List of FC Bayern Munich records and statistics

This list has details on FC Bayern Munich records and statistics.

Coaches

Until 1963

Information on the club's coaches before the Bundesliga era is hard to come by. The information as given in the following table is from the club's website.

Coach Period Titles
fromuntil
Dr. Willem Hesselink 19021905
Thomas Taylor 19061909
Dr. Mohammed 19091911
Charles Griffiths 19111912
William James Townley 19131921
Izidor Kürschner 19211922
James McPherson 19251926
Leo Weisz 19261928
Kálmán Konrád 19281930
Richard Dombi 19301933 1 Championship
Hans Tauchert 19331934
Ludwig Hofmann 19341935
Dr. Richard Michalke 19361937
Heinz Körner 19371938
Ludwig Goldbrunner 19381943
Konrad Heidkamp 19431945
Alfred Schaffer 1945
Richard Högg 1946
Josef Pöttinger 19461947
Franz Dietl 19471948
Alv Riemke 19481950
David Davison 1950
Konrad Heidkamp
Herbert Moll
1951
Dr. Max Schäfer 19511953
Georg Bayerer 19531954
Georg Knöpfle 1954
Jakob Streitle 1955
Willibald Hahn 19561957 1 Cup
Herbert Moll 19571958
Adolf Patek 19581961
Helmut Schneider 19611963
Herbert Erhardt 1963

Since 1963

In contrast to the pre-Bundesliga era, a list of coaches since the inception of the national league (Bundesliga) in 1963 is readily available on the club's website.[1] Felix Magath (in 2005), Ottmar Hitzfeld (in 2008), Louis van Gaal (in 2010), and Jupp Heynckes (in 2013 and 2018) were awarded the title of Germany's Football Manager of the Year for their work at Bayern. In 2001 Hitzfeld was awarded UEFA Coach of the Year and the IFFHS World's Best Club Coach titles. Also in 2013 Heynckes was awarded FIFA World Coach of the Year and the IFFHS World's Best Club Coach titles.

No. Coach Period League Record Major
Titles
Domestic European Worldwide
fromuntildaysPWDLGFGA BLDPLPSC CLELSC WCICCCWC
1 Zlatko Čajkovski 1 July 196330 June 19681,826 102521832211170 3 21
2 Branko Zebec 1 July 196813 March 1970620 5832141211756 2 11
3 Udo Lattek 14 March 19702 January 19751,755 1631023328424202 5 311
4 Dettmar Cramer 16 January 197530 November 19771,049 101402734205180 3 21
5 Gyula Lorant 2 December 197728 February 1979453 381610127257
6 Pal Csernai 1 March 197916 May 19831,537 147873129346173 3 21
7 Reinhard Saftig (caretaker) 17 May 198330 June 198344 311177
8 Udo Lattek 1 July 198330 June 19871,460 136823519313141 5 32
9 Jupp Heynckes 1 July 19878 October 19911,560 148824026303157 4 22
10 Søren Lerby 9 October 199110 March 1992153 154562323
11 Erich Ribbeck 11 March 199227 December 1993656 6531201413789
12 Franz Beckenbauer 28 December 199330 June 1994184 149232614 1 1
13 Giovanni Trapattoni 1 July 199430 June 1995364 34151364325
14 Otto Rehhagel 1 July 199527 April 1996301 3018485837
15 Franz Beckenbauer (caretaker) 29 April 199615 May 199616 310267 1 1
16 Klaus Augenthaler (caretaker) 16 May 199630 June 199645 101022 1
17 Giovanni Trapattoni 1 July 199630 June 1998729 682920913781 3 111
18 Ottmar Hitzfeld 1 July 199830 June 20042,191 2041284135425181 11 42311
19 Felix Magath 1 July 200431 January 2007944 8756181317487 5 221
20 Ottmar Hitzfeld 1 February 200730 June 2008515 49301279139 3 111
21 Jürgen Klinsmann 1 July 200827 April 2009300 2916675937
22 Jupp Heynckes (caretaker) 28 April 200930 June 200963 5410125
23 Louis van Gaal 1 July 20099 April 2011647 6335171113366 3 111
24 Andries Jonker (caretaker) 10 April 201130 June 201181 5410205
25 Jupp Heynckes 1 July 201130 June 2013730 68528817540 4 1111
26 Pep Guardiola[2][3] 1 July 201330 June 20161,095 1028211925458 7 3211
27 Carlo Ancelotti 1 July 201628 September 2017454 40298310327 3 12
28 Willy Sagnol (caretaker) 28 September 20178 October 201710 101022
29 Jupp Heynckes 9 October 201730 June 2018264 2723137621 1 1
30 Niko Kovač 1 July 20183 November 2019490 44299611348 3 111
31 Hans-Dieter Flick 4 November 2019Present462 36331211626 5 11111

Presidents

Former player, general manager, and president Uli Hoeneß
Former player, manager, and president Franz Beckenbauer

At the club's founding Franz John was appointed as the first president. The current president, Herbert Hainer, is Bayern's 38th president with several presidents having multiple spells in office (counted separately.)[4]

Era President
1900–1903 Franz John
1903–1906 Dr. Willem Hesselink
1906–1907 Dr. Angelo Knorr
1907–1908 Dr. Kurt Müller
1908–1909 Dr. Angelo Knorr
1909–1910 Otto Wagner
1910–1913 Dr. Angelo Knorr
1913–1914 Kurt Landauer
1914–1915 Fred Dunn
1915 Hans Tusch
1915 Fritz Meier
1916 Hans Bermühler
1916–1919 Fritz Meier
1919–1921 Kurt Landauer
1921–1922 Fred Dunn
1922–1933 Kurt Landauer
1933–1934 Siegfried Hermann
1934–1935 Dr. Karl-Heinz Oettinger
1935–1937 Dr. Richard Amesmeier
1937–1938 Franz Nußhardt
1938–1943 Dr. Franz Kellner
1943–1945 Josef Sauter
1945 Franz Xaver Heilmannseder
1945 Josef Bayer
1945–1947 Siegfried Hermann
1947–1951 Kurt Landauer
1951–1953 Julius Scheuring
1953–1955 Adolf Fischer
Karli Wild
Hugo Theisinger
1955–1958 Alfred Reitlinger
1958–1962 Roland Endler
1962–1979 Wilhelm Neudecker
1979–1985 Willi O. Hoffmann
1985–1994 Prof. Dr. Fritz Scherer
1994–2009 Franz Beckenbauer
2009–2014 Uli Hoeneß
2014–2016 Karl Hopfner
2016–2019 Uli Hoeneß
2019– Herbert Hainer

Honorary presidents

The club has six honorary presidents, Franz John, Siegfried Herrmann, Kurt Landauer, Wilhelm Neudecker, Franz Beckenbauer, and Uli Hoeneß, the only living ones being Beckenbauer and Hoeneß. Bayern has also designated honorary vice presidents: Hans Schiefele, Karl Pfab, Bernd Rauch, and Fritz Scherer.[5]

Honours

Bayern has won 77 major trophies: 64 national titles and 13 international titles.

Official

Unofficial

  • Fuji-Cup (1986–1996; The competition competed with the DFB-Supercup, although ultimately the two competitions were replaced by the DFB-Ligapokal in 1997. Nowadays there is a similar competition named Telekom Cup.)
    • Champions: 1986, 1987, 1988, 1994, 1995
    • Runners-up: 1993, 1996
    • Third-place: 1989, 1990, 1991*
  • Telekom Cup (formerly known as T-Home Cup and LIGA total! Cup; since 2009)

International titles

Bayern is one of only five clubs to have won all three major European competitions. Bayern are also one of three clubs to have won the European Cup three times in a row, entitling them to wear a multiple-winner badge during Champions League matches.

Regional competitions

International friendly competitions

Honours and awards

FC Bayern Munich II

FC Bayern Munich junior team

  • Under 19 Bundesliga
    • Winners: 2001, 2002, 2004
    • Runners-up: 1998, 2006, 2007, 2012, 2017
  • Under 17 Bundesliga
    • Winners: 1989, 1997, 2001, 2007, 2017
    • Runners-up: 2000, 2009
  • South/Southwest German Under 19 championship
    • Winners: 2004, 2007, 2012, 2013
  • South/Southwest German Under 17 championship
    • Winners: 2009
  • Southern German Under 19 championship
    • Winners: 1950, 1954
  • Southern German Under 15 championship
    • Winners: 1982, 1985, 1987, 1990, 1991
  • Bavarian Under 19 championship
    • Winners: 1950, 1954, 1966, 1972, 1973, 1981, 1985, 1987, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1995, 1996
    • Runners-up: 1946, 1960, 1964, 1980, 1999
  • Bavarian Under 17 championship
    • Winners: 1976, 1978, 1983, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1993, 1994, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2010, 2014
    • Runners-up: 1982, 1987, 1990, 1992, 1996, 2012, 2015
  • Bavarian Under 15 championship
    • Winners: 1975, 1978, 1982, 1985, 1987, 1990, 1991, 1994, 1995, 2007, 2009
    • Runners-up: 1976, 1977, 1988, 1992, 2008
  • Reserve team

Honours for players

Honour Player Year(s)
Goalkeeper of the Century (4th)
Title awarded only once
Sepp Maier
Ballon d'Or
Title awarded from 1956-2009 and since 2016
Gerd Müller 1970
Franz Beckenbauer 1972, 1976
Karl-Heinz Rummenigge 1980, 1981
Ballon d'Or (2nd)
Title awarded from 1956-2009 and since 2016
Gerd Müller 1972
Franz Beckenbauer 1974, 1975
Karl-Heinz Rummenigge 1979
Paul Breitner 1981
Jürgen Klinsmann 1995
Ballon d'Or (3rd)
Title awarded from 1956-2009 and since 2016
Franz Beckenbauer 1966
Gerd Müller 1969, 1973
Oliver Kahn 2001, 2002
The Best FIFA Men's Player
Title awarded since 2016
Robert Lewandowski 2020
FIFA World Player of the year (2nd)
Title awarded since 1991, stopped in 2009
Oliver Kahn 2002
FIFA World Player of the year (3rd)
Title awarded since 1991, stopped in 2009
Jürgen Klinsmann 1995
FIFA Ballon d'Or (3rd)
Title awarded from 2010–2015, after Ballon d'Or and FIFA World Player of the Year awards were merged
Franck Ribéry 2013
Manuel Neuer 2014
UEFA Footballer of the Year
Title awarded since 1998, stopped in 2010
Stefan Effenberg 2001
Best European Goalkeeper
Title awarded since 1998, stopped in 2010
Oliver Kahn 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002
UEFA Best Player in Europe/UEFA Men's Player of the Year
Title awarded since 2011
Franck Ribéry 2013
Robert Lewandowski[7] 2020
UEFA Champions League Best Goalkeeper
Title awarded since 2017
Manuel Neuer[8] 2020
UEFA Champions League Best Defender
Title awarded since 2017
Joshua Kimmich[9] 2020
UEFA Champions League Best Forward
Title awarded since 2017
Robert Lewandowski[10] 2020
Onze d'Or
Title awarded since 1976
Karl-Heinz Rummenigge 1980, 1981
Bravo Award
Title awarded since 1978
Owen Hargreaves 2001
Thomas Müller 2010
Golden Boy
Title awarded since 2003
Renato Sanches 2016
FIFA World Cup Golden Ball
Title awarded since 1982
Oliver Kahn 2002
IFFHS World's Best Goalkeeper
Title awarded since 1987
Jean-Marie Pfaff 1987
Oliver Kahn 1999, 2001, 2002
Manuel Neuer 2013, 2014, 2015,[11] 2016, 2020[12]
Footballer of the Year (Germany)
Title awarded since 1960
Franz Beckenbauer 1966, 1968, 1974, 1976
Gerd Müller 1967, 1969
Sepp Maier 1975, 1977, 1978
Karl-Heinz Rummenigge 1980
Paul Breitner 1981
Lothar Matthäus 1999
Oliver Kahn 2000, 2001
Michael Ballack 2003, 2005
Franck Ribéry 2008
Arjen Robben 2010
Bastian Schweinsteiger[13] 2013
Manuel Neuer[14] 2014
Jérôme Boateng[15] 2016
Philipp Lahm[16] 2017
Robert Lewandowski[17] 2020
Austrian Footballer of the Year
Title awarded since 1984
David Alaba 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016
Austrian Sports Personality of the Year
Title awarded since 1949
David Alaba 2013, 2014
Canadian Men's Player of the Year
Title awarded since 1993
Alphonso Davies[18] 2020
Croatian Footballer of the Year
Title awarded since 1991
Ivica Olić 2009, 2010
Mario Mandžukić 2012, 2013
Croatian Sportsman of the Year
Title awarded since 1952
Mario Mandžukić 2013
Dutch Sportsman of the year
Title awarded since 1951
Arjen Robben 2014
France Footballer of the Year
Title awarded since 1965
Franck Ribéry 2008, 2013
England Player of the Year
Title awarded since 2003
Owen Hargreaves 2006
Danish Football Player of the Year
Title awarded since 1963
Brian Laudrup 1992
Swedish footballer of the Year
Title awarded since 1946
Patrik Andersson 2001
Polish Footballer of the Year
Title awarded since 1973
Robert Lewandowski 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019
Polish Sportspersonality of the Year
Title awarded since 1926
Robert Lewandowski 2015
Paraguayan Footballer of the Year
Title awarded since 1997
Roque Santa Cruz 1999
Asian Footballer of the Year
Title awarded since 1988
Ali Daei 1999
Ghanaian Footballer of the Year
Samuel Kuffour 1998, 1999, 2001
BBC African Footballer of the Year
Title awarded since 1991
Samuel Kuffour 2001
Top Scorers
European Golden Shoe winners (Top Scorer in Europe)
Player Year(s) (Goals)
Gerd Müller 1970 (38), 1972 (40)
UEFA Champions League top scorers
Player Year(s) (Goals)
Gerd Müller 1973 (12), 1974, 1975, 1977
Karl-Heinz Rummenigge 1981
Dieter Hoeneß 1982
Robert Lewandowski 2020 (15)
UEFA Cup top scorers
Player Year(s) (Goals)
Dieter Hoeneß 1980
Jürgen Klinsmann 1996 (15)
Luca Toni 2008 (10)
Bundesliga top scorers
Player Year(s) (Goals)
Gerd Müller 1967 (28), 1969 (30), 1970 (38), 1972 (40), 1973 (36), 1974 (30), 1978 (24)
Karl-Heinz Rummenigge 1980 (26), 1981 (29), 1984 (26)
Roland Wohlfarth 1989 (17), 1991 (21)
Giovane Élber 2003 (21)
Luca Toni 2008 (24)
Mario Gómez 2011 (28)
Robert Lewandowski 2016 (30), 2018 (29), 2019 (22), 2020 (34)
Notes 1967: jointly w/ Lothar Emmerich (Borussia Dortmund)
1974: jointly w/ Jupp Heynckes (Borussia Mönchengladbach)
1977: jointly w/ Dieter Müller (1. FC Köln)
1989: jointly w/ Thomas Allofs (1. FC Köln)
2003: jointly w/ Thomas Christiansen (VfL Bochum)

The scores by Müller of 1970, 72 and 73 are still an unmatched record.

World Cup Top scorer
Player Year(s) (goals)
Gerd Müller 1970 (10)
Miroslav Klose 2006
Thomas Müller 2010
All-time Top World Cup goalscorers
Player Year(s) (Goals)
Miroslav Klose 16 goals (2002–2006–2010–2014) (competition record)
Gerd Müller 14 goals (1970–1974)
Thomas Müller 10 goals (2010–2014–2018)

World Cup winning players

The following World Cup winning players, played at Bayern Munich at some point during their career. Highlighted Players played for Bayern Munich while winning the World Cup.

* Franz Beckenbauer won the World Cup 1974 as player and 1990 as coach. He was also player and later coach for Bayern Munich.
** Jupp Heynckes won the World Cup as player and later became coach of Bayern Munich.

Records

All-time

  • Most Bundesliga titles won: 29
  • Most consecutive Bundesliga titles won: 8 (2013 to 2020)
  • Most Bundesliga games won (1120) and points achieved (3769)
  • Most match-days at the first place of the Bundesliga table (798)
  • Most average points per game in the Bundesliga: 2.01
  • Most Bundesliga goals scored: 4133
  • Most consecutive wins in the Bundesliga (matchday 9 to 27 of 2013–14 season): 19
  • Highest number of consecutive games unbeaten in the Bundesliga: 53 (matchday 10 of 2012–13 season to matchday 28 of 2013–14 season)
  • Most games won in a club's first Bundesliga season (1965–66): 20
  • Earliest point of time in a year for a team to be crowned champions: (25 March of 2013–14 season)
  • Highest number of games left when becoming champions: 7 (2013–14 season)
  • Biggest lead over second-place finisher (2012–13): 25 points
  • Championship with fewest points under the 3-point rule (2000–01): 63
  • Championship with the most losses in a season (2000–01): 9
  • Record Bundesliga victory: 11–1 v. Borussia Dortmund (27 November 1971)
  • Record Bundesliga defeat: 0–7 v. Schalke 04 (9 October 1976)

Per season

Per match

  • As an infamous record, Bayern's match in Dortmund in the 2000–01 season was the most "unfair" match in Bundesliga history with 15 cards shown (10 yellow, 1 yellow-red, 2 red),[19] of those 12 (8, 1, 1) were shown to Bayern players which is also a record in Bundesliga history.

Other national records

Managerial

  • Longest-serving manager by time: Udo Lattek, from 14 March 1970 to 2 January 1975 and 1 July 1983 to 30 June 1987 (8 years, 295 days)[20]
  • Longest-serving manager by matches: Udo Lattek managed the club for 420 matches over a period of eight years and nine months, from 14 March 1970 to 2 January 1975 and 1 July 1983 to 30 June 1987 (8 years, 295 days)[21]

International record

  • Fastest goal in UEFA Champions League history: After 10.12 seconds by Roy Makaay against Real Madrid on 7 March 2007.
  • Managed to score at least two goals in each match of the UEFA Champions League group stage on two occasions: 2010–11 group stage (after beating Basel 3–0 in the final game), and 2019–20 group stage (after beating Tottenham Hotspur 3–1 in the final game).
  • Only German club to win all six games in a group stage of the UEFA Champions League: 2019–20.
  • Largest aggregate win in the UEFA Champions League knockout phase: 12–1 against Sporting CP (5–0 first leg, 7–1 second leg) in 2008–09.
  • Largest margin of victory in a single match in the current UEFA Champions League knockout phase format: 7–0 (second leg) against Basel in 2011–12.
  • Largest margin of victory in a quarter-final tie in the UEFA Champions League era: 6–0 against 1. FC Kaiserslautern (2–0 first leg, 4–0 second leg) in 1998–99, and 8–2 (single leg) against Barcelona in 2019–20.
  • Largest margin of victory in a semi-final tie in the UEFA Champions League era: 7–0 (4–0 first leg, 3–0 second leg) against Barcelona in 2012–13.
  • Largest margin of victory in a UEFA Champions League final: 4–0 (replay) against Atlético Madrid in 1974.
  • Most consecutive wins in the UEFA Champions League: 15 (18 September 2019 – 25 November 2020).
  • Most consecutive home wins in the UEFA Champions League: 16 (17 September 2014 – 15 February 2017).
  • Most consecutive away wins in the UEFA Champions League: 7 (19 February 2013 – 19 February 2014).
  • Bayern Munich's biggest win in a friendly is 23–0 against FC Rottach Egern on 8 August 2019.[22] Exactly a year before, on 8 August 2018, Bayern Munich beat FC Rottach Egern with a score of 20–2, the club's previous biggest friendly win.[23]

Appearances

Since 1945 (Entrance to Oberliga Süd)[24][25][26]

# Name Years League Cup Europe Other Total
1 Sepp Maier1962–1980537637921700
2 Oliver Kahn1994–20084295713016632
3 Gerd Müller1964–1979453627416605
4 Franz Beckenbauer1964–1977427617123582
5 Thomas Müller2008–present3715812314566
6 Hans-Georg Schwarzenbeck1966–1981416577011554
7 Klaus Augenthaler1976–199140450892545
8 Philipp Lahm2002–20173325411714517
9 Bernd Dürnberger1972–198537543789505
10 Bastian Schweinsteiger2002–2015342471038500

Goalscorers

Since 1945 (Entrance to Oberliga Süd)[29][30][31]

# Name Years League Cup Europe Other Total
1 Gerd Müller1964–19793987865
[33][34]
22563
2 Robert Lewandowski2014–present18629546275
3 Karl-Heinz Rummenigge1974–198416225300217
4 Rainer Ohlhauser[35]1961–19701861658215
5 Thomas Müller2008–present12833474212
6 Roland Wohlfarth1984–199311918180155
7 Dieter Hoeneß1979–198710217260145
8 Arjen Robben2009–20199916263144
9 Giovane Élber1997–20039216238139
10 Dieter Brenninger[36]1962–1971111777132

Assists

Other club statistics

Fiscal year Revenues in Mio. €[I] Earnings in Mio. €[I] Members[II] Fanclubs Fanclub members
1992–93 033.3 02.5 024,285 0720 ?
1993–94 038.0 00.1 033,000 0850 ?
1994–95 063.4 04.9 044,311 1,100 ?
1995–96 075.3 03.1 059,339 1,348 063,747
1996–97 084.5 07.7 071,757 1,532 078,958
1997–98 100.5 08.1 077,075 1,617 088,893
1998–99 127.7 12.3 081,957 1,761 098,728
1999–2000 144.7 08.7 084,717 1,845 107,112
2000–01 173.2 16.5 091,288 1,909 115,343
2001–02 176.0 09.8 095,195 1,980 121,348
2002–03 162.7 00.4 096,440 2,055 132,308
2003–04 166.3 3.4 097,810 2,123 136,563
2004–05 189.5 06.6 104,720 2,189 146,009
2005–06 204.7 04.8 121,119 2,290 156,673
2006–07 225.8 18.9 135,752 2,329 164,580
2007–08 286.8 02.1 147,072 2,437 176,976
2008–09[39][40] 268.7 02.5 151,227 2,535 181,688
2009–10[41] 312.0 02.9 162,187 2,764 190,745
2010–11[42] 290.9 01.3 171,345 2,952 204,235
2011–12 332.2 11.1 187,865 3,202 231,197
2012–13[43] 393.9 14.0 223,985 3,576 262,077
2013–14[44] 480.0 16.4 233,427 3,749 283,558
2014–15[45] 485.6 15.1 251,315 3,968 306,770
2015–16[46] 587.7 20.6 284,041 4,157 325,415
2016–17[47] 603.0 33.2 290,000 4,209 330,557
2017–18[48][49] 657.4 29.5 291,000 4,327 340,474
2018–19[50][51] 750.4 52.5 293,000 4,548 364,195
2019–20[52] 698.0 9.8

Source:[53]

Notes

^I : The represent are the AG's earnings and revenues. ^II : The number represents the club's members.

References

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