Bayern Munich Junior Team

Bayern Munich Junior Team
Full name FC Bayern Munich Junior Team
Founded 1902
1995 (Restructured)
Ground FC Bayern Munich Headquarters
Chairman Herbert Hainer
Manager Wolfgang Dremmler
Active departments of
FC Bayern Munich
Football (Men's) Football II (Men's) Football JT (Men's)
Football (Women's) Football (Seniors) Basketball
Handball Chess Bowling
Table tennis Referee

Bayern Munich Junior Team is the youth academy for German football club Bayern Munich. The Junior Team was created in 1902 and restructured in 1995. It has educated many players who have become regulars in the Bundesliga and Germany. The vision for the Junior Team is "to educate young players so that it will be possible for FCB to keep a global position in club football in the next millennium and its mission is "to have the best youth development in club football. Bayern Munich have to test before the school will accept and you can study free until you graduate if you have a talent." Rosters remain unchanged while players train for their position. Bayern Munich Junior Team uses a 4–3–3 formation good system. Bayern Munich has scouts all over the world. Bayern Munich has developed a "Talent Day". In 2003, Bayern Munich started partnering with other football clubs. The penultimate stage for youngsters at Bayern is Bayern Munich II.

History

The Junior Team was created in 1902[1] and restructured in 1995.[2]

In 2006 FC Bayern purchased land near the Allianz Arena with the purpose of building a new youth academy. In 2015 the project, estimated to cost €70 million, was started, after overcoming internal resistance. The main reasons for the project were that the existing facilities were to small and that the club, while very successful at senior level, lacked competitiveness with other German and European clubs at youth level. The new facility is scheduled to open in the 2017–18 season.[3]

Overview

The vision for the Junior Team is "to educate young players so that it will be possible for FCB to keep a global position in club football in the next millennium and its mission is "to have the best youth development in club football."[4]

There are 165 players, 16 instructors and managers, 1 physiotherapist and 1 masseur.[1] Rosters remain unchanged while the kids learn their trade whether it be for goalkeeper, defence, midfield or forward. They are trained for no more than 1 or 2 positions.[5]

Bayern Munich Junior Team uses a 4–3–3 formation system from D Juniors and upwards.[1] Players from overseas are offered accommodation in a youth apartment block with 13 single rooms inside the club grounds on Säbener Straße.[1] The facility arrangement at different to many other high-profile clubs, in that both the first team and the youth teams train at the same location.[2]

Bayern Munich has a residence building for players who are between 15 and 18 and live too far away from the training ground.[6] Up to 14 youth team players can live there.[6] They have an employee in the residence building where in the morning waking up and prepares a breakfast buffet and also takes care of small and large problems of youth players.[6] There are up to eight part-time teachers are available to support the youth players to compensate for the educational gaps.[6] The ground floor of the youth center is also the office of the junior team and a meeting room for the coaches.[6]

Scouting

Bayern Munich has scouts all over the world, though most of the scouting happens within a few hours drive of Munich.[5] Thomas Hitzlsperger, Christian Lell, Andreas Ottl, current first team players Philipp Lahm and Bastian Schweinsteiger and most recent graduates Holger Badstuber, Diego Contento and Thomas Müller are all from either Munich or within a 70 km radius of the city.

As part of the restructuring and to help find players for the Junior Team, Bayern Munich has developed a "Talent Day" where up to 500 boys are scouted. The Talent Days are done over Saturday and Sunday.[7] The format used is 3 twenty-minute 5-a-side matches on reduced-sized football fields.[7] The scouts are looking for how well the participants "cope with the ball" "particular skill", "excellent dribbling" and "good vision".[7] An average of seven children will make it to the Bayern Munich Junior Team during Talent days.[5] Talent Days has drawn "worldwide attention".[7] The event has drawn participants from all over Germany along with participants from Austria, France, Italy, Egypt, Slovenia, Slovakia and Australia.[7][8]

In 2003, Bayern Munich started partnering with other football clubs.[9] The partner clubs are SpVgg Unterhaching, Ingolstadt 04, Kickers Offenbach and Ulm 1846, 1860 Rosenheim, SpVgg Landshut, TSV Milbertshofen and SC Fürstenfeldbruck.[9] SpVgg Unterhaching, Ingolstadt 04, Kickers Offenbach and Ulm 1846 are the elite partners.[9] 1860 Rosenheim and SpVgg Landshut are regional partners.[9] TSV Milbertshofen and SC Fürstenfeldbruck are local partners.[9] Udo Bassemir is responsible for club partnerships.[9] Players they are interested in are not transferred immediately.[9] They allow the player to train at their own club and at Bayern Munich's training fields and the transfer happens at the "right time".[9]

FC Bayern II

Main article: Bayern Munich II

The penultimate stage for youngsters at Bayern is Bayern Munich II, which currently plays in the Regionalliga Bayern.

Youth squad

Under 19

Updated 20 July 2016[10]

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

No. Position Player
2 Turkey DF Resul Türkkalesi
3 Austria DF Marco Friedl
5 Sweden DF Thomas Isherwood
6 Germany MF Niklas Tarnat
7 Germany FW Yousef Emghames
12 Croatia FW Mario Crnicki
15 Kosovo MF Meritan Shabani
16 Germany FW Matthias Stingl
18 Germany GK Enrico Caruso
20 Germany MF Felix Götze
23 Germany GK Daniel Shorunkeh-Sawyerr
25 Germany DF Maxime Awoudja
No. Position Player
00 Bosnia and Herzegovina FW Benjamin Hadzic
00 Germany GK Ron-Thorben Hoffmann
00 Germany FW Elias Kollmann
00 Germany FW Mathis Lange
00 Germany DF Jonathan Meier
00 Turkey FW Okan Memetoglou
00 United States MF Timothy Tillman
00 Germany FW Manuel Wintzheimer
00 Germany MF Maximilian Zaiser
00 Germany FW Maximilian Franzke
00 Germany MF Adrian Fein

Under 17

Updated 20 July 2016[11]

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

No. Position Player
4 Germany DF Alexander Nitzl
5 Germany DF Lars Mai
8 Germany MF Tobias Heiland
14 Cameroon FW Franck Evina
16 Germany MF Marcel Zylla
00 Germany DF Elias Kratzer
00 Serbia FW Aleksandar Kovacevic
00 Brazil FW Oliver Batista-Meier
00 Germany DF Yannick Brugger
00 Togo FW Rainer D'Almeida
00 Germany GK Christian Früchtl
00 Germany DF Tobias Haumer
No. Position Player
00 Bosnia and Herzegovina MF Daniel Jelisic
00 Turkey FW Can Karatas
00 Germany GK Maurice König
00 Germany DF Alexander Lungwitz
00 Togo DF Akbar Mago
00 Albania FW Progon Maloku
00 France FW Tidiane M'Baye
00 Latvia MF Daniels Ontuzans
00 Croatia MF Marin Pudic
00 Germany DF Thomas Rausch
00 Croatia FW Antonio Trogranic
00 Germany GK Michael Wagner

Technical staff

The head of the junior team is Wolfgang Dremmler. The following staff are in charge of the various age groups:

Role Under-19[10] Under-17[11]
Head coach Holger Seitz Tim Walter
Assistant coach Dirk Teschke Tobias Schweinsteiger
Sebastian Dreier
Goalkeeper coach Walter Junghans Uwe Gospodarek
Fitness coach Pascal Wunderlich Quirin Löppert

Noted graduates

Player Year joined club Years played
for 1st team
National team Years Played
for National Team
Franz Beckenbauer 1959 1964 – 1977  Germany 1965 – 1977
Sepp Maier 1959 1962 – 1979  Germany 1966 – 1979
Hans-Georg Schwarzenbeck 1962 1966 – 1981  Germany 1971 – 1978
Klaus Augenthaler 1975 1976 – 1991  Germany 1983 – 1990
Max Eberl 1979 1991 – 1994
Raimond Aumann 1980 1982 – 1994  Germany 1989 – 1990
Markus Babbel 1981 1991 – 2000  Germany 1995 – 2000
Christian Nerlinger 1986 1992 – 1998  Germany 1998 – 1999
Dietmar Hamann 1989 1993 – 1998  Germany 1998 – 2005
Thomas Hitzlsperger 1989  Germany 2004 – 2010
Uwe Gospodarek 1989 1991–1995
Christian Lell 1993[12] 2003–2010
David Jarolím 1995 1997 – 2000  Czech Republic 2005 – 2009
Philipp Lahm 1995[13] 2002 – present  Germany 2004 – 2014
Mats Hummels 1995 2007 – 2009; 2016 – present  Germany 2010 – present
Diego Contento 1995[14] 2010 – 2014
Georg Niedermeier 1995
Andreas Ottl 1996 2005–2011
Philipp Heerwagen 1997
Markus Feulner 1997 2001–2003
Owen Hargreaves 1997 2001–2007  England 2001 – 2008
Mehmet Ekici 1997 2010–2011  Turkey 2010 – present
Bastian Schweinsteiger 1998[15] 2003 – 2015  Germany 2004 – 2016
Piotr Trochowski 1999 2002–2005  Germany 2006 – 2010
Thomas Müller 2000[16] 2008 – present  Germany 2010 – present
Zvjezdan Misimović 2000 2003–2004  Bosnia and Herzegovina 2004 – 2014
Michael Rensing 2000 2003–2010
Holger Badstuber 2002[17] 2009 – present  Germany[18] 2010[18] – present
José Paolo Guerrero 2002 2004–2006  Peru 2005 – present
Thomas Kraft 2004 2008 – 2011
Gianluca Gaudino 2004 2014 – present
Toni Kroos 2006 2007 – 2014  Germany 2010 – present
David Alaba 2008 2010 – present  Austria 2009 – present
Emre Can 2009 2012 – 2013  Germany 2015 – present
Alessandro Schöpf 2009  Austria 2016 – present
Julian Green 2010 2013 – present  United States 2014 – present
Patrick Weihrauch 2010 2012 – 2016

Honours

Youth

Recent seasons

The recent season-by-season performance of the club's under 19 and under 17 sides since 2003–04:[19]

Under 19

Year Division Tier League
Position
National
Championship
2003–04 Bundesliga – South/Southwest I 1st Champions
2004–05 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 6th
2005–06 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 2nd Runners-up
2006–07 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 1st Runners-up
2007–08 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 3rd
2008–09 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 3rd
2009–10 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 9th
2010–11 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 7th
2011–12 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 1st Runners-up
2012–13 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 1st Semi-finals
2013–14 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 6th
2014–15 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 5th
2015–16 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 8th

Under 17

Year Division Tier League
Position
National
Championship
2003–04 Regionalliga – South I 6th
2004–05 Regionalliga – South 5th
2005–06 Regionalliga – South 3rd
2006–07 Regionalliga – South 1st Champions
2007–08 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 6th
2008–09 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 1st Runners-up
2009–10 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 6th
2010–11 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 4th
2011–12 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 4th
2012–13 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 8th
2013–14 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 6th
2014–15 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 5th
2015–16 Bundesliga – South/Southwest 2nd

Heads of the Junior Team

HeadStart dateEnd dateSource
Werner Kern199830 June 2012[2][20]
Hans-Jörg Butt1 July 20127 August 2012[20][21]
Wolfgang Dremmler9 August 2012Present[22]

German championship winning teams

Bayern Munich has won the German under 19 championship three times and the under 17 championship four times. Here are the championship winning teams with goals in the final in brackets:

Under 19

2001:[23][24] FC Bayern Munich – Bayer Leverkusen 3–2
Philipp Heerwagen - Leonhard Haas (1) - Markus Husterer - Peter Endres - Martin Rietzler - Enzo Contento - Paul Thomik - Barbaros Barut - Markus Feulner - Philipp Lahm - Zvjezdan Misimović (1) - Piotr Trochowski (1) - Florian Heller - Yunus Karayün
2002:[25][26] FC Bayern Munich – VfB Stuttgart 4–0
Michael Rensing - Leonhard Haas - Alexander Aischmann - Andreas Ottl - Barbaros Barut - Michael Stegmayer - Christian Lell - Paul Thomik - Bastian Schweinsteiger - Philipp Lahm (1) - Piotr Trochowski (2) - Erdal Kilicaslan (1) - Borut Semler - Serkan Atak - Peter Endres
2004:[27] FC Bayern Munich – VfL Bochum 3–0
Johannes Höcker - Philipp Rehm - Jan Mauersberger - Georg Niedermeier - Michael Stegmayer - Paul Thomik (1) - Andreas Ottl (1) - Rainer Storhas - Timo Heinze - José Luis Ortíz - Fabian Müller - Borut Semler (1) - Sebastian Heidinger - Markus Steinhöfer - Marijan Holjevac

Under 17

1989:[28] FC Bayern Munich – Hertha Zehlendorf 1–1 (5–4 pen)
Andreas Schöttl - Markus Babbel - Daniel Punzelt - Karaula - Dieter Schönberger - Alexander Roth - Schmidt - Christian Nerlinger - Max Eberl - Gehann - Tripp - Bauer - Papachristous
1997: FC Bayern Munich – Werder Bremen 3–0
Matthias Küfner – Marcin Mamzer - Stephan Kling - Stefan Bürgermeier - Simon Kelletshofer – Sebastian Backer - Benjamin Schöckel - Steffen Hofmann - Sebastian Bönig - Zvjezdan Misimović - Daniel JungwirthPatrick Mölzl - Thomas Hitzlsperger - Aykin Aydemir - David Reinisch
2001:[23] FC Bayern Munich – Borussia Dortmund 4–0
Michael Rensing - Markus Grünberger - Andy Balck - Daniel Brode - Christian Lell - Florian Stegmann - Andreas Ottl - Bastian Schweinsteiger (1) - Oguz - Thorsten Schulz - Paul Thomik - Domenico Contento - Erdal Kilicaslan (2) - Serkan Atak (1) - Robert Rakaric
2007:[29] FC Bayern Munich – Borussia Dortmund 1–0
Ferdinand Oswald - Uwe Schlottner - Christoph Herberth - Matthias Haas - Schapfl - Mario Erb - Gianluca Simari - Roberto Soriano - Jonas Hummels - Diego Contento - Mehmet Ekici - Nikola Trkulja - Vincent Bönig - Yannick Kakoko (1) - Elender

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Junior Team 2004-5". Bayern Munich. Archived from the original on 9 November 2006. Retrieved 1 November 2006.
  2. 1 2 3 "THE BOYS of BAYERN: A look at the FC Bayern Munich Junior Team". Retrieved 2006-11-04.
  3. "Neues Nachwuchsleistungszentrum" [New youth academy]. spiegel.de (in German). Der Spiegel. 17 October 2015. Retrieved 17 May 2016.
  4. "THE BOYS of BAYERN: A look at the FC Bayern Munich Junior Team". Retrieved 2006-11-01.
  5. 1 2 3 "THE BOYS of BAYERN: A look at the FC Bayern Munich Junior Team". Retrieved 1 November 2006.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 "Das Jugendhaus" (in German). FC Bayern Munich. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 "Australian lad among crop of hopefuls". Bayern Munch. 19 June 2011. Retrieved 19 June 2011.
  8. "'Total success' with kids from all over the world". Bayern Munich. 4 June 2012. Retrieved 4 June 2012.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "VEREINSPARTNERSCHAFTEN" (in German). FC Bayern Munich. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  10. 1 2 "U19 - Der Kader 2016/17" (in German). Fußball-Club Bayern München e.V. Retrieved 17 July 2016.
  11. 1 2 "U17 - Der Kader 2016/17" (in German). Fußball-Club Bayern München e.V. Retrieved 17 July 2016.
  12. "Defender Lell heads for Hertha Berlin". Bayern Munich. 23 June 2010. Retrieved 23 June 2010.
  13. "Philipp Lahm". Bayern Munich. Retrieved 23 June 2010.
  14. "Diego Contento". Bayern Munich. Archived from the original on 30 May 2010. Retrieved 23 June 2010.
  15. "Bastian Schweinsteiger". Bayern Munich. Retrieved 23 June 2010.
  16. "Thomas Müller". Bayern Munich. Retrieved 23 June 2010.
  17. "Holger Badstuber". Bayern Munich. Retrieved 23 June 2010.
  18. 1 2 "Badstuber earns first senior cap". Bayern Munich. 30 May 2010. Retrieved 23 June 2010.
  19. Fussball.de - Ergebnisse (German) Tables and results of all German football leagues
  20. 1 2 "Club bids official farewell to Butt & Co". FC Bayern Munich. 22 May 2012. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
  21. "Butt to leave FCB youth development post". FC Bayern Munich. 7 August 2012. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
  22. "Dremmler appointed head of FCB youth section". FC Bayern Munich. 9 August 2012. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
  23. 1 2 Deutschlands Fussball in Zahlen - Die Saison 2000-01 (German) publisher: DSFS, published: 2001, page: 287, accessed: 1 December 2008
  24. Meisterschaft 2000/2001 .:. Finale (German) Weltfussball.de, accessed 20 June 2013
  25. Deutschlands Fussball in Zahlen - Die Saison 2001-02 (German) publisher: DSFS, published: 2002, page: 307, accessed: 1 December 2008
  26. Meisterschaft 2001/2002 .:. Finale (German) Weltfussball.de, accessed 20 June 2013
  27. Meisterschaft 2003/2004 .:. Finale (German) Weltfussball.de, accessed 20 June 2013
  28. 50 Jahre Bayerischer Fussball Bund (German) publisher: BFV, published: 1996, page: 130, accessed: 1 December 2008
  29. B-Jugend erneut Vizemeister (German) , accessed: 1 December 2008

External links

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