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2014–15 Bundesliga











2014–15 Bundesliga




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Bundesliga
Season 2014–15
Champions
Bayern Munich
24th Bundesliga title
25th German title
Relegated
SC Freiburg
SC Paderborn 07
Champions League
Bayern Munich
VfL Wolfsburg
Borussia Mönchengladbach
Bayer Leverkusen
Europa League
FC Augsburg
Schalke 04
Borussia Dortmund
Matches played 306
Goals scored 843 (2.75 per match)
Top goalscorer
Alexander Meier
(19 goals)
Biggest home win
Bayern Munich 8–0 Hamburger SV
(14 February 2015)
Biggest away win
SC Paderborn 07 0–6 Bayern Munich
(21 February 2015)
Highest scoring
Eintracht Frankfurt 4–5 VfB Stuttgart
(25 October 2014)
Bayer Leverkusen 4–5 VfL Wolfsburg
(14 February 2015)
Longest winning run 8 matches[1]
Bayern Munich
Longest unbeaten run 17 matches[1]
Bayern Munich
Longest winless run 16 matches[1]
Hannover 96
Longest losing run 5 matches[1]
Borussia Dortmund
Hamburger SV
Highest attendance 80,667[1]
Borussia Dortmund 0–2 Bayer Leverkusen
(23 August 2014)
Lowest attendance 14,401[1]
SC Paderborn 0–0 1899 Hoffenheim
(21 March 2015)
Average attendance 43,527[1]

← 2013–14


2015–16 →


The 2014–15 Bundesliga was the 52nd season of the Bundesliga, Germany's premier football competition. The season started on 22 August 2014 and the final matchday took place on 23 May 2015. Bayern Munich won their 25th German title on 26 April 2015.[2][3]




Contents






  • 1 Background


  • 2 Teams


    • 2.1 Stadiums and locations


    • 2.2 Personnel and kits




  • 3 Managerial changes


  • 4 League table


  • 5 Results


  • 6 Relegation play-offs


    • 6.1 First leg


    • 6.2 Second leg




  • 7 Season statistics


    • 7.1 Top goalscorers


    • 7.2 Top assists


    • 7.3 Hat-tricks


    • 7.4 Number of teams by state




  • 8 References


  • 9 External links





Background[edit]


Bayern Munich came into the season as defending champions, winning the championship on 25 March 2014 against Hertha BSC.[4]Armin Veh announced that he was leaving Eintracht Frankfurt during the 2013–14 season.[5] He had demanded that the club invest more money in the squad.[6]Thomas Schaaf replaced Veh.[7]Bayer Leverkusen sacked Sami Hyypiä during the 2013–14 season.[8]Sascha Lewandowski was named interim manager.[8] Lewandowski's interim reign lasted until the end of the season when Roger Schmidt took over.[9] Other managerial changes include Kasper Hjulmand[10] replacing Thomas Tuchel[11] at 1. FSV Mainz 05 and Armin Veh[12] replacing Huub Stevens at VfB Stuttgart.[13] Every club received their licence.[14] The league schedule came out on 24 June with Bayern Munich facing VfL Wolfsburg in the opening fixture on 22 August.[15] The match ended 2–1 win for Bayern Munich, a record third straight win for the home team, on the opening matchday, in the last three seasons.



Teams[edit]




2014–15 Bundesliga is located in Germany

Bayern Munich

Bayern Munich



Dortmund

Dortmund



Schalke

Schalke



Mönchengladbach

Mönchengladbach


2014–15 Bundesliga


Wolfsburg

Wolfsburg



Mainz

Mainz



Augsburg

Augsburg



Hoffenheim

Hoffenheim



Hamburg

Hamburg



Hertha BSC

Hertha BSC



E. Frankfurt

E. Frankfurt



Freiburg

Freiburg



Hannover

Hannover



Werder Bremen

Werder Bremen



Stuttgart

Stuttgart



Köln

Köln



Leverkusen

Leverkusen



Paderborn

Paderborn




Locations of the 2014–15 Fußball-Bundesliga teams


18 teams comprise the league. 15 sides qualified directly from the 2013–14 season and two sides were directly promoted from the 2013–14 2. Fußball-Bundesliga season: 1. FC Köln and SC Paderborn 07. The final participant was decided by a two-legged play-off, in which 16th-placed Bundesliga club Hamburger SV defeated third-place finisher in 2. Bundesliga, SpVgg Greuther Fürth.



Stadiums and locations[edit]





















































































































Team
Location
Stadium
Capacity[16]

FC Augsburg

Augsburg

SGL arena
30,660

Bayer Leverkusen

Leverkusen

BayArena
30,210

Bayern Munich

Munich

Allianz Arena
75,000

Borussia Dortmund

Dortmund

Signal Iduna Park
80,645

Borussia Mönchengladbach

Mönchengladbach

Stadion im Borussia-Park
54,010

Eintracht Frankfurt

Frankfurt

Commerzbank-Arena
51,500

SC Freiburg

Freiburg

Schwarzwald-Stadion
24,000

Hamburger SV

Hamburg

Imtech Arena
57,000

Hannover 96

Hanover

HDI-Arena
49,000

Hertha BSC

Berlin

Olympiastadion
74,244

TSG 1899 Hoffenheim

Sinsheim

Rhein-Neckar Arena
30,150

1. FC Köln

Cologne

RheinEnergieStadion
50,000

1. FSV Mainz 05

Mainz

Coface Arena
34,000

SC Paderborn 07

Paderborn

Benteler Arena
15,000

Schalke 04

Gelsenkirchen

Veltins-Arena
61,973

VfB Stuttgart

Stuttgart

Mercedes-Benz Arena
60,441

Werder Bremen

Bremen

Weserstadion
42,100

VfL Wolfsburg

Wolfsburg

Volkswagen Arena
30,000


Personnel and kits[edit]








































































































































Team
Manager
Captain
Kit manufacturer
Shirt sponsor

FC Augsburg

Germany Markus Weinzierl

Netherlands Paul Verhaegh

Nike
AL-KO
Bayer Leverkusen

Germany Roger Schmidt

Germany Simon Rolfes

adidas

LG
Bayern Munich

Spain Pep Guardiola

Germany Philipp Lahm
adidas

T-Mobile
Borussia Dortmund

Germany Jürgen Klopp

Germany Mats Hummels

Puma

Evonik
Borussia Mönchengladbach

Switzerland Lucien Favre

Belgium Filip Daems

Kappa

Postbank
Eintracht Frankfurt

Germany Thomas Schaaf

Germany Kevin Trapp
Nike

Alfa Romeo[17]

SC Freiburg

Germany Christian Streich

Germany Julian Schuster
Nike
Ehrmann
Hamburger SV

Germany Bruno Labbadia

Netherlands Rafael van der Vaart
adidas

Emirates
Hannover 96

Germany Michael Frontzeck

Germany Lars Stindl
Jako
Heinz von Heiden
Hertha BSC

Hungary Pál Dárdai

Switzerland Fabian Lustenberger
Nike

Deutsche Bahn

TSG 1899 Hoffenheim

Germany Markus Gisdol

Germany Andreas Beck

Lotto

SAP

1. FC Köln

Austria Peter Stöger

Slovenia Mišo Brečko
Erima

REWE

1. FSV Mainz 05

Switzerland Martin Schmidt

Republic of Macedonia Nikolče Noveski
Nike
Entega

SC Paderborn 07

Germany André Breitenreiter

Germany Uwe Hünemeier
Saller
kfzteile24

Schalke 04

Italy Roberto Di Matteo

Germany Benedikt Höwedes
adidas

Gazprom

VfB Stuttgart

Netherlands Huub Stevens

Germany Christian Gentner
Puma

Mercedes-Benz Bank
Werder Bremen

Ukraine Viktor Skrypnyk

Germany Clemens Fritz
Nike
Wiesenhof

VfL Wolfsburg

Germany Dieter Hecking

Switzerland Diego Benaglio
Kappa

Volkswagen


Managerial changes[edit]


































































































































Team
Outgoing

Manner

Date
Position in table
Incoming

Date

Ref.

Eintracht Frankfurt

Germany Armin Veh
End of contract
30 June 20141
Pre–season

Germany Thomas Schaaf
21 May 2014

[5][7]

Mainz 05

Germany Thomas Tuchel
Stepped down
11 May 2014

Denmark Kasper Hjulmand
15 May 2014

[10][11]

Bayer Leverkusen

Germany Sascha Lewandowski
End of caretaker assignment
30 June 2014

Germany Roger Schmidt
1 July 20142

[8][9]

VfB Stuttgart

Netherlands Huub Stevens
End of contract
30 June 20143

Germany Armin Veh
1 July 20144

[12][13]

Hamburger SV

Germany Mirko Slomka
Sacked
15 September 2014
18th

Germany Josef Zinnbauer
16 September 2014

[18][19]

Schalke 04

Germany Jens Keller
Sacked
7 October 2014
11th

Italy Roberto Di Matteo
7 October 2014
[20]

Werder Bremen

Germany Robin Dutt
Sacked
25 October 2014
18th

Ukraine Viktor Skrypnyk
25 October 2014
[21]
VfB Stuttgart

Germany Armin Veh
Resigned
24 November 2014
18th

Netherlands Huub Stevens
25 November 2014

[22][23]

Hertha BSC

Netherlands Jos Luhukay
Sacked
5 February 2015
17th

Hungary Pál Dárdai
6 February 2015
[24]
Mainz 05

Denmark Kasper Hjulmand
Sacked
17 February 2015
14th

Switzerland Martin Schmidt
17 February 2015
[25]
Hamburger SV

Germany Josef Zinnbauer
Sacked
22 March 2015
16th

Germany Bruno Labbadia
15 April 2015
[26]

Hannover 96

Turkey Tayfun Korkut
Sacked
20 April 2015
15th

Germany Michael Frontzeck
20 April 2015

[27][28]

Notes


  1. Announced on 3 March 2014.

  2. Announced on 25 April 2014.

  3. Announced on 10 May 2014.

  4. Announced on 12 May 2014.



League table[edit]
















































































































































































































































Pos
Team

Pld

W

D

L

GF

GA

GD

Pts
Qualification or relegation
1

Bayern Munich (C)
34
25
4
5
80
18
+62
79
Qualification to Champions League group stage
2

VfL Wolfsburg
34
20
9
5
72
38
+34
69
3

Borussia Mönchengladbach
34
19
9
6
53
26
+27
66
4

Bayer Leverkusen
34
17
10
7
62
37
+25
61
Qualification to Champions League play-off round
5

FC Augsburg
34
15
4
15
43
43
0
49
Qualification to Europa League group stage[a]
6

Schalke 04
34
13
9
12
42
40
+2
48
7

Borussia Dortmund
34
13
7
14
47
42
+5
46
Qualification to Europa League third qualifying round[a]
8

1899 Hoffenheim
34
12
8
14
49
55
−6
44

9

Eintracht Frankfurt
34
11
10
13
56
62
−6
43
10

Werder Bremen
34
11
10
13
50
65
−15
43
11

FSV Mainz 05
34
9
13
12
45
47
−2
40
12

1. FC Köln
34
9
13
12
34
40
−6
40
13

Hannover 96
34
9
10
15
40
56
−16
37
14

VfB Stuttgart
34
9
9
16
42
60
−18
36
15

Hertha BSC
34
9
8
17
36
52
−16
35
16

Hamburger SV (O)
34
9
8
17
25
50
−25
35
Qualification to relegation play-offs
17

SC Freiburg (R)
34
7
13
14
36
47
−11
34
Relegation to 2. Bundesliga
18

SC Paderborn 07 (R)
34
7
10
17
31
65
−34
31

Source: DFB
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored
(C) Champion; (O) Play-off winner; (R) Relegated.
Notes:




  1. ^ ab Since the winners of the 2014–15 DFB-Pokal, VfL Wolfsburg, qualified for the Champions League based on league position, the Europa League group stage spot was passed to the sixth-placed team, Schalke 04; and the Europa League third qualifying round spot was passed to the seventh-placed team, Borussia Dortmund.




Results[edit]


















































































































































































































































































































































































































Home Away

FCA

BSC

SVW

BVB

SGE

SCF

HSV

H96

TSG

KOE

B04

M05

BMG

FCB

SCP

S04

VFB

WOB

FC Augsburg

1–0
4–2
2–3
2–2
2–0
3–1
1–2
3–1
0–0
2–2
0–2
2–1
0–4
3–0
0–0
2–1
1–0

Hertha BSC
1–0

2–2
1–0
0–0
0–2
3–0
0–2
0–5
0–0
0–1
1–3
1–2
0–1
2–0
2–2
3–2
1–0

Werder Bremen
3–2
2–0

2–1
1–0
1–1

1–0
3–3
1–1
0–1
2–1
0–0
0–2
0–4
4–0
0–3
2–0
3–5

Borussia Dortmund
0–1
2–0
3–2

2–0
3–1
0–1
0–1
1–0
0–0
0–2
4–2
1–0
0–1
3–0

3–0
2–2
2–2

Eintracht Frankfurt
0–1
4–4
5–2
2–0

1–0
2–1
2–2
3–1
3–2
2–1
2–2
0–0
0–4
4–0
1–0
4–5
1–1

SC Freiburg
2–0
2–2
0–1
0–3
4–1

0–0
2–2
1–1
1–0
0–0
2–3
0–0
2–1
1–2
2–0
1–4
1–2

Hamburger SV
3–2
0–1

2–0
0–0
1–2
1–1

2–1
1–1
0–2
1–0
2–1
1–1
0–0
0–3
2–0
0–1
0–2

Hannover 96
2–0
1–1
1–1
2–3
1–0
2–1
2–0

1–2
1–0
1–3
1–1
0–3
1–3
1–2
2–1
1–1
1–3

1899 Hoffenheim
2–0
2–1
1–2
1–1
3–2
3–3
3–0
4–3

3–4
0–1
2–0
1–4
0–2
1–0
2–1
2–1
1–1

1. FC Köln
1–2
1–2
1–1
2–1
4–2
0–1
0–0
1–1
3–2

1–1
0–0
0–0
0–2
0–0
2–0
0–0
2–2

Bayer Leverkusen
1–0
4–2
3–3
0–0
1–1
1–0
4–0
4–0
2–0
5–1

0–0
1–1
2–0
2–2
1–0
4–0
4–5

Mainz 05
2–1
0–2
1–2
2–0
3–1
2–2
1–2
0–0
0–0
2–0
2–3

2–2
1–2
5–0
2–0
1–1
1–1

Borussia Mönchengladbach
1–3
3–2
4–1
3–1
1–3
1–0
1–0
2–0
3–1
1–0
3–0
1–1

0–0
2–0
4–1
1–1
1–0

Bayern Munich
0–1
1–0
6–0
2–1
3–0
2–0
8–0
4–0
4–0
4–1
1–0
2–0
0–2

4–0
1–1
2–0
2–1

SC Paderborn
2–1
3–1
2–2
2–2
3–1
1–1
0–3
2–0
0–0
0–0
0–3
2–2
1–2
0–6

1–2
1–2
1–3

Schalke 04
1–0
2–0
1–1

2–1
2–2
0–0
0–0
1–0
3–1
1–2
0–1
4–1
1–0
1–1
1–0

3–2
3–2

VfB Stuttgart
0–1
0–0
3–2
2–3
3–1
2–2
2–1
1–0
0–2
0–2
3–3
2–0
0–1
0–2
0–0
0–4

0–4

VfL Wolfsburg
1–0
2–1
2–1
2–1
2–2
3–0
2–0
2–2
3–0
2–1
4–1
3–0
1–0
4–1
1–1
1–1
3–1


Source: DFB
Colours: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.


Relegation play-offs[edit]


The team which finishes 16th, will face the third-placed 2014–15 2. Bundesliga side for a two-legged play-off. The winner on aggregate score after both matches earns entry into the 2015–16 Bundesliga. Hamburger SV prevailed for the second year in a row, avoiding their possible first relegation.



First leg[edit]


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28 May 2015 (2015-05-28)

20:30 CEST












Hamburger SV 1–1 Karlsruher SC

Iličević Goal 73'
Report
Hennings Goal 4'


Volksparkstadion, Hamburg

Attendance: 56,615

Referee: Deniz Aytekin




















Hamburger SV
















Karlsruher SC
























































































































GK 15
Germany René Adler
RB 4
Germany Heiko Westermann

Yellow card 26'

Substituted off 56'
CB 5
Switzerland Johan Djourou (c)
CB 32
Serbia Slobodan Rajković
LB 22
Germany Matthias Ostrzolek
CM 40
Serbia Gojko Kačar

Yellow card 83'
CM 20
Chile Marcelo Díaz
RW 8
Croatia Ivica Olić

Substituted off 89'
AM 18
Germany Lewis Holtby

Yellow card 59'

Substituted off 69'
LW 11
Croatia Ivo Iličević
CF 10
Germany Pierre-Michel Lasogga

Substitutes:
GK 30
Germany Alexander Brunst
DF 2
Germany Dennis Diekmeier

Yellow card 83'

Substituted in 56'
DF 3
Brazil Cléber
MF 17
Hungary Zoltán Stieber

Substituted in 69'
MF 23
Netherlands Rafael van der Vaart
MF 27
Germany Nicolai Müller
FW 9
Germany Maximilian Beister

Substituted in 89'

Manager:

Germany Bruno Labbadia


Hamburger SV vs Karlsruher SC 2015-05-28.svg














































































































GK 1
Germany Dirk Orlishausen (c)
RB 22
Germany Enrico Valentini

Yellow card 13'
CB 3
Jamaica Daniel Gordon
CB 14
Germany Manuel Gulde
LB 31
Germany Philipp Max
CM 13
Germany Dominic Peitz

Yellow card 78'
CM 23
Germany Jonas Meffert
RW 18
Spain Manuel Torres Jiménez
AM 8
Germany Reinhold Yabo

Substituted off 76'
LW 11
Azerbaijan Dimitrij Nazarov
CF 17
Germany Rouwen Hennings

Substituted off 90+3'

Substitutes:
GK 24
Germany René Vollath
DF 4
Germany Martin Stoll
DF 5
Germany Dennis Kempe
DF 20
Austria Ylli Sallahi
MF 15
Germany Boubacar Barry
MF 21
France Gaëtan Krebs

Substituted in 76'
FW 19
Bulgaria Iliyan Mitsanski

Substituted in 90+3'

Manager:

Germany Markus Kauczinski






Assistant referees:

Benjamin Brand

Markus Hacker

Fourth official:

Michael Weiner



Match rules



  • 90 minutes.

  • Seven named substitutes.

  • Maximum of three substitutions.




Second leg[edit]




1 June 2015 (2015-06-01)

19:00 CEST












Karlsruher SC 1–2 (a.e.t.) Hamburger SV

Yabo Goal 78'
Report
Díaz Goal 90+1'
Müller Goal 115'


Wildparkstadion, Karlsruhe

Attendance: 27,986

Referee: Manuel Gräfe




















Karlsruher SC
















Hamburger SV





























































































































GK 1
Germany Dirk Orlishausen (c)
RB 22
Germany Enrico Valentini
CB 3
Jamaica Daniel Gordon

Yellow card 118'
CB 14
Germany Manuel Gulde

Yellow card 90+2'
LB 31
Germany Philipp Max

Substituted off 86'
CM 21
France Gaëtan Krebs

Yellow card 87'

Substituted off 89'
CM 23
Germany Jonas Meffert

Yellow card 90'
RW 18
Spain Manuel Torres Jiménez
AM 9
Japan Hiroki Yamada

Substituted off 72'
LW 11
Azerbaijan Dimitrij Nazarov

Yellow card 120+1'
CF 17
Germany Rouwen Hennings

Substitutes:
GK 24
Germany René Vollath
DF 4
Germany Martin Stoll

Substituted in 89'
DF 5
Germany Dennis Kempe

Substituted in 86'
DF 20
Austria Ylli Sallahi
MF 8
Germany Reinhold Yabo

Substituted in 72'
MF 15
Germany Boubacar Barry
FW 19
Bulgaria Iliyan Mitsanski

Manager:

Germany Markus Kauczinski


Karlsruher SC vs Hamburger SV 2015-06-01.svg





















































































































GK 15
Germany René Adler
RB 2
Germany Dennis Diekmeier
CB 5
Switzerland Johan Djourou
CB 32
Serbia Slobodan Rajković

Yellow card 63'
LB 22
Germany Matthias Ostrzolek
CM 20
Chile Marcelo Díaz

Yellow card 55'
CM 23
Netherlands Rafael van der Vaart (c)

Yellow card 48'
RW 8
Croatia Ivica Olić

Substituted off 77'
AM 18
Germany Lewis Holtby

Substituted off 66'
LW 11
Croatia Ivo Iličević

Substituted off 86'
CF 10
Germany Pierre-Michel Lasogga

Substitutes:
GK 30
Germany Alexander Brunst
DF 3
Brazil Cléber

Yellow card 101'

Substituted in 86'
DF 31
Mozambique Ronny Marcos
MF 17
Hungary Zoltán Stieber

Substituted in 66'
MF 19
Czech Republic Petr Jiráček

Yellow card 115'
MF 27
Germany Nicolai Müller

Substituted in 77'
FW 9
Germany Maximilian Beister

Yellow card 90+2'

Manager:

Germany Bruno Labbadia






Assistant referees:

Guido Kleve

René Rohde

Fourth official:

Marco Fritz



Match rules



  • 90 minutes of regular time.

  • 30 minutes of extra time if tied on aggregate.


  • Penalty shoot-out if no further goals are scored.

  • Seven named substitutes.

  • Maximum of three substitutions.



Hamburger SV won 3–2 on aggregate.



Season statistics[edit]











Hat-tricks[edit]



















































Player
Club
Against
Result
Date

Germany Thomas Müller

Bayern Munich

Eintracht Frankfurt

4–0

8 November 2014

Netherlands Klaas-Jan Huntelaar

Schalke 04

1. FSV Mainz 05

4–1

29 November 2014

Cameroon Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting

Schalke 04

VfB Stuttgart

4–0

6 December 2014

Germany Nils Petersen

SC Freiburg

Eintracht Frankfurt

4–1

31 January 2015

Netherlands Bas Dost4

VfL Wolfsburg

Bayer Leverkusen

5–4

14 February 2015

South Korea Son Heung-min

Bayer Leverkusen

VfL Wolfsburg

4–5

4Player scored four goals



Number of teams by state[edit]


























































Position

State
Number of teams
Teams
1

 North Rhine-Westphalia
6
1. FC Köln, Bayer Leverkusen, Borussia Dortmund, Borussia Mönchengladbach, Schalke 04 and SC Paderborn 07
2

 Baden-Württemberg
3
1899 Hoffenheim, SC Freiburg and VfB Stuttgart
3

 Bavaria
2
FC Augsburg and Bayern Munich

 Lower Saxony
2
Hannover 96 and VfL Wolfsburg
5

 Berlin
1
Hertha BSC

 Bremen
1
Werder Bremen

 Hamburg
1
Hamburger SV

 Hesse
1
Eintracht Frankfurt

 Rhineland-Palatinate
1
Mainz 05


References[edit]





  1. ^ abcdefg "2014–15 German Bundesliga statistics". ESPN FC. Retrieved 4 November 2014..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ BBC News, Bayern Munich: Pep Guardiola's side win 25th Bundesliga title


  3. ^ "Bayern Munich charge ahead to leave their German rivals playing catch-up". Guardian. 28 April 2015. Retrieved 28 April 2015.


  4. ^ "Der FC Bayern feiert die erste März-Meisterschaft". Die Welt (in German). 25 March 2014. Retrieved 22 May 2014.


  5. ^ ab Weitbrecht, Ralf (3 March 2014). "Trainer Armin Veh verlässt Eintracht Frankfurt". Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 22 May 2014.


  6. ^ "Trainer Veh bereitet in Frankfurt seinen Abgang vor". Die Welt (in German). 15 March 2014. Retrieved 22 May 2014.


  7. ^ ab Marwedel, Jörg (21 May 2014). "Der ewige Bremer wird Frankfurter". Süddeutsche Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 22 May 2014.


  8. ^ abc "Leverkusen trennt sich von Trainer Hyypiä". Süddeutsche Zeitung (in German). 5 April 2014. Retrieved 5 April 2014.


  9. ^ ab "Bayer Leverkusen name Roger Schmidt as Sami Hyypia replacement". BBC Sports. 25 April 2014. Retrieved 27 April 2014.


  10. ^ ab "Hjulmand übernimmt Tuchels Job". Süddeutsche Zeitung (in German). 16 May 2014. Retrieved 22 May 2014.


  11. ^ ab "Mainz-Manager Heidel: Trainer Tuchel will zurücktreten". Süddeutsche Zeitung (in German). Deutsche Presse-Agentur. 10 May 2014. Retrieved 22 May 2014.


  12. ^ ab "Rückkehr zum VfB perfekt: Veh übernimmt bis 2016!" (in German). kicker. 12 May 2014. Retrieved 22 May 2014.


  13. ^ ab Plavec, Jan Georg (10 May 2014). "Huub Stevens verlässt den VfB". Suttgarter Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 22 May 2014.


  14. ^ "DFL erteilt allen Klubs die Lizenz". Süddeutsche Zeitung (in German). 27 May 2014. Retrieved 29 May 2014.


  15. ^ "FC Bayern eröffnet Saison gegen Wolfsburg" (in German). Süddeutsche Zeitung. 24 June 2014. Retrieved 18 July 2014.


  16. ^ Smentek, Klaus; et al. (8 August 2012). "kicker Bundesliga Sonderheft 2012/13". kicker Sportmagazin (in German). Nuremberg: Olympia Verlag. ISSN 0948-7964.


  17. ^ "Fiat Group neuer Hauptsponsor von Eintracht Frankfurt" (in German). Eintracht Frankfurt. Archived from the original on 22 October 2013. Retrieved 21 April 2013.


  18. ^ "Der Hamburger SV trennt sich von Mirko Slomka". bundesliga.de (in German). 15 September 2014. Retrieved 15 September 2014.


  19. ^ "HSV macht Zinnbauer gleich zum Cheftrainer" (in German). kicker. 16 September 2014. Retrieved 16 September 2014.


  20. ^ "Schalke trennt sich von Keller - di Matteo übernimmt". bundesliga.de (in German). 7 October 2014. Retrieved 7 October 2014.


  21. ^ "Viktor Skripnik übernimmt – Robin Dutt freigestellt". bundesliga.de (in German). 25 October 2014. Retrieved 25 October 2014.


  22. ^ "Nach Veh-Rücktritt: Viele Baustellen in Stuttgart". bundesliga.de (in German). 24 November 2014. Retrieved 24 November 2014.


  23. ^ "Stevens: "Ich freue mich auf die Herausforderung"". bundesliga.de (in German). 25 November 2014. Retrieved 25 November 2014.


  24. ^ "Hertha BSC trennt sich von Trainer Jos Luhukay". bundesliga.de (in German). 5 February 2015. Retrieved 5 February 2015.


  25. ^ "Mainz trennt sich von Trainer Hjulmand, Schmidt übernimmt". dfb.de (in German). 17 February 2015. Retrieved 17 February 2015.


  26. ^ "Bruno Labbadia ist neuer HSV-Trainer". dfb.de (in German). 15 April 2015. Retrieved 15 April 2015.


  27. ^ "Hannover beurlaubt Tayfun Korkut". dfb.de (in German). 20 April 2015. Retrieved 20 April 2015.


  28. ^ "Frontzeck neuer Trainer bei Hannover 96". dfb.de (in German). 20 April 2015. Retrieved 20 April 2015.


  29. ^ "Torjäger" [Goalscorers] (in German). DFL.


  30. ^ "Scorer" [Goal + assist] (in German). DFL.




External links[edit]



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