2012–13 Eintracht Braunschweig season

Eintracht Braunschweig
2012–13 season
Chairman Sebastian Ebel
Manager Torsten Lieberknecht
Stadium Eintracht-Stadion
2. Bundesliga 2nd (promoted)
DFB-Pokal Lost in 2nd round
Top goalscorer Dominick Kumbela (19 goals)
Highest home attendance 21,820 (vs. Köln)
Lowest home attendance 18,900 (vs. Sandhausen)
Average home league attendance 20,454
Home colours
Away colours

The 2012–13 Eintracht Braunschweig season is the 118th season in the club's football history. In 2012–13 the club plays in the 2. Bundesliga, the second tier of German football. It is the club's second consecutive season in this league, having played at this level since 2011–12, after it was promoted from the 3. Liga in 2011.

The club also took part in the 2012–13 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it reached the second round and subsequently lost to Bundesliga side SC Freiburg.[1]

Review and events

Due to the ongoing rebuilding of the Eintracht-Stadion, the stadium's capacity is reduced during the season.[2]

Eintracht Braunschweig started the season by winning five games in a row and taking over first place in the league on the second matchday. The club never left the direct promotion spots for the rest of the season. After having spent the last two decades mostly between the second and third division of German football, Eintracht's resurgence became noted by the German media.[3][4][5][6][7][8] On the 31st matchday, the club secured its return to the Bundesliga after a 28-year absence with a 1–0 away win over FC Ingolstadt.[9] Damir Vrančić scored the decisive goal from a free-kick in injury time.

With 19 goals, Dominick Kumbela also finished as the top-scorer of the 2. Bundesliga.[10]

Matches and results

Legend

  Win   Tie   Loss

Friendly matches

2. Bundesliga

DFB-Pokal

Players

Current squad

As of 11 March 2013

Squad Season 2012–13
No. Player Nat. Birthday at BTSV since previous club League matches League goals Cup matches Cup goals
Goalkeepers
1 Marjan Petković 22 May 1979 2009 FSV Frankfurt 4 0 2 0
26 Daniel Davari 6 Jan 1988 2009 Mainz 05 II 30 0 0 0
Defenders
3 Ermin Bičakčić 24 Jan 1990 01/12 VfB Stuttgart 33 3 2 0
4 Matthias Henn 28 Apr 1985 2007 1. FC Kaiserslautern 3 0 0 0
5 Benjamin Kessel 1 Oct 1987 2010 Mainz 05 II 15 0 0 0
8 Deniz Doğan 20 Oct 1979 2007 VfB Lübeck 29 2 2 0
15 Norman Theuerkauf 24 Jan 1987 2009 Eintracht Frankfurt II 31 1 2 0
16 Emre Turan 16 Nov 1990 01/11 Ankaraspor 1 0 0 0
19 Ken Reichel 19 Dec 1986 2007 Hamburger SV II 25 0 2 0
25 Marcel Correia 16 May 1989 2011 1. FC Kaiserslautern II 17 0 2 0
Midfielders
6 Damir Vrančić 4 Oct 1985 2009 Borussia Dortmund II 24 1 1 0
7 Björn Kluft 11 Jan 1990 2012 Preußen Münster 1 0 0 0
10 Mirko Boland 23 Apr 1987 01/09 MSV Duisburg II 30 4 2 1
11 Steffen Bohl 28 Dec 1983 01/11 Wehen Wiesbaden 21 0 1 0
13 Raffael Korte 29 Aug 1990 2011 TuS Mechtersheim 10 0 1 0
14 Omar Elabdellaoui 5 Dec 1991 01/13 Manchester City 14 0 0 0
17 Kevin Kratz 21 Jan 1987 2012 Alemannia Aachen 18 0 1 2
18 Oliver Petersch 26 Apr 1989 2011 Rot-Weiß Oberhausen 11 1 0 0
31 Marc Pfitzner 28 Aug 1984 2007 Youth system 20 2 1 0
Strikers
9 Orhan Ademi 28 Oct 1991 2012 Rheindorf Altach 30 4 2 0
12 Dominick Kumbela 20 Apr 1984 01/10 Rot Weiss Ahlen 30 19 2 0
20 Zhang Chengdong 9 February 1989 2012 Mafra 12 0 0 0
21 Pierre Merkel 25 May 1989 2011 Idar-Oberstein 16 2 0 0
22 Randy Edwini-Bonsu 20 Apr 1990 01/12 Oulu 8 0 1 0
23 Jonas Erwig-Drüppel 20 Jul 1991 2012 Schalke 04 II 6 0 0 0
27 Gianluca Korte 29 Aug 1990 2011 TuS Mechtersheim 11 2 2 0
32 Dennis Kruppke (captain) 1 Apr 1980 01/08 SC Freiburg 23 11 2 0
No longer at the club
14 Jan Washausen 2 Oct 1988 2007 Youth system 0 0 0 0
Last updated: 19 May 2013

Summer transfers

In:

No. Position Player
9 Switzerland FW Orhan Ademi (from Rheindorf Altach)
23 Germany FW Jonas Erwig-Drüppel (from Schalke 04 II)
7 Germany MF Björn Kluft (from Preußen Münster)
17 Germany MF Kevin Kratz (from Alemannia Aachen)
20 China FW Zhang Chengdong (on loan from Mafra, previously on loan at Beira-Mar)

Out:

No. Position Player
9 Germany FW Mathias Fetsch (to Kickers Offenbach)
7 Austria DF Benjamin Fuchs (to Manisaspor)
24 Germany DF Pascal Gos (to Eintracht Braunschweig II)
30 Germany GK Benjamin Later (to Eintracht Braunschweig II)
23 Germany MF Julius Reinhardt (to Kickers Offenbach)
17 Germany MF Markus Unger (to Eintracht Braunschweig II)
20 Germany MF Nico Zimmermann (to VfR Aalen)

Winter transfers

In:

No. Position Player
14 Norway MF Omar Elabdellaoui (on loan from Manchester City, previously on loan at Feyenoord)

Out:

No. Position Player
14 Germany MF Jan Washausen (on loan to Kickers Offenbach)

Management and coaching staff

Since 12 May 2008 Torsten Lieberknecht is the manager of Eintracht Braunschweig.

Position Staff
ManagerTorsten Lieberknecht
Assistant managerDarius Scholtysik
Assistant manager/athletic trainerJürgen Rische
Goalkeeping coachAlexander Kunze
Sporting directorMarc Arnold
Club doctorDr. Frank Maier
PhysiotherapistCaroline Schweibs
PhysiotherapistGoce Janevski
PhysiotherapistThorsten Taenzer
Team managerHolm Stelzer
Kit and equipment manager/Bus driverChristian Skolik

References

  1. DFB-Pokal 2012/2013 .:. Spielplan (German) DFB-Pokal 2012–13, accessed: 5 September 2012
  2. "Fan-Infos zum Umbau der Haupttribüne" (in German). www.eintracht-stadion.com. 2012. Retrieved 26 August 2012.
  3. Otto, Christian (20 October 2012). "Im Zweifel gegen den Trend" (in German). faz.net. Retrieved 9 December 2012.
  4. Herrmann, Boris (23 September 2012). "Auferstanden vom Rande des Untergangs" (in German). sueddeutsche.de. Retrieved 9 December 2012.
  5. Jahn, Michael (25 October 2012). "Spagat auf der Baustelle" (in German). fr-online.de. Retrieved 9 December 2012.
  6. Schramm, Anja (7 April 2013). "Braunschweigs großer Klimmzug" (in German). welt.de. Retrieved 7 April 2013.
  7. Spiller, Christian (18 December 2012). "Kein Geld – und trotzdem erfolgreich" (in German). zeit.de. Retrieved 18 December 2012.
  8. Hacke, Detlef (27 April 2013). "Aufstieg von Eintracht Braunschweig: Comeback der Enkel" (in German). spiegel.de. Retrieved 11 May 2013.
  9. "Braunschweig nach 28 Jahren zurück in Liga eins". Die Welt (in German). 26 April 2013. Retrieved 26 April 2013.
  10. "2. Bundesliga - Torjäger". Kicker Sportmagazin (in German). Retrieved 19 May 2013.

External links

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