1999–2000 SV Werder Bremen season

During the 1999–2000 season, SV Werder Bremen played in the 1. Bundesliga, the highest tier of the German football league system.

SV Werder Bremen
1999–2000 season
ManagerThomas Schaaf
StadiumWeser-Stadion
Bundesliga9th
DFB-PokalRunners-up
UEFA CupQuarter-finals
Top goalscorerLeague: Marco Bode (13)
All: Marco Bode (18)

Season summary edit

Having barely escaped relegation last season, Bremen rose to 9th in the final table - 6 points off Champions League qualification. The club also qualified for the UEFA Cup again, giving them the chance to improve on that season's run to the quarter-finals. The team also reached the DFB-Pokal final for the second season running, but lost to Bayern Munich.

First team squad edit

Squad at end of season[1]
No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK   GER Frank Rost
3 MF   SUI Raphael Wicky
4 MF   GER Dirk Flock
5 MF   GER Dieter Eilts
6 MF   GER Frank Baumann
7 MF   UKR Yuriy Maksymov
8 DF   GER Bernhard Trares
9 FW   YUG Rade Bogdanović[notes 1]
10 FW   PER Claudio Pizarro
11 DF   POL Jacek Chańko
12 GK   GER Stefan Brasas
13 DF   GER Andree Wiedener
15 DF   GER Dieter Frey
16 GK   GER Pascal Borel
17 MF   GER Marco Bode
No. Pos. Nation Player
18 MF   AUT Andi Herzog
19 DF   UKR Viktor Skrypnyk
22 MF   GER Torsten Frings
23 MF   GER Christoph Dabrowski
25 MF   GER Sören Seidel
26 MF   GER Timo Schultz
27 MF   GER Alexander Nouri
28 MF   NAM Razundara Tjikuzu
29 DF   GER Matthias Plump
32 FW   BRA Ailton
33 DF   GER Mike Barten
35 DF   CAN Paul Stalteri
36 DF   BRA Julio Cesar
38 DF   GER Björn Schierenbeck
39 MF   GER Danny Fütterer

Left club during season edit

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 MF   NED Lodewijk Roembiak (on loan to FC Aarau)
20 FW   GER Dirk Weetendorf (to Eintracht Braunschweig)
No. Pos. Nation Player
24 MF   GER Sven Benken (to Hansa Rostock)
30 DF   POL Paweł Wojtala (to Legia Warsaw)

References edit

  1. ^ "FootballSquads - Werder Bremen - 1999/00". www.footballsquads.co.uk.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Bogdanović was born in Sarajevo, SFR Yugoslavia (now Bosnia and Herzegovina), but represented Yugoslavia internationally.