Bayern Munich

(German: FC Bayern München)

 

Germany's most successful team in history

 

2005/2006 FIRST TEAM SQUAD

Founded in 1900, it is based in the Bavarian city of Munich in Southern Germany. Until recently its matches were held in the Olympiastadion München, but it moved to a new ground, the Allianz Arena, in 2005. The club is arguably the most famous and most successful football side in Germany and has a registered fan base of 110,911 members and 2,189 fan clubs which makes it the biggest sport club in Germany. The club is also one of only four to have won all three major European trophies. Four Champions League trophies, including three successive wins in a phenomenally successful era in the mid 1970s, are the particular highlights of their massive success in Europe. As Bayern is the country's most successful club, it is the inevitable subject of intensive attention by the German media, and an object of envy and outright resentment by supporters of other clubs. Its past off-field dramas in particular have led German tabloid media to dub the club FC Hollywood, a nickname that has occasionally been used by football media in the English-speaking world. Bayern Munich won its 19th German Championship in the 2004/05 season, reinforcing its position as the most successful team in Germany.

 

RESERVE SQUAD

The first 100 years of Bayern Munich's history - and its success story - begin and end with the name Franz. Is it just a coincidence that the leader of the eleven spirited rebels who met to form FC Bayern in the Gisela Restaurant in Munich on the night of 27th February 1900, was a certain Franz John? Or that it was a Franz who masterminded the split from MTV 1879, the original club, which had suppressed every attempt by the footballers at independence? Is it only chance that exactly a century later, another Franz, this time Beckenbauer, would lead Bayern Munich, now an experienced and visionary club with countless titles to its name, into the new millennium as its president? Much time and many other differences separate now from then. Franz John co-founded and built Bayern up from nothing and was delighted with relatively modest results, like Bayern's 7-1 victory in their first match against their former team, MTV 1879.

But John also gave this 'cavalier' club its first individual touch. In the early days, people recognised Bayern, then known as Schwabinger Bayern, by the players' straw hats. In his turn, Franz Beckenbauer would help make Bayern Munich what it is today: an international club with millions of fans, an institution reaching way beyond German football. Not in his wildest dreams could Franz John have imagined that future, or that his team would one day be German champions, European Cup Champions and even World Club Championship winners. Nor could he have imagined that nearly a century later, on a mild spring day in 1999, Beckenbauer would meet the world's leading heads of state, and no less than the British prime minister, Tony Blair, would whisper to him that he was the most famous person there. Clearly something incredible happened in the 100 years between Franz and Franz.

 

 
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