1998–99 Tennis Borussia Berlin season

Tennis Borussia Berlin
1998–99 season
Manager Hermann Gerland
(until 18 November 1998)
Stanislav Levý
(19 November 1998 – 23 March 1999)
Winfried Schäfer
(from 24 March 1999)
Stadium Mommsenstadion
2. Bundesliga 6th
DFB-Pokal Quarter-finals
Top goalscorer League:
Ilija Aračić (8)

All:
Kreso Kovacec (12)
Highest home attendance 10,800 (vs.
SSV Ulm 1846)
Lowest home attendance 2,000 (vs.
KFC Uerdingen 05,
1. FSV Mainz 05)
Average home league attendance 4,453

The 1998–99 season was the eighth time Tennis Borussia Berlin played in the 2. Fußball-Bundesliga, the second highest tier of the German football league system. After 34 league games, Tennis Borussia finished 6th. The club had a long run in the DFB-Pokal; making it to the quarter-finals where they lost 2–1 after extra time away to SV Werder Bremen. Ilija Aračić scored eight of the club's 47 league goals before his mid-season move to local rivals Hertha BSC.

1998–99 Tennis Borussia Berlin squad

No. Position Player
1 Serbia and Montenegro GK Goran Ćurko
16 Germany GK Roman Görtz
Turkey DF Müslüm Can
4 Tunisia DF Fahed Dermech
6 Germany DF Olaf Kapagiannidis
5 Germany DF Jens Melzig
13 Serbia and Montenegro DF Dejan Raičković
2 Germany DF Marko Tredup
3 Switzerland DF Marco Walker
Serbia and Montenegro MF Duško Adamović
8 Bosnia and Herzegovina MF Bruno Akrapović
22 Germany MF Matthias Hamann
11 Turkey MF Celaleddin Koçak
33 Slovakia MF Ivan Kozák (from 1 March 1999)
No. Position Player
24 Republic of Macedonia MF Toni Mičevski
21 Germany MF Dirk Rehbein
30 Republic of Macedonia MF Goran Stankovski
20 Poland MF Zbigniew Szewczyk
18 Germany MF Niclas Weiland
Croatia FW Ilija Aračić (until 31 December 1998)
10 Spain FW Francisco Copado
32 Norway FW Geir Frigård
7 Albania FW Harun Isa
28 Germany FW Enrico Kern
9 Germany FW Kreso Kovacec
23 Germany FW Mike Lünsmann
12 Turkey FW Faruk Namdar

1998–99 fixtures

Player statistics

Pos Player Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
2. Bundesliga DFB-Pokal Total
MF Serbia and Montenegro Duško Adamović 10 00 10
MF Bosnia and Herzegovina Bruno Akrapović 320 40 360
FW Croatia Ilija Aračić 178 43 2111
DF Turkey Müslüm Can 261 40 301
FW Spain Francisco Copado 314 32 346
GK Serbia and Montenegro Goran Ćurko 330 40 370
DF Tunisia Fahed Dermech 233 40 273
FW Norway Geir Frigård 145 00 145
GK Germany Roman Görtz 10 00 10
MF Germany Matthias Hamann 321 30 350
FW Albania Harun Isa 141 20 161
DF Germany Olaf Kapagiannidis 130 20 150
FW Germany Enrico Kern 40 10 50
MF Turkey Celaleddin Koçak 151 10 161
FW Germany Kreso Kovacec 197 45 2312
MF Slovakia Ivan Kozák 110 00 110
FW Germany Mike Lünsmann 173 00 173
DF Germany Jens Melzig 272 30 302
MF Republic of Macedonia Toni Mičevski 194 10 204
FW Turkey Faruk Namdar 121 20 140
DF Serbia and Montenegro Dejan Raičković 240 40 280
MF Germany Dirk Rehbein 00 00 00
MF Republic of Macedonia Goran Stankovski 30 10 40
MF Poland Zbigniew Szewczyk 261 40 301
DF Germany Marko Tredup 181 10 191
DF Switzerland Marco Walker 232 30 262
MF Germany Niclas Weiland 130 10 140

Final league position – 6th

1998–99 2. Fußball-Bundesliga: extract from the final league table[1]
Pos
Team
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Points
1 Arminia Bielefeld (C) 34 20 7 7 62 32 +30 67
5 Karlsruher SC 34 17 5 12 54 43 +11 56
6 Tennis Borussia Berlin 34 15 9 10 47 39 +8 54
7 1. FSV Mainz 05 34 14 8 12 48 44 +4 50
18 Fortuna Düsseldorf (R) 34 5 13 16 35 59 –24 28

References

  1. "Abschlusstabelle der 2. Bundesliga 1998/1999". fussballdaten.de (in German). 17 June 1999. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
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