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SV Darmstadt 98

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Association football club in Germany

Football club
Darmstadt 98
Full nameSportverein Darmstadt 1898 e.V.
NicknameDie Lilien (The Lilies)
Founded22 May 1898; 127 years ago (1898-05-22)
GroundMerck-Stadion am Böllenfalltor
Capacity17,810[citation needed]
PresidentKlaus Rüdiger Fritsch
ManagerFlorian Kohfeldt
League2. Bundesliga
2024–252. Bundesliga, 12th of 18
Websitesv98.de
Current season

Sportverein Darmstadt 1898 e.V., commonly known asDarmstadt 98 (German pronunciation:[ˌdaʁmʃtatʔaxtʔʊntˈnɔɪ̯nt͡sɪç]), is aGerman professional association football club based inDarmstadt,Hesse. The club was founded on 22 May 1898 as FC Olympia Darmstadt. Early in 1919, the association was briefly known asRasen-Sportverein Olympia before merging with Darmstädter Sport Club 1905 on 11 November that year to become Sportverein Darmstadt 98. Merger partner SC was the product of a 1905 union between Viktoria 1900 Darmstadt and Germania 1903 Darmstadt. The footballers are today part of a sports club which also offers its over 13,500 members[1]basketball,hiking,futsal,judo, andtable tennis.

The football department competed in theBundesliga for the 2015–16 and 2016–17 seasons after a 33-year run in lower leagues. Darmstadt 98 were promoted again to the Bundesliga in 2023; however, they did not avoid relegation the following season.

History

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Early history

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Cigarette card with the crest of the club from 1930

Olympia played as a lower table side in the Westkreisliga between 1909 and 1913. In the late 20s and early 30s the club played as SV Darmstadt in theKreisliga Odenwald andBezirksliga Main-Hessen, Gruppe Hesse, but struggled to stay in top flight competition. In 1933, German football was reorganized under theThird Reich into sixteen premier divisions known as Gauligen. Darmstadt was not able to break into upper league play until 1941 when they joined theGauliga Hessen-Nassau, Gruppe 2. Their stay was short-lived and they were relegated after their second season of play at that level. By 1944–45 the division had collapsed in the face of the advance of Allied armies into Germany.

Historical chart of SV Darmstadt league performance

Darmstadt enjoyed a long run as a second division team through the 50s and then again from the time of the formation of theBundesliga in 1963 on into the 70s. However, they were never better than a lower to mid-table side until a breakthrough happened in 1973 with aRegionalliga Süd championship and participation in the promotion rounds for the Bundesliga, where they finished a distant second toRot-Weiss Essen.

From the Bundesliga to insolvency

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A side with limited resources, Darmstadt eventually managed two seasons in the Bundesliga (1978–79 and 1981–82). They narrowly missed a third turn in the top league in 1988 when they lost in a lengthy relegation-promotion play-off toWaldhof Mannheim in apenalty shoot-out of the third match between the two clubs.[2] In the following years, Darmstadt 98 escaped relegation to the AmateurOberliga Hessen (III) in 1991 when Essen was refused a2. Bundesliga licence for financial reasons. However, by 1997, SV had themselves become victims of financial mismanagement, slipping to the third and fourth divisions.

The team's most recent successes include wins in the Hessen Pokal (Hessen Cup) in 1999, 2001, 2006, 2007 and 2008, as well as three consecutive Possmann-Hessen Cup wins from 2000 to 2002. In theDFB-Pokal, Darmstadt advanced as far as the third round in 1989 and 2001, and to the quarter-finals in 1986. In 2004, the club won the Oberliga Hessen (IV) championship under manager and former playerBruno Labbadia, and were promoted to the Regionalliga Süd (III).

Financial problems limited their options and they were relegated to the Oberliga Hessen (IV) at the end of the 2006–07 season. The club's stated aim was to reach the new3. Liga within five years. However, on 6 March 2008, Darmstadt enteredinsolvency proceedings, with debts of around1.1 million making the future of the club uncertain. After the 2007–08 Oberliga Hessen Championship, Darmstadt played in the Regionalliga Süd. Darmstadt took various measures to avertbankruptcy, for example a friendly benefit match againstBayern Munich, donations etc. In addition, the former management of the club (e.g. former president, former tax advisor) made vital financial contributions which secured the club's future.

Rise to the Bundesliga

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After winning the 2010–11 Regionalliga Süd in dramatic fashion, Darmstadt were promoted to the3. Liga. In 2012,Dirk Schuster was appointed as head coach, and he signed Darmstadt's future captain,Aytaç Sulu. In the 2012–13 season, the club was initially relegated but their fiercest rivalsKickers Offenbach were refused a 3. Liga licence due to going into administration and were relegated to the Regionalliga instead. Darmstadt 98 took Offenbach's place.[3]

In 2013–14, having finished third in league and thus gaining entry into the promotion-relegation play-offs, Darmstadt defeatedArminia Bielefeld in the second leg through away goals after losing 1–3 in the first leg at home to secure promotion to2. Bundesliga for the first time in 21 years in dramatic circumstances.

In the following2. Bundesliga season, Darmstadt secured the second-place position in the league and therefore promotion to theBundesliga after a 33-year absence. In their final league match, againstFC St. Pauli, the club won 1–0 at home through a 70th minute free-kick byTobias Kempe. This was a second consecutive promotion for the team, led again by coach Schuster and captain Sulu.

Darmstadt reached theRound of 16 of the 2015–16 DFB Pokal. On 8 March 2016, long-term fan Jonathan Heimes died of cancer and, posthumously, Darmstadt's stadium was renamed as "Jonathan-Heimes-Stadion am Böllenfalltor" for the2016–17 season. Darmstadt finished the2015–16 season in 14th position, mainly due to a positive away record.

Coach Dirk Schuster announced his decision to joinFC Augsburg, andNorbert Meier was appointed as head coach for the2016–17 season. After being defeated in thesecond round of the 2016–17 DFB Pokal and only scoring 8 points in 12 games, Maier was sacked on 5 December 2016. On 27 December 2016, former Bundesliga player andWerder Bremen assistant managerTorsten Frings was presented as new head coach. However, the team was incapable of securing the next season in the Bundesliga after a 0–1 defeat to Bayern Munich in the 32nd matchday of the season, and was relegated to the 2. Bundesliga.

After a poor start to the 2017–18-second Bundesliga season, Torsten Frings was removed from his position, and, on 11 December 2017, the vacant manager's position was again filled by Dirk Schuster, who returned to the Darmstadt club for his second spell as manager. He finished 10th in the league.

In the 2018–19 2. Bundesliga season,Dimitrios Grammozis replaced Schuster after 23 points out of 22 games, going on to finish 10th. In the following season, the club finished 5th. After the season,Markus Anfang took over as head coach.

In the 2022–23 2. Bundesliga season, Darmstardt secured automatic promotion to the Bundesliga by beating 1. FC Magdeburg 1–0 at home.

They were relegated thefollowing season from the Bundesliga, finishing bottom of the table in 18th. The club only recorded three wins for the entire season out of a possible 34 matches.[4]

Honours

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The club's honours:

League

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Cup

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Recent seasons

[edit]
This list has noprecise inclusion criteria as described in theManual of Style for standalone lists. Pleaseimprove this article by adding inclusion criteria, or discuss this issue on thetalk page.(January 2024)

The recent season-by-season performance of the club:[5][6]

SeasonDivisionTierPosition
1963–64Amateurliga HessenIII1st ↑
1964–65Regionalliga SüdII14th
1965–66Regionalliga Süd13th
1966–67Regionalliga Süd14th
1967–68Regionalliga Süd14th
1968–69Regionalliga Süd8th
1969–70Regionalliga Süd18th ↓
1970–71HessenligaIII1st ↑
1971–72Regionalliga SüdII7th
1972–73Regionalliga Süd1st
1973–74Regionalliga Süd4th
1974–752. Bundesliga Süd10th
1975–762. Bundesliga Süd7th
1976–772. Bundesliga Süd6th
1977–782. Bundesliga Süd1st ↑
1978–79BundesligaI18th ↓
1979–802. Bundesliga SüdII4th
1980–812. Bundesliga Süd1st ↑
1981–82BundesligaI17th ↓
1982–832. BundesligaII7th
1983–842. Bundesliga12th
1984–852. Bundesliga15th
1985–862. Bundesliga10th
1986–872. Bundesliga4th
1987–882. Bundesliga3rd
1988–892. Bundesliga11th
1989–902. Bundesliga16th
1990–912. Bundesliga17th
1991–922. Bundesliga Süd8th
1992–932. Bundesliga24th ↓
1993–94Oberliga HessenIII9th
1994–95Regionalliga Süd11th
1995–96Regionalliga Süd15th
1996–97Regionalliga Süd13th
1997–98Regionalliga Süd16th ↓
1998–99Oberliga HessenIV1st
1999–00Regionalliga SüdIII9th
2000–01Regionalliga Süd5th
2001–02Regionalliga Süd14th
2002–03Regionalliga Süd17th ↓
2003–04Oberliga HessenIV1st ↑
2004–05Regionalliga SüdIII5th
2005–06Regionalliga Süd5th
2006–07Regionalliga Süd16th ↓
2007–08Oberliga HessenIV1st ↑
2008–09Regionalliga SüdIV15th
2009–10Regionalliga Süd15th
2010–11Regionalliga Süd1st ↑
2011–123. LigaIII14th
2012–133. Liga18th
2013–143. Liga3rd ↑
2014–152. BundesligaII2nd ↑
2015–16BundesligaI14th
2016–17Bundesliga18th ↓
2017–182. BundesligaII10th
2018–192. Bundesliga10th
2019–202. Bundesliga5th
2020–212. Bundesliga7th
2021–222. Bundesliga4th
2022–232. Bundesliga2nd ↑
2023–24BundesligaI18th ↓
2024–252. BundesligaII12th
2025–262. Bundesliga

Players

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Current squad

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As of 28 August 2025[7]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
1GK GERMarcel Schuhen(captain)
2DF GERSergio López
3DF RUSLeon Klassen
5DF CROMatej Maglica
6DF GHAPatric Pfeiffer
7FW SWEIsac Lidberg
8FW GERLuca Marseiler
9FW SCOFraser Hornby
10MF SURJean-Paul Boëtius
14DF MNEMeldin Drešković
15MF BULFabian Nürnberger
16MF JPNHiroki Akiyama(on loan fromAlbirex Niigata)
17MF GERKai Klefisch
19FW GERFynn Lakenmacher
No.Pos.NationPlayer
20DF SRBAleksandar Vukotić
21MF GERMerveille Papela
22FW GERSerhat-Semih Güler
23FW GERMarco Richter(on loan fromMainz 05)
24GK GERBenedikt Börner
26DF GERMatthias Bader
27FW POLBartosz Białek
28MF GERPaul Will
30GK GERAlexander Brunst
32DF GERFabian Holland
34FW FRAKillian Corredor
44FW JPNYosuke Furukawa
46DF GERTim Arnold
48DF GERMax Pfister

Out on loan

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Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
MF MAROthmane El Idrissi(atViktoria Aschaffenburg until 30 June 2026)
No.Pos.NationPlayer
FW GERFabio Torsiello(atAlemannia Aachen until 30 June 2026)

Current technical staff

[edit]
As of 14 September 2020[8]
PositionName
ManagerGermanyFlorian Kohfeldt
Assistant managerGermany Martin Heck
Goalkeeping coachGermanyDimo Wache
GermanyUwe Zimmermann
Fitness coachGermany Kai-Peter Schmitz
Head physiotherapistGermany Dirk Schmitt
Club doctorsGermany Dr. med. Michael Weingart
Germany Dr. med. Alexander Lesch
Germany Dr. med. Ingo Schwinnen
Germany Dr. med. Philip Jessen
Team officialsGermany Michael Stegmayer
Germany Matthias Neumann
Germany Jonas Nietzel
Germany Sebastian Pommer
Germany Björn Rein
Germany Michael Richter
Academy directorGermany Björn Kopper
Academy CoordinatorGermany Tim Kuhl
Under-19s coachGermany Georg-Martin Leopold
Under-17s coachGermany Patrick Kurt
Under-16s coachGermany Burak Yelken

Former managers

[edit]

The managers of the club:[9]

StartEndManager
19681970GermanyHeinz Lucas
19711976Germany Udo Klug †
19781979GermanyLothar Buchmann
19791979GermanyKlaus Schlappner
19791980GermanyJörg Berger
19811982GermanyWerner Olk
19821983Germany Manfred Krafft
19831984GermanyTimo Zahnleiter
19841984Germany Lothar Kleim
19851986Germany Udo Klug †
19861987GermanyEckhard Krautzun
19871988GermanyKlaus Schlappner
19881989GermanyWerner Olk
19891989GermanyEckhard Krautzun
19891990GermanyDieter Renner
19901990Germany Uwe Klimaschefski
19901991GermanyJürgen Sparwasser
19941996GermanyGerhard Kleppinger
19961996Germany Max Reichenberger
19961998GermanyLothar Buchmann
19981999Federal Republic of YugoslaviaSlavko Petrović
19992000GermanyEckhard Krautzun
20002002GermanyMichael Feichtenbeiner
20022003GermanyHans-Werner Moser
20032006GermanyBruno Labbadia
20062006ItalyGino Lettieri
20062009GermanyGerhard Kleppinger
20092010SerbiaŽivojin Juškić
24 March 20102 September 2012GermanyKosta Runjaić
5 September 201217 December 2012GermanyJürgen Seeberger
20122016GermanyDirk Schuster
1 July 20165 December 2016GermanyNorbert Meier
5 December 201627 December 2016GermanyRamon Berndroth (interim)
3 January 20179 December 2017GermanyTorsten Frings
12 December 201718 February 2019GermanyDirk Schuster
24 February 201930 June 2020GreeceDimitrios Grammozis
1 July 202030 June 2021GermanyMarkus Anfang
1 July 20211 September 2024GermanyTorsten Lieberknecht
7 September 2024GermanyFlorian Kohfeldt

References

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  1. ^"Wir Lilien. Sind der Verein".WIR LILIEN (in German). SV Darmstadt 98.Archived from the original on 30 September 2023. Retrieved29 July 2023.
  2. ^"SV Waldhof Mannheim – SV Darmstadt 98, 5:4 i.E., Relegation Bundesliga 1987/88 Spiele".Archived from the original on 5 March 2023. Retrieved14 September 2020.
  3. ^Ruhl: "Ein bitterer Tag für den OFC"(in German)kicker.de, published: 3 June 2013. Retrieved 4 June 2013
  4. ^"Darmstadt relegated to Bundesliga 2 after Heidenheim loss".www.bundesliga.com.
  5. ^Das deutsche Fußball-ArchivArchived 5 September 2019 at theWayback Machine(in German) Historical German domestic league tables
  6. ^Fussball.de – ErgebnisseArchived 18 May 2011 at theWayback Machine(in German) Tables and results of all German football leagues
  7. ^"Kader: Darmstadt 98" (in German). SV Darmstadt 98. 3 July 2015.Archived from the original on 20 February 2020. Retrieved9 August 2015.
  8. ^"Die Trainer". SV Darmstadt 98.Archived from the original on 20 February 2020. Retrieved14 September 2020.
  9. ^"SV Darmstadt 98 » Coaching history Trainer von A–Z".weltfussball.de (in German).Archived from the original on 10 July 2013. Retrieved6 December 2011.

External links

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