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Pages in category "Lists of footballers in Germany by club" The following 26 pages are in this category, out of 26 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Germany portal; Pages in category "People from Landstuhl" The following 14 pages are in this category, out of 14 total. This list may not reflect recent ...
1. FC Kaiserslautern: 2. Bundesliga: 2 Kaiserslautern: Rhineland-Palat. 4 2 0 FC Karbach: Oberliga Rheinland-Pfalz/Saar: 5 Karbach: 0 0 0 Karlsruher FV: Kreisklasse Karlsruhe 9 Karlsruhe: Baden-Württemberg: 1 0 0 Karlsruher SC: 2. Bundesliga: 2 Karlsruhe: 1 2 0 Kickers Emden: Landesliga Weser-Ems: 6 Emden: Lower Saxony: 0 0 0 Kickers Offenbach ...
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. Current Bundesliga players and their current clubs are shown in bold. As of matches played 22 December 2024 [1]
This is a list of clubs in the 2. Bundesliga, including all clubs and their final placings from 1974–75 to 2023–24. The league is the second-highest football league in Germany and the German football league system. It replaced the Regionalligas as the second division in Germany in 1974.
It records all 57 clubs who played in the 61 seasons of the Bundesliga since its introduction in 1963. The placings section is split in two periods, before and after the German reunification, which took place during the league's 1990–91 season, in October 1990. For the following season, clubs from former East Germany joined the league.
This is a list of football clubs in Germany by major honours won. It lists every German football club to have won any of the two major domestic trophies in Germany (or West Germany), three major European competitions or the global competitions FIFA has recognised. East German championships are not counted in these tables.
Lothar Matthäus earned 150 caps for Germany, a team record, and went to nine major international tournaments, captaining the 1990 World Cup-winning team. The Germany national football team played its first international match on 5 April 1908 during the era of the German Empire, losing 5–3 to Switzerland in Basel.