2009–10 SV Werder Bremen season

SV Werder Bremen
2009–10 season
Manager Germany Thomas Schaaf
Stadium Weser-Stadion
Bundesliga 3rd
DFB-Pokal Runners-up
UEFA Europa League Round of 16
Top goalscorer Claudio Pizarro (16)

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

Season summary

After last season's poor league form, 2009–10 saw a return to business for Bremen as they finished third, qualifying for the Champions League qualifying rounds. Bremen also reached the DFB-Pokal final for the second season running, but lost to Bayern Munich.

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 Tim Wiese
2 Germany DF Sebastian Boenisch[notes 1]
3 Finland DF Petri Pasanen
4 Brazil DF Naldo
6 Germany MF Tim Borowski
8 Germany DF Clemens Fritz
9 Sweden FW Markus Rosenberg
10 Germany MF Marko Marin[notes 2]
11 Germany MF Mesut Özil
14 Germany MF Aaron Hunt
15 Austria DF Sebastian Prödl
16 Tunisia DF Aymen Abdennour (on loan from Étoile du Sahel)
17 Bosnia and Herzegovina MF Said Husejinović
19 Germany FW Sandro Wagner
20 Denmark MF Daniel Jensen
21 Germany GK Sebastian Mielitz
No. Position Player
22 Germany MF Torsten Frings (captain)
23 Portugal FW Hugo Almeida
24 Peru FW Claudio Pizarro
25 Germany MF Peter Niemeyer
27 Germany DF Niklas Andersen
29 Germany DF Per Mertesacker
30 Hungary FW Márkó Futács
31 Germany MF Kevin Artmann
32 Germany MF José-Alex Ikeng[notes 3]
33 Germany GK Christian Vander
41 Germany DF Dominik Schmidt
42 Germany GK Felix Wiedwald
43 Germany FW Pascal Testroet
44 Germany MF Philipp Bargfrede
45 Germany DF Timo Perthel
46 Turkey MF Onur Ayık[notes 4]

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
5 Serbia DF Duško Tošić (released)
7 Croatia MF Jurica Vranješ (on loan to Gençlerbirliği)
18 Ivory Coast FW Boubacar Sanogo (to Saint-Étienne)
No. Position Player
34 Austria FW Martin Harnik[notes 5] (on loan to Fortuna Düsseldorf)
39 Bolivia FW Marcelo Martins Moreno (on loan from Shakhtar Donetsk)
47 Germany FW Torsten Oehrl (on loan to Fortuna Düsseldorf)

Results

Europa League

Play-off round

Werder Bremen won 8–3 on aggregate.

Group stage

Round of 32

Werder Bremen won 4–2 on aggregate.

Round of 16

Valencia 5–5 Werder Bremen on aggregate. Valencia won on away goals.

References

  1. "FootballSquads - Werder Bremen - 2009/10". www.footballsquads.co.uk.

Notes

  1. Boenisch was born in Gliwice, Poland, but was raised in Germany from the age of 1 and represented them at U-20 and U-21 level. He would later change his allegiance to Poland and make his international debut for Poland in September 2010.
  2. Marin was born in Bosanska Gradiška, Yugoslavia (now Bosnia and Herzegovina), but was raised in Germany from the age of 2 and represented them at U-16, U-17, U-18 and U-21 level before making his international debut for Germany in May 2008.
  3. Ikeng was born in Bafia, Cameroon, but also qualified to represent Germany internationally and represented them at U-18 level.
  4. Ayık was born in Walsrode, West Germany (now Germany), but also qualifies to represent Turkey internationally and has represented them at U-16, U-18, U-19, and U-23 level.
  5. Harnik was born in Hamburg, West Germany (now Germany), but also qualifies to represent Austria internationally through his father and represented them at U-19, U-20, and U-21 level before making his international debut for Austria in August 2007.
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