Berliner FC Dynamo


















































Berliner FC Dynamo
BFC Dynamo - 2009.svg
Full name Berliner Fussball Club Dynamo e. V.
Nickname(s) "The Wine Reds"
Founded 15 January 1966; 53 years ago (1966-01-15)
Ground Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Sportpark
Capacity 19,708
Chairman Norbert Uhlig
Manager René Rydlewicz
League
Regionalliga Nordost (IV)
2017–18 4th

















Home colours














Away colours




Berliner FC Dynamo (commonly BFC Dynamo or BFC) is a German football club from Berlin and the record champion of East Germany with ten consecutive championships from 1979 through 1988.




Contents






  • 1 History


    • 1.1 Founding and GDR era


    • 1.2 Post-unification




  • 2 Stadiums


  • 3 Club culture, supporters and rivalries


  • 4 Club crest


    • 4.1 Ownership of the BFC crest


    • 4.2 Championship stars controversy




  • 5 Coaches


  • 6 Notable players


  • 7 Honours


    • 7.1 Domestic


    • 7.2 Regional


    • 7.3 Double




  • 8 Seasons of GDR


  • 9 Seasons since end of GDR


  • 10 European Cup


  • 11 References


  • 12 External links





History




Historical chart of BFC Dynamo league performance



Founding and GDR era


A predecessor side to the current-day club was established in 1949 as Sportgemeinde Deutsche Volkspolizei Berlin. In March 1953, this team assumed the place of SC Volkspolizei Potsdam in the DDR-Liga, East Germany's tier two competition. The Potsdam and Berlin sides were later formally merged and after 27 March 1953 played as part of the larger Sportvereinigung Dynamo sports club under the name SG Dynamo Berlin. After a 14th-place result in the 1953–54 season, the team was demoted to the Bezirksliga Berlin (III). The club was again renamed, being christened Sport Club Dynamo Berlin on 1 October 1954.[1]


In 1954, team members of Dynamo Dresden were ordered to leave for the capital to establish a competitive side in Berlin. Some of these team members, including Johannes Matzen, Herbert Schoen and Günter Schröter, were originally from Potsdam and had previously been ordered to leave the region to establish the Dynamo Dresden side in order to replace the popular, but bourgeois, Dresdner SC team in Dresden.


Dynamo Berlin enjoyed some success in the late 1950s and early 1960s with a number of top-three finishes and an East German Cup win in 1959. By 1963, however, their play had fallen off and they had become a lower table side leading to their relegation in 1967.


The club was re-established on 15 January 1966 as Berliner Fußballclub Dynamo (BFC Dynamo) when the football department was disassociated as a football club in a general re-organisation of football in the country. The club returned to first division play after a single season's absence. The side was known as being the favoured team of Erich Mielke, the head of East Germany's Stasi (the secret police).[2]




Dynamo, after winning the title in 1979


Playing in the DDR-Oberliga BFC won ten consecutive titles from 1979 to 1988 allegedly assisted by obedient referees,[3] and important player transfers from other East German teams. BFC Dynamo was reviled by many East Germans and referee obedience incurred the unofficially expressed displeasure of the country's ruling Politburo, particularly bureaucrats from the Leipzig region. Alleged manipulation of the 1986 championship match between BFC Dynamo and Lokomotive Leipzig which ended in a 1–1 draw resulted in sanctions against referee Bernd Stumpf.[4]



Post-unification


After German re-unification in 1990, the side was renamed FC Berlin in an attempt to re-package it and distance it from its past (Dynamo admitted to tier III of the new German league in 1991–92 season). In 1999 and due to the supporters' desire they again took up the name BFC Dynamo. Without its powerful patron and losing its best players to West German Bundesliga teams, the side quickly fell to tier III play and since the 2000–01 season has toiled in IV or V division leagues. The club filed for insolvency in 2001 but was rescued by a number of supporters. The insolvency proceedings were successfully closed in 2004.


BFC recovered to win the Verbandsliga Berlin (V) championship in 2004 and return to fourth division play in the Oberliga Nordost-Nord (IV, now V) where they settled in as upper-table side.


On 12 June 2013, BFC Dynamo won the Berlin Cup (Berlin Pokal) for a third time, beating SV Lichtenberg 47 1–0, thus qualifying for the national cup of the DFB, the DFB-Pokal.[5] The crowd of 6,381 set a new record for a Berlin Cup final.


The subsequent DFB-Pokal match against VfB Stuttgart took place on 4 August 2013 in front of 9,227 spectators. The stadium capacity of the Friedrich Ludwig Jahn Sportpark had been limited and ticket prices had been increased due to requirements by the DFB. While Dynamo's Christoph Köhne came close after hitting the inner post in the 31st minute, Vedad Ibišević won the game for Stuttgart with goals in the 40th and 75th minutes (a penalty), resulting in a 0–2 defeat.


In the 2013–14 Oberliga season, BFC Dynamo won 15 out of the initial 16 games (while drawing against SV Lichtenberg 47). After 21 season matches, the streak was extended to 20 wins and one draw, effectively securing promotion to Regionalliga Nordost with a 25-point lead.[6] The club subsequently extended contracts with its key players and announced to move back to the Friedrich Ludwig Jahn Sportpark for its Regionalliga matches starting with the 2014–15 season.[7]


Following promotion, BFC Dynamo finished the 2014–15 Regionalliga season in fifth place. During the season, coach Volkan Uluc was replaced by former Hamburger SV player and coach of SSV Jahn Regensburg, Thomas Stratos. Under Stratos, BFC Dynamo secured yet another Berlin Cup trophy, thus qualifying again for the DFB-Pokal. The crowd of 6,914 spectators during the 2015 cup final against Tasmania Berlin (1–0 victory) at the Friedrich Ludwig Jahn Sportpark set another record for a Berlin Cup final.


The 2014–15 season marked the return of the club to live television (pay TV had broadcast the DFB-Pokal cup matches against 1.FC Kaiserslautern in 2011 and VfB Stuttgart in 2013) with its Regionalliga matches against Carl Zeiss Jena and 1. FC Magdeburg being broadcast by Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk television.


The 2015 DFB-Pokal match was lost 0:2 against 2. Bundesliga side FSV Frankfurt. Rockenbach da Silva missed a penalty for BFC.[8]


René Rydlewicz, a former Bundesliga player who had started his career at the club, took over as BFC coach in May 2016. The Regionalliga seasons 2015–16 and 2016–17 brought mixed results. However, BFC secured another Berlin Cup trophy in 2017, thus qualifying for DFB-Pokal season 2017–18. FC Schalke 04 was drawn as first round opponent for the match scheduled 14 August 2017. 12,000 tickets were sold in advance.



Stadiums


The long-time home and training ground of the club has been the Sportforum Hohenschönhausen. Its outdoor stadium has a capacity of 10,000 spectators, including 2,000 seated, and is part of a large sports complex with facilities for ice hockey, speed skating, athletics, and cycling. When opened it offered the world's first covered indoor speed skating oval. It is also the training ground for the Eisbären Berlin professional ice hockey team, formerly SC Dynamo Berlin.





Sportforum Hohenschönhausen


The team played most European Cup matches and most seasons (1971–1992) at the Friedrich Ludwig Jahn Sportpark in Prenzlauer Berg, close to the former Berlin Wall. Following the 2014 promotion to Regionalliga Nordost, BFC moved permanently back to the Prenzlauer Berg stadium, next to the Mauerpark.[9] The stadium currently has a capacity of 19,708 spectators.





Friedrich Ludwig Jahn Sportpark


The Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Sportpark is under planning for a complete redevelopment. The estimated cost for the redevelopment of the whole area is estimated at up to €170 million, including €85 million for a new stadium. The current stadium will be demolished by 2020.[10]



Club culture, supporters and rivalries


In the 1980s and 1990s, BFC Dynamo supporters became known to include skinheads, with far right political views. In the early 1990s, BFC Dynamo gained a reputation of having the strongest hooligan element in Germany.[11]


It was the broader BFC supporter scene that managed to rescue the club during its insolvency proceedings in 2004. Today its supporter scene includes Ultra-groups and other supporter groups with various political or non-political views.


The BFC has rivalries with Dynamo Dresden and Union Berlin while enjoying friendly relations with Scottish side Aberdeen,[12] and partially with Eintracht Braunschweig, Polish club Pogoń Szczecin and Swedish club GAIS.



Club crest




The original SC Dynamo logo ca. 1954 and logos in use by FC Berlin ca. 1990–99.



Ownership of the BFC crest





Dynamo's traditional crest is at the centre of an ownership dispute with related marketing revenues at stake.




An alternate team crest was prepared ca. 2004 as a possible replacement for the traditional crest, but was only ever used by the club's youth sides.


After German re-unification many East German clubs rushed to drop the names they were bearing during the Communist era. Dynamo was among the clubs to do so, becoming FC Berlin. However, like many others of these clubs they found more value and fan recognition in the names, colours and crests they had played under in East Germany, thus returning to them due to supporters's pressure and based on a members' decision.


Dynamo's situation was complicated as they had neglected to copyright their old crest. In 1999 that they no longer held title, having to share it with sports souvenir seller Peter "Pepe" Mager who laid claim to the orphaned image in March 1997. Control of the logo image has since passed to André Sommer and Rayk Bernt and their marketing firm Ra-Be GmbH through which they take ten percent of the value of all fan articles sold. Sommer and Bernt also assisted in the period following the club's insolvency in 2001. This was the cause of concern for the beleaguered football association as the pair were known to have links to the Hells Angels motorcycle club.


Dynamo has been working to recover the rights to its familiar traditional crest. Several alternative crests have been developed and registered in the event that they are unsuccessful in the attempt. The disputed image continued to be used on Dynamo's first team uniforms, at its website, and in other limited contexts, but the club was still unable to fully exploit the commercial value of the logo to its benefit.[13] In 2009, in response to the problem, the club decided to introduce the current logo that abandoned the traditional stylized "D" in favour of the Berlin bear. However, the club and most of its fans identify with the traditional logo.



Championship stars controversy





Dynamo's unsanctioned unilateral adoption of championship stars helped stir a controversy in German football.




The introduction of the Verdiente Meistervereine put in place a national standard for the display of championships stars.


In 2004, the DFB introduced the Verdiente Meistervereine – a system to honor the most successful teams in Bundesliga history awarding one star for three titles, two stars for five, and three stars for ten – allowing qualifying teams to display on their jerseys the stars they have earned. Dynamo petitioned the league to have their East German titles recognized, but received no reply.[14] They eventually took matters into their own hands and emblazoned their jerseys with three stars. This caused considerable debate on the fact that the DFB did not recognize East German championships, only those championships won since the 1963 formation of the Bundesliga. The issue also affected other former East German teams including Dynamo Dresden (8 titles), Vorwärts Berlin (6), SC Wismut Karl Marx Stadt, Carl Zeiss Jena and 1. FC Magdeburg.


The DFB has since updated this practice by broadening recognition to include all national level men's competitions since 1903 (when the first recognized national championship was staged), including those of the former East Germany, as well as all women's competitions since 1974. The DFB governs the use of championship stars and a club must have that governing body's approval before displaying any such badge.


Dynamo has since used the championship star in accordance with DFB graphic standards, displaying a star bearing the number 10 in the current website design.



Coaches







1954–1973




  • East Germany Helmut Petzold 1954–1956 (from Dynamo Dresden)


  • Hungary East Germany Istvan Orczifalvi/Fritz Bachmann 1957–1958


  • East Germany Fritz Bachmann 1959


  • Hungary Janos Gyarmati 1961–62


  • East Germany Fritz Gödicke 1962–1965


  • East Germany Karl Schäffner 1965–66


  • Hungary Bela Volentik 1966–67


  • East Germany Karl Schäffner 1967–1969


  • East Germany Hans Geitel 1969–1971


  • East Germany Günter Schröter 1972–73


  • East Germany Harry Nippert 1974–1977



1977–2003




  • East Germany Jürgen Bogs 1977–1989


  • Germany Helmut Jäschke 1989–90


  • Germany Peter Rohde 1989–1991


  • Germany Jürgen Bogs 1990–1994


  • Germany Helmut Koch 1994–1996


  • Germany Werner Voigt 1996–1998


  • Germany Ingo Rentzsch 1997–98


  • Germany Henry Häusler 1998–99


  • Germany Klaus Goldbach 1999–2000


  • Germany Jürgen Bogs 2000–01


  • Germany Mario Maek 2001–02


  • Germany Dirk Vollmar 2002–03


  • Germany Sven Orbanke 2002–04



2004–




  • Germany Christian Backs 2004–05


  • Germany Bodo Rudwaleit 2004–05


  • Germany Rajko Fijalek 2004–05


  • Germany Jürgen Piepenburg 2005–06


  • Germany Rajko Fijalek 2006–07


  • Germany Nico Thomaschewski, Jörn Lenz 2006–07


  • Germany Ingo Rentzsch 2006–07


  • Germany Nico Thomaschewski, Jörn Lenz 2006–07


  • Turkey Volkan Uluc 2007–2009


  • Germany Christian Backs 2009–2010


  • Germany Heiko Bonan 2010–2011


  • Bosnia and Herzegovina Igor Lazič 2011


  • Turkey Volkan Uluc 2012–2014


  • Germany Thomas Stratos 2014–2016


  • Germany René Rydlewicz 2016–




Notable players


Many BFC players of the 1970s or 1980's played on the GDR's or Germany's national team while others became coaches or Bundesliga players.








  • Germany Christian Backs (1973–1991)


  • Germany Thomas Doll (1986–1990)


  • Germany Lutz Eigendorf † (−1979)


  • Germany Rainer Ernst (1975–1990)


  • Germany Falko Götz (1971–1983)


  • Germany Werner Heine (1955–1966)


  • Germany Hendrik Herzog (1981–1991)


  • East Germany Reinhard Lauck † (1973–1980)


  • Germany Wolf-Rüdiger Netz (1971–1984)


  • Germany Frank Pastor (1984–1989)


  • Germany Burkhard Reich (1986–1991)


  • Germany Hans-Jürgen Riediger (1970–1983)





  • Germany Frank Rohde (1971–1990)


  • Germany René Rydlewicz (1986–1990)


  • Germany Bodo Rudwaleit (1969–1990)


  • Germany Günter Schröter (1954–1963)


  • Germany Bernd Schulz (1980–1989)


  • Germany Frank Terletzki (1966–1986)


  • Germany Andreas Thom (1974–1990)


  • Germany Norbert Trieloff (1972–1987)


  • Germany Rainer Troppa (1976–1989)




Honours


Dynamo Berlin was East Germany's most successful club, capturing ten national titles, and those ten titles came consecutively – a feat no other team in East Germany has matched. After German Reunification, DDR-Oberliga had dissolved and replaced by Bundesliga as the German Democratic Republic (GDR/DDR/East Germany) joined the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG/West Germany) to form the reunited nation of (Germany).



Domestic




  • DDR-Oberliga: 10 (Record)


    •  Gold Winners 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988


    •  Silver Runners-up 1972, 1976, 1989




  • DDR-Liga:

    •  Gold Winners 1967/68



  • FDGB-Pokal:


    • Cup Winner.png Winners 1988, 1989


    • Cup Finalist.png Runners-up 1971, 1979, 1982, 1984, 1985




  • DFV-Supercup:

    • Cup Winner.png Winners 1989




Regional




  • Berlin Cup:

    • Winners 1999, 2011, 2013, 2015, 2017, 2018

    • Runners-up 2000




  • NOFV-Oberliga Nord:
    • Winners 1992, 2001, 2014



  • Verbandsliga Berlin:
    • Winners 2004




Double


DDR-Oberliga and FDGB-Pokal:


  • 1988


Seasons of GDR


























































































































































Year

Division

Level

Position
1967–68

DDR-Oberliga
II

1st
1968–69

DDR-Oberliga
I

10th
1969–70

DDR-Oberliga
I

6th
1970–71

DDR-Oberliga
I

9th
1971–72

DDR-Oberliga
I

2nd
1972–73

DDR-Oberliga
I

6th
1973–74

DDR-Oberliga
I

6th
1974–75

DDR-Oberliga
I

4th
1975–76

DDR-Oberliga
I

2nd
1976–77

DDR-Oberliga
I

4th
1977–78

DDR-Oberliga
I

3rd
1978–79

DDR-Oberliga
I

1st
1979–80

DDR-Oberliga
I

1st
1980–81

DDR-Oberliga
I

1st
1981–82

DDR-Oberliga
I

1st
1982–83

DDR-Oberliga
I

1st
1983–84

DDR-Oberliga
I

1st
1984–85

DDR-Oberliga
I

1st
1985–86

DDR-Oberliga
I

1st
1986–87

DDR-Oberliga
I

1st
1987–88

DDR-Oberliga
I

1st
1988–89

DDR-Oberliga
I

2nd
1989–90

DDR-Oberliga
I

4th
1990–91

NOFV-Oberliga
I

11th


Seasons since end of GDR












































































































































































Year

Division

Level

Position
1991–92

NOFV-Oberliga Nord
III

1st
1992–93

NOFV-Oberliga Nord
III

4th
1993–94

NOFV-Oberliga Nord
III

4th
1994–95

Regionalliga Nordost
III

11th
1995–96

Regionalliga Nordost
III

13th
1996–97

Regionalliga Nordost
III

13th
1997–98

Regionalliga Nordost
III

11th
1998–99

Regionalliga Nordost
III

8th
1999–2000

Regionalliga Nordost
III

17th ↓
2000–01

NOFV-Oberliga Nord
IV

1st
2001–02
NOFV-Oberliga Nord
IV

17th ↓
2002–03

Verbandsliga Berlin
V
3rd
2003–04
Verbandsliga Berlin
V
1st ↑
2004–05
NOFV-Oberliga Nord
IV

6th
2005–06
NOFV-Oberliga Nord
IV

6th
2006–07
NOFV-Oberliga Nord
IV

10th
2007–08
NOFV-Oberliga Nord
IV

5th
2008–09
NOFV-Oberliga Nord
V

2nd
2009–10
NOFV-Oberliga Nord
V

2nd
2010–11
NOFV-Oberliga Nord
V

7th
2011–12
NOFV-Oberliga Nord
V

13th
2012–13
NOFV-Oberliga Nord
V

3rd
2013–14
NOFV-Oberliga Nord
V

1st ↑
2014–15
Regionalliga Nordost
IV

5th
2015–16
Regionalliga Nordost
IV

4th
2016–17
Regionalliga Nordost
IV

15th
2017–18
Regionalliga Nordost
IV

4th


European Cup



















































































































































































































































Season
Competition
Round
Country
Club
Score

1971–72

Cup Winners' Cup
1st round

Wales

Cardiff City
1–1, 1–1, 5–6 (p)


1/8 final

Belgium

K. Beerschot V.A.C.
3–1, 3–1


quarter-final

Sweden

Åtvidabergs FF
2–0, 2–2


semi-final

Soviet Union

Dynamo Moscow
1–1, 1–1, 4–1 (p)
1972–73

UEFA Cup
1st round

France

Angers
1–1, 2–1


2nd round

Bulgaria

Levski Sofia
3–0, 0–2


1/8 final

England

Liverpool
0–0, 1–3
1976–77
UEFA Cup
1st round

Soviet Union

Shakhtar Donetsk
0–3, 1–1
1978–79
UEFA Cup
1st round

Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia

Red Star Belgrade
5–2, 1–4
1979–80

European Cup
1st round

Poland

Ruch Chorzów
4–1, 0–0


1/8 round

Switzerland

Servette
2–1, 2–2


quarter-final

England

Nottingham Forest
1–0, 1–3
1980–81
European Cup
1st round

Cyprus

APOEL
3–0, 1–2


1/8 final

Czech Republic

Baník Ostrava
0–0, 1–1
1981–82
European Cup
1st round

Switzerland

Zürich
2–0, 1–3


1/8 final

England

Aston Villa
1–2, 1–0
1982–83
European Cup
1st round

Germany

Hamburger SV
1–1, 0–2
1983–84
European Cup
1st round

Luxembourg

Jeunesse Esch
4–1, 2–0


1/8 final

Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia

Partizan
2–0, 0–1


quarter-final

Italy

Roma
0–3, 2–1
1984–85
European Cup
1st round

Scotland

Aberdeen
1–2, 2–1, 5–4 (p)


1/8 final

Austria

Austria Wien
3–3, 1–2
1985–86
European Cup
1st round

Austria

Austria Wien
0–2, 1–2
1986–87
European Cup
1st round

Sweden

Örgryte IS
3–2, 4–1


1/8 final

Denmark

Brøndby
1–2, 1–1
1987–88
European Cup
1st round

France

Bordeaux
0–2, 0–2
1988–89
European Cup
1st round

Germany

Werder Bremen
3–0, 0–5
1989–90
Cup Winners' Cup
1st round

Iceland

Valur
2–1, 2–1


1/8 final

France

Monaco
0–0, 1–1


References





  1. ^ Grüne, Hardy (2001). Vereinslexikon. Kassel: AGON Sportverlag .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}
    ISBN 3-89784-147-9



  2. ^ Stephen Evans (12 July 2014). "The secret police with its own football team". BBC News. Retrieved 13 July 2014.


  3. ^ "East Germany's Star Quality in Question". Deutsche Welle. 13 May 2005. Archived from the original on 21 May 2007. Retrieved 18 March 2008.


  4. ^ Weinreich, Jens (24 March 2005). "Büttel an der Pfeife" (in German). Berliner Zeitung. Archived from the original on 28 November 2006. Retrieved 2 February 2007.


  5. ^ http://www.tagesspiegel.de/sport/berliner-pokal-finale-bfc-dynamo-schlaegt-lichtenberg-1-0/8342096.html Der Tagesspiegel (in German).


  6. ^ http://www.diefussballecke.de/liga5_non/index.php Die Fussballecke, retrieved on 12 April 2014 (in German).


  7. ^ http://www.morgenpost.de/sport/berlin-sport/article126875461/BFC-Dynamo-in-kleinen-Schritten-heraus-aus-der-Versenkung.html BFC Dynamo in kleinen Schritten heraus aus der Versenkung. Berliner Morgenpost, retrieved on 12 April 2014 (in German).


  8. ^ http://www.kicker.de/news/fussball/dfbpokal/spielrunde/dfb-pokal/2015-16/1/2841073/spielvorschau_bfc-dynamo-72_fsv-frankfurt-1295.html Kapllani und Dedic schießen cleveren FSV weiter. kicker.de, retrieved on 11 August 2017 (in German).


  9. ^ http://www.fupa.net/berichte/bfc-dynamo-zieht-in-jahn-sportpark-um-137303.html


  10. ^ Koch-Klaucke, Norbert (23 February 2017). "Senat pumpt 170 Mio. in den Sportpark in Prenzlauer Berg". Berliner Kurier (in German). Berlin: Berliner Verlag GmbH. Retrieved 6 August 2017.


  11. ^ To My Kibice, Winter 2014 No.4(46) p.38-39


  12. ^ "BFC Dynamo". LiberoGuide.com. Retrieved 19 January 2015.


  13. ^ http://www.berlinonline.de/berliner-kurier/archiv/.bin/dump.fcgi/2006/0406/sport/0038/index.html (in German)


  14. ^ East Germany's Star Quality in Question | German Soccer | Deutsche Welle | 13.05.2005




External links




  • Official website (in German)

  • The Abseits Guide to German Soccer


  • Facts and Figures (in German)


  • Dynamo Berlin: The soccer club 'owned' by the Stasi via CNN






Coordinates: 52°32′27″N 13°28′34″E / 52.54083°N 13.47611°E / 52.54083; 13.47611









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