Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Karlsruher SC

German professional football club


German professional football club

FieldValue
clubnameKarlsruher SC
fullnameKarlsruher Sport-Club
Mühlburg-Phönix e. V.
imageKarlsruher SC Logo 2.svg
upright0.8
nicknameKSC, Eurofighter (since 93–94 season)
current2025–26 Karlsruher SC season
founded
groundBBBank Wildpark
capacity34,302
chairmanHolger Siegmund-Schultze
chrtitlePresident
mgrtitleHead coach
managerChristian Eichner
league
season
position
pattern_la1_karlsruhe2526h
pattern_b1_karlsruhe2526h
pattern_ra1_karlsruhe2526h
pattern_sh1_karlsruhe2526h
pattern_so1_ksc_2526h
leftarm1002e7e
body10000FF
rightarm11053a8
shorts11053a8
socks11053a8
pattern_la2_blue_end
pattern_b2_karlsruhe2526a
pattern_ra2_blue_end
pattern_sh2_karlsruhe2526a
pattern_so2_Macron_blue_logo_upperbar
leftarm2FFFFFF
body2FFFFFF
rightarm2FFFFFF
shorts2FFFFFF
socks2FFFFFF
pattern_la3_karlsruhe2526t
pattern_b3_karlsruhe2526t
pattern_ra3_karlsruhe2526t
pattern_sh3_karlsruhe2526t
pattern_so3_Macron_white_logo_2
leftarm321345d
body321345d
rightarm321345d
shorts321345d
socks321345d
website

Mühlburg-Phönix e. V.

Karlsruher Sport-Club Mühlburg-Phönix e. V., better known as Karlsruher SC, is a German association football club, based in Karlsruhe, Baden-Württemberg that currently plays in the 2. Bundesliga, the second tier of German football. Domestically, the club was crowned German champion in 1909 and won the DFB-Pokal in 1955 and 1956. In Europe, KSC won the UEFA Intertoto Cup in 1996, which remains the club's last major honour.

Formed as Karlsruher Fussball Club Phönix in 1894, the modern form of the club was formed as the result of several mergers in 1952, and its early success granted KSC a spot in the inaugural Bundesliga season in 1963. KSC spent the next few decades as a yo-yo club, frequently being promoted and relegated between the top two divisions, with their best Bundesliga season coming in 1996 when KSC finished 6th in the table. Relegation followed in 1998, and the club has since spent all but two seasons between the second and third tiers. KSC maintains a fierce rivalry with VfB Stuttgart, in which old Badenese-Württembergian animosities are played out.

History

A succession of mergers

The most successful of these ancestral clubs was Karlsruher Fussball Club Phönix, formed on 6 June 1894 by dissatisfied gymnastics club Karlsruher Turngemeinde members. They quickly became a strong regional side, playing in the Südkreis-Liga, and won the national title in 1909, defeating defending champions Viktoria 89 Berlin 4–2 in the championship final that season. In 1912, Phönix merged with KFC Alemannia, established in 1897, to create KFC Phönix (Phönix Alemannia).

Historical chart of Karlsruher SC league performance

A lower-table side through the 1930s, VfB's performance improved considerably in the following decade. As war overtook the country, the Gauliga Baden was sub-divided at various times into a number of more local city-based circuits, and the team was able to earn three second-place finishes in divisional play. The Gauliga Baden collapsed in 1944–45 after playing a significantly reduced schedule in which many teams, including Mühlburg, were unable to compete. After the war the club slipped from top-flight competition until earning promotion to the Oberliga Süd in 1947. They generally competed as a mid-table side here with the exception of a strong performance in 1951 when they narrowly missed an advance to the national championship rounds after earning a third-place result just a single point behind SpVgg Fürth.

The formation of Karlsruher SC

KFC Phoenix and VfB Mühlburg united to form the Karlsruher Sport-Club Mühlburg-Phönix e. V., on 16 October 1952 and the new team earned good results throughout the remainder of the decade. In 1955, they beat Schalke 04 3–2 to win the DFB-Pokal, and repeated the success next year with a 3–1 win over Hamburger SV. That season, they also made an appearance in the national final, where they lost 2–4 to Borussia Dortmund. KSC was Oberliga Süd champion in 1956, 1958 and 1960, as well as runner-up in the DFB-Pokal in 1960, when they lost the final match 2–3 to Borussia Mönchengladbach. Their record earned them admission as one of sixteen founding clubs into Germany's new professional football league, the Bundesliga, when it began play in 1963.

Karlsruhe struggled in the top flight, never managing better than a 13th-place finish over five seasons before finally being demoted to the second-division Regionalliga Süd. Over the next three seasons, the team earned a first-place finish as well as two-second-place finishes there but were unable to advance in the promotion rounds. After the 1974 formation of the 2. Bundesliga, which consisted of two divisions at the time, KSC finished first in the 2. Bundesliga Süd and returned to the top flight for the 1975–76 season but were able to stay up for only two years. They next returned to the first division in 1980, where they spent four seasons before being sent down again. After a two-year absence, they were promoted back to the Bundesliga in 1987 to begin an extended stay.

The Schäfer era

Under the guidance of new coach Winfried Schäfer, KSC's return to the top flight was marked with some success as for the first time, the team managed to work its way out of the bottom half of the league table. In the 1993–94 season, the club had a successful run in the UEFA Cup, going out in the semi-finals on away goals to Austria Salzburg after beating, in turn, PSV, Valencia, Bordeaux and Boavista. Their 7–0 second-round victory over Valencia, a top team in the Spanish La Liga at the time and in historical terms as well, might be considered the high point of the club's history in its centennial year. Edgar "Euro Eddy" Schmitt scored 4 goals and became a club legend. Between 1992 and 1997, the club was ranked in the single digits in six consecutive Bundesliga seasons, and participated in two more UEFA Cups, reaching the third round both in the 1996–97 and 1997–98 seasons, being eliminated from the competition after losing their second-leg matches to Brøndby and Spartak Moscow respectively. In 1995, KSC won the DFB-Hallenpokal, an indoor football tournament that was traditionally held during winter breaks of the Bundesliga seasons. They also played in the final of the DFB-Pokal in 1996 but lost 0–1 to 1. FC Kaiserslautern.

As the millennium drew to a close, Karlsruhe faded. The club started the 1997–98 Bundesliga season well, with two wins and a draw in their opening three matches, but their downfall began with a 1–6 defeat to Bayer Leverkusen on Day 4. At the league winter break the club sat outside the relegation ranks, but a series of negative results pushed them down to 15th place until the second-last matchday of the season. Schäfer was fired in March 1998, but this did not keep the club from slipping to the Second Bundesliga after a 16th-place finish. The club needed an away draw against Hansa Rostock on the final day of the season to avoid relegation but lost the match 2–4 while Borussia Mönchengladbach beat VfL Wolfsburg 2–0 to overtake KSC and finish 15th on goal difference.

After relegation from the Bundesliga in 1998

KSC finished fifth in their first season in the 2. Bundesliga after relegation, only two points behind third-place SSV Ulm 1846 which was promoted to the Bundesliga. However, a last place finish in a terrible 1999–2000 season played under dire financial circumstances dropped them down to the Regionalliga Süd (III). The club rebounded and on the strength of a first-place result in the Regionalliga made a prompt return to second division play. After four seasons of mediocre play that saw KSC narrowly avoid being sent further down, the team turned in a much-improved performance and earned a sixth-place result in 2005–06.

From 2007

KSC secured the 2007 2. Bundesliga title with three games left in the season by way of a 1–0 victory over SpVgg Unterhaching on 29 April, combined with a draw by second-placed Hansa Rostock on 30 April. KSC maintained its dominance over the course of the season, playing 14 matches (nine wins, five draws) before suffering their first loss of the campaign at the hands of Erzgebirge Aue. They became the first team in the history of the single-division 2. Bundesliga to occupy the top spot throughout the whole season.

In their return season to the Bundesliga in 2007–08 they finished 11th, fading in the second half of the year after a strong start that saw them positioned in the qualifying places for European competition. The club continued to perform poorly in the 2008–09 season, ultimately finishing 17th and finding themselves relegated to the 2. Bundesliga once more. The club's two most recent campaigns there ended with 10th and 15th-place finishes. Karlsruhe finished second level as 16th and faced Jahn Regensburg with relegation play-offs. These teams draw with as 1–1 at Regensburg and as 2–2 at Karlsruhe. This meant Karlsruhe's relegation to third tier after 12 years according to away goal rule.

The club successfully bounced back in 2012–13 when it won a championship in the 3. Liga and earned promotion back to the 2. Bundesliga.

2014–15 would see the club come close to a return to the Bundesliga, a third-place finish would see them play a promotion play-off against Hamburg, and after a 1–1 draw in Hamburg in the first leg, KSC were seconds away from promotion, only for Hamburg to score an equaliser in the 90th minute to force extra time, where they would score a winning away goal late in the second half to secure their Bundesliga status for another season.

In 2019, Karlsruhe won 4–1 against Preußen Münster on matchday 31, therefore returning to the 2. Bundesliga after a hiatus of two years.

Reserve team

Main article: Karlsruher SC II

The Karlsruher SC II, historically also referred to as Karlsruher SC Amateure, is a successful side in its own right, playing for many years as high up as the Regionalliga Süd. At the end of the 2011–12 season, the team was forcefully relegated to the Oberliga because of the relegation of the first team to the 3. Liga as reserve teams of 3. Liga clubs are not permitted in the Regionalliga anymore from 2012. The team had suffered a similar fate in 2000, when the first team was relegated to the Regionalliga Süd and the reserve team therefore had to leave this league despite finishing above the relegation ranks.

Between 1991 and 2000, the team also won the North Baden Cup on four occasions, thereby qualifying for the first round of the DFB-Pokal on each occasion. Its greatest success in this competition was reaching the third round in 1996–97.

After many restrained years, in which the targeted promotion was clearly missed, the already greatly reduced second team was discontinued for financial reasons at the end of the 2017–18 Oberliga season. However, KSC reopened its second team as a fans' team for the 2019–20 season and entered the Kreisklasse C, the lowest level of league football in Karlsruhe and North Baden.

In November 2023, Karlsruher SC announced that it would reinstate an under-23 team for the 2024–25 season, following approval by the Baden Football Association. The reinstated reserve team is organised as the highest team within the club's academy structure, providing a transition for young players between youth football and the professional game, and entered the Verbandsliga Baden for the 2024–25 campaign. In its first season after reinstatement, the team won the league title and secured promotion to the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg for the following campaign.

League timeline

ImageSize = width:1500 height:60 PlotArea = left:10 right:10 bottom:30 top:10 TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal format:yyyy DateFormat = dd/mm/yyyy Period = from:01/07/1975 till:01/07/2026 ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:1 start:1976 Colors = id:bl1 value:rgb(0.5,0.8,0.5) id:bl2 value:rgb(0.9,0.9,0.3) id:rs value:rgb(0.8,0.6,0.6)

PlotData= bar:Position width:17 color:white align:center

from:01/07/1975 till:01/07/1976 shift:(0,-4) text:15 from:01/07/1976 till:01/07/1977 shift:(0,-4) text:16 from:01/07/1977 till:01/07/1978 shift:(0,-4) text:7 from:01/07/1978 till:01/07/1979 shift:(0,-4) text:5 from:01/07/1979 till:01/07/1980 shift:(0,-4) text:2 from:01/07/1980 till:01/07/1981 shift:(0,-4) text:10 from:01/07/1981 till:01/07/1982 shift:(0,-4) text:14 from:01/07/1982 till:01/07/1983 shift:(0,-4) text:17 from:01/07/1983 till:01/07/1984 shift:(0,-4) text:1 from:01/07/1984 till:01/07/1985 shift:(0,-4) text:17 from:01/07/1985 till:01/07/1986 shift:(0,-4) text:7 from:01/07/1986 till:01/07/1987 shift:(0,-4) text:2 from:01/07/1987 till:01/07/1988 shift:(0,-4) text:15 from:01/07/1988 till:01/07/1989 shift:(0,-4) text:11 from:01/07/1989 till:01/07/1990 shift:(0,-4) text:10 from:01/07/1990 till:01/07/1991 shift:(0,-4) text:13 from:01/07/1991 till:01/07/1992 shift:(0,-4) text:8 from:01/07/1992 till:01/07/1993 shift:(0,-4) text:6 from:01/07/1993 till:01/07/1994 shift:(0,-4) text:6 from:01/07/1994 till:01/07/1995 shift:(0,-4) text:8 from:01/07/1995 till:01/07/1996 shift:(0,-4) text:7 from:01/07/1996 till:01/07/1997 shift:(0,-4) text:6 from:01/07/1997 till:01/07/1998 shift:(0,-4) text:16 from:01/07/1998 till:01/07/1999 shift:(0,-4) text:5 from:01/07/1999 till:01/07/2000 shift:(0,-4) text:18 from:01/07/2000 till:01/07/2001 shift:(0,-4) text:1 from:01/07/2001 till:01/07/2002 shift:(0,-4) text:13 from:01/07/2002 till:01/07/2003 shift:(0,-4) text:13 from:01/07/2003 till:01/07/2004 shift:(0,-4) text:14 from:01/07/2004 till:01/07/2005 shift:(0,-4) text:11 from:01/07/2005 till:01/07/2006 shift:(0,-4) text:6 from:01/07/2006 till:01/07/2007 shift:(0,-4) text:1 from:01/07/2007 till:01/07/2008 shift:(0,-4) text:11 from:01/07/2008 till:01/07/2009 shift:(0,-4) text:17 from:01/07/2009 till:01/07/2010 shift:(0,-4) text:10 from:01/07/2010 till:01/07/2011 shift:(0,-4) text:15 from:01/07/2011 till:01/07/2012 shift:(0,-4) text:16 from:01/07/2012 till:01/07/2013 shift:(0,-4) text:1 from:01/07/2013 till:01/07/2014 shift:(0,-4) text:5 from:01/07/2014 till:01/07/2015 shift:(0,-4) text:3 from:01/07/2015 till:01/07/2016 shift:(0,-4) text:7 from:01/07/2016 till:01/07/2017 shift:(0,-4) text:18 from:01/07/2017 till:01/07/2018 shift:(0,-4) text:3 from:01/07/2018 till:01/07/2019 shift:(0,-4) text:2 from:01/07/2019 till:01/07/2020 shift:(0,-4) text:15 from:01/07/2020 till:01/07/2021 shift:(0,-4) text:6 from:01/07/2021 till:01/07/2022 shift:(0,-4) text:12 from:01/07/2022 till:01/07/2023 shift:(0,-4) text:7 from:01/07/2023 till:01/07/2024 shift:(0,-4) text:5 from:01/07/2024 till:01/07/2025 shift:(0,-4) text:8 from:01/07/2025 till:01/07/2026 shift:(0,-4) text:

from:01/07/1975 till:01/07/1977 color:bl1 shift:(0,13) text: "1. Bundesliga" from:01/07/1977 till:01/07/1980 color:bl2 shift:(0,13) text: "2. Bundesliga" from:01/07/1980 till:01/07/1983 color:bl1 shift:(0,13) text: "1. Bundesliga" from:01/07/1983 till:01/07/1984 color:bl2 shift:(0,13) text: "2. BL" from:01/07/1984 till:01/07/1985 color:bl1 shift:(0,13) text: "1. BL" from:01/07/1985 till:01/07/1987 color:bl2 shift:(0,13) text: "2. Bundesliga" from:01/07/1987 till:01/07/1998 color:bl1 shift:(0,13) text: "1. Bundesliga" from:01/07/1998 till:01/07/2000 color:bl2 shift:(0,13) text: "2. BL" from:01/07/2000 till:01/07/2001 color:rs shift:(0,13) text: "RLS" from:01/07/2001 till:01/07/2007 color:bl2 shift:(0,13) text: "2. Bundesliga" from:01/07/2007 till:01/07/2009 color:bl1 shift:(0,13) text: "1. BL" from:01/07/2009 till:01/07/2012 color:bl2 shift:(0,13) text: "2. BL" from:01/07/2012 till:01/07/2013 color:rs shift:(0,13) text: "3. L" from:01/07/2013 till:01/07/2017 color:bl2 shift:(0,13) text: "2. Bundesliga" from:01/07/2017 till:01/07/2019 color:rs shift:(0,13) text: "3. L" from:01/07/2019 till:01/07/2026 color:bl2 shift:(0,13) text: "2. BL"

Honours

The club's honours:

League

Cup

International

  • UEFA Intertoto Cup
  • Intertoto Cup
    • Winners: 1988 (group 10), 1992 (group 4)

Reserve team

  • Oberliga Baden-Württemberg
    • Champions: 1989–90, 1995–96, 2004–05
  • Verbandsliga Nordbaden (IV–V)
    • Champions: 1982–83, 1988–89, 1993–94
  • Amateurliga Nordbaden (III)
    • Champions: 1964–65
  • North Baden Cup
    • Winners: 1990–91, 1993–94, 1995–96, 1999–2000
  • All pre-1952 titles listed here were won by Phönix Karlsruhe

Players

Current squad

Out on loan

Reserve team squad

Main article: Karlsruher SC II

Coaching staff

PositionName
Head coachGER Christian Eichner
Assistant head coachBIH Zlatan Bajramović
Assistant coachGER Sirus Motekallemi
Goalkeeper coachGER Markus Miller
Fitness coachGER Florian Böckler
Rehab coachGER Wendelin Wäcker
Team DoctorGER Dr. Marcus Schweizer
PhysiotherapistITA Matteo Poppert
ENG Kevin Benz
Kit manGER Torsten Merkel
GER Cafer Aydogan
LaundryGER Gloria Schorb
Bus DriverGER Thomas Laschuk
GER Andreas Heinrich
Technical DirectorGER Necat Aygün
Youth Chief ScoutGER Sebastian Freis
Team ManagerGER Burkhard Reich
GER Sarah Saliba

Coaching history

Coaches of the club since 1952:

Recent seasons

The recent season-by-season performance of the club:

Karlsruher SC

2025–262. Bundesliga

Karlsruher SC II

2019–20Kreisklasse C1 KarlsruheXI
  • With the introduction of the Regionalligas in 1994 and the 3. Liga in 2008 as the new third tier, below the 2. Bundesliga, all leagues below dropped one tier. In 2012, the number of Regionalligas was increased from three to five with all Regionalliga Süd clubs except the Bavarian ones entering the new Regionalliga Südwest.

;Key

↑ Promoted↓ Relegated

References

References

  1. "Beirat: KSC - MEINE HEIMAT".
  2. "Bundesliga – Die offizielle Seite".
  3. Hamburg, Hamburger Abendblatt-. (26 April 2017). "Was der HSV mit dem rasanten Absturz des KSC zu tun hat".
  4. "LIVE! Preußen Münster – Karlsruher SC, 3. Liga, Saison 2018/19, 37. Spieltag".
  5. [http://www.weltfussball.de/spielplan/dfb-pokal-2014-2015-achtelfinale/0/ DFB-Pokal] {{in lang. de Weltfussball.de. Retrieved 11 January 2015
  6. ka-news. (6 March 2018). "Bittere Entscheidung im Wildpark: KSC meldet zweite Mannschaft ab!". ka-news.de.
  7. (12 June 2019). "KSC II feiert Rückkehr als Fanmannschaft". Karlsruher SC.
  8. (13 November 2023). "Der KSC führt die U23 wieder ein".
  9. (3 June 2025). "U23 macht Aufstieg perfekt!".
  10. "Kader: KSC".
  11. "Karlsruher SC .:. Trainer von A-Z". weltfussball.de.
  12. "Historical German domestic league tables". Das deutsche Fußball-Archiv.
  13. "Tables and results of all German football leagues". Fussball.de.
  14. 30 Jahre Bundesliga (1963–1993), DFB special edition booklet
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Karlsruher SC — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report