Hertha BSC II

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Hertha BSC II
Hertha BSC Logo 2012.svg
Full nameHertha Berliner Sport-Club von 1892 e.V. II
Founded25 July 1892;133 years ago (1892-07-25)
Ground Amateurstadion, Olympiapark, Berlin, Germany
Capacity4,300
ChairmanWerner Gegenbauer
Coach Ante Čović
League Regionalliga Nordost (IV)
2024–25 Regionalliga Nordost, 10th of 18

Hertha BSC II is the reserve team of Hertha BSC that is based in Berlin, Germany. Historically, during the time the senior team played in professional football the team has played as Hertha BSC Amateure. Since 2005 it has played under its current name.

Contents

The team currently plays in the tier four Regionalliga Nordost. The team's greatest achievement is reaching the final of the DFB-Pokal in 1993 – the only reserve team to have achieved this.

History

The team first entered the highest football league in West Berlin, then the tier three Amateurliga Berlin, in 1968 and played at this level for three seasons with a third-place finish as its best result in the first season. After relegation in 1971 Hertha BSC Amateure made a return to the league in 1975 and achieved two runners-up finishes in the league in 1976 and 1977. It took part in the 1975–76 German amateur football championship but was knocked out in the first round by Concordia Hamburg. The team played at Oberliga level for eleven consecutive seasons before being forcibly relegated in 1986 after the senior team dropped out of professional football into what was now the Amateur-Oberliga Berlin. In 1988, after Hertha BSC had returned to the 2. Bundesliga the reserve team returned to the Amateur-Oberliga again, where it played for three more seasons until the league was disbanded in 1991. [1]

With the German reunion league football in West Berlin was incorporated into the new leagues in former East Germany and Hertha BSC Amateure became part of the new NOFV-Oberliga Mitte. This league was disbanded in 1994 and the team qualified for the new Regionalliga Nordost. After two seasons the team dropped back to the Oberliga and now entered the NOFV-Oberliga Nord where it played for three seasons until being promoted back up in 1999. It played for one more season in the Regionalliga Nordost before this league was disbanded in 2000. The team failed to qualify for the enlarged Regionalliga Nord and instead played in the Oberliga again for another three seasons. The team returned to the Regionalliga in 2004, spend one more season in the Oberliga in 2007–08 and then played in the Regionalliga Nord again until the Regionalliga Nordost was reestablished in 2012. [2]

Since 2012 Hertha BSC II has been playing in the Regionalliga Nordost. [3]

The team has played in the German Cup, the DFB-Pokal, on three occasions, in 1976–77, 1992–93 and 2004–05 and is now, like all reserve teams in Germany, banned from the competition. Hertha BSC Amateure in 1992-1993, under coach Jochem Ziegert, became the only reserve side ever to reach the German Cup final when it eliminated SGK Heidelberg, VfB Leipzig, Hannover 96, 1. FC Nürnberg and Chemnitzer FC before losing the final in Berlin 1–0 to Bayer 04 Leverkusen. [4]

Honours

The team's honours

League

Cup

Current squad

As of 19 September 2025 [5]

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 Maximilian Mohwinkel
2 DF Flag of Slovakia.svg  SVK Peter Pekarík
3 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Janne Berner
4 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Denis Koldžić
5 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Mathis Bruns
6 MF Flag of Georgia.svg  GEO Shalva Ogbaidze
7 FW Flag of Germany.svg  GER Joel Richter
8 MF Flag of Estonia.svg  EST Soufian Gouram
9 FW Flag of Germany.svg  GER Timur Kesim
10 MF Flag of Tunisia.svg  TUN Änis Ben-Hatira
11 FW Flag of Germany.svg  GER Karim Bellomo
14 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Colin Wolf
15 MF Flag of Sweden.svg  SWE Bilal Hussein
16 FW Flag of Germany.svg  GER Chima Ishionwu
17 FW Flag of Germany.svg  GER Elijas Aslanidis
No.Pos.NationPlayer
18 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Jaime Sherwood
19 FW Flag of Germany.svg  GER Anthony Traoré
20 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Eliyas Strasner
25 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Peter Matiebel
27 GK Flag of Germany.svg  GER Nash-Daniel Amankona
28 FW Flag of Germany.svg  GER Jelani Ndi
29 MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Dion Ajvazi
30 MF Flag of Italy.svg  ITA Oscar Capoano
31 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Sebastian Weiland
36 FW Flag of Germany.svg  GER Luis Trus
37 FW Flag of the Dominican Republic.svg  DOM Oliver Schmidhauser
38 MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Julius Gottschalk
47 MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Selim Telib
49 FW Flag of Germany.svg  GER Oliver Rölke

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
MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Lukas Michelbrink(at Energie Cottbus until 30 June 2026)

Recent seasons

The recent season-by-season performance of the club: [6] [7]

YearDivisionTierPosition
2000–01 NOFV-Oberliga Nord IV2nd
2001–02NOFV-Oberliga Nord1st
2002–03NOFV-Oberliga Nord2nd
2003–04NOFV-Oberliga Nord1st↑
2004–05 Regionalliga Nord III12th
2005–06Regionalliga Nord7th
2006–07Regionalliga Nord18th↓
2007–08NOFV-Oberliga NordIV1st↑
2008–09Regionalliga Nord12th
2009–10Regionalliga Nord11th
2010–11Regionalliga Nord7th
2011–12Regionalliga Nord14th
2012–13 Regionalliga Nordost 5th
2013–14Regionalliga Nordost12th
2014–15Regionalliga Nordost6th
2015–16Regionalliga Nordost10th
2016–17Regionalliga Nordost9th
2017–18Regionalliga Nordost8th
2018–19Regionalliga Nordost4th
2019–20Regionalliga Nordost5th
2020–21Regionalliga Nordost12th
2021–22Regionalliga Nordost8th
2022–23Regionalliga Nordost9th

Key

Promoted Relegated

References

  1. Historic German football league tables (in German) Das Deutsche Fussball Archiv, accessed: 27 January 2015
  2. NOFV-Oberliga Nord tables and results (in German) Weltfussball.de, accessed: 27 January 2015
  3. Regionalliga Nordost tables and results (in German) Weltfussball.de, accessed: 27 January 2015
  4. 1992–93 DFB-Pokal (in German) Weltfussball.de, accessed: 27 January 2015
  5. "Hertha BSC U23". official website. Hertha BSC . Retrieved 9 October 2025.
  6. Das deutsche Fußball-Archiv (in German) Historical German domestic league tables
  7. Fussball.de – Ergebnisse (in German) Tables and results of all German football leagues