1994–95 Frauen-Bundesliga
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1994–95 Frauen-Bundesliga
The 1994–95 Frauen-Bundesliga was the fifth season of the Frauen-Bundesliga, Germany's premier football league. It was the last season, in which 2 points were awarded for a win. Beginning with the following season the standard 3 points were awarded for wins. In the final the champion of the southern division, FSV Frankfurt, won 2–0 against the champion of the northern division, Grün-Weiß Brauweiler. Frankfurt thus won their second championship. By winning the cup final six weeks later they completed the Double Double, The Double or Dubble may refer to: Mathematics and computing * Multiplication by 2 * Double precision, a floating-point representation of numbers that is typically 64 bits in length * A double number of the form x+yj, where j^2=+1 * A .... Northern conference Standings Results Southern conference Standings Results Semifinals Final Top scorers Qualification Group North Group South 1 Group South 2 References {{DEFAULTSORT:1994-9 ...
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Frauen-Bundesliga
The Frauen-Bundesliga (German language, German for ''Women's Federal League''), currently known as the Google Pixel Frauen-Bundesliga for sponsorship reasons, is the top level of league competition for women's association football in Germany. In the UEFA Women's Champions League, the Frauen-Bundesliga is the most successful league with a total of nine titles from four clubs. In 1990 the German Football Association (DFB) created the German Women's Bundesliga, based on the model of the men's Bundesliga. It was first played with north and south divisions, but in 1997 the groups were merged to form a uniform league. The league currently consists of twelve teams and the seasons usually last from late summer to the end of spring with a break in the winter. Despite the league's competitiveness, it has been semi-professional. VfL Wolfsburg (women), VfL Wolfsburg has won the most championships. Although the league has become more professional, women's-only teams have found it difficult t ...
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VfL Wolfsburg
Verein für Leibesübungen Wolfsburg e. V., commonly known as VfL Wolfsburg (), is a German professional sports club based in Wolfsburg, Lower Saxony. The club grew out of a multi-sports club for Volkswagen workers in the city of Wolfsburg. It is best known for its football department, but other departments include badminton, handball and athletics. The men's professional football team play in the Bundesliga, the top tier of the German football league system. Wolfsburg have won the Bundesliga once in their history, in the 2008–09 season, the DFB-Pokal in 2015 and the DFL-Supercup in 2015. Professional football is run by the spin-off organization ''VfL Wolfsburg-Fußball GmbH'', a wholly owned subsidiary of the Volkswagen Group. Since 2002, Wolfsburg's stadium is the Volkswagen Arena. History Foundation The city of Wolfsburg was established on 1 July 1938 under the name ''Stadt des KdF-Wagens bei Fallersleben'' to accommodate workers for the newly constructed Volkswagen ...
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Gudrun Gottschlich
Gudrun Gottschlich (born 23 May 1970) is a German women's international footballer who plays as a forward. She is a member of the Germany women's national football team. She was part of the team at the 1991 FIFA Women's World Cup. On club level she plays for KBC Duisburg KBC Duisburg is a German sports club based in Kaßlerfeld, a suburb of Duisburg, North Rhine-Westphalia. The club was founded in 1888 and is renowned for its defunct women's football team, which won a German championship in 1984–85. Today the ... in Germany. References 1970 births Living people Frauen-Bundesliga players German women's footballers Germany women's international footballers Place of birth missing (living people) 1991 FIFA Women's World Cup players Women's association football forwards UEFA Women's Championship–winning players West German women's footballers Grün-Weiß Brauweiler players {{Germany-women-footy-bio-stub ...
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Bettina Wiegmann
Bettina Wiegmann (born 7 October 1971) is a German former footballer who played as a midfielder. Wiegmann scored 51 goals in 154 caps for the Germany national team between 1989 and 2003. In 1997, she was selected '' German Female Footballer of the Year''. Career statistics International goals Bettina Wiegmann competed in four FIFA Women's World Cup: China 1991, Sweden 1995, USA 1999 and USA 2003; and two Olympics: 1996 Summer Olympic Games, and 2000 Summer Olympic Games; played 30 matches and scored 14 goals. Along with her Germany teams, Wiegmann is a world champion from USA 2003, runner-up from Sweden 1995; and a bronze medalist at the 2000 Summer Olympic Games. Honours Germany * FIFA Women's World Cup: 2003 * Football at the Summer Olympics: bronze medal 2000 * UEFA Women's Championship: 1991, 1995, 1997, 2001 The year's most prominent event was the September 11 attacks against the United States by al-Qaeda, which Casualties of the September 11 attacks, kil ...
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Sonja Fuss
Sonja Beate Fuss (born 5 November 1978) is a German former football defender. She played for the Chicago Red Stars in the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) and the Germany national team. She has played in the German Frauen-Bundesliga since 1992. In 2011, together with Inka Grings, she played for Swiss side, FC Zürich Frauen. Early life Hartford University Fuss attended the University of Hartford located in West Hartford, Connecticut. Playing career Club Fuss spent most of her career playing for SV Grün-Weiß, which was renamed FFC Brauweiler Pulheim in 2000. In 2004, she transferred to FSV Frankfurt. In February 2005, she signed with FFC Turbine Potsdam. She returned to FFC Brauweiler Pulheim after one season. At the beginning of the season 2006/07, she moved to FCR 2001 Duisburg. In July 2009, Fuss moved to the first FC Köln, the newly formed women's soccer Division 1, for the 2009/10 season. In January 2011, she returned to play for FCR 2001 Duisburg. Her contract ...
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Claudia Klein
Claudia Klein (born 24 September 1971) is a German women's international footballer who plays as a defender. She is a member of the Germany women's national football team. She was part of the team at the 1995 FIFA Women's World Cup. On club level she plays for Grün-Weiß Brauweiler FFC Brauweiler Pulheim 2000 was a German women's football club based in Pulheim, North Rhine-Westphalia. It was founded when the women's section of Grün-Weiß Brauweiler in 2000 established its own club. The team played its last season in the Re ... in Germany. References 1971 births Living people Frauen-Bundesliga players German women's footballers Germany women's international footballers Place of birth missing (living people) 1995 FIFA Women's World Cup players Women's association football defenders UEFA Women's Championship–winning players West German women's footballers Footballers from Cologne (region) Grün-Weiß Brauweiler players {{Germany-women-footy-bio-stu ...
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Manuela Goller
Manuela Goller (born 5 January 1971 in Wipperfürth, North Rhine-Westphalia) is a German former footballer. Early life Manuela Goller was born in Wipperfürth to Franz-Josef Goller, a dairy farmer, and joined the local sports club, TuS Egen, which he runs. Career Manuela Goller played as a goalkeeper for SSG 09 Bergisch Gladbach and Grün-Weiß Brauweiler. In 1997, playing for Brauweiler, she won the last German championship before the introduction of the national Bundesliga, beating FC Rumeln-Kaldenhausen 5–3 in a penalty shoot-out. In 1994 and 1997, she won the Frauen DFB Pokal. She played her first of 45 matches for Germany in 1990 against England. In 1995, she played in the final of the European Championship in 1995, which Germany won 3–2 against Sweden, and in the final of the World Cup in 1995, which Norway Norway, officially the Kingdom of Norway, is a Nordic countries, Nordic country located on the Scandinavian Peninsula in Northern Europe. The remote Arct ...
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Hallstadt
Hallstadt is a town in the Upper Franconian district of Bamberg on the left bank of the Main, 4 km north of Bamberg. Geography Hallstadt borders in the south on the city of Bamberg and in the west on the Main. There are two constituent communities named Hallstadt (population 7,588) and Dörfleins (population 1,380). The town also has these traditional rural land units, known in German as ''Gemarkungen'': Hallstadt and Dörfleins (it is traditional for a ''Gemarkung'' to be named after a town or village lying nearby) History Archaeological digs have shown that there were settlers in the area who farmed the land in the New Stone Age, about 5000 BC. About 670, the later Franconian Saint Kilian was preaching in Hallstadt and almost 50 years later Saint Boniface tried to convert Hallstadt’s Germans. Eventually, sometime between 741 and 747, the town was first named as ''Halazestat im Radensgove'' in a document issued by the Frankish Dukes Karlmann and Pepin the Short, and in ...
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Pulheim
Pulheim (; Ripuarian: ''Pullem'') is a town in the Rhein-Erft-Kreis, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. Since the 1920s, a large substation of the ''Rheinisch-Westfälisches Elektrizitätswerk AG'' ( RWE) is located at Pulheim. It is the end of the North–South Powerline and a large control center for the power grid of the RWE. In the communal reform of 1975, several previously independent municipalities were added to the municipality Pulheim, which received city rights in 1981. Pulheim consists of 12 quarters (''Stadtteile''), including Brauweiler, Geyen and Stommeln. Education The following schools are in Pulheim: *Dietrich-Bonhoeffer Primary School, Pulheim *Catholic Primary School Barbara School, Pulheim *Community Primary School “Am Buschweg”, formerly known as “Am Wäldchen”, Pulheim *Richeza Community Primary School, Pulheim-Brauweiler *Wolfhelm School (primary school), Pulheim-Dansweiler *Community Primary School Sinnersdorf, Pulheim-Sinnersdorf *Community Pr ...
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FSV Schwarzbach
FSV may refer to: * Fidelity Special Values, a British investment trust * File System Visualizer, a file manager for Linux and other Unix-like operating systems * Fort St. Vrain Generating Station The Fort St. Vrain Nuclear Power Plant is a former commercial nuclear power station located near the town of Platteville in northern Colorado in the United States. It originally operated from 1979 until 1989. It had a 330 MWe High-temperature g ..., in Colorado, United States * M1131 fire support vehicle * Fullskip Void, in Realm of the Mad God {{disambiguation ...
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VfL Sindelfingen
VfL Sindelfingen is a German sports club from Sindelfingen, Baden–Württemberg. With more than 9,000 members, the club, which was established in 1862, is one of the largest sporting organizations in Germany. VfL Sindelfingen has departments for various sports including football (soccer), volleyball, basketball, swimming, athletics, table tennis, and badminton. Football Women The women's football section is one of the most successful departments in the club. They played in the Bundesliga, Germany's premier football league for women, from its inception in 1990 till 1997. They were relegated after the 1996–97 season and struggled for some years. When the second Bundesliga was incepted in 2004 Sindelfingen was one of the founding members and even managed promotion to the Bundesliga after the first season. After a year in the Bundesliga they were relegated back to the second league, where they played 2012, when they were again promoted to the premier category. The team's curren ...
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SC Klinge Seckach
SC Klinge Seckach is a German women's football club based in Seckach, Baden-Württemberg. The women's club has played eight seasons in the Bundesliga, but at the end of the 1990s their performance fell off and today Klinge Seckach's first team plays in the fifth-tier Verbandsliga. History The origins of Klinge Seckach lie at SV Schlierstadt. Schlierstadt won the championship of Baden in 1975 and again in 1977. Following the 1977 championship they had even reached the semi-final of the German championship where they lost to FC Oberst Schiel 1902 Niederrad. The club won consecutive championships from 1979 to 1981, but was never able to advance beyond the second round of the national championship. Also in 1981 the DFB-Pokal was held for the first time and Schlierstadt reached the quarter-final of the competition. In 1981 the ladies of Schlierstadt decided to form their own club and on 28 June 1981 SC Klinge Seckach was founded as an independent women's football club. While the cl ...
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