Season Finale

by Mark on May 18, 2008 · 0 comments

The 45th sea­son of the Bun­desliga has come to an end with com­par­a­tively lit­tle drama or the­atrics. Bay­ern all but guar­an­teed itself the title with a busy sum­mer in the trans­fer mar­ket, spend­ing 70 mil­lion Euros on Luca Toni (the league’s top scorer), Franck Ribery (world class play­maker) and the rest. While this invest­ment was able to secure first place in Ger­many, a return to Cham­pi­ons League action and a domes­tic cup, it could not secure the tre­ble. Two (lucky) draws against a lower table Span­ish side Getafe and an aggre­gate 2–5 drub­bing by the Russ­ian cham­pi­ons Zenit St. Peters­burg did remove some of the season’s lus­ter. But ulti­mately with their 20th Bun­desliga title in hand this year can be seen as a return to form for Bay­ern and their fans.

The names of the other squads return­ing to Europe has a famil­iar ring to them:

Both Bre­men and Schalke return to the Cham­pi­ons League with Bre­men auto­mat­i­cally qual­i­fy­ing this year and Schalke going into the third qual­i­fy­ing round.

Ham­burg, last year’s Inter­toto Cup “win­ner”, enters the Uefa Cup proper joined by a Wolfs­burg team who in 2006-07 had fin­ished 15th, the last safe spot above the rel­e­ga­tion zone, and Dort­mund who had an unin­spir­ing year but were runners-up in the DFB Cup.

Hertha Berlin are for­tu­nate to be in Europe this year, being the lucky recip­i­ents of a Fair Play UEFA Cup first round qual­i­fy­ing place along with Man­ches­ter City and Denmark’s FC Nordsjælland.

Finally Stuttgart, the ex-reigning champs, have the plea­sure of play­ing in the Inter­toto Cup’s third round where, if they’re as lucky as Ham­burg was last year, they’ll get to play a team from Moldova. The Inter­toto Cup is slated to be abol­ished in 2009, so if Stuttgart (or any other Ger­man club) still has designs on Euro­pean sil­ver­ware the time is run­ning out.

Bayer Lev­erkusen and Nürn­berg both failed to emu­late last year’s suc­cess. Lev­erkusen just missed out on a spot in Europe with their 7th place fin­ish. Nürn­berg took mat­ters one step fur­ther by not only avoid­ing Europe but the 1. Bun­desliga as well, choos­ing rel­e­ga­tion instead. Being rel­e­gated as reign­ing DFB Cup hold­ers stands proudly along­side the club’s unique achieve­ment of win­ning the league one year (1968) and being rel­e­gated the next.

Join­ing Nürn­berg are Hansa Ros­tock and MSV Duis­burg, two squads who gained pro­mo­tion only the year before. Karl­sruhe, com­fort­able win­ners of the 2. Bun­desliga, fin­ished a respectable 11th in the table.

The 1. Bun­desliga wel­comes in their place two old faces: five-time cham­pi­ons Borus­sia Mönchenglad­bach and three-time cham­pi­ons FC Köln, and one very new one: 1899 Hof­fen­heim. Hof­fen­heim is only two years removed from play­ing in Region­al­liga Süd, one of the var­i­ous third tier leagues (soon to be replaced by a nation-wide 3. Liga). It is dif­fi­cult to imag­ine them sur­viv­ing beyond their inau­gural sea­son in the high­est divi­sion, but they are sure to gain numer­ous fans from around the football-starved Hei­del­berg area in south­west­ern Germany.

As for the other clubs? Han­nover, Frank­furt, Bochum, Cot­tbus and Biele­feld did just enough to stay within the safe band of clubs between spots 7 and 15 on the table to avoid men­tion. Sure, Cot­tbus and Biele­feld flirted con­tin­u­ally with rel­e­ga­tion through­out the sea­son, but did just enough in the end. The rest man­aged to be solid, anony­mous mid-table clubs. Con­sis­tent ade­quacy may not be glam­orous, but it is reassuring.

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