2004–05 FC Schalke 04 season

FC Schalke 04 had a surprise title tilt at Bundesliga, in spite of a poor start to the season and the resultant dismissal of manager Jupp Heynckes. With largely unproven Ralf Rangnick taking over, Schalke went about level with title rivals Bayern Munich after a 1–0 win thanks to a goal from Lincoln. From there on, Bayern dominated, leaving Schalke a full 14 points behind, albeit good enough for runners-up, qualifying the team for the Champions League.

Schalke 04
2004–05 season
ManagerJupp Heynckes
Ralf Rangnick
Bundesliga2nd
UEFA CupRound of 32
DFB-PokalRunners-up
Intertoto CupWinners
Top goalscorerAílton (14)

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 GK Frank Rost
2 MF Christian Poulsen
3 DF Levan Kobiashvili
4 DF Thomas Kläsener
5 DF Marcelo Bordon
6 MF Hamit Altıntop[notes 1]
7 MF Michael Delura
9 FW Aílton
10 MF Lincoln
11 FW Ebbe Sand
12 DF Marco van Hoogdalem
13 GK Christofer Heimeroth
14 FW Gerald Asamoah[notes 2]
15 DF Tomasz Wałdoch
16 DF Darío Rodríguez
17 MF Sven Vermant
No. Position Player
18 MF Niels Oude Kamphuis
19 MF Gustavo Varela
20 DF Mladen Krstajić[notes 3]
21 MF Alexander Baumjohann
23 DF Fabian Lamotte
24 DF Christian Pander
25 FW Kai Hesse
26 FW Mike Hanke
27 DF Tim Hoogland
29 GK Volkan Ünlü
30 DF Christian Petereit
31 MF Sven Kmetsch
32 DF Niko Bungert
33 MF Mimoun Azaouagh[notes 4]
34 MF Ahmet Cebe

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 MF Jörg Böhme (to Borussia Mönchengladbach)
No. Position Player
28 DF Simon Talarek (to SG Wattenscheid 09)

Results

UEFA Intertoto Cup

Third round

17 July 2004 Schalke 04 50 VardarArena AufSchalke, Gelsenkirchen
17:15 Krstajić  19'
Altıntop  40'
Aílton  50'
Kläsener  81'
Tanevski  90' (o.g.)
Report Attendance: 56,054
Referee: Milan Šedivý (Czech Republic)
24 July 2004 Vardar 12 Schalke 04Gradski Stadion, Skopje
17:00 Wandeir  84' Report Pander  4'
Sand  15'
Attendance: 4,000
Referee: Carlo Bertolini (Switzerland)

Schalke 04 won 71 on aggregate.

Semi-finals

28 July 2004 Esbjerg 13 Schalke 04MCH Arena, Herning
19:45 Lucena  8' Report Aílton  40'
Hanke  71'
Altıntop  87'
Attendance: 8,000
Referee: Mark Halsey (England)
3 August 2004 Schalke 04 30 EsbjergArena AufSchalke, Gelsenkirchen
20:15 Hanke  11'
Altıntop  54'
Asamoah  63'
Report Attendance: 56,320
Referee: Carlos Megía Dávila (Spain)

Schalke 04 won 61 on aggregate.

Final

10 August 2004 (2004-08-10) Schalke 04 2–1 Slovan LiberecArena AufSchalke, Gelsenkirchen
20:15 Aílton  25'
Asamoah  41'
Report Zápotočný  74' Attendance: 54,136
Referee: Roberto Rosetti (Italy)
24 August 2004 (2004-08-24) Slovan Liberec 0–1 Schalke 04Stadion u Nisy, Liberec
18:45 Report Aílton  87' Attendance: 7,880
Referee: Yuri Baskakov (Russia)

Schalke 04 won 31 on aggregate.

UEFA Cup

First round

16 September 2004 Schalke 04 5–1 Liepājas MetalurgsArena AufSchalke, Gelsenkirchen
18:15 Sand  20', 53', 60'
Kobiashvili  67'
Asamoah  89'
Report Katasonov  34' Referee: Martin Ingvarsson (Sweden)
30 September 2004 Liepājas Metalurgs 0–4 Schalke 04Daugava Stadium, Liepāja
16:00 Report Sand  45'
Hanke  63', 75', 90'
Referee: Dougie McDonald (Scotland)

Schalke 04 won 9-1 on aggregate.

Group stage

21 October 2004 Schalke 1–1 BaselArena AufSchalke, Gelsenkirchen
20:30 Kobiashvili  8' Report Delgado  82' Attendance: 52,900[2]
Referee: Johan Verbist (Belgium)
4 November 2004 Hearts 0–1 SchalkeMurrayfield, Edinburgh
20:30 Kisnorbo  48'  Report Lincoln  73' Attendance: 27,272[3]
Referee: Nikolai Ivanov (Russia)
25 November 2004 Schalke 2–0 FerencvárosArena AufSchalke, Gelsenkirchen
18:15 Gyepes  16' (og)
Kobiashvili  40'
Report Attendance: 51,179
Referee: Claude Colombo (France)
1 December 2004 Feyenoord 2–1 SchalkeFeijenoord Stadion, Rotterdam
20:45 Kalou  32', 40' Report Hanke  6' Attendance: 48,000
Referee: Matt Messias (England)

Round of 32

16 February 2005 Shakhtar Donetsk 1–1 Schalke 04RSC Olimpiyskiy, Donetsk
18:15 (CET) Brandão  86' Report Aílton  7' Referee: Espen Berntsen (Norway)

Shakhtar Donetsk won 2–1 on aggregate.

DFB-Pokal

Final

28 May 2005 (2005-05-28) Schalke 041–2Bayern MunichOlympiastadion, Berlin
20:45 CEST Lincoln  45' (pen.) Report
Attendance: 74,349
Referee: Florian Meyer (Burgdorf)

References

Notes

  1. Altıntop was born in Gelsenkirchen, West Germany (now Germany), but also qualified to represent Turkey internationally and represented them at U-18, U-20 and U-21 level before making his international debut for Turkey in 2004.
  2. Asamoah was born in Mampong, Ghana, but was raised in Germany from the age of 12 and made his international debut for Germany in May 2001.
  3. Krstajić was born in Zenica, SFR Yugoslavia (now Bosnia and Herzegovina), but was raised in Serbia and Montenegro (now Serbia) and made his international debut for Serbia and Montenegro in 1999.
  4. Azaouagh was born in Beni Sidel, Morocco, but also qualified to represent Germany internationally and represented them at U-21 level.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.