FC Bayern München
Founded: 1900
Owner/Major Shareholder: adidas-Salomon AG (10%
Main Sponsor/Uniform Sponsor: Deutsche Telekom's T-Com/Adidas
Chief Executive: Karl-Heinz Rummenigge (Chairman, Executive Board)
Club President: Franz Beckenbauer (Chairman, Supervisory Board)
Bayern's official youtube channel: http://www.youtube.com/fcbayern
Team Value: $838 mil (€655 mil / £453 mil)
Revenue: $262 mil (€205 mil / £142 mil)
Income: $62 mil (€49 mil / £34 mil)
Debt: 0
Stadium: Allianz Arena
Capacity: 69,000
History:
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.
Bayern opened the new millennium in spectacular fashion, claiming the Champions League, the domestic championship, the World Club Cup and the German Cup in quick succession.
Bayern ended the old millennium on a low note with the devastating defeat to Manchester United in the 1999 Champions League final, but the team built around Oliver Kahn, Stefan Effenberg and Giovane Elber swiftly set about making amends in the new century.
Long-standing rivals Real Madrid felt the effects of Bayern's determination early in the year 2000 as the Reds put no less than eight goals past the Spanish giants in the space of eight days, winning 4-2 at the Bernabeu and 4-1 at home. The sides met again in the semi-finals, but this time Real took revenge, winning the tie with a 2-0 success at home and a crucial away goal in Munich's 2-1 win at the Olympic Stadium.
Ottmar Hitzfeld's men still collected silverware that season, entering the last week of the Bundesliga campaign neck-and-neck with Bayer Leverkusen. The Rhineland outfit fell to a shock defeat against relegated Unterhaching, allowing Bayern to pip them to the title. A week later, the Reds took revenge for the previous year's German Cup final defeat to Werder Bremen with a 3-0 win against the same opponents in the Berlin showpiece, sealing the third league and cup double in the club's history. Oliver Kahn was named German Player of the Year 1999-2000.
There was even better to come in 2000-2001. The omens were not good after an early German Cup exit to unfancied Magdeburg, but after 34 Bundesliga matches, Bayern again finished top of the standings. And again the glory was earned in dramatic fashion as Patrik Andersson blasted a stoppage-time equaliser in Hamburg with almost the last kick of the last match, snatching the title from rivals Schalke 04, whose game had already finished. The Schalke fans had celebrated - for just four minutes.
Brimming with confidence after the knife-edge finale, the Reds travelled to Milan on 23 May 2001 for the Champions League final against Valencia. Bayern had been on a European revenge mission all season, knocking out Manchester United in the quarter-finals and then seeing off Madrid with a 1-0 away win and a 2-1 success at home. Olli Kahn was the hero of that unforgettable night in Milan, saving three penalties in the shoot-out after the match had finished 1-1 after extra time to seal Munich's fourth European Champions Cup title, a quarter of a century after a the previous success.
Honors:
European Trophies:
4 European Champions Cups: 1973-74, 1974-75, 1975-76, 2000-01
1 UEFA Cup: 1996
1 European Cup Winners Cup: 1967
2 Intercontinental Cups: 1976, 2001
Domestic Championships:
20: 1932, 1968-69, 1971-72, 1972-73, 1973-74, 1979-80, 1980-81, 1984-85, 1985-86, 1986-87, 1988-89, 1989-90, 1993-94, 1996-97, 1998-99, 1999-2000, 2000-01, 2002-03, 2004-05, 2005-06
Domestic Cups:
13 German Cups: 1957, 1966, 1967, 1969, 1971, 1982, 1984, 1986, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006
Transfers In
Luca Toni (Fiorentina) - €11M
Franck Ribéry (Marseille) - €26M (plus an additional €4M for a top 3 finish)
Miroslav Klose (Bremen) - €12M
Marcell Jansen (Gladbach) - €12M
José Ernesto Sosa (Estudiantes) - €10M
Jan Schlaudraff (Aachen) - €1,2M
Hamit Altintop (Schalke) - free transfer
Zé Roberto (FC Santos) - free transfer
Transfers Out
Roy Makaay (Feyenoord) - €5M
Roque Santa Cruz (Blackburn) - €5M
Owen Hargreaves (Manchester United) - €25M
Mehmet Scholl - retires from professional football
Hasan Salihamidzic (Juventus Turin) - free transfer
Claudio Pizarro (Chelsea) - free transfer
Ali Karimi (Qatar Sports Club) - free transfer
Andreas Görlitz (Karlsruher SC) - one-year loan
Julio dos Santos (UD Almeria) - one-year loan
Squad:
Head Coach
Ottmar Hitzfeld
Goalkeepers
1 - Oliver Kahn
22 - Michael Rensing
29 - Bernd Dreher
Defenders
2 - Willy Sagnol
3 - Lucio
5 - Daniel van Buyten
21 - Philipp Lahm
23 - Marcell Jansen
25 - Valerien Ismael
30 - Christian Lell
32 - Mats Hummels
Midfielders
6 - Martin Demichelis
7 - Franck Ribéry
8 - Hamit Altintop
15 - Zé Roberto
16 - Andreas Ottl
17 - Mark van Bommel
20 - José Ernesto Sosa
31 - Bastian Schweinsteiger
36 - Stephan Fürstner
39 - Toni Kroos
Forwards
9 - Luca Toni
11 - Lukas Podolski
18 - Miroslav Klose
19 - Jan Schlaudraff