Ballspielverein
Borussia 09 e.V. Dortmund, commonly known as Borussia Dortmund (BVB), or simply
Dortmund, is a German sports club based in Dortmund, North Rhine-Westphalia
(Borussia is the Latin equivalent of Prussia). The football team is part of a
large membership-based sports club with more than 145,000 members, making BVB
the second largest sports club by membership in Germany. Dortmund plays in the
Bundesliga, the top tier of the German football league system. Dortmund is one
of the most successful clubs in German football history.
Borussia Dortmund was founded in 1909 by eighteen football
players from Dortmund. Borussia Dortmund have won eight German championships,
three DFB-Pokals, five DFL-Supercups, one UEFA Champions League, one UEFA Cup
Winners' Cup, and one Intercontinental Cup. Their Cup Winners' Cup win in 1966
made them the first German club to win a European title.
Since 1974, Dortmund have played their home games at
Westfalenstadion, named after its home region of Westphalia. The stadium is the
largest in Germany and Dortmund has the highest average attendance of any
association football club in the world. Borussia Dortmund's colours are black
and yellow, giving the club its nickname die Schwarzgelben. Dortmund holds a
long-standing rivalry with Ruhr neighbours Schalke 04, known as the
Revierderby. In terms of Deloitte's annual Football Money League, Dortmund is
the second biggest sports club in Germany and the 11th biggest football team in
the world.football team in the world.
The club was founded on 19 December 1909 by a group of young
men unhappy with the Catholic church-sponsored Trinity Youth, where they played
football under the stern and unsympathetic eye of the local parish priest.
Father Dewald was blocked at the door when he tried to break up the organizing
meeting being held in a room of the local pub, Zum Wildschütz. The founders
were Franz and Paul Braun, Henry Cleve, Hans Debest, Paul Dziendzielle, Franz,
Julius and Wilhelm Jacobi, Hans Kahn, Gustav Müller, Franz Risse, Fritz
Schulte, Hans Siebold, August Tönnesmann, Heinrich and Robert Unger, Fritz
Weber, Franz Wendt and Benno Elkan. The name Borussia is Latin for Prussia but
was taken from Borussia beer from the nearby Borussia brewery in Dortmund. The
team began playing in blue and white striped shirts with a red sash, and black
shorts. In 1913, they donned the black and yellow stripes so familiar today.
Borossia Dortmunt in 1913 |
Over the next decades the club enjoyed only modest success
playing in local leagues. They had a brush with bankruptcy in 1929 when an
attempt to boost the club's fortunes by signing some paid professional
footballers failed miserably and left the team deep in debt. They survived only
through the generosity of a local supporter who covered the team's shortfall
out of his own pocket.
The 1930s saw the rise of the Third Reich, which
restructured sports and football organizations throughout the nation to suit
the regime's goals. Borussia's president was replaced when he refused to join
the Nazi Party, and a couple of members who surreptitiously used the club's
offices to produce anti-Nazi pamphlets were executed in the last days of the
war. The club did have greater success in the newly established Gauliga
Westfalen, but would have to wait until after World War II to make a
breakthrough. It was during this time that Borussia developed its intense
rivalry with Schalke 04 of suburban Gelsenkirchen, the most successful side of
the era (see Revierderby). Like every other organisation in Germany, Borussia
was dissolved by the Allied occupation authorities after the war in an attempt
to distance the country's institutions from its so-recent Nazi past. There was
a short-lived attempt to merge the club with two others – Werksportgemeinschaft
Hoesch and Freier Sportverein 98 – as Sportgemeinschaft Borussia von 1898, but
it was as Ballspiel-Verein Borussia
(BVB) that they made their first appearance in the national league final in
1949, where they lost 2–3 to VfR Mannheim.
Between 1946 and 1963, Borussia featured in the
Oberliga West, a first division league which dominated German football through
the late 1950s. In 1949, Borussia reached the final in Stuttgart against VfR
Mannheim, which they lost 2–3 after extra time. The club claimed its first
national title in 1956 with a 4–2 win against Karlsruher
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