotzke in 1967.

On 2 March 2021, Dimitrios Grammozis was announced as new head coach for Schalke 04.[46] Grammozis started with a scoreless draw against Mainz 05, but his team was unable to collect any points in the two following matches, which were lost 5–0 against VfL Wolfsburg and 3–0 against Borussia Mönchengladbach. Schalke did not score a goal in the first three matches under Grammozis, a joined negative record for the club (Helmut Schulte in 1992–93 and Markus Weinzierl in 2016–17 also waited for the first goal until their fourth match as head coach for Schalke).[47][48] Against Borussia Mönchengladbach, Schalke conceded its fifth own goal of the season, yet another negative record.[47]

Relegation to the 2. Bundesliga was confirmed on 20 April 2021, as Schalke 04 lost 1–0 to Arminia Bielefeld,[49] which led to riots by Schalke supporters.[50]

 
Mike Büskens led Schalke back to the Bundesliga in the 2021–22 season.

On 28 February 2022, following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Schalke cancelled their contract with main sponsor Gazprom,[51] further straining the club's financial situation. Grammozis was sacked as head coach on 6 March 2022, as promotion back to the Bundesliga appeared uncertain.[52][53] He was replaced by Mike Büskens as caretaker manager until the end of the season.[54] Schalke recovered under Büskens, winning eight of the remaining nine matches. The club secured promotion on 7 May 2022, following a 3–2 victory over FC St. Pauli that guaranteed a top-two finish in the 2. Bundesliga. Fans invaded the pitch in celebration.[55] One week later Schalke won the 2. Bundesliga in dramatic fashion after a 88th minute winner by Simon Terodde defeating 1. FC Nürnberg 2–1.[56]

At the end of the 2021–22 season, Büskens moved back to the position of assistant coach. On 7 June 2022, Schalke appointed Frank Kramer as head coach.[57] As a result of the club's financial problems, most of the players who were essential for the success in the previous season, like Ko Itakura, could not be kept,[58] and Schalke struggled to be competitive at the beginning of the 2022–23 season. Following a series of humiliating losses, including a 1–5 against Hoffenheim, Kramer was relieved of his duties on 19 October 2022. At the time, Schalke was 17th in the Bundesliga after ten matchdays.[59][60] Matthias Kreutzer took over as caretaker manager. A week after Kramer's dismissal, on 26 October 2022, sporting director Rouven Schröder also announced his instant resignation.[61][62]

On 27 October 2022, Thomas Reis was named as Schalke's new head coach.[63] The first match under Reis, against SC Freiburg, was lost 0–2, marking Schalke's seventh consecutive loss.[64] After the game, commentators like Huub Stevens praised the team for its better organization, compared to previous matches.[65]

Sponsors and finances

 
Schalke 04 royal blue trademark jersey with former sponsor Gazprom elaborately showcased prior to a match with Zenit Saint Petersburg at the Veltins-Arena to celebrate Gazprom's investment of over €125 million in S04.

As of 2022, the headline sponsor of Schalke 04 is the China-based electronics manufacturer Hisense. The Russia-based hydrocarbon giant Gazprom was dropped in February 2022 as a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[66] Additional sponsors include Dusseldorf-based insurance group ERGO Insurance Group; Munich-based automotive manufacturer BMW; and its motorcycle division BMW Motorrad; Spanish-based security insurance company Reale Seguros; China-based telecommunications company Huawei; cyber gambling and sports betting company bet-at-home.com; beverage giant Coca-Cola; North Rhine Westphalia-based brewery Veltins; and the current manufacturer of Schalke's squad kits, Germany-based Adidas.[66]

In terms of operating income, Schalke possesses an operating income of €13 million,[67] and 12 per cent debt as of May 2019.[68] As of 2019, Schalke generated the 14th-highest revenue of any football club in the world at €291 million.[68]

In May 2019, Schalke 04 were still ranked by Forbes magazine as the 14th-richest football club in the world,[67] at €683 million, a decrease of 3 per cent from the previous year.[68] As of 2022, the club is no longer listed among the top 20 for either revenue or value.[69]

Schalke 04 is among the Bundesliga teams that were hit hardest by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic,[70] and in April 2020 the club said it was threatened by bankruptcy.[71]

Players

Current squad

As of 24 January 2023[72]

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 Ralf Fährmann
2 DF   NED Thomas Ouwejan
3 DF   AUT Leo Greiml
4 DF   JPN Maya Yoshida (3rd captain)
5 DF   NED Sepp van den Berg (on loan from Liverpool)
6 MF   GER Tom Krauß (on loan from RB Leipzig)
7 FW   SWE Jordan Larsson
8 MF   GER Danny Latza (captain)[73]
9 FW   GER Simon Terodde (vice-captain)
10 MF   URU Rodrigo Zalazar
11 FW   GER Marius Bülter
13 GK   GER Alexander Schwolow (on loan from Hertha BSC)
15 DF   FRA Timothée Kolodziejczak
18 DF   FIN Jere Uronen (on loan from Brest)
19 FW   TUR Kenan Karaman
20 FW   GER Tim Skarke (on loan from Union Berlin)
No. Pos. Nation Player
21 MF   GER Niklas Tauer (on loan from Mainz 05)
22 DF   MLI Ibrahima Cissé
23 MF   GER Mehmet-Can Aydın
24 MF   GER Dominick Drexler
26 FW   SUI Michael Frey (on loan from Royal Antwerp)
27 DF   SUI Cédric Brunner
28 GK   GER Justin Heekeren
29 MF   GER Tobias Mohr
30 MF   CZE Alex Král (on loan from Spartak Moscow)
34 GK   AUT Michael Langer
35 DF   POL Marcin Kamiński
38 FW   JPN Sōichirō Kōzuki
40 FW   GER Sebastian Polter
41 DF   GER Henning Matriciani
MF   MAR Nassim Boujellab

Out on loan

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
15 DF   BEL Dries Wouters (at Mechelen until 30 June 2023)
17 MF   GER Florian Flick (at 1. FC Nürnberg until 30 June 2023)
18 MF   KOS Blendi Idrizi (at Jahn Regensburg until 30 June 2023)
21 FW   GER Marvin Pieringer (at SC Paderborn 07 until 30 June 2023)
42 MF   GER Kerim Çalhanoğlu (at SV Sandhausen until 30 June 2023)
MF   GER Can Bozdoğan (at Utrecht until 30 June 2023)
MF   MAR Amine Harit (at Marseille until 30 June 2023)
MF   AUT Reinhold Ranftl (at Austria Wien until 30 June 2023)

Reserve team

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
37 MF   ROU Andreas Ivan
44 FW   GER Sidi Sané
GK   SRB Radomir Novaković
DF   NED Steven van der Sloot
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF   GER Tim Albutat
FW   AZE Rufat Dadashov
FW   NED Nelson Amadin

Notable former players

 
Sculptures with some of the FC Schalke 04 "Team of the Century".

In the year 2000, the supporters voted for Schalker Jahrhundertelf, the "Team of the Century":[74]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK   GER Norbert Nigbur
DF   GER Klaus Fichtel
DF   GER Olaf Thon
DF   GER Rolf Rüssmann
MF   GER Fritz Szepan
MF   GER Ingo Anderbrügge
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF   BEL Marc Wilmots
FW   GER Ernst Kuzorra
FW   GER Klaus Fischer
FW   GER Reinhard Libuda
FW   GER Rüdiger Abramczik

Records

As of 26 May 2021.[75][76]
 
Klaus Fischer scored the most goals in Schalke's Bundesliga history

Stadium

Schalke's stadium, known as the Veltins-Arena under a sponsorship agreement with Veltins brewery, was built in the summer of 2001 and has a capacity of 62,271 spectators.[1] Schalke regularly draws sell-out crowds to what is widely regarded as one of the most modern and best multi-use facilities in Europe. The facility was previously known as the Arena AufSchalke and replaced the Parkstadion (capacity of 62,000) built in 1973. Prior to this, the club played its matches in the Glückauf-Kampfbahn, constructed in 1928 with a capacity of 35,000. The facility was used for amateur matches during its later years with a reduced capacity of 5,000.

Fan culture

 
S04 Ultras Gelsenkirchen.
 
S04 fans in the streets of Gelsenkirchen on a matchday.

The number of members of Schalke 04 grew from 10,000 in 1991 to 160,000 in 2022.[3] This figure makes Schalke 04 the second-biggest sports club in Germany and fourth-biggest sports club in the world, behind Bayern Munich, Benfica, and CA Boca Juniors.[4] As of 2022, Schalke is ranked as the 94th-best football club in Europe and in Continental Europe by UEFA's UEFA club rankings.[77] A representation of the Schalke 04 membership structure in 2014 showed, among other things, a female share of 20 per cent and a share of the age group up to ten years of 14 per cent.[78] Around 30 per cent of the members were not from North Rhine-Westphalia. Apart from Gelsenkirchen (10,197 members) and its immediate neighbouring towns, the members of Schalke 04 also come from more distant cities such as Cologne (1,117) and Berlin (932).[78] This high growth in Schalke 04 membership is also promoted by promotions of Schalke 04, as from 2013 to further "advertise Schalke 04 brand".[78][79]

On 21 August 2013, Schalke 04 played their first home match of the 2013–14 season, a UEFA Champions League qualifier at the Veltins-Arena against the Greek runners-up PAOK (led by former head coach Huub Stevens), drawing 1–1.[80] The match and result was more than overshadowed by a controversial police operation in the "S04 Ultras Gelsenkirchen" block of the Veltins-Arena against the fans of the home team with nearly 80 of the home team's fans injured.[80] The return match was won 3–2 by Schalke without any of their supporters allowed to attend the match.[80]

Fan Club Association

Schalke 04 Fan Club Association (SFCV) is an umbrella organization which, according to their own statement, has an estimated 1,500 fan clubs.[81] Of those listed by the SFCV, 860 Schalke 04 fan clubs in October 2012 were divided geographically as follows: an estimated 200 were in Ruhr, 360 in the rest of North Rhine-Westphalia and 300 in the other federal states.[82] A member of the board of SFCV has a permanent seat on the board of FC Schalke 04 and in 2013 SFCV merged with the "Ultras Gelsenkirchen" and later the supporters' club, Schalke Fan-Initiative eV with several members of strong fan groups from the SFCV, as is clear from the merger of the SFCV with the fan section of S04 has not adequately represented the fan interests.[83][84]

Friendships

 
Friendship corner in the Fan Shop of 1. FC Nürnberg with shirts of Schalke 04.

The fan-base of Schalke is connected, in a friendly way, with the supporters of 1. FC Nürnberg and Dutch club Twente. The friendship with Nürnberg is the oldest connection between two fan-bases in Germany. Before a match between both clubs, the official club songs are played.

Club songs

  • Blau und weiß, wie lieb ich Dich ("Blue and White, How I Love You") is the official club song.
  • Das Steigerlied, traditional German mining song, played before every match.
  • Blau und Weiß ein Leben lang ("Blue and white a life-long") is the goal tune.
  • Königsblauer S04 ("Royal Blue S04") played after every match

Popular unofficial chants are

  • Der Mythos vom Schalker Markt ("The Myth of the Schalke Market"),
  • Opa Pritschikowski ("Grandpa Pritschikowski"),
  • Von der Emscher bis zum Bosporus ("From the Emscher to the Bosphorus"),
  • Wir schlugen Roda... ("We beat Roda..."),
  • Die Eurofighter sind wieder da ("The Eurofighter are back again"),
  • Für deine Farben leben und sterben wir ("For your colours we live and die"),
  • Wir lieben alle nur den FC Schalke ("We all love only FC Schalke"),
  • Wir sind die Fans ("We are the fans"),
  • Hurra wir sind die Schalker Knappen ("Hurray we are the Schalke Knappen"),
  • Kohle unter unser'n Füßen ("Coal under our feet"), and
  • Steht auf, wenn ihr Schalker seid ("Stand up if you're Schalke"), sung to the melody of "Go West" by the Pet Shop Boys (itself a cover of a Village People song).

Revierderby

The Revierderby is the rivalry between local clubs Schalke 04 and Borussia Dortmund, both situated in the densely populated Ruhr region. Because of the small geographical distances between the clubs (roughly 30 kilometers), fans of opposing clubs often meet in everyday life. The term may be used in any match between two football clubs of the Ruhr region (such as VfL Bochum, Rot-Weiss Essen or MSV Duisburg), but the term is most commonly associated with the rivalry between Schalke and Dortmund due to the derby's popularity and prestige. To some fans, the win of the derby itself is more important than the actual performance in the Bundesliga.

 
Respective league placements of Schalke 04 and Borussia Dortmund since the 1963–64 season

In popular culture

 
The cleats worn by the entire S04 squad players in the 1920s displayed at the museum of Schalke 04.

Schalke has been subject of a feature-length film called Fußball ist unser Leben ("Football is our life"), shown in 1999. Actors Uwe Ochsenknecht and Ralf Richter, both of whom were in the award-winning film Das Boot played the main roles, while many persons associated with Schalke had cameo roles, such as manager Rudi Assauer, coaches Huub Stevens and Helmut Schulte, and player Yves Eigenrauch. Also featured were prominent fans like Manfred Breuckmann, Ulrich Potofski or DJ Hooligan.[85] The film is a comedy about "Hans", a Schalke fanatic, and his three pals who somehow get involved in kidnapping and trying to bring back to form the team's new star player "Di Ospeo" and in the process bet Hans' house that their idol will score in the final match.[85]

"Schalke" is mentioned in the film Das Boot when the bosun tells the crew in their ward room, "I got bad news for you men. Schalke lost 5–0, looks like we won't be in the final this year."

Honours

Role of honour[86][87]

Domestic

International

UEFA club coefficient ranking

As of 30 June 2022[88]
Rank Nation Team Points
93   Belarus FC BATE Borisov 17,500
94   Norway FK Bodø/Glimt 17,000
95   Germany Schalke 04 17,000
96   Austria SK Rapid Wien 16,000
97   Belgium R. Standard de Liège 16,000

Youth

Domestic

Double

Corporate structure

As of 27 October 2022[89][90]
Managing board
Role Person
Chairman   Bernd Schröder
Sport and Communications   Peter Knäbel
Finance   Christina Rühl-Hamers
Coaching staff
Role Person
Head coach   Thomas Reis
Assistant head coach   Mike Büskens
  Markus Gellhaus
  Matthias Kreutzer
  Sven Piepenbrock
Goalkeeping coach   Simon Henzler
Athletic coach   Jörn Menger
  Alexander Storck
Rehabilitation coach   David Gröger
Analyst   Lars Gerling

Notable coaches

 
Huub Stevens coached the club in four spells: firstly, from 1996 to 2002, where he won the UEFA Cup in 1997; secondly, from 2011 to 2012; thirdly, in 2019 as an interim; and again in 2020 as interim coach. He was voted 'Coach of the Century' by Schalke fans in 1999.[91]
Name Nationality From To Honours
Hans Schmidt   Germany 1 July 1933 12 June 1938 3 German championships (1934, 1935, 1937)
German championship runners-up (1933, 1938)
5 Gauliga Westfalen championships (1934, 1935, 1936, 1937, 1938)
1 Tschammerpokal (1937); runners-up (1935, 1936)
Otto Faist   Germany 13 July 1938 31 December 1942 3 German championships (1939, 1940, 1942)
German championship runners-up (1941)
4 Gauliga Westfalen championships (1939, 1940, 1941, 1942)
Tschammerpokal runners-up (1941, 1942)
Ernst Kuzorra   Germany 1 July 1946 30 September 1947
Fritz Szepan   West Germany 1 July 1949 30 June 1954 1 Oberliga West championship (1951); runners-up (1952)
Edi Frühwirth   Austria 1 July 1954 30 June 1959 1 German championship (1958)
1 Oberliga West championship (1958); runners-up (1956)
DFB-Pokal runners-up (1955)
Ivica Horvat   Yugoslavia 1 July 1971
1 July 1978
30 June 1976
17 March 1979
Bundesliga runners-up (1971–72)
1 DFB-Pokal (1971–72)
Huub Stevens   Netherlands 8 October 1996
27 September 2011
14 March 2019
18 December 2020
30 June 2002
16 December 2012
30 June 2019
22 December 2020
Bundesliga runners-up (2000–01)
2 DFB-Pokals (2000–01, 2001–02)
1 UEFA Cup (1997)
DFB-Ligapokal runners-up (2001, 2002)
Felix Magath   Germany 1 July 2009 16 March 2011 Bundesliga runners-up (2009–10)
1 DFL-Supercup (2010)

Other departments

The basketball department played in the 1988–89 season in the National Basketball League Basketball Bundesliga and from 2004 for several seasons in the ProA, the second highest basketball league in Germany.[92] 2009 saw Schalke 04 voluntarily withdrawal from the ProA. Currently, the team competes in ProB.[93] The club founded a blind football department in 2015, which plays in the Blindenfußball-Bundesliga.[94]

The women's football club was initially dissolved in the mid-1980s, but achieved some notable successes, including five-time Westphalia championships, and competed in the German championship and DFB Cup. Schalke 04 later cooperated with 1. FFC Recklinghausen [de], a women's football club, from 2007 to 2010,[95] and the current women's team was established in July 2020, to compete in Kreisliga B, the eighth tier of women's football, in 2021.[96]

Other longstanding departments include the handball department, which was founded in 1926 and competed in the Gaumeister, Gauliga during Nazi Germany, and the current top division.[97] The athletic department was founded in 1922, with the club's former players including Olympic silver medallist decathlete Frank Busemann, and 2003 European Athletics Junior Championships gold 200-metre runner, Sebastian Ernst.[98] The table tennis department was founded in 1947, and competes in the Westphalia district league. The women's team was one of the early participants in the national league until it withdrew in 1956.[99]

In 2016, Schalke acquired League of Legends e-sports team Elements, becoming the second professional sports team with a League of Legends division, after Beşiktaş. In early June, they debuted in the European League of Legends Championship Series, the top level of professional League of Legends competition in Europe.[100] The club also announced former Rot-Weiß Oberhausen and Sportfreunde Siegen midfielder and SK Gaming co-founder Tim Reichert as Head of ESport.

See also

Bibliography

  • Bodo Berg: More than a game: from the life of a football fan; with photos of Yves own smoke. Verlg the workshop, Göttingen 2000, ISBN 3-89533-299-2.
  • Jenrich Burkh: Royal Blue Planet, Göttingen 2004, ISBN 3-89533-446-4.
  • Stefan Goch / Norbert Silver Bach: Between blue and white is gray, Essen 2005, ISBN 3-89861-433-6.
  • Hardy Green: Faith, Love, Schalke. The complete history of FC Schalke 04, The Workshop, Göttingen 2011, ISBN 978-3-89533-747-5.
  • Helmut Wood: Schalke is priceless, Gelsenkirchen, 1991, ISBN 3-924984-30-1 .
  • Helmut Wood: Schalke smile. Curiosities and concrete of fans and dreamers – experienced and collected, Gelsenkirchen 1984, ISBN 3-9800764-6-6.
  • William Herbert Koch: The Royal Blues: the phenomenon Schalke 04, Düsseldorf 1973, ISBN 3-7700-0365-9.
  • Olivier Kruschinski: Blue and white for a lifetime. A season with Schalke, Herten 2005, ISBN 3-938152-04-4.
  • Georg Röwekamp: The legend lives on. The history of FC Schalke 04, Göttingen 1996 [and newer edition], ISBN 3-89533-164-3.
  • Schalke Fan Initiative (Eds.), The tip of the Eichbergs. Most scandals of FC Schalke 04. plain text, Essen 2005, ISBN 3-89861-393-3.
  • Jörg Seven Eick, Thomas Spiegel, Gerd Voss (Eds.): 100 Schalke years – 100 stories Schalke. Plain text, Essen 2004, ISBN 3-89861-321-6.
  • Matt Ford: "Bundesliga: Schalke relegated for first time in 30 years". 2021. https://www.dw.com/en/bundesliga-schalke-relegated-for-first-time-in-30-years/a-57270976

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External links

  • Official website  
  • FC Schalke 04 at UEFA

schalke, schalke, redirects, here, district, gelsenkirchen, mountain, schalke, harz, company, schalker, eisenhütte, maschinenfabrik, fußballclub, gelsenkirchen, schalke, commonly, known, german, tseː, ˈʃalkə, nʊl, fiːɐ, listen, schalke, german, ˌʃalkə, nʊl, ˈf. Schalke redirects here For the district see Gelsenkirchen For the mountain see Schalke Harz For the company see Schalker Eisenhutte Maschinenfabrik Fussballclub Gelsenkirchen Schalke 04 e V commonly known as FC Schalke 04 German ɛf tseː ˈʃalke nʊl fiːɐ listen Schalke 04 German ˌʃalke nʊl ˈfiːɐ listen or abbreviated as S04 German ˈɛs nʊl fiːɐ listen is a professional German football and multi sports club originally from the Schalke district of Gelsenkirchen North Rhine Westphalia The 04 in the club s name derives from its formation in 1904 Schalke have been one of the most popular professional football teams in Germany even though the club s heyday was in the 1930s and 1940s Schalke have played in the Bundesliga the top tier of the German football league system since 2022 following promotion from the 2 Bundesliga in 2021 22 As of 2022 the club has 160 000 members 3 making it the second largest football club in Germany and the fourth largest club in the world in terms of membership 4 Other activities offered by the club include athletics basketball handball table tennis winter sports and eSports Schalke 04Full nameFussballclub Gelsenkirchen Schalke 04 e V Nickname s Die Konigsblauen The Royal Blues Die Knappen The Miners Short nameS04Founded4 May 1904 118 years ago 1904 05 04 as Westfalia SchalkeGroundVeltins Arena GelsenkirchenCapacity62 271 1 Executive boardAxel Hefer 2 Head coachThomas ReisLeagueBundesliga2021 222 Bundesliga 1st of 18 promoted WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent seasonSchalke have won seven German championships five DFB Pokals one DFB Ligapokal one DFL Supercup and one UEFA Cup In 1937 Schalke became the first German club to win the double Since 2001 Schalke s stadium has been the Veltins Arena Schalke hold a long standing rivalry with Ruhr neighbours Borussia Dortmund known as the Revierderby Contents 1 History 1 1 1904 1927 Schalke s early years 1 2 1928 1933 Rise to dominance 1 3 1933 1945 The championship years 1 4 1945 1959 Football after World War II 1 5 1960 2000 Entry to the Bundesliga and the Euro Fighters 1 6 2000 2019 Top table mainstay European semi final 1 7 2019 present Financial crisis relegation and return to the Bundesliga 2 Sponsors and finances 3 Players 3 1 Current squad 3 2 Out on loan 3 3 Reserve team 3 4 Notable former players 3 5 Records 4 Stadium 5 Fan culture 5 1 Fan Club Association 5 2 Friendships 5 3 Club songs 5 4 Revierderby 6 In popular culture 7 Honours 7 1 Domestic 7 2 International 7 3 UEFA club coefficient ranking 7 4 Youth 7 5 Double 8 Corporate structure 9 Notable coaches 10 Other departments 11 See also 12 Bibliography 13 References 14 External linksHistory EditMain article List of FC Schalke 04 seasons 1904 1927 Schalke s early years Edit 1900s typical mining structure in the Ruhr source of the Schalke nickname Die Knappen from an old German word for miners because the team drew so many of its players and supporters from the coalmine workers of Gelsenkirchen The club was founded on 4 May 1904 as Westfalia Schalke by a group of high school students and first wore the colours red and yellow The team was unable to gain admittance to the Westdeutscher Spielverband Western German Football Association and played in one of the wild associations of early German football In 1912 after years of failed attempts to join the official league they merged with the gymnastic club Schalker Turnverein 1877 in order to facilitate their entry This arrangement held up until 1915 when SV Westfalia Schalke was re established as an independent club The separation proved short lived and the two came together again in 1919 as Turn und Sportverein Schalke 1877 The new club won its first honours in 1923 as champions of the Schalke Kreisliga It was around this time that Schalke picked up the nickname Die Knappen from an old German word for miners because the team drew so many of its players and supporters from the coal miners of Gelsenkirchen citation needed In 1924 the football team parted ways with the gymnasts again this time taking the club chairman along with them They took the name FC Schalke 04 and adopted the now familiar blue and white kit from which their second nickname would derive Die Konigsblauen English The Royal Blues The following year the club became the dominant local side based on a style of play that used short sharp man to man passing to move the ball This system would later become famous as the Schalker Kreisel English spinning top gyroscope In 1927 it carried them into the top flight Gauliga Ruhr onto the league championship and then into the opening rounds of the national finals citation needed 1928 1933 Rise to dominance Edit The popular club built a new stadium the Gluckauf Kampfbahn in 1928 and acknowledged the city s support by renaming themselves FC Gelsenkirchen Schalke 04 They won their first West German championship in 1929 but the following year were sanctioned for exceeding salary levels set by the league and in an era that considered professionalism in sport to be anathema found themselves banned from play for nearly half a year However the ban had little impact on the team s popularity in their first match after the ban against Fortuna Dusseldorf in June 1931 the team drew 70 000 spectators to its home ground The club s fortunes begun to rise from 1931 and they made a semi final appearance in the 1932 German championship losing 1 2 to Eintracht Frankfurt The year after the club went all the way to the final where Fortuna Dusseldorf proved the better side winning 3 0 5 1933 1945 The championship years Edit With the re organisation of German football in 1933 under Nazi Germany Schalke found themselves in the Gauliga Westfalen 1 of 16 top flight divisions established to replace the innumerable regional and local leagues all claiming top status This league saw Schalke s most successful decade in their history from 1933 to 1942 the club would appear in 14 of 18 national finals ten in the German championship and eight in the Tschammerpokal the predecessor of today s DFB Pokal and win their league in every one of its eleven seasons The club never lost a home match in the Gauliga Westfalen in all these 11 seasons and only lost six away matches while remaining unbeaten in the 1935 36 1936 37 1937 38 1938 39 1940 41 and 1942 43 seasons a sign of the club s dominance 6 FC Schalke 04 supporters in 1941 Schalke s first national title came in 1934 with a 2 1 victory over favourites 1 FC Nurnberg The next year they successfully defended their title against VfB Stuttgart with a 6 4 win The club missed the 1936 final but would make appearances in the championship match in each of the next six years coming away victorious in 1937 1939 1940 and 1942 Three of those national finals were against Austrian teams Admira Wien Rapid Wien and First Vienna which played in Germany s Gauliga Ostmark after Austria s incorporation into the Reich through the 1938 Anschluss Die Konigsblauen also made frequent appearances in the final of the Tschammerpokal but enjoyed much less success there They lost the inaugural Tschammerpokal 0 2 to 1 FC Nurnberg in 1935 They also made failed appearances in the 1936 1941 and 1942 finals with their only victory coming in 1937 against Fortuna Dusseldorf Over a dozen seasons from 1933 to 1945 Schalke won 162 of 189 Gauliga matches drawing 21 and losing only 6 Within this period they scored 924 goals and conceded just 145 From 1935 to 1939 they did not lose a single league match The club s dominance throughout this period led them to be held up for propaganda purposes by the Nazi regime as an example of new Germany 1945 1959 Football after World War II Edit Commonly regarded as the greatest S04 player of all time alongside Fritz Szepan Ernst Kuzorra is also commonly regarded as one of the greatest German forwards and led S04 to become the dominant team in German football winning six German championships and one DFB Pokal from 1934 to 1942 Ernst Kuzorra was one of the main axes of what became known as the Schalker Kreisel a system that used quick and short passing to confuse and overwhelm the opponent With Germany in chaos towards the end of World War II Schalke played just two matches in 1945 They resumed regular play following the war and for a time continued to compete as a strong side They set a record in a national championship round match with a 20 0 drubbing of SpVgg Herten but that spoke more to the weakened condition of German football than to the ability of the team Schalke s play fell off and the best they could manage in the new Oberliga West in 1947 was a sixth place finish Within two years they slipped to 12th place It would take Schalke until the mid 1950s to recover their form They finished third in a tight three way race for the 1954 Oberliga West title decided on the last day of the season The following year they appeared in the DFB Pokal final where they lost 2 3 to Karlsruher SC The club s next and to date last German championship came in 1958 with a 3 0 victory over Hamburger SV The strong fanbase of the club is as well documented in a local church St Joseph in Gelsenkirchen It was renovated shortly after the 1958 victory where one of the glass windows shows Aloysius Gonzaga with a football and the dress and colors of Schalke 7 1960 2000 Entry to the Bundesliga and the Euro Fighters Edit Schalke continued to play well delivering a number of top four finishes in the years leading up to the 1963 formation of the Bundesliga West Germany s new federal professional league Those results earned them selection as 1 of 16 clubs admitted to the top flight league Their first years in the Bundesliga were difficult In 1964 65 they escaped relegation only through the expansion of the league to 18 teams A number of finishes at the lower end of the league table followed before a marked improvement in 1971 72 culminating in a second place finish to Bayern Munich and after having led the league for much of the season In the same season Schalke won the DFB Pokal for the second time in its history Despite their improved results the seeds of a major reversal had already been sown A number of the team s players and officials were accused of accepting bribes as part of the widespread Bundesliga scandal of 1971 Investigation showed that Schalke had deliberately played to lose their 17 May 28th round match against Arminia Bielefeld 0 1 As a result several Schalke players were banned for life including three Klaus Fischer Stan Libuda and Klaus Fichtel who regularly played for the West Germany national team at the time citation needed Even though the penalties were later commuted to bans ranging from six months to two years the scandal had a profound effect on what might have possibly become one of the dominant German teams of the 1970s citation needed In 1973 the club moved to the Parkstadion newly built for the 1974 FIFA World Cup and having a capacity of 70 000 spectators In the wake of the scandal the club s performance was uneven They managed another second place result in 1976 77 finishing just one point behind champions Borussia Monchengladbach In the early 1980s Die Knappen ran into trouble and found themselves relegated to the second division of the Bundesliga for the 1981 82 season and after promotion again in 1983 84 They returned to the top flight in 1984 but slipped once more to the second tier in 1988 They returned to the Bundesliga in the 1991 92 season and stayed in the top flight until 2021 FC Schalke 04 starting line up in their victorious 1997 UEFA Cup Final The club earned their first honours since the DFB Pokal win of 1972 with a victory in the final of the 1996 97 UEFA Cup over Inter Milan on penalties Coached by the Dutch coach Huub Stevens the 1997 Schalke squad earned the nickname Euro Fighters which is still in use among fans Stevens who was widely unknown in Germany at the time quickly earned himself a cult following among the Schalke supporters Stevens successfully implemented a system of rigid discipline especially in the defence His motto Die Null muss stehen in English It has to read nil which emphasized his importance on his side not conceding any goals has found its way into everyday language in Germany 2000 2019 Top table mainstay European semi final Edit The turn of the millennium has seen much stronger performances from Schalke During the 1990s and early 2000 the club underwent a successful transformation into a modern commercial sports organization and established itself as one of the dominant teams of the Bundesliga Schalke captured consecutive DFB Pokals in 2000 01 and 2001 02 and earned second place finishes in the Bundesliga in 2000 01 2004 05 and 2006 07 The 2000 01 season finish was heartbreaking for Schalke s supporters as it took a goal in the fourth minute of injury time by Bayern Munich away to Hamburger SV to snatch the title from Die Konigsblauen Fans displaying their colours at the Veltins Arena The last few years have been more successful for Schalke who finished in the second place in 2005 a result that led to Schalke making its second appearance in the UEFA Champions League There Schalke finished in third place during the group stage and continuing into the UEFA Cup where they were eliminated by the eventual winners Sevilla in the semi finals In 2005 06 Schalke finished in fourth place in the Bundesliga and a year later they again finished as runners up for the third time in seven seasons In the 2007 08 season Schalke progressed past the Champions League group stage for the first time and advanced to the quarter finals after defeating Porto on penalties in the round of 16 They were eliminated by Barcelona in the quarter finals losing both home and away matches 0 1 On 9 October 2006 Russian oil company Gazprom became the club s new sponsor The company stated it expected to invest as much as 125 million in the club over a five and a half year period 8 Gazprom s sponsorship has been seen by some analysts as a politically motivated attempt to buy friendship in Germany 9 Within this sponsorship Schalke 04 and Zenit Saint Petersburg signed a partnership agreement both clubs intend to work closely on improving football related issues On 13 April 2008 the club announced the dismissal of manager Mirko Slomka after a heavy defeat at the hands of Werder Bremen and elimination from the Champions League Former players Mike Buskens and Youri Mulder were put in charge of the first team on an interim basis For the 2008 09 Bundesliga season Schalke signed a new head coach Fred Rutten previously of Twente Rutten signed a contract running until June 2010 10 In March 2009 Rutten was sacked and once more Mike Buskens Youri Mulder and Oliver Reck took over the helm Raul then all time top goalscorer in European club competitions played for Schalke from 2010 to 2012 On 1 July 2009 Felix Magath who had led VfL Wolfsburg to the top of the table in the Bundesliga became head coach and general manager of the Konigsblauen The appointment of Magath as manager coincided with a multimillion euro spending spree allowing Schalke to acquire internationally known forwards Klaas Jan Huntelaar and Raul Magath s tenure at the club was initially successful seeing the side score a glut of goals in the first few months of the season though defensive frailties and Magath s questionable squad selection had made him unpopular with Schalke supporters by December 2010 On 16 March 2011 Magath was sacked and replaced with Ralf Rangnick who previously between 2004 and 2005 had a brief spell being in charge of the team Within just weeks of his appointment Rangnick masterminded a 5 2 victory over Inter Milan at the San Siro during the quarter finals of the Champions League Schalke advanced to the semi final where they lost 2 0 to Manchester United in the first leg and 4 1 in the second leg 11 However Schalke 04 managed to win the 2010 11 DFB Pokal after a thrashing victory 5 0 over MSV Duisburg 12 On 1 June 2011 Schalke s captain Manuel Neuer made his move to Bayern Munich 13 On 22 September 2011 Ralf Rangnick announced his immediate resignation as head coach of Schalke 04 due to long term exhaustion 14 Assistant coach Seppo Eichkorn coached the team as interim manager until the appointment of Huub Stevens on 27 September 2011 Stevens contract was to run until 30 June 2013 15 FC Schalke 04 in the UEFA Champions League line up against FC Barcelona Despite having legendary status among Schalke supporters Stevens return to Schalke was met with some scepticism as fans feared that Stevens who coached Schalke to the 1997 UEFA Cup win with a rigidly defensive system could abandon Rangnick s system of attacking play in favour of returning to his 1997 defensive antics 16 The doubts of the supporters proved unfounded Although Schalke played a somewhat inconsistent season they reached third place in the Bundesliga and therefore direct qualification for the UEFA Champions League Schalke had an excellent start to the 2012 13 Bundesliga season and worked their way to second place in the league by November just behind Bayern Munich On 20 October Schalke traveled to Borussia Dortmund for matchday 8 and were able to defeat the home side 2 1 to secure their first league Revierderby win since February 2010 while securing a Champions League place by finishing in fourth place In the 2013 14 UEFA Champions League group stage Schalke s opponents were FCSB FC Basel and Chelsea Schalke ultimately finished the group stage in second place behind Chelsea and was eliminated in the round of 16 by Real Madrid CF The most prominent Schalke addition was the arrival of Kevin Prince Boateng from Milan 17 After a disappointing first round of the 2013 14 Bundesliga that saw Schalke in seventh place in the Bundesliga table as well as an early exit from the 2013 14 DFB Pokal in the first knockout round the club played their most successful second half of the season in club history The season was marked by a glut of injuries to key squad players including Jefferson Farfan and Klaas Jan Huntelaar for almost the entire season It also led to performance related discussions about head coach Jens Keller Partially Schalke fielded up to ten young players with potential who played in the Schalke youth system throughout the season Among the brightest young player discoveries of the 2013 14 season were Max Meyer and Leon Goretzka The young Schalke squad won 11 out of 17 matches totalling 36 points At the end of the 2013 14 season the club finished in third place in the Bundesliga table to qualify for their third straight UEFA Champions League appearance a feat Schalke had never before achieved On 7 October 2014 after a 1 2 defeat to 1899 Hoffenheim and after amassing just eight points from seven matches Keller was sacked and succeeded by Roberto Di Matteo 18 Domenico Tedesco was the youngest coach in Schalke s club history In the 2014 15 UEFA Champions League Schalke 04 finished second in a group with Chelsea Sporting CP and Maribor Later on they played against the reigning champion Real Madrid again in the round of 16 where they lost the first leg at home 0 2 but they won 4 3 at the Santiago Bernabeu Stadium 19 After finishing sixth in the 2014 15 season the club announced the resignation of head coach Roberto Di Matteo on 26 May 2015 20 Schalke 04 then played in the Europa League in the 2015 16 and 2016 17 seasons and were eliminated by Shakhtar Donetsk and Ajax respectively Starting with the 2017 18 season Domenico Tedesco took over the managerial spot for Schalke 04 21 At the end of the season he managed to lead the team to finish as runners up to Bayern Munich On 29 July 2018 the team s captain Benedikt Howedes decided to leave after more than ten years at the club 22 2019 present Financial crisis relegation and return to the Bundesliga Edit In the 2018 19 UEFA Champions League Schalke 04 lost 2 10 in aggregate to Manchester City in the round of 16 23 Two days later on 14 March 2019 Tedesco was relieved of his duties Huub Stevens and Mike Buskens took over as caretaker managers 24 On 9 May 2019 David Wagner was appointed as head coach of Schalke 04 on a three year contract until 30 June 2022 25 Schalke was hit particularly hard by the COVID 19 pandemic and in April 2020 the club said that it was threatened by bankruptcy 26 Against the backdrop of a worsened financial situation caused by a high level of debt and a decrease in revenue related to restrictions put in place to combat the COVID 19 pandemic the club decided to introduce a player salary cap of 2 5 million per year 27 In the second half of the 2019 20 season Schalke set a new club record of 16 league games without a win between 25 January and 27 June 2020 28 Despite this losing streak Wagner remained as manager 29 with Clemens Tonnies stepping down from his role as the chairman of Schalke s supervisory board after 19 years in service instead 30 Schalke started with significant difficulties into the 2020 21 season After 8 0 31 and 4 0 32 thrashings away at the hands of Bayern Munich and RB Leipzig and a 1 3 33 loss at home against Werder Bremen Schalke was last in the league table after three games with one goal scored and fifteen conceded After only two match days Schalke dismissed David Wagner as head coach on 27 September in the aftermath of the loss against Bremen 34 At 1 08 average points per game Wagner was then the lowest scoring head coach in Schalke s recent history 35 Three days later Manuel Baum was nominated as Wagner s successor with Naldo a former Schalke player as assistant coach 36 Baum who had taken over from Wagner at a winless streak of 18 games was unable to win a single Bundesliga game between the 3rd and 12th match days and was dismissed ahead of the 13th match day against Arminia Bielefeld 37 Huub Stevens once again returned as head coach beginning his fourth tenure 37 Baum s tenure had brought the winless streak up from 18 to 28 Bundesliga games bringing Schalke to the brink of breaking the alltime record of 31 winless games set by SC Tasmania 1900 Berlin in the 1965 66 season 38 39 Stevens did not change Schalke s fortunes in his first game losing the home game against Arminia Bielefeld themselves in 16th place and thus threatened by relegation with a 0 1 scoreline 40 On 27 December 2020 Schalke 04 announced that they signed a contract with Swiss manager Christian Gross to be the head coach of the club until the end of the season making him the fourth head coach for Schalke 04 during the 2020 21 season 41 Under Gross Schalke s negative streak continued with a 3 0 loss to Hertha BSC marking the 30th consecutive winless game a losing streak of 358 days 42 43 On 9 January 2021 Schalke finally recorded a victory over 1899 Hoffenheim which meant they avoided matching Tasmania Berlin s record 44 It remained Schalke s only victory under Gross who was sacked as head coach after just eleven matches on 28 February 2021 following losses against rival Borussia Dortmund 0 4 and VFB Stuttgart 1 5 Alongside Gross sporting director Jochen Schneider team coordinator Sascha Riether assistant coach Rainer Widmayer and fitness coach Werner Leuthard were also relieved of their duties 45 At 0 45 average points per game Gross was the least successful head coach at Schalke since Karl Heinz Marotzke in 1967 On 2 March 2021 Dimitrios Grammozis was announced as new head coach for Schalke 04 46 Grammozis started with a scoreless draw against Mainz 05 but his team was unable to collect any points in the two following matches which were lost 5 0 against VfL Wolfsburg and 3 0 against Borussia Monchengladbach Schalke did not score a goal in the first three matches under Grammozis a joined negative record for the club Helmut Schulte in 1992 93 and Markus Weinzierl in 2016 17 also waited for the first goal until their fourth match as head coach for Schalke 47 48 Against Borussia Monchengladbach Schalke conceded its fifth own goal of the season yet another negative record 47 Relegation to the 2 Bundesliga was confirmed on 20 April 2021 as Schalke 04 lost 1 0 to Arminia Bielefeld 49 which led to riots by Schalke supporters 50 Mike Buskens led Schalke back to the Bundesliga in the 2021 22 season On 28 February 2022 following Russia s invasion of Ukraine Schalke cancelled their contract with main sponsor Gazprom 51 further straining the club s financial situation Grammozis was sacked as head coach on 6 March 2022 as promotion back to the Bundesliga appeared uncertain 52 53 He was replaced by Mike Buskens as caretaker manager until the end of the season 54 Schalke recovered under Buskens winning eight of the remaining nine matches The club secured promotion on 7 May 2022 following a 3 2 victory over FC St Pauli that guaranteed a top two finish in the 2 Bundesliga Fans invaded the pitch in celebration 55 One week later Schalke won the 2 Bundesliga in dramatic fashion after a 88th minute winner by Simon Terodde defeating 1 FC Nurnberg 2 1 56 At the end of the 2021 22 season Buskens moved back to the position of assistant coach On 7 June 2022 Schalke appointed Frank Kramer as head coach 57 As a result of the club s financial problems most of the players who were essential for the success in the previous season like Ko Itakura could not be kept 58 and Schalke struggled to be competitive at the beginning of the 2022 23 season Following a series of humiliating losses including a 1 5 against Hoffenheim Kramer was relieved of his duties on 19 October 2022 At the time Schalke was 17th in the Bundesliga after ten matchdays 59 60 Matthias Kreutzer took over as caretaker manager A week after Kramer s dismissal on 26 October 2022 sporting director Rouven Schroder also announced his instant resignation 61 62 On 27 October 2022 Thomas Reis was named as Schalke s new head coach 63 The first match under Reis against SC Freiburg was lost 0 2 marking Schalke s seventh consecutive loss 64 After the game commentators like Huub Stevens praised the team for its better organization compared to previous matches 65 Sponsors and finances Edit Schalke 04 royal blue trademark jersey with former sponsor Gazprom elaborately showcased prior to a match with Zenit Saint Petersburg at the Veltins Arena to celebrate Gazprom s investment of over 125 million in S04 Further information Forbes list of the most valuable football clubs Exterior of the S04 museum at the S04 Veltins Arena Restaurants at the S04 Veltins Arena Ice hockey events are hosted at the S04 Veltins Arena Biathlon and a variety of winter sport events are hosted at the S04 Veltins ArenaAs of 2022 the headline sponsor of Schalke 04 is the China based electronics manufacturer Hisense The Russia based hydrocarbon giant Gazprom was dropped in February 2022 as a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine 66 Additional sponsors include Dusseldorf based insurance group ERGO Insurance Group Munich based automotive manufacturer BMW and its motorcycle division BMW Motorrad Spanish based security insurance company Reale Seguros China based telecommunications company Huawei cyber gambling and sports betting company bet at home com beverage giant Coca Cola North Rhine Westphalia based brewery Veltins and the current manufacturer of Schalke s squad kits Germany based Adidas 66 In terms of operating income Schalke possesses an operating income of 13 million 67 and 12 per cent debt as of May 2019 68 As of 2019 Schalke generated the 14th highest revenue of any football club in the world at 291 million 68 In May 2019 Schalke 04 were still ranked by Forbes magazine as the 14th richest football club in the world 67 at 683 million a decrease of 3 per cent from the previous year 68 As of 2022 the club is no longer listed among the top 20 for either revenue or value 69 Schalke 04 is among the Bundesliga teams that were hit hardest by the ongoing COVID 19 pandemic 70 and in April 2020 the club said it was threatened by bankruptcy 71 Players EditCurrent squad Edit As of 24 January 2023 72 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 Ralf Fahrmann2 DF NED Thomas Ouwejan3 DF AUT Leo Greiml4 DF JPN Maya Yoshida 3rd captain 5 DF NED Sepp van den Berg on loan from Liverpool 6 MF GER Tom Krauss on loan from RB Leipzig 7 FW SWE Jordan Larsson8 MF GER Danny Latza captain 73 9 FW GER Simon Terodde vice captain 10 MF URU Rodrigo Zalazar11 FW GER Marius Bulter13 GK GER Alexander Schwolow on loan from Hertha BSC 15 DF FRA Timothee Kolodziejczak18 DF FIN Jere Uronen on loan from Brest 19 FW TUR Kenan Karaman20 FW GER Tim Skarke on loan from Union Berlin No Pos Nation Player21 MF GER Niklas Tauer on loan from Mainz 05 22 DF MLI Ibrahima Cisse23 MF GER Mehmet Can Aydin24 MF GER Dominick Drexler26 FW SUI Michael Frey on loan from Royal Antwerp 27 DF SUI Cedric Brunner28 GK GER Justin Heekeren29 MF GER Tobias Mohr30 MF CZE Alex Kral on loan from Spartak Moscow 34 GK AUT Michael Langer35 DF POL Marcin Kaminski38 FW JPN Sōichirō Kōzuki40 FW GER Sebastian Polter41 DF GER Henning Matriciani MF MAR Nassim BoujellabOut 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 Player15 DF BEL Dries Wouters at Mechelen until 30 June 2023 17 MF GER Florian Flick at 1 FC Nurnberg until 30 June 2023 18 MF KOS Blendi Idrizi at Jahn Regensburg until 30 June 2023 21 FW GER Marvin Pieringer at SC Paderborn 07 until 30 June 2023 42 MF GER Kerim Calhanoglu at SV Sandhausen until 30 June 2023 MF GER Can Bozdogan at Utrecht until 30 June 2023 MF MAR Amine Harit at Marseille until 30 June 2023 MF AUT Reinhold Ranftl at Austria Wien until 30 June 2023 Reserve team Edit Main article FC Schalke 04 II Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player37 MF ROU Andreas Ivan44 FW GER Sidi Sane GK SRB Radomir Novakovic DF NED Steven van der Sloot No Pos Nation Player MF GER Tim Albutat FW AZE Rufat Dadashov FW NED Nelson AmadinNotable former players Edit Main article List of FC Schalke 04 players Sculptures with some of the FC Schalke 04 Team of the Century In the year 2000 the supporters voted for Schalker Jahrhundertelf the Team of the Century 74 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player GK GER Norbert Nigbur DF GER Klaus Fichtel DF GER Olaf Thon DF GER Rolf Russmann MF GER Fritz Szepan MF GER Ingo Anderbrugge No Pos Nation Player MF BEL Marc Wilmots FW GER Ernst Kuzorra FW GER Klaus Fischer FW GER Reinhard Libuda FW GER Rudiger AbramczikRecords Edit Main article List of FC Schalke 04 records and statistics As of 26 May 2021 75 76 Klaus Fischer scored the most goals in Schalke s Bundesliga history Most appearances Bundesliga Player Nat Apps1 Klaus Fichtel 4772 Norbert Nigbur 3553 Rolf Russmann 3044 Klaus Fischer 295Olaf Thon 2956 Herbert Lutkebohmert 2867 Gerald Asamoah 2798 Mike Buskens 2579 Jiri Nemec 25610 Benedikt Howedes 240 Top scorers Bundesliga Player Nat Goals1 Klaus Fischer 1822 Klaas Jan Huntelaar 843 Ebbe Sand 734 Kevin Kuranyi 715 Olaf Thon 526 Erwin Kremers 507 Ingo Anderbrugge 468 Helmut Kremers 459 Rudiger Abramczik 44Gerald Asamoah 44Stadium EditSchalke s stadium known as the Veltins Arena under a sponsorship agreement with Veltins brewery was built in the summer of 2001 and has a capacity of 62 271 spectators 1 Schalke regularly draws sell out crowds to what is widely regarded as one of the most modern and best multi use facilities in Europe The facility was previously known as the Arena AufSchalke and replaced the Parkstadion capacity of 62 000 built in 1973 Prior to this the club played its matches in the Gluckauf Kampfbahn constructed in 1928 with a capacity of 35 000 The facility was used for amateur matches during its later years with a reduced capacity of 5 000 An interior design panorama of the Veltins Arena Exterior of the Veltins Arena Training ground of FC Schalke 04 known as the GeschaftsstelleFan culture Edit S04 Ultras Gelsenkirchen S04 fans in the streets of Gelsenkirchen on a matchday The number of members of Schalke 04 grew from 10 000 in 1991 to 160 000 in 2022 3 This figure makes Schalke 04 the second biggest sports club in Germany and fourth biggest sports club in the world behind Bayern Munich Benfica and CA Boca Juniors 4 As of 2022 Schalke is ranked as the 94th best football club in Europe and in Continental Europe by UEFA s UEFA club rankings 77 A representation of the Schalke 04 membership structure in 2014 showed among other things a female share of 20 per cent and a share of the age group up to ten years of 14 per cent 78 Around 30 per cent of the members were not from North Rhine Westphalia Apart from Gelsenkirchen 10 197 members and its immediate neighbouring towns the members of Schalke 04 also come from more distant cities such as Cologne 1 117 and Berlin 932 78 This high growth in Schalke 04 membership is also promoted by promotions of Schalke 04 as from 2013 to further advertise Schalke 04 brand 78 79 On 21 August 2013 Schalke 04 played their first home match of the 2013 14 season a UEFA Champions League qualifier at the Veltins Arena against the Greek runners up PAOK led by former head coach Huub Stevens drawing 1 1 80 The match and result was more than overshadowed by a controversial police operation in the S04 Ultras Gelsenkirchen block of the Veltins Arena against the fans of the home team with nearly 80 of the home team s fans injured 80 The return match was won 3 2 by Schalke without any of their supporters allowed to attend the match 80 Fan Club Association Edit Schalke 04 Fan Club Association SFCV is an umbrella organization which according to their own statement has an estimated 1 500 fan clubs 81 Of those listed by the SFCV 860 Schalke 04 fan clubs in October 2012 were divided geographically as follows an estimated 200 were in Ruhr 360 in the rest of North Rhine Westphalia and 300 in the other federal states 82 A member of the board of SFCV has a permanent seat on the board of FC Schalke 04 and in 2013 SFCV merged with the Ultras Gelsenkirchen and later the supporters club Schalke Fan Initiative eV with several members of strong fan groups from the SFCV as is clear from the merger of the SFCV with the fan section of S04 has not adequately represented the fan interests 83 84 Friendships Edit Friendship corner in the Fan Shop of 1 FC Nurnberg with shirts of Schalke 04 The fan base of Schalke is connected in a friendly way with the supporters of 1 FC Nurnberg and Dutch club Twente The friendship with Nurnberg is the oldest connection between two fan bases in Germany Before a match between both clubs the official club songs are played Club songs Edit Blau und weiss wie lieb ich Dich Blue and White How I Love You is the official club song Das Steigerlied traditional German mining song played before every match Blau und Weiss ein Leben lang Blue and white a life long is the goal tune Konigsblauer S04 Royal Blue S04 played after every matchPopular unofficial chants are Der Mythos vom Schalker Markt The Myth of the Schalke Market Opa Pritschikowski Grandpa Pritschikowski Von der Emscher bis zum Bosporus From the Emscher to the Bosphorus Wir schlugen Roda We beat Roda Die Eurofighter sind wieder da The Eurofighter are back again Fur deine Farben leben und sterben wir For your colours we live and die Wir lieben alle nur den FC Schalke We all love only FC Schalke Wir sind die Fans We are the fans Hurra wir sind die Schalker Knappen Hurray we are the Schalke Knappen Kohle unter unser n Fussen Coal under our feet and Steht auf wenn ihr Schalker seid Stand up if you re Schalke sung to the melody of Go West by the Pet Shop Boys itself a cover of a Village People song Revierderby Edit Main article Revierderby The Revierderby is the rivalry between local clubs Schalke 04 and Borussia Dortmund both situated in the densely populated Ruhr region Because of the small geographical distances between the clubs roughly 30 kilometers fans of opposing clubs often meet in everyday life The term may be used in any match between two football clubs of the Ruhr region such as VfL Bochum Rot Weiss Essen or MSV Duisburg but the term is most commonly associated with the rivalry between Schalke and Dortmund due to the derby s popularity and prestige To some fans the win of the derby itself is more important than the actual performance in the Bundesliga Respective league placements of Schalke 04 and Borussia Dortmund since the 1963 64 seasonIn popular culture Edit The cleats worn by the entire S04 squad players in the 1920s displayed at the museum of Schalke 04 Schalke has been subject of a feature length film called Fussball ist unser Leben Football is our life shown in 1999 Actors Uwe Ochsenknecht and Ralf Richter both of whom were in the award winning film Das Boot played the main roles while many persons associated with Schalke had cameo roles such as manager Rudi Assauer coaches Huub Stevens and Helmut Schulte and player Yves Eigenrauch Also featured were prominent fans like Manfred Breuckmann Ulrich Potofski or DJ Hooligan 85 The film is a comedy about Hans a Schalke fanatic and his three pals who somehow get involved in kidnapping and trying to bring back to form the team s new star player Di Ospeo and in the process bet Hans house that their idol will score in the final match 85 Schalke is mentioned in the film Das Boot when the bosun tells the crew in their ward room I got bad news for you men Schalke lost 5 0 looks like we won t be in the final this year Honours EditRole of honour 86 87 Domestic Edit German Championship Winners 1934 1935 1937 1939 1940 1942 1958 DFB Pokal German Cup Winners 1937 1971 72 2000 01 2001 02 2010 11 DFB Ligapokal German League Cup Winners 2005 DFL Supercup German Super Cup Winners 2011 2 Bundesliga Winners 1981 82 1990 91 2021 22International Edit Further information FC Schalke 04 in European football UEFA Cup Winners 1996 97 UEFA Intertoto Cup Winners 2003 2004UEFA club coefficient ranking Edit As of 30 June 2022 88 Rank Nation Team Points93 Belarus FC BATE Borisov 17 50094 Norway FK Bodo Glimt 17 00095 Germany Schalke 04 17 00096 Austria SK Rapid Wien 16 00097 Belgium R Standard de Liege 16 000Youth Edit Domestic Under 19 Bundesliga Winners 1976 2006 2012 2015 Runners up 1975 1980 1981 Under 19 Bundesliga West Winners 2006 2012 2013 2014 2015 Under 17 Bundesliga Winners 1978 2002 Runners up 1977 1980 Under 17 Bundesliga West Winners 2013Double Edit 1937 Championship and CupCorporate structure EditAs of 27 October 2022 89 90 Managing boardRole PersonChairman Bernd SchroderSport and Communications Peter KnabelFinance Christina Ruhl HamersCoaching staffRole PersonHead coach Thomas ReisAssistant head coach Mike Buskens Markus Gellhaus Matthias Kreutzer Sven PiepenbrockGoalkeeping coach Simon HenzlerAthletic coach Jorn Menger Alexander StorckRehabilitation coach David GrogerAnalyst Lars GerlingNotable coaches Edit Huub Stevens coached the club in four spells firstly from 1996 to 2002 where he won the UEFA Cup in 1997 secondly from 2011 to 2012 thirdly in 2019 as an interim and again in 2020 as interim coach He was voted Coach of the Century by Schalke fans in 1999 91 Further information List of FC Schalke 04 managers Name Nationality From To HonoursHans Schmidt Germany 1 July 1933 12 June 1938 3 German championships 1934 1935 1937 German championship runners up 1933 1938 5 Gauliga Westfalen championships 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1 Tschammerpokal 1937 runners up 1935 1936 Otto Faist Germany 13 July 1938 31 December 1942 3 German championships 1939 1940 1942 German championship runners up 1941 4 Gauliga Westfalen championships 1939 1940 1941 1942 Tschammerpokal runners up 1941 1942 Ernst Kuzorra Germany 1 July 1946 30 September 1947Fritz Szepan West Germany 1 July 1949 30 June 1954 1 Oberliga West championship 1951 runners up 1952 Edi Fruhwirth Austria 1 July 1954 30 June 1959 1 German championship 1958 1 Oberliga West championship 1958 runners up 1956 DFB Pokal runners up 1955 Ivica Horvat Yugoslavia 1 July 1971 1 July 1978 30 June 1976 17 March 1979 Bundesliga runners up 1971 72 1 DFB Pokal 1971 72 Huub Stevens Netherlands 8 October 1996 27 September 2011 14 March 2019 18 December 2020 30 June 2002 16 December 2012 30 June 2019 22 December 2020 Bundesliga runners up 2000 01 2 DFB Pokals 2000 01 2001 02 1 UEFA Cup 1997 DFB Ligapokal runners up 2001 2002 Felix Magath Germany 1 July 2009 16 March 2011 Bundesliga runners up 2009 10 1 DFL Supercup 2010 Other departments EditFurther information Schalke 04 Basketball and FC Schalke 04 Esports The basketball department played in the 1988 89 season in the National Basketball League Basketball Bundesliga and from 2004 for several seasons in the ProA the second highest basketball league in Germany 92 2009 saw Schalke 04 voluntarily withdrawal from the ProA Currently the team competes in ProB 93 The club founded a blind football department in 2015 which plays in the Blindenfussball Bundesliga 94 The women s football club was initially dissolved in the mid 1980s but achieved some notable successes including five time Westphalia championships and competed in the German championship and DFB Cup Schalke 04 later cooperated with 1 FFC Recklinghausen de a women s football club from 2007 to 2010 95 and the current women s team was established in July 2020 to compete in Kreisliga B the eighth tier of women s football in 2021 96 Other longstanding departments include the handball department which was founded in 1926 and competed in the Gaumeister Gauliga during Nazi Germany and the current top division 97 The athletic department was founded in 1922 with the club s former players including Olympic silver medallist decathlete Frank Busemann and 2003 European Athletics Junior Championships gold 200 metre runner Sebastian Ernst 98 The table tennis department was founded in 1947 and competes in the Westphalia district league The women s team was one of the early participants in the national league until it withdrew in 1956 99 In 2016 Schalke acquired League of Legends e sports team Elements becoming the second professional sports team with a League of Legends division after Besiktas In early June they debuted in the European League of Legends Championship Series the top level of professional League of Legends competition in Europe 100 The club also announced former Rot Weiss Oberhausen and Sportfreunde Siegen midfielder and SK Gaming co founder Tim Reichert as Head of ESport See also EditThe Football Club Social Alliance Forbes list of the most valuable football clubs Portals Sports Association football North Rhine WestphaliaBibliography EditBodo Berg More than a game from the life of a football fan with photos of Yves own smoke Verlg the workshop Gottingen 2000 ISBN 3 89533 299 2 Jenrich Burkh Royal Blue Planet Gottingen 2004 ISBN 3 89533 446 4 Stefan Goch Norbert Silver Bach Between blue and white is gray Essen 2005 ISBN 3 89861 433 6 Hardy Green Faith Love Schalke The complete history of FC Schalke 04 The Workshop Gottingen 2011 ISBN 978 3 89533 747 5 Helmut Wood Schalke is priceless Gelsenkirchen 1991 ISBN 3 924984 30 1 Helmut Wood Schalke smile Curiosities and concrete of fans and dreamers experienced and collected Gelsenkirchen 1984 ISBN 3 9800764 6 6 William Herbert Koch The Royal Blues the phenomenon Schalke 04 Dusseldorf 1973 ISBN 3 7700 0365 9 Olivier Kruschinski Blue and white for a lifetime A season with Schalke Herten 2005 ISBN 3 938152 04 4 Georg Rowekamp The legend lives on The history of FC Schalke 04 Gottingen 1996 and newer edition ISBN 3 89533 164 3 Schalke Fan Initiative Eds The tip of the Eichbergs Most scandals of FC Schalke 04 plain text Essen 2005 ISBN 3 89861 393 3 Jorg Seven Eick Thomas Spiegel Gerd Voss Eds 100 Schalke years 100 stories Schalke Plain text Essen 2004 ISBN 3 89861 321 6 Matt Ford Bundesliga Schalke relegated for first time in 30 years 2021 https www dw com en bundesliga schalke relegated for first time in 30 years a 57270976References Edit a b Schalke erhoht Stadionkapazitat kicker de in German kicker 30 June 2015 Retrieved 20 July 2015 Supervisory Board FC Schalke 04 a b FC Schalke 04 Vereinsinfo Kicker Retrieved 23 January 2022 a b Fussballclubs weltweit Anzahl der Mitglieder 2021 kicker Almanach 1990 in German publisher kicker published 1989 page 171 Die deutschen Gauligen 1933 45 Heft 1 3 in German DSFS zur Nieden Felix 12 July 2011 Der Fussball Heilige wacht uber die St Joseph Kirche in Schalke WAZ in German Retrieved 6 February 2016 145 000 see German Newcastle blow it The Guardian 13 May 2007 Boyes Roger 7 January 2009 Comment Gazprom is not a market player it s a political weapon The Times London Retrieved 7 January 2009 Rutten named new Schalke boss FC Schalke 04 23 April 2008 Retrieved 16 August 2008 Schalke 0 Manchester United 2 The Daily Telegraph 26 April 2011 Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 26 April 2011 Schalke zum Funften 5 0 gegen MSV Duisburg dfb de in German Retrieved 1 July 2020 Neuer set to leave Schalke Deutsche Welle Retrieved 13 August 2018 Rangnick steps aside at Schalke UEFA 22 September 2011 Retrieved 22 September 2011 Huub Stevens new Schalke coach Schalke Official Website 27 September 2011 Herzlich willkommen zuruck Huub Stevens 13 May 2012 Schalke sign Kevin Prince Boateng FC Schalke 04 30 August 2013 Archived from the original on 1 September 2013 Retrieved 3 August 2014 Schalke Announces Di Matteo As New Coach newswirengr com 7 October 2014 Retrieved 7 October 2014 Ganz stark S04 feiert 4 3 Sieg im Bernabeu schalke04 de in German 10 March 2015 Archived from the original on 2 March 2016 Roberto Di Matteo legt Amt als Trainer des FC Schalke 04 nieder schalke04 de in German 26 May 2015 Bestatigt Domenico Tedesco ersetzt Markus Weinzierl auf Schalke Kicker de 9 June 2017 Retrieved 9 June 2017 Howedes vor Wechsel zu Lokomotive Moskau Sky Sport in German 29 July 2018 0 7 Schalke geht bei Manchester City unter spiegel de in German 12 March 2022 Retrieved 2 November 2022 Schalke 04 relieve Domenico Tedesco of his duties FC Schalke 04 14 March 2019 Retrieved 14 March 2019 David Wagner becomes new head coach of Schalke 04 Schalke 04 9 May 2019 Retrieved 9 May 2019 Schalke 04 in der Krise Ex Boss Heidel deutet wahres Ausmass an Wir reden hier nicht uber eine kleine Delle tz de in German 11 May 2020 Retrieved 6 January 2021 Als erster Bundesliga Verein Schalke 04 fuhrt Gehaltsobergrenze ein n tv de in German 28 June 2020 Retrieved 6 July 2020 Schalke verliert beim SC Freiburg 0 4 Ruhr Nachrichten in German Archived from the original on 1 July 2020 Retrieved 27 June 2020 FC Schalke 04 setzt weiter auf Trainer David Wagner und korrigiert zukunftige Saisonziele in German SPOX 1 July 2020 Retrieved 6 July 2020 Clemens Tonnies steps down from his role at FC Schalke 04 schalke04 de 30 June 2020 Ein Rabona zwei Blitzstarts und acht Tore Bayern deklassiert Schalke zum Auftakt kicker in German 18 September 2020 Retrieved 8 October 2020 Erneute Abwehrschwachen und vier Gegentore Schalke geht in Leipzig baden kicker in German 3 October 2020 Retrieved 8 October 2020 Fullkrug wird eingeladen Schalkes Krise nimmt kein Ende kicker in German 26 September 2020 Retrieved 8 October 2020 Nach 18 Spielen ohne Sieg Schalke trennt sich von Wagner kicker in German 27 September 2020 Retrieved 8 October 2020 Die Punkteschnitte der Schalke Trainer seit Magath kicker in German 27 September 2020 Retrieved 8 October 2020 Schalke stellt Baum am Mittag vor Naldo wird Co Trainer kicker in German 30 September 2020 Retrieved 8 October 2020 a b Paukenschlag auf Schalke Stevens ubernimmt fur Baum kicker in German Retrieved 18 December 2020 Bundesliga Bundesliga Wieder kein Sieg Schalke 04 nahert sich Tasmania Rekord ran de in German 16 December 2020 Retrieved 18 December 2020 0 2 gegen Freiburg Schalke kommt Tasmania Berlin immer naher Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in German ISSN 0174 4909 Retrieved 18 December 2020 Bielefeld besteht im Kellerduell Klos vermiest Stevens die Ruckkehr kicker in German Retrieved 19 December 2020 Christian Gross ist neuer Chef Trainer des FC Schalke 04 Schalke 04 in German 27 December 2020 Retrieved 27 December 2020 Gross Debut misslingt Cordoba nimmt Schalke den Wind aus den Segeln kicker in German Retrieved 3 January 2021 Bundesliga s longest winless streaks Schalke nearing an unwanted record Bulinews Retrieved 10 January 2021 Schalke 4 0 Hoffenheim Matthew Hoppe hat trick in first win in 31 Bundesliga games BBC Sport 9 January 2021 Retrieved 10 January 2021 Crisis hit Schalke sack Christian Gross in major clear out BeSoccer 28 February 2021 Grammozis wird neuer Schalke Trainer Suddeutsche Zeitung in German 2 March 2021 a b Hlusiak Marc 20 March 2021 FC Schalke 04 historisch schlecht Trauriger Eigentor Rekord diese Zahlen schockieren Schalke 04 historically bad Sad own goal record these numbers are shocking eurosport de in German Retrieved 26 March 2021 Bayer Leverkusen Schalke 04 Trotz Niederlage Huntelaar bewahrt S04 Trainer vor Negativ Rekord Bayer Leverkusen Schalke 04 Despite loss Huntelaar saves S04 coach from starting with negative record derwesten de in German 3 April 2021 Retrieved 3 April 2021 Selldorf Philipp 21 April 2021 Abstieg von Schalke 04 Das unvermeidliche Ende des Siechtums Suddeutsche Zeitung in German Retrieved 21 April 2021 Schalke players attacked by Schalke fans Deutsche Welle 20 April 2021 Partnership between S04 and GAZPROM ends prematurely FC Schalke 04 28 February 2022 Retrieved 20 October 2022 FC Schalke 04 relieve head coach Dimitrios Grammozis of his duties FC Schalke 04 6 March 2022 2 Bundesliga 2021 2022 25 Spieltag in German 6 March 2022 Retrieved 20 October 2022 Mike Buskens takes over as head coach until the end of the season FC Schalke 04 7 March 2022 Schalke promoted back to Bundesliga after one season away AP News 7 May 2022 Retrieved 7 May 2022 Schalke crowned 2021 22 Bundesliga 2 champions bundesliga com the official Bundesliga website Retrieved 4 August 2022 Frank Kramer is Schalke s new head coach FC Schalke 04 7 June 2022 Great person and player Schalke 04 bid farewell to Ko Itakura FC Schalke 04 31 May 2022 Retrieved 20 October 2022 FC Schalke 04 part ways with Frank Kramer FC Schalke 04 19 October 2022 Jonathan Dicks 19 October 2022 Schroder We cannot present ourselves in this form bulinews com Retrieved 20 October 2022 Sportdirektor Schroder verlasst Schalke mit sofortiger Wirkung kicker de in German 26 October 2022 Retrieved 26 October 2022 Laura Czypull 2 November 2022 Nach Schalke Aus Weitere Details zu Schroder Abgang enthullt watson de in German Retrieved 2 November 2022 Thomas Reis named new Schalke head coach bundesliga com 27 October 2022 Retrieved 2 November 2022 Vincenzo Grifo at the double as Freiburg see off Schalke bundesliga com 30 October 2022 Retrieved 2 November 2022 Stevens sieht bei Schalke Fortschritte unter Reis ran de in German 1 November 2022 Retrieved 2 November 2022 a b Vladimir Putin Gazprom and Schalke 04 How Russia sending troops to the Crimea is being felt in the Bundesliga The Independent 7 March 2014 Retrieved 3 August 2014 a b Soccer Team Values Forbes May 2014 Retrieved 1 August 2014 a b c Schalke 04 Forbes May 2014 Retrieved 1 August 2014 The Business of Soccer Full List Forbes 2022 Retrieved 14 October 2022 Matthias Wolf 9 April 2020 Studie Schalke Union und Paderborn finanziell auf der Kippe Sportschau de in German Retrieved 6 January 2021 Schalke 04 in der Krise Ex Boss Heidel deutet wahres Ausmass an Wir reden hier nicht uber eine kleine Delle tz de in German 11 May 2020 Retrieved 6 January 2021 Der Kader des FC Schalke 04 Schalke 04 in German Retrieved 22 June 2022 Danny Latza is the new captain of Schalke 04 Schalke 04 9 July 2021 Schalkes Jahrhundertelf in German derwesten de 25 June 2013 Retrieved 27 January 2014 Bundesliga All time appearances FC Schalke 04 worldfootball net Retrieved 26 May 2021 Bundesliga All time topscorers FC Schalke 04 worldfootball net Retrieved 26 May 2021 UEFA Team Ranking 2022 kassiesa home xs4all nl Retrieved 14 October 2022 a b c Schalke freut sich uber 80 000 Vereins Mitglied focus de in German Hand Drauf Jetzt Mitglied werden schalke04 de in German Archived from the original on 19 July 2014 Retrieved 3 August 2014 a b c Streit um Einsatz gegen Saloniki Polizei zieht sich aus Schalke Arena zuruck Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in German Von Fans fur Fans sfcv de in German Archived from the original on 27 September 2014 Retrieved 3 August 2014 Fan Clubs im Schalker Fan Club Verband sfcv de in German Archived from the original on 26 September 2013 Retrieved 3 August 2014 Nachster Ruckschlag fur den SFCV reviersport de in German 8 June 2013 Austritt aus dem SFCV fan ini de in German a b Fussball ist unser Leben Archived 25 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine review in FilmSpiegel 1999 in German Milestones Schalke 04 de FC Schalke 04 Trophies Soccerway Club coefficients UEFA Managing Board FC Schalke 04 Coaches and Staff FC Schalke 04 Beste trainer van de Eeuw keert terug naar Schalke Sport VK De Volkskrant in Dutch Retrieved 17 October 2011 Geschichte der Basketballabteilung des FC Schalke 04 schalke04 de in German Archived from the original on 1 December 2013 Retrieved 3 August 2014 Basketball department of FC Schalke 04 FC Schalke 04 Archived from the original on 11 October 2017 Retrieved 3 August 2014 Neue Abteilung Blindenfussball startet in die Bundesligasaison FC Schalke 04 Kooperation mit Fussballerinnen vom 1 FFC Recklinghausen schalke04 de in German Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 3 August 2014 FC Schalke 04 to form a women s football team FC Schalke 04 2 July 2020 Retrieved 2 July 2020 Handball department of FC Schalke 04 FC Schalke 04 Archived from the original on 3 October 2017 Retrieved 3 August 2014 Athletics department of FC Schalke 04 FC Schalke 04 Table tennis department of FC Schalke 04 FC Schalke 04 Sources Soccer org Schalke 04 finalizes League Championship Series roster picks up Fox ESPN 15 May 2016 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to FC Schalke 04 Official website FC Schalke 04 at UEFA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title FC Schalke 04 amp oldid 1135447554, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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