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2011–12 TSV 1860 Munich season

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1860 Munich
2011–12 season
StadiumAllianz Arena
2. Bundesliga6th
DFB-PokalSecond round

The 2011–12 TSV 1860 Munich season started on 17 July 2011 and finished on 6 May 2012. 1860 Munich finished the 2011–12 2. Bundesliga in sixth place and were eliminated in the second round of the 2011–12 DFB-Pokal.

Competitions

[edit]

2. Bundesliga

[edit]

2. Bundesliga review

[edit]
July
[edit]

1860 Munich started their season on 17 July 2011 with a 3–1 loss to Eintracht Braunschweig in the 2. Bundesliga.[1] Kevin Volland scored for 1860 Munich.[2] Dennis Kruppke, Nico Zimmermann, and Domi Kumbela scored for Eintracht Braunschweig.[3] Stefan Buck was sent–off during the match.[2] 1860 Munich finished matchday one in 16th place.[4] On 23 July 2011, 1860 Munich's first home match was against Karlsruher SC.[1] 1860 Munich won the match 2–1[5] with goals from Christopher Schindler and Stefan Aigner.[6] 1860 Munich finished matchday two in 10th place.[7]

August
[edit]

1860 Munich started August with a 5–0 win against Energie Cottbus in Cottbus.[1] 1860 Munich got goals from Stefan Aigner, Kevin Volland, Daniel Halfar, an own goal from Uwe Hünemeier, and a goal from Benjamin Lauth.[8] Sebastian Maier made his 2. Bundesliga debut.[9] 1860 Munich finished matchday three in fourth place.[10] on 14 August 2011, 1860 Munich defeated Erzgebirge Aue 4–0[11] with two goals from Daniel Halfar and a goal each from Benjamin Lauth and Manuel Schäffler.[12] 1860 Munich finished matchday four in second place.[13] On 19 August 2011 (matchday five),[14] 1860 Munich lost 3–1 to Fortuna Düsseldorf.[15] Benjamin Lauth scored from a penalty shot for 1860 Munich and Fortuna Düsseldorf got goals from Sascha Rösler, who scored from a penalty shot, Andreas Lambertz, and Maximilian Beister.[16] 1860 Munich finished matchday five in seventh place.[17] 1860 Munich finished August[1] with a 3–1 win against Union Berlin[18] on 28 August 2011 (matchday six).[19] 1860 Munich got two goals from Kevin Volland and a goal from Stefan Aigner and Union Berlin got their goal from John Mosquera.[20] 1860 Munich finished matchday six in fifth place.[21]

September
[edit]

1860 Munich started September[1] with a 4–2 loss to FC St. Pauli,[22] which took place on 11 September 2011 (matchday seven).[23] 1860 Munich took a 2–0 lead with a penalty shot from Benjamin Lauth and an own goal from Kevin Schindler.[24] However, FC St. Pauli got a goal from Marius Ebbers, a goal from Sebastian Schachten, and two goals from Max Kruse to win 4–2.[24] 1860 Munich dropped down to seventh place.[25] On 18 September 2011 (matchday eight),[26] 1860 Munich defeated FSV Frankfurt 4–0[27] with a goal from Stefan Aigner, two goals from Kevin Volland and an own goal from Alexander Huber.[28] 1860 Munich moved up to sixth place.[29] The 125th Bavarian Derby took place on 25 September 2011 (matchday nine).[30] 1860 Munich lost 2–0 to Greuther Fürth.[31] Christopher Nöthe and Bernd Nehrig scored for Greuther Fürth.[32] Kai Bülow (1860 Munich) was sent–off during the match.[32] 1860 Munich finished matchday nine in sixth place.[33]

October
[edit]

1860 Munich started October with a 4–2 loss to Dynamo Dresden.[1] The match took place on 2 October 2011.[34] Daniel Bierofka scored both of 1860 Munich's season.[35] Dynamo Dresden got three goals from Mickael Poté and a goal from Romain Bregerie.[35] With the win, Dynamo Dresden picked up their first 3 points away from home.[36] Stefan Buck was sent–off.[34] 1860 Munich finished matchday 10 in seventh place.[37] 1860 Munich faced Hansa Rostock on 14 October 2011.[38] Hansa Rostock defeated 1860 Munich 2–0.[39] Dominic Peitz and Matthias Holst scored for Hansa Rostock.[40] 1860 Munich dropped down to ninth place.[41] On 21 October 2011,[42] the match between 1860 Munich and SC Paderborn 07 finished in a 1–1 draw.[43] Kevin Volland scored for 1860 Munich and Florian Mohr for SC Paderborn 07.[44] 1860 Munich finished matchday 12 by remaining in ninth place.[45] 1860 Munich finished October with a 3–0 win against MSV Duisburg.[1] The match took place on 30 October 2011.[46] Daniel Bierofka, Sandro Kaiser, and Kevin Volland scored for 1860 Munich.[47] The win for 1860 Munich finished their four–match winless streak.[48] 1860 Munich finished matchday 13 by moving up to seventh place.[49]

November
[edit]

On 5 November 2011,[50] 1860 Munich started November with a 3–1 loss to VfL Bochum.[1] Benjamin Lauth scored for 1860 Munich.[51] Lauth also missed scoring from a penalty kick.[52] VfL Bochum got a goal from Takashi Inui, an own goal from Collin Benjamin, and a goal from Mirkan Aydin.[51] 1860 Munich finished matchday 14 in eighth place.[53] On 18 November 2011,[54] 1860 Munich started a Nine–match undefeated streak with a 1–0 win against FC Ingolstadt 04.[1] Đorđe Rakić scored the goal for 1860 Munich.[55] 1860 Munich finished matchday 15 in sixth place.[56] On 26 November 2011, 1860 Munich defeated Eintracht Frankfurt 2–1.[57] Anderson Soares de Oliveira scored an own goal in the first minute that put 1860 Munich ahead.[58] Kevin Volland scored the second goal for 1860 Munich.[58] Theofanis Gekas scored for Eintracht Frankfurt.[58] The win against Eintracht Frankfurt finished their undefeated streak to start the season.[59] 1860 Munich remained in sixth place.[60]

December
[edit]

On 4 December 2011, 1860 Munich faced Alemannia Aachen at New Tivoli in Aachen.[61] Stefan Buck and Stefan Aigner scored for 1860 Munich.[62] Sergiu Radu and Bas Sibum scored for Alemannia Aachen.[62] 1860 Munich dropped down to eighth place.[63] On 9 December 2011, 1860 Munich faced Eintracht Braunschweig at the Allianz Arena in Munich.[64] 1860 Munich won 3–0 with goals from Stefan Aigner, Đorđe Rakić, and Benjamin Lauth.[65] This was 1860 Munich's fourth match without defeat.[66] 1860 Munich finished matchday 18 in seventh place.[67] 1860 Munich faced Karlsruher SC on 17 December 2011 at Wildparkstadion in Karlsruhe.[68] 1860 Munich won the match 3–1.[69] Stefan Aigner got two goals from Daniel Bierofka, including one from a penalty kick, and a goal from Stefan Aigner.[70] This was their fourth win in five matches[69] and their final match of 2011.[1] Timo Ochs played in goal against Karlsruher SC,[70] which was his only match in either the 2. Bundesliga[71] or DFB-Pokal.[72] 1860 Munich finished in sixth place on matchday 19.[73]

February
[edit]

On 6 February 2011, 1860 Munich faced Energie Cottbus at the Allianz Arena in Munich.[74] 1860 Munich won 2–0 with two goals from Benjamin Lauth.[75] This was 1860 Munich's first competitive match of 2012.[76] 1860 Munich also extended their undefeated streak to six matches.[76] 1860 Munich remained in sixth place.[77] The away match against Erzgebirge Aue on matchday 21 was supposed to be the next match for 1860 Munich. However, it was postponed[78] until 14 March 2011.[79] Matchday 22 against Fortuna Düsseldorf happened on 19 February 2012 at Allianz Arena in Munich.[80] 1860 Munich defeated Fortuna Düsseldorf 2–1.[81] Stefan Aigner and Necat Aygün scored for 1860 Munich and Maximilian Beister scored for Fortuna Düsseldorf.[82] 1860 Munich handed Fortuna Düsseldorf their first loss away from their home stadium in Düsseldorf.[81] 1860 Munich finished matchday 22 in sixth place.[83] On 24 February 2012, 1860 Munich faced Union Berlin at Stadion An der Alten Försterei in Berlin.[84] 1860 Munich won the match 1–0 with a goal from Stefan Aigner.[85] 1860 Munich remained in sixth place.[86]

March
[edit]

1860 Munich started March with a 1–1 draw against FC St. Pauli.[1] The match took place on 5 March 2012 at the Allianz Arena in Munich.[87] The match finished in a 1–1 draw.[88] Kevin Volland scored for 1860 Munich and Florian Bruns, who scored from a penalty kick, scored for FC St. Pauli.[88] 1860 Munich remained in sixth place.[89] 1860 Munich faced FSV Frankfurt on 10 March 2012 at PSD Bank Arena in Frankfurt.[90] Kai Bülow scored for 1860 Munich.[91] Michael Görlitz, Marcel Gaus, and Macauley Chrisantus scored for FSV Frankfurt.[91] The loss finished their nine–match undefeated streak.[92] 1860 Munich finished matchday 10 in sixth place.[93] 1860 Munich faced Erzgebirge Aue on 14 March 2012 at Erzgebirgsstadion in Aue.[79] the match finished in a 0–0 draw.[78] 1860 Munich remained in sixth place.[94] 1860 Munich faced Greuther Fürth on 17 March 2012 at Allianz Arena in Munich.[95] 1860 Munich lost the match 4–1.[96] Daniel Bierofka scored from a penalty kick for 1860 Munich.[97] Greuther Fürth got two goals from Olivier Occean and goals from Stephan Fürstner and Felix Klaus.[97] 1860 Munich remained in sixth place.[98] 1860 Munich faced Dynamo Dresden on 23 March 2012 at Glücksgas-Stadion in Dresden.[99] 1860 Munich won 1–0 with a goal from Benjamin Lauth.[100] 1860 Munich remained in sixth place.[101] 1860 Munich faced Hansa Rostock on 31 March 2012 at Allianz Arena in Munich.[102] Hansa Rostock won 1–0 with a goal from Freddy Borg.[103] 1860 Munich remained in sixth place.[104]

April and May
[edit]

1860 Munich started April with a 2–2 draw against SC Paderborn 07.[1] The match took place on 8 April 2012 at Energieteam-Arena in Paderborn.[105] Đorđe Rakić and Kevin Volland scored for 1860 Munich.[106] Nick Proschwitz and Enis Alushi scored for SC Paderborn 07.[106] 1860 Munich remained in sixth place.[107] 1860 Munich faced MSV Duisburg on 11 April 2012 at Allianz Arena in Munich.[108] 1860 Munich won the match 2–1. Guillermo Vallori and Benjamin Lauth scored for 1860 Munich and Emil Jula.[109] The win for 1860 Munich finished MSV Duisburg's five–match undefeated streak.[110] 1860 Munich finished matchday 30 in sixth place.[111] 1860 Munich faced VfL Bochum on 15 April 2012 at Rewirpower-Stadion in Bochum.[112] The match finished in a 2–2 draw.[113] Đorđe Rakić and Benjamin Lauth scored for 1860 Munich and Daniel Ginczek and Kevin Vogt scored for VfL Bochum.[114] 1860 Munich remained in sixth place.[115] 1860 Munich faced FC Ingolstadt 04 on 21 April 2012 at the Allianz Arena in Munich.[116] 1860 Munich won the match 4–1.[117] 1860 Munich got two goals from Kevin Volland and a goal each from Stefan Aigner and Dominik Stahl.[118] Stefan Leitl scored for FC Ingolstadt 04.[118] 1860 Munich finished matchday 32 in sixth place.[119] 1860 Munich faced Eintracht Frankfurt on 29 April 2012 at Commerzbank-Arena in Frankfurt.[120] 1860 Munich won 2–0 with an own goal from Sebastian Jung and a goal from Guillermo Vallori.[121] 1860 Munich finished matchday 33 in sixth place.[122] 1860 Munich finished the 2. Bundesliga season with a 2–1 loss to Alemannia Aachen.[1] The match took place 6 May 2012 at Allianz Arena in Munich.[123] Stefan Aigner scored for 1860 Munich and Albert Streit and Alper Uludag scored for Alemannia Aachen.[124] 1860 Munich finished the 2011–12 season in sixth place.[125]

2. Bundesliga results

[edit]
Date Opponent Venue
H/A
Results
F–A
Goalscorer(s) Attendance Pos. Ref.
17 July 2011 Eintracht Braunschweig A 1–3 Volland 22,167 16th [2][3][4]
23 July 2011 Karlsruher SC H 2–1 Schindler, Aigner 26,600 10th [5][6][7]
6 August 2011 Energie Cottbus A 5–0 Aigner, Volland, Halfar, Hünemeier (O.G.), Lauth 11,220 4th [8][9][10]
14 August 2011 Erzgebirge Aue H 4–0 Halfar (2), Lauth, Schäffler 24,600 2nd [11][12][13]
19 August 2011 Fortuna Düsseldorf A 1–3 Lauth (Pen.) 28,300 7th [14][15][16][17]
28 August 2011 Union Berlin H 3–1 Volland (2), Aigner 22,500 5th [18][19][20][21]
11 September 2011 FC St. Pauli A 2–4 Lauth (Pen.), Schindler (O.G.) 24,487 7th [22][23][24][25]
18 September 2011 FSV Frankfurt H 4–0 Aigner, Volland (2), Huber (O.G.) 20,100 6th [26][27][28][29]
25 September 2011 Greuther Fürth A 0–2 14,200 6th [30][31][32][33]
2 October 2011 Dynamo Dresden H 2–4 Bierofka (2) 39,500 7th [34][35][36][37]
14 October 2011 Hansa Rostock A 0–2 14,700 11th [38][39][40][41]
21 October 2011 SC Paderborn 07 H 1–1 Volland 15,100 9th [42][43][44][45]
30 October 2011 MSV Duisburg A 3–0 Bierofka, Kaiser, Volland 11,387 7th [46][47][49]
5 November 2011 VfL Bochum H 1–3 Lauth 18,300 8th [50][51][53]
18 November 2011 FC Ingolstadt 04 A 1–0 Rakić 13,850 6th [54][55][56]
26 November 2011 Eintracht Frankfurt H 2–1 Anderson (O.G.), Volland 30,660 6th [57][58][60]
4 December 2011 Alemannia Aachen A 2–2 Buck, Aigner 17,023 8th [61][62][63]
9 December 2011 Eintracht Braunschweig H 3–0 Aigner, Rakić, Lauth 16,400 6th [64][65][67]
17 December 2011 Karlsruher SC A 3–1 Bierofka (2, Pen.), Aigner 12,640 6th [68][70][73]
6 February 2012 Energie Cottbus H 2–0 Lauth (2) 14,600 6th [74][75][77]
19 February 2012 Fortuna Düsseldorf H 2–1 Aigner, Aygün 21,400 6th [80][82][83]
24 February 2012 Union Berlin A 1–0 Aigner 15,723 6th [84][85][86]
5 March 2012 FC St. Pauli H 1–1 Volland 31,600 6th [87][88][89]
10 March 2012 FSV Frankfurt A 1–3 Bülow 6,019 6th [90][91][93]
14 March 2012 Erzgebirge Aue A 0–0 7,500 6th [78][79][94]
17 March 2012 Greuther Fürth H 1–4 Bierofka (Pen.) 29,600 6th [95][97][98]
23 March 2012 Dynamo Dresden A 1–0 Lauth 29,323 6th [99][100][101]
31 March 2012 Hansa Rostock H 0–1 17,700 6th [102][103][104]
8 April 2012 SC Paderborn 07 A 2–2 Rakić, Volland 11,466 6th [105][106][107]
11 April 2012 MSV Duisburg H 2–1 Vallori, Lauth 14,400 6th [108][109][111]
15 April 2012 VfL Bochum A 2–2 Rakić, Lauth 10,132 6th [112][114][115]
21 April 2012 FC Ingolstadt 04 H 4–1 Volland (2), Aigner, Stahl 21,200 6th [116][118][119]
29 April 2012 Eintracht Frankfurt A 2–0 Jung (O.G.), Vallori 50,800 6th [120][121][122]
6 May 2012 Alemannia Aachen H 1–2 Aigner 25,100 6th [123][124][125]

League table

[edit]
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
4 FC St. Pauli 34 18 8 8 59 34 25 62
5 SC Paderborn 34 17 10 7 51 42 9 61
6 1860 Munich 34 17 6 11 62 46 16 57
7 1. FC Union Berlin 34 14 6 14 55 58 −3 48
8 Eintracht Braunschweig 34 10 15 9 37 34 3 45
Source: kicker
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.

Results summary

[edit]
Overall Home Away
Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts W D L GF GA GD W D L GF GA GD
34 17 6 11 62 46   16 57 10 2 5 35 22   13 7 4 6 27 24   3

Last updated: 6 May 2012.
Source: 2. Bundesliga results

DFB-Pokal

[edit]

DFB-Pokal review

[edit]

1860 Munich were eliminated in the second round of the DFB-Pokal.[1] In the first round, 1860 Munich defeated VfL Osnabrück 3–2 in extra time.[126] 1860 Munich got two goals from Benjamin Lauth, including one from the penalty spot, and a goal from Kevin Volland.[127] In the second round, 1860 Munich lost 3–0 to Fortuna Düsseldorf.[128] Collin Benjamin was sent–off during the match.[129]

DFB-Pokal results

[edit]
Date Round Opponent Venue
Home/Away
Result
F–A
Goalscorers Attendance Ref.
29 July 2011 First round VfL Osnabrück A 3–2 Lauth (2), Volland 11,000 [1][126][127]
25 October 2011 Second round Fortuna Düsseldorf A 0–3 34,413 [1][128][129]

Overall record

[edit]
Competition First match Last match Starting round Final position Record
Pld W D L GF GA GD Win %
2. Bundesliga 17 July 2011 6 May 2012 Matchday 1 Sixth 34 17 6 11 62 46 16 050.00
DFB-Pokal 29 July 2011 25 October 2011 First round Second round 2 1 0 1 3 5 −2 050.00
Total 36 18 6 12 65 51 14 050.00

Source: Competitions

Roster and statistics

[edit]

Roster, appearances, and goals

[edit]

Roster, appearances, and goals

[edit]
Roster, appearances, and goals[71][72]
Player Total 2. Bundesliga DFB-Pokal
Apps. Gls. Apps. Gls. Apps. Gls.
Gpalkeepers
Vitus Eicher 1 0 1 0 0 0
Gabor Kiraly 34 0 32 0 2 0
Timo Ochs 1 0 1 0 0 0
Defenders
Necat Aygün 19 1 19 1 0 0
Stefan Buck 21 1 21 1 0 0
Arne Feick 22 0 20 0 2 0
Jonatan Kotzke 1 0 1 0 0 0
Dennis Malura 4 0 3 0 1 0
Antonio Rukavina 33 0 31 0 2 0
Christopher Schindler 32 1 30 1 2 0
Phillipp Steinhart 1 0 1 0 0 0
Guillermo Vallori 11 2 11 2 0 0
Midfielders
Stefan Aigner 32 11 30 11 2 0
Collin Benjamin 20 0 18 0 2 0
Daniel Bierofka 33 6 31 6 2 0
Kai Bülow 30 1 28 1 2 0
Daniel Halfar 19 3 18 3 1 0
Sandro Kaiser 10 1 10 1 0 0
Sebastian Maier 15 0 15 0 0 0
Maximilian Nicu 15 0 15 0 0 0
Dominik Stahl 30 1 28 1 2 0
Forwards
Benjamin Lauth 35 13 33 11 2 2
Đorđe Rakić 25 4 24 4 1 0
Manuel Schäffler 15 3 14 3 1 0
Kevin Volland 35 14 33 13 2 1
Bobby Wood 4 0 3 0 1 0

Goalscorers

[edit]
2. Bundesliga goalscorers[71]
Player Goals
Kevin Volland 13
Benjamin Lauth 11
Stefan Aigner 11
Daniel Bierofka 6
Own goals 5
Đorđe Rakić 4
Manuel Schäffler 3
Daniel Halfar 3
Guillermo Vallori 2
Jonatan Kotzke 1
Christopher Schindler 1
Kai Bülow 1
Sandro Kaiser 1
Dominik Stahl 1
Necat Aygün 1
Stefan Buck 1
DFB-Pokal goalscorers[72]
Player Goals
Benjamin Lauth 2
Kevin Volland 1

Own goals

[edit]
Own goals by 1860 Munich players
No. Player Competition Date Opponent Final score Ref.
1 Collin Benjamin 2. Bundesliga 5 November 2011 VfL Bochum 1–3 [51]
Own goals by opposing players
No. Player Competition Date Team Final score Ref.
1 Uwe Hünemeier 2. Bundesliga 6 August 2011 Energie Cottbus 5–0 [9]
2 Kevin Schindler 2. Bundesliga 11 September 2011 FC St. Pauli 2–4 [24]
3 Alexander Huber 2. Bundesliga 18 September 2011 FSV Frankfurt 4–0 [28]
4 Anderson Soares de Oliveira 2. Bundesliga 26 November 2011 Eintracht Frankfurt 2–1 [58]
5 Sebastian Jung 2. Bundesliga 29 April 2012 Eintracht Frankfurt 2–0 [121]

Other statistics

[edit]

Discipline

[edit]
Player 2. Bundesliga Ref.
Yellow card Yellow card Red card Red card
Daniel Bierofka 10 0 0 [130]
Kevin Volland 7 0 0 [131]
Kai Bülow 6 0 2 [132]
Dominik Stahl 6 0 0 [133]
Christopher Schindler 5 0 0 [134]
Necat Aygün 5 0 0 [135]
Stefan Aigner 5 0 0 [136]
Arne Feick 4 0 0 [137]
Guillermo Vallori 4 0 0 [138]
Benjamin Lauth 4 0 0 [139]
Stefan Buck 1 1 1 [140]
Gabor Kiraly 2 0 0 [141]
Daniel Halfar 2 0 0 [142]
Sandro Kaiser 2 0 0 [143]
Antonio Rukavina 2 0 0 [144]
Đorđe Rakić 2 0 0 [145]
Collin Benjamin 1 0 0 [146]
Sebastian Maier 1 0 0 [147]
Manuel Schäffler 1 0 0 [148]
Totals 70 1 3
Player DFB-Pokal Ref.
Yellow card Yellow card Red card Red card
Kevin Volland 1 0 0 [131]
Christopher Schindler 1 0 0 [134]
Arne Feick 1 0 0 [137]
Gabor Kiraly 1 0 0 [141]
Collin Benjamin 0 0 1 [146]
Dennis Malura 1 0 0 [149]
Totals 5 0 1

Clean sheets

[edit]
Clean sheets
No. Goalkeeper Competition Opponent Final score Ref.
1 Gabor Kiraly 2. Bundesliga Energie Cottbus 5–0 [8]
2 Gabor Kiraly 2. Bundesliga Erzgebirge Aue 4–0 [12]
3 Gabor Kiraly 2. Bundesliga FSV Frankfurt 4–0 [28]
4 Gabor Kiraly 2. Bundesliga MSV Duisburg 3–0 [47]
5 Gabor Kiraly 2. Bundesliga FC Ingolstadt 04 1–0 [55]
6 Gabor Kiraly 2. Bundesliga Eintracht Braunschweig 3–0 [65]
7 Gabor Kiraly 2. Bundesliga Energie Cottbus 2–0 [75]
8 Gabor Kiraly 2. Bundesliga Union Berlin 1–0 [85]
9 Gabor Kiraly 2. Bundesliga Erzgebirge Aue 0–0 [94]
10 Gabor Kiraly 2. Bundesliga Dynamo Dresden 1–0 [100]
11 Vitus Eicher 2. Bundesliga Eintracht Frankfurt 2–0 [121]
10 clean sheets for Gabor Kiraly and one clean sheet for Vitus Eicher.

Minutes played

[edit]
Minutes played in all competitions
Rank Players Minutes played
1 Gabor Kiraly 3,090
2 Kevin Volland 2,951
3 Antonio Rukavina 2,895
4 Benjamin Lauth 2,885
5 Christopher Schindler 2,611
6 Stefan Aigner 2,542
7 Daniel Bierofka 2,472
8 Kai Bülow 2,448
9 Dominik Stahl 1,941
10 Stefan Buck 1,631
11 Đorđe Rakić 1,623
12 Arne Feick 1,605
13 Necat Aygün 1,598
14 Daniel Halfar 1,110
15 Collin Benjamin 1,013
16 Maximilian Nicu 973
17 Guillermo Vallori 959
18 Sandro Kaiser 393
19 Manuel Schäffler 291
20 Sebastian Maier 259
21 Dennis Malura 234
22 Vitus Eicher 90
Timo Ochs 90
24 Phillipp Steinhart 40
25 Bobby Wood 35
26 Jonatan Kotzke 22
2. Bundesliga[150]
Rank Players Minutes played
1 Gabor Kiraly 2,880
2 Kevin Volland 2,747
3 Antonio Rukavina 2,731
4 Benjamin Lauth 2,675
5 Christopher Schindler 2,401
6 Daniel Bierofka 2,334
7 Stefan Aigner 2,332
8 Kai Bülow 2,238
9 Dominik Stahl 1,753
10 Stefan Buck 1,631
11 Đorđe Rakić 1,617
12 Necat Aygün 1,598
13 Arne Feick 1,395
14 Daniel Halfar 1,004
15 Maximilian Nicu 973
16 Guillermo Vallori 959
17 Collin Benjamin 851
18 Sandro Kaiser 393
19 Manuel Schäffler 277
20 Sebastian Maier 259
21 Dennis Malura 188
22 Vitus Eicher 90
Timo Ochs 90
24 Phillipp Steinhart 40
25 Jonatan Kotzke 22
26 Bobby Wood 13
DFB-Pokal[72]
Rank Players Minutes played
1 Gabor Kiraly 210
Benjamin Lauth 210
Christopher Schindler 210
Stefan Aigner 210
Kai Bülow 210
Arne Feick 210
7 Kevin Volland 204
8 Dominik Stahl 188
9 Antonio Rukavina 164
10 Collin Benjamin 162
11 Daniel Bierofka 138
12 Daniel Halfar 106
13 Dennis Malura 46
14 Bobby Wood 22
15 Manuel Schäffler 14
16 Đorđe Rakić 6

Transfers

[edit]
Transferred in[151]
Pos. Name Age EU Moving from Transfer Window
Midfielder Eke Uzoma 21 No Arminia Bielefeld Summer
Forward Manuel Schäffler 22 Yes MSV Duisburg Summer
Goalkeeper Timo Ochs 29 Yes 1. FC Nürnberg Summer
Defender Dennis Malura 27 Yes Rot-Weiß Erfurt Summer
Midfielder Jonatan Kotzke 21 Yes 1. FC Nürnberg II Summer
Midfielder Sandro Kaiser 21 Yes Arminia Bielefeld Summer
Defender Arne Feick 23 Yes Arminia Bielefeld Summer
Defender Collin Benjamin 32 No Hamburger SV Summer
Defender Guillermo Vallori 29 Yes Grasshopper Club Zürich Winter
Midfielder Maximilian Nicu 29 Yes SC Freiburg Winter
Transferred Out[151]
Pos. Name Age EU Moving to Transfer Window
Goalkeeper Philipp Tschauner 25 Yes FC St. Pauli Summer
Defender Julian Ratei 22 Yes SV Darmstadt 98 Summer
Midfielder Alexander Ludwig 27 Yes Energie Cottbus Summer
Midfielder Florin Lovin 29 Yes AO Kerkyra Summer
Midfielder Aleksandar Ignjovski 20 No Werder Bremen Summer
Midfielder Tarık Çamdal 20 Yes Eskişehirspor Summer
Midfielder Stefan Bell 19 Yes Eintracht Frankfurt Summer
Forward Korbinian Vollmann 17 Yes SpVgg Unterhaching Summer
Forward Manuel Schäffler 22 Yes FC Ingolstadt 04 Winter
Defender Dennis Malura 27 Yes 1. FC Heidenheim 1846 Winter

Coaching staff

[edit]
Position Coach
Head coach: Reiner Maurer
Assistant coach: Wolfgang Schellenberg
Assistant coach: Alexander Schmidt
Goalkeeping coach: Jürgen Wittmann
Source:[152]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "TSV 1860 München — Termine". kicker.de (in German). Olympia Verlag. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  2. ^ a b c "2. Bundesliga — Schema". kicker.de (in German). Olympia Verlag. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
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  6. ^ a b "2. Bundesliga — Schema". kicker.de (in German). Olympia Verlag. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
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  11. ^ a b "Löwen weiter hungrig - Halfar macht's wie Raul". kicker.de (in German). Olympia Verlag. 14 August 2011. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  12. ^ a b c "2. Bundesliga — Schema". kicker.de (in German). Olympia Verlag. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  13. ^ a b "2. Bundesliga — Tabelle". kicker.de (in German). Olympia Verlag. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  14. ^ a b "2. Bundesliga — Spielinfo". kicker.de (in German). Olympia Verlag. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  15. ^ a b "Beister setzt noch einen drauf". kicker.de (in German). Olympia Verlag. 19 August 2011. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  16. ^ a b "2. Bundesliga — Schema". kicker.de (in German). Olympia Verlag. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  17. ^ a b "2. Bundesliga — Tabelle". kicker.de (in German). Olympia Verlag. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  18. ^ a b "Volland veredelt den Löwen-Startrekord". kicker.de (in German). Olympia Verlag. 28 August 2011. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
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