Fixtures

Germany 3.Liga 04/21 14:30 34 SC Preussen Munster vs SC Freiburg II - View
Germany 3.Liga 04/27 12:00 35 FC Viktoria Köln vs SC Preussen Munster - View
Germany 3.Liga 05/05 11:30 36 SC Preussen Munster vs Saarbrucken - View
Germany 3.Liga 05/12 14:30 37 Verl vs SC Preussen Munster - View
Germany 3.Liga 05/18 11:30 38 SC Preussen Munster vs Unterhaching - View

Results

Germany 3.Liga 04/13 12:00 33 [2] SSV Ulm 1846 v SC Preussen Munster [3] L 2-0
Germany 3.Liga 04/06 12:00 32 [3] SC Preussen Munster v Jahn Regensburg [1] L 1-3
Germany 3.Liga 03/30 13:00 31 [4] SC Preussen Munster v Dynamo Dresden [2] W 1-0
Germany 3.Liga 03/16 13:00 30 [13] 1860 Munich v SC Preussen Munster [4] W 1-2
Germany 3.Liga 03/09 15:30 29 [4] SC Preussen Munster v Hallescher FC [15] W 1-0
Germany 3.Liga 03/02 13:00 28 [8] Erzgebirge Aue v SC Preussen Munster [6] W 2-3
Germany 3.Liga 02/23 18:00 27 [8] SC Preussen Munster v MSV Duisburg [18] W 3-1
Germany 3.Liga 02/17 13:00 26 [18] Vfb Lubeck v SC Preussen Munster [9] W 0-3
Germany 3.Liga 02/13 18:00 20 [6] Borussia Dortmund II v SC Preussen Munster [11] W 2-3
Germany 3.Liga 02/10 13:00 25 [11] SC Preussen Munster v Sandhausen [7] D 1-1
Germany 3.Liga 02/04 15:30 24 [17] Waldhof Mannheim v SC Preussen Munster [12] D 2-2
Germany 3.Liga 01/28 12:30 23 [12] SC Preussen Munster v Rot-Weiss Essen [7] W 2-1

Stats

 TotalHomeAway
Matches played 52 29 23
Wins 27 20 7
Draws 11 5 6
Losses 14 4 10
Goals for 124 87 37
Goals against 76 35 41
Clean sheets 13 9 4
Failed to score 9 2 7

Wikipedia - SC Preußen Münster

SC Preußen Münster (English: Prussia Münster) is a German sports club based in Münster, North Rhine-Westphalia which is mostly recognised for its football section. The football team currently plays in 3. Liga which is the third tier in German football. Preußen Münster also fields teams in tennis, athletics, futsal, handball, fistball, darts and e-sports.

History

The club was founded as FC Preußen on 30 April 1906 and has its roots in a group formed at the Johann-Conrad-Schlaun Grammar School. Historians consider patriotic reasons for naming the club after Prussia. At first the club did not have its own ground and was playing at a parade ground of the army at Loddenheide. General Baron von Bissing gave permission only if the goals would be taken down again after training. On 24 June 1907 the Eagles won their first game against FC Osnabrück with 5–0. After successfully applying for the Western German League system, the team initially competed in the second tier. In 1908 the Eagles were promoted to the first league and in 1914 they won the Westphalian Championship. Between 1916 and 1926 the club played on Münstermannplatz, which was close to the current ground, the Preußenstadion. In 1921 they won the Championship a second time and also took on their current name.

In 1933, Preußen advanced to the Gauliga Westfalen, one of sixteen top-flight leagues established through the re-organization of German football under the Third Reich. They earned only mediocre results there and were relegated twice. Their second demotion in 1941 left them out of first division football until after World War II.

Historical chart of Preußen Münster league performance

The team played three seasons in the Landesliga Westfalen Gr. 2 (II) before returning to the top-flight in the Oberliga West in the 1948–49 season. That arrival was accompanied by some notoriety, as Preußen Münster became the first German football club to build a team by buying players, something previously unheard of in a country committed to the ideal of amateurism. Siegfried Rachuba, Adolf Preissler, Rudolf Schulz, Felix Gerritzen, and Josef Lammers formed a front five dubbed by the press as the "Hundred-Thousand-Mark Line", even though that much money never did change hands. Rachuba is still Münsters most successful first tier striker of all times with 97 goals in 238 games.

The investment paid dividends as the club appeared in the 1951 national final in front of 107,000 spectators at Berlin's Olympic Stadium against 1. FC Kaiserslautern. Preußen striker Gerritzen scored first but the team lost after two goals from Ottmar Walter.

Founding member of the Bundesliga

Their results as a mid-table side in the tough Oberliga West in the ten years prior to the formation of the Bundesliga in 1963 were good enough to earn Preußen Münster the admission as one of the five teams from that league to earn a place in Germany's new sixteen-team professional circuit. The club made only a cameo appearance in the Bundesliga, being relegated after a next-to-last 15th-place finish.

Post Bundesliga play

Preußen Münster played out the 1960s and 1970s as a second division side in the Regionalliga West and 2. Bundesliga Nord. In the 1970s the Preußen made several attempts to return to Bundesliga. Under club president Günter Wellerdieck (from 1970 to 1978) the club took a considerable financial risk to achieve the promotion to first tier. Preußen failed to do so by finishing on 5th place in the 1973–74 season and on 3rd place in the 1977–78 and 1978–79 seasons. After Wellerdieck and other staff of the club's management resigned due to financial difficulties and accusations of tax fraud in 1978, the decline of Preußen Münster continued. They slipped to the Amateur Oberliga Westfalen (III) in the 1981–82 season, and except for a short adventure in the 2. Bundesliga in the 1990 and 1991 seasons, played third tier football in the Regionalliga West/Sudwest (1993–2000) and Regionalliga Nord until 2006. During this period, they captured the German Amateur Championship in 1994 with a 1–0 win over Kickers Offenbach.

In 2006, the club was relegated to the Oberliga Westfalen, now a fourth tier circuit. Management subsequently invested significant financial resources into a high-profile team of experienced second- and third-tier players in pursuit of immediate re-promotion. The attempt ended in failure and the club re-built itself with young players in place of expensive veterans and also put in place a young and relatively unknown coach, Roger Schmidt. The re-worked side finished in first place in the 2007–08 season, and so qualified for the new Regionalliga West which replaced the Oberliga in the league system. They ended the season in fourth place in the Regionalliga in 2008–09, and in sixth in 2009–10. For season 2008–09 the club qualified for the DFB-Pokal the first time since season 1997–98 (where they were defeated by 1.FSV Mainz 05). The opponent was VfL Bochum which competed in Bundesliga at that time. After a penalty shootout Preußen lost 5–6. In the following year the Eagles were defeated in the extra time against another first tier team, Hertha BSC. The match ended 1–3.

111-year anniversary logo used in 2017

They were finally promoted to 3. Liga after finishing as champions of the West Group of the Regionalliga in the 2010–11 season. The manager of that time was Marc Fascher. Preußen were defeated by another Bundesliga team in the German cup, VfL Wolfsburg (1–2). The first season 2011–12 in the third tier of German football after five years ended with a 12th place. In the following seasons the team finished significantly better and even had chances to get promoted again to 2. Bundesliga. In season 2012–13 they almost succeeded and ended in fourth place. In that season the team was also able to defeat the Bundesliga team Werder Bremen in the first round of the DFB-Pokal, 4–2 after extra time. In the second round the club lost against FC Augsburg. In season 2013–14 they ended in sixth place. Again the club managed to win against a team from a higher league in the DFB-Pokal, FC St. Pauli from 2. Bundesliga. In the next round Preußen was defeated again by FC Augsburg.

In the 2014–15 season, the club had a promising start, and was during winter even at the top of the league. Unfortunately the team was not able to keep up the good results and finished 8th. The season 2015–16 also started with good results, but again the team lost ground in the long turn and finished ninth. During the season the club switched managers, from Ralf Loose to Horst Steffen. The following season brought up big changes in the club administration. After changing the coach from Horst Steffen to the former SCP-player Benno Möhlmann several high ranking positions in the club were also manned with new personalities. To serve as chairman Preußen Münster could win over Christoph Strässer, a former politician of the German Bundestag. Among others, the board of directors now contains Walther Seinsch who is well known in German football for his work with then fourth tier club FC Augsburg. Furthermore, with Friedrich Lucas the club's board now has a fans' representative for the first time in the history of Preußen Münster. In April 2017, Malte Metzelder manned the position of director of football. He is also a former player of the Eagles.

In 2017, Preußen Münster celebrated the club's 111th anniversary. In celebration, the club used a special anniversary logo in 2017. The logo contained the text "111 Jahre" (111 years) on top and "1906–2017" on the bottom, along with the club's usual Prussian eagle surrounded by a wreath. The club also gave away 111 litres of free beer to fans at the stadium.

At the end of the 2019-20 season, despite a switch of managers from Sven Hübscher to Sascha Hildmann in the winter break, the club was relegated to Regionalliga West again. Following the relegation Malte Metzelder resigned as director of football and was replaced by former Bundesliga player Peter Niemeyer. In the following three seasons the club rebuild itself. After a third place in season 2020-21 the Eagles came second in the 2021-22 season and were only three goals short of promotion. Finally in the following season they dominated the league and at the end of the season were promoted to return to 3. Liga.

SC Preussen Munster is a professional soccer team based in Munster, Germany. The team was founded in 1906 and has a rich history in German football. They currently compete in the Regionalliga West, which is the fourth tier of the German football league system.

SC Preussen Munster has a loyal fan base and plays their home matches at the Preussenstadion, which has a capacity of over 15,000 spectators. The team's colors are blue and white, and their mascot is a lion named Preu.

Over the years, SC Preussen Munster has had success in various competitions, including winning the Westphalia Cup multiple times. They have also produced talented players who have gone on to play at higher levels of German football.

The team is known for their strong work ethic, disciplined style of play, and passionate supporters. SC Preussen Munster continues to strive for success and aims to climb the ranks of German football to compete at the highest levels.