FC 08 Homburg

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FC 08 Homburg
FC 08 Homburg crest.svg
Full nameFußball-Club 08 Homburg-Saar e.V.
Founded1908
Ground Waldstadion Homburg
Capacity16,488 [1]
ChairmanHerbert Eder[ citation needed ]
Manager Roland Seitz
League Regionalliga Südwest (IV)
2024–25 Regionalliga Südwest, 8th of 18

Fußball-Club 08 Homburg or simply FC Homburg is a German association football club based in Homburg, Saarland, that competes in the Regionalliga Südwest.

Contents

History

The club was founded on 15 June 1908 as Fussball Club Homburg by a group of seventeen young men at the local Hohenburg pub.

In February 1913 they were renamed Fussballverein Homburg and went on to take the local championship that season. By the mid-1920s the side was playing second-division football, but folded on 27 August 1936. A new multi-sport club known as VfL Homburg was formed 5 March 1937 out of a group of local sides that included Turnverein 1878 Homburg, Schwimmverein Homburg, Kraftsportverein Homburg, Boxclub Homburg, Tennis-Club Homburg, as well as the former membership of the defunct FV. The footballers again took up play in second-tier competition and failed in two attempts (1938, 1941) to win their way through the regional promotion playoff to the first division Gauliga Südwest.

After World War II, Allied occupation authorities dissolved all types of associations in Germany, including football clubs. The club was soon re-constituted as Sportverein Homburg and won a division championship in the Amateurliga Saarland (III) in 1948 before resuming the name FC Homburg in January 1949.

Historical chart of FC Homburg league performance Homburg Performance Chart.png
Historical chart of FC Homburg league performance

The Saarland was occupied by the French who made various efforts to see the state become independent of Germany or join France. In sport this was manifested as separate 1952 Olympic and 1954 World Cup teams for Saarland, the establishment of a short-lived football league for the state, and the German club 1. FC Saarbrücken playing in the French second division.[ citation needed ]Homburg played in the Saarland Ehrenliga from 1949 to 1951 as FC Homburg-Saar.[ citation needed ] By the time of the 1951–52 season the return of German teams to the German Football Association had been negotiated: the Ehrenliga faded away and by 1956 the independent Saarland Fussball Bund had re-joined the DFB.

A second Amateurliga Saarland title in 1957 advanced FC to the 2. Liga-Südwest (II) and in December of that year they adopted the name FC 08 Homburg/Saar. The club was relegated to the Amateurliga in 1960 which had become a fourth-tier circuit by 1963.

In the late 1970s, the team advanced to the quarter-finals of the DFB-Pokal on two occasions, and, on into the early 1980s, moved frequently between third- and fourth-tier play. In the second half of the decade the team was greatly successful. They played their way back to the second division and on into the Bundesliga in 1986. Homburg played two seasons there, were relegated, and returned for one final Bundesliga season in 1989–90 before beginning a gradual descent which would lead them to Oberliga Südwest (IV) where they play today.

The team was able to beat the famous club FC Bayern Munich in Munich 4–2 after extra time in the first round of the 1991–92 DFB-Pokal. [2] They were relegated from the 2. Bundesliga after the 1994–95 season.

In 1988, the DFB prohibited the team from wearing the sponsorship logo of a condom manufacturer on ethical and moral grounds.[ citation needed ] In 1998, they entered into an agreement with 1. FC Saarbrücken to loan players to that team to help improve Homburg's financial situation.[ citation needed ] In 1999, the club became close to bankruptcy, which led to them being denied a license to play in the Regionalliga West/Südwest (III) and demotion to the Oberliga Südwest (IV). The club qualified for the 2006–07 German Cup, exiting in the first round 1–2 to Bundesliga side VfL Bochum . Homburg was finally promoted to Regionalliga West after finishing atop the Oberliga Südwest ahead of FK Pirmasens on a goal differential of plus 2 in the 2009–10 season. Their Regionalliga cameo ended with a 17th place finish and a return to fifth tier play. Homburg won the Oberliga Südwest title and qualified for the Regionalliga Südwest (IV) for 2012–13.

Honours

The club's honours:[ citation needed ]

Recent managers

Recent managers of the club: [3]

ManagerStartFinish
Christian Hock 14 November 201021 April 2011
Flag of Guinea.svg Taifour Diane 22 April 201130 June 2011
Christian Titz 1 July 201110 April 2014
Sebastian Stache7 April 201421 April 2014
Robert Jung22 April 201430 June 2014
Jens Kiefer 1 July 201414 April 2017
Jürgen Luginger 17 April 201730 June 2020
Matthias Mink 1 July 202017 February 2021
Flag of Greece.svg Joti Stamatopoulos18 February 20218 March 2021
Timo Wenzel 9 March 202123 April 2023
Sven Sökler 24 April 202330 June 2023
Danny Schwarz 1 July 20233 December 2024
Roland Seitz 1 January 2025-

Recent seasons

The recent season-by-season performance of the club: [4] [5] [6]

SeasonDivisionTierPosition
1984–85 2. Bundesliga II16th
1985–862. BundesligaII1st ↑
1986–87 1. Bundesliga I16th
1987–881. BundesligaI17th ↓
1988–892. BundesligaII2nd ↑
1989–901. BundesligaI18th ↓
1990–912. BundesligaII4th
1991–922. BundesligaII6th
1992–932. BundesligaII16th
1993–942. BundesligaII10th
1994–952. BundesligaII17th ↓
1999–2000 Oberliga Südwest IV3rd
2000–01Oberliga Südwest4th
2001–02Oberliga Südwest9th
2002–03Oberliga Südwest12th
2003–04Oberliga Südwest4th
2004–05Oberliga Südwest4th
2005–06Oberliga Südwest2nd
2006–07Oberliga Südwest4th
2007–08Oberliga Südwest7th
2008–09Oberliga SüdwestV2nd
2009–10Oberliga Südwest1st ↑
2010–11 Regionalliga West IV17th ↓
2011–12Oberliga SüdwestV1st ↑
2012–13 Regionalliga Südwest IV14th
2013–14Regionalliga Südwest11th
2014–15Regionalliga Südwest6th
2015–16Regionalliga Südwest6th
2016–17Regionalliga Südwest15th ↓
2017–18 Oberliga Rheinland-Pfalz/Saar V1st ↑
2018–19Regionalliga SüdwestIV3rd
2019–20Regionalliga Südwest4th
2020–21Regionalliga Südwest7th
2021–22Regionalliga Südwest6th
2022–23Regionalliga Südwest4th
2023–24Regionalliga SüdwestIV5th
2024–25Regionalliga Südwestongoing

Key

Promoted Relegated

Current squad

As of 15 September 2025 [7]

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

No.Pos.NationPlayer
1 GK Flag of Germany.svg  GER Michael Gelt
3 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Frederik Schumann
4 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Manuel Kober
5 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Steffen Nkansah
6 MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Frederic Baum
7 MF Flag of Kosovo.svg  KOS Armend Qenaj
8 MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Simon Joachims
9 FW Flag of Germany.svg  GER Oliver Kovacic
10 FW Flag of Lebanon.svg  LBN Hilal El-Helwe
11 MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Markus Mendler
13 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Nils Röseler
14 FW Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg  BIH Amar Suljić
17 MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Justin Petermann
No.Pos.NationPlayer
18 MF Flag of Luxembourg.svg  LUX Miguel Gonçalves
21 MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Nicolas Jorg
26 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Tim Steinmetz
28 MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Minos Gouras
29 MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Mart Ristl
30 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Michael Heilig
31 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Tim Littmann
34 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Grischa Walzer
36 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Phillipp Steinhart
37 GK Flag of Germany.svg  GER Lukas Hoffmann
41 FW Flag of Germany.svg  GER Ken Mata
42 GK Flag of Germany.svg  GER Elias Cervenka

Out on loan

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

No.Pos.NationPlayer

References

  1. "STADION". FC 08 Homburg (in German). Archived from the original on 24 January 2022. Retrieved 30 October 2022.
  2. Shock defeats and a record victory FC Bayern Munich website, retrieved 13 November 2008
  3. FC 08 Homburg .:. Trainer von A-Z (in German) weltfussball.de, retrieved 6 July 2012
  4. Das deutsche Fußball-Archiv (in German) Historical German domestic league tables
  5. Fussball.de – Ergebnisse (in German) Tables and results of all German football leagues
  6. 30 Jahre Bundesliga, DFB special edition booklet
  7. "FC 08 Homburg – Aktuelles".