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Position (Pos): GK = Goalkeeper, DF = Defender, MF = Midfielder, FW = Forward; First / Last: year of first / last Bundesliga appearance; Seasons (S): number of Bundesliga seasons in which the player made at least one appearance; Players are sorted by number of appearances, then by year of first appearance.
Neuer is the only goalkeeper in Bundesliga history with more than 100 appearances to have conceded fewer goals than matches played. [31] A former Germany youth international, Neuer made his debut for the senior team in 2009, and was first-choice goalkeeper for the 2010 FIFA World Cup. [33]
This is a list of Bundesliga top scorers season by season. [1] Since 1966, a trophy sponsored by the German football magazine Kicker, shaped in the form of a miniature artillery piece, has been awarded to the top scorer at the end of each season. It is formally named the "Kicker-Torjägerkanone" (literally "kicker goal hunter cannon").
Have played at least one Bundesliga game. Players who were signed by Bundesliga clubs, but only played in lower league, cup and/or European games, or did not play in any competitive games at all, are not included. Players of 2. Bundesliga clubs are also not included. Are considered foreign, i.e., outside Germany determined by the following:
Spent their entire professional career with Bayern Munich. Part of the Bayern Munich hall of fame. Franz Beckenbauer was the captain of Bayern's successful side of the 1970s Oliver Kahn was Bayern's goalkeeper from 1994 to 2008, and captain from 2002 Goalkeeper Sepp Maier made 473 Bundesliga appearances between 1962 and 1980, more than any other Bayern player Lothar Matthäus was a star player ...
In the 1996–97 Bundesliga season, Kahn achieved his first German championship with Bayern Munich, the German League Cup, [21] and was named German Goalkeeper of the Year for the second time in his career (the first in 1994). [2] In 1999, Bayern Munich reached the 1999 Champions League Final, facing Manchester United at Camp Nou.
Roman Weidenfeller (born 6 August 1980) is a German former professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper for Bundesliga clubs 1. FC Kaiserslautern and Borussia Dortmund, as well as the Germany national team. Weidenfeller spent 16 seasons with Dortmund and won both the Bundesliga and DFB-Pokal twice. In 2014, he won the FIFA World Cup with ...
Record number of penalty goals in a single professional league of Europe (26 in 1. Bundesliga); includes three goals in UEFA Champions League (record for a goalkeeper), one in the German League Cup, one in the 2. Bundesliga, one in the 2. Bundesliga play-off, and one in the 3. Liga. [34] [35] Misael Alfaro El Salvador: 1988–2010