1998–99 Bundesliga


The 1998–99 Bundesliga was the 36th season of the Bundesliga, Germany's premier football league. It began on 14 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999. 1. FC Kaiserslautern were the defending champions.

Competition modus

Every team played two games against each other team, one at home and one away. Teams received three points for a win and one point for a draw. If two or more teams were tied on points, places were determined by goal difference and, if still tied, by goals scored. The team with the most points were crowned champions while the three teams with the fewest points were relegated to 2. Bundesliga.

Team changes to 1997–98

, 1. FC Köln and Arminia Bielefeld were relegated to the 2. Bundesliga after finishing in the last three places. They were replaced by Eintracht Frankfurt, SC Freiburg and 1. FC Nürnberg.

Season overview

While Bayern Munich clearly dominated the league and secured the championship in round 31, the season is well remembered for the struggle against relegation which remained close until the final whistle. In the last round, five teams needed a win to remain in the top flight, with one team having to join Mönchengladbach and Bochum who already had lost their chances. At halftime, Frankfurt looked like the relegated team, but they turned a 0–0 draw into a 5–1 win against Kaiserslautern. Rostock and Stuttgart also won their matches, and the other two teams, Nürnberg and Freiburg, faced each other. Nürnberg lost 1–2 and was eventually overtaken by the other four teams, dropping from position 12 to 16, and had to go down to League Two.
With around twenty minutes to go, league table position #16 changed hands several times:
In a famous post-match interview, Frankfurt's striker Jan Åge Fjørtoft, who had scored the team's decisive goal, praised Frankfurt's manager Jörg Berger claiming that he would have also saved.

Team overview

ClubLocationGroundCapacity
BerlinOlympiastadion76,000
BochumRuhrstadion36,344
BremenWeserstadion36,000
DortmundWestfalenstadion68,600
DuisburgWedaustadion30,128
Frankfurt am MainWaldstadion62,000
FreiburgDreisamstadion22,500
HamburgVolksparkstadion62,000
KaiserslauternFritz-Walter-Stadion38,500
LeverkusenBayArena22,500
MönchengladbachBökelbergstadion34,500
MunichOlympiastadion63,000
MunichOlympiastadion63,000
NurembergFrankenstadion44,700
RostockOstseestadion25,850
GelsenkirchenParkstadion70,000
StuttgartGottlieb-Daimler-Stadion53,700
WolfsburgVfL-Stadion am Elsterweg21,600

League table

Results

Top goalscorers

Champion squad

FC Bayern Munich
Goalkeepers: Oliver Kahn ; Bernd Dreher ; Sven Scheuer.

Defenders: Markus Babbel ; Thomas Linke ; Lothar Matthäus ; Thomas Helmer ; Bixente Lizarazu ; Samuel Kuffour .

Midfielders: Stefan Effenberg ; Hasan Salihamidžić ; Jens Jeremies ; Thorsten Fink ; Mario Basler ; Thomas Strunz ; Michael Tarnat ; Mehmet Scholl ; Nils-Eric Johansson ; David Jarolím .

Forwards: Carsten Jancker ; Alexander Zickler ; Ali Daei ; Giovane Élber ; Alexander Bugera ; Berkant Göktan .

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Manager: Ottmar Hitzfeld.
On the roster but have not played in a league game: none.
Transferred out during the season:''' Alexander Bugera ; Berkant Göktan .