2009–10 Hamburger SV season

Hamburger SV
2009–10 season
Manager Germany Bruno Labbadia (until 26 April)
Netherlands Ricardo Moniz (interim)
Stadium HSH Nordbank Arena
Bundesliga 7th
DFB-Pokal Second round
UEFA Europa League Semi-finals
Top goalscorer Mladen Petrić (8)
Average home league attendance 55,242

During the 2009–10 German football season, Hamburger SV competed in the Bundesliga.

Season summary

Hamburg reached the Europa League semi-final for the second season running, but were eliminated by Fulham (thus missing out on the chance to play the final at their home ground). However, a seventh-placed finish in the final table meant that the club would not be competing in Europe for the first time in 7 years. Manager Bruno Labbadia paid for the poor form with his job in late April, with technical coach Ricardo Moniz taking charge for the final two games. Armin Veh was appointed permanent manager in May.

First-team squad

Squad at end of season[1]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 Germany GK Frank Rost
3 Czech Republic DF David Rozehnal
4 Germany DF Bastian Reinhardt
5 Netherlands DF Joris Mathijsen
6 Germany DF Dennis Aogo
7 Germany DF Marcell Jansen
8 Brazil DF Zé Roberto
9 Peru FW Paolo Guerrero
10 Croatia FW Mladen Petrić[notes 1]
11 Netherlands MF Eljero Elia
12 Germany GK Wolfgang Hesl
13 Germany MF Robert Tesche
14 Czech Republic MF David Jarolím (captain)
15 Germany MF Piotr Trochowski[notes 2]
16 Sweden FW Marcus Berg
17 Germany DF Jérôme Boateng
No. Position Player
18 Netherlands MF Romeo Castelen[notes 3]
19 Turkey MF Tolgay Arslan[notes 4]
20 Ivory Coast DF Guy Demel[notes 5]
21 Burkina Faso MF Jonathan Pitroipa
22 Netherlands FW Ruud van Nistelrooy
24 Germany MF Christian Groß
25 Venezuela MF Tomás Rincón
27 Germany MF Sören Bertram
29 Germany GK Tom Mickel
30 Namibia MF Collin Benjamin
31 Germany FW Maximilian Beister
32 Germany DF Henrik Dettman
33 Czech Republic DF Miroslav Štěpánek
34 Germany DF Kai-Fabian Schulz
35 Turkey FW Tunay Torun[notes 6]
36 Germany MF Hanno Behrens

Left club during season

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
2 Brazil DF Alex Silva (on loan to São Paulo)
22 Cameroon FW Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting[notes 7] (on loan to Nürnberg)
No. Position Player
28 Senegal MF Mickaël Tavares[notes 8] (on loan to Nürnberg)
32 Germany MF Änis Ben-Hatira[notes 9] (to MSV Duisburg)

Results

DFB-Pokal

First round

Second round

Europa League

Third qualifying round

Hamburg won 4–1 on aggregate.

Play-off round

Hamburg won 8–2 on aggregate.

Group stage

Round of 32

Hamburg 3–3 PSV Eindhoven on aggregate. Hamburg won on away goals.

Round of 16

Hamburg won 6–5 on aggregate.

Quarter-finals

Hamburg won 5–2 on aggregate.

Semi-finals

Fulham won 2–1 on aggregate.

References

  1. "FootballSquads - Hamburger SV - 2009/10". www.footballsquads.co.uk.

Notes

  1. Petrić was born in Brčko, Yugoslavia (now Bosnia and Herzegovina), but also qualified to represent Croatia internationally and made his international debut for Croatia in November 2001.
  2. Trochowski was born in Tczew, Poland, but was raised in Germany from the age of 5 and made his international debut for Germany in October 2002.
  3. Castelen was born in Paramaribo, Suriname, but also qualified to represent the Netherlands internationally and made his international debut for the Netherlands in August 2004.
  4. Arslan was born in Paderborn, West Germany (now Germany), and represented them at U-20 and U-21 level, but also qualified to represent Turkey internationally and represented them at U-19 and U-21 level.
  5. Demel was born in Orsay, France, but also holds an Ivory Coast passport and made his international debut for the Ivory Coast in 2004.
  6. Torun was born in Hamburg, West Germany (now Germany), but also qualified to represent Turkey internationally and represented them at every youth level between U-15 and U-23 before making his international debut for Turkey in February 2011.
  7. Choupo-Moting was born in Hamburg, West Germany (now Germany), and represented them at U-19 and U-21 level, but also qualified to represent Cameroon internationally and would make his international debut for Cameroon in 2010.
  8. Tavares was born in Villeneuve-Saint-Georges, France, but also qualifies to represent Senegal internationally through his father and made his international debut for Senegal in 2009.
  9. Ben-Hatira was born in West Berlin, West Germany (now Germany), and represented them at U-19, U-20, and U-21 level, but also qualified to represent Tunisia internationally and would make his international debut for Tunisia in February 2012.
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