Bundesliga 2000 Der Fussball Manager 15

[Ps1] Introduction du jeu 'The F.A. Premier League Football. ' de l'editeur Electronic Arts (1999) - Duration.

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Bundesliga Manager Professional

DOS - 1991

Also available on: Amiga - Atari ST

4.09 / 5 - 33 votes

Description of Bundesliga Manager Professional

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The Manager is an excellent soccer simulation game that is unfortunately much less popular than Championship Manager, current champion of the genre.

While Bundesliga Manager, the game’s German league equivalent, sells very well in Europe and is being continually updated, this England league counterpart was discontinued years ago. That the game’s relative anonymity is undeserved is obvious from the first few minutes you spend with the game.

For starter, it includes accurate statistics for the players and clubs in the 1992/1993 Premier League season in England. As manager of a Division 3 club, your job is to lead the team up through the ladder, finishing up hopefully as the Premier League champion. The range of control is comprehensive: you decide on the tactics to use for each match, as well as managerial tasks such as negotiation contracts with star players and sponsors, and investing in stadium expansions.

One of the neat details that make the game memorable for me is how the game represents each match. Although the game’s emphasis is definitely on coaching and managing the team, it doesn’t present match results in static screens as you would expect. Instead, you will see animations of players on the screen, with each important event (such as scoring, of course) depicted very fluidly. You can turn these graphical extras off if you want, but to me they really enliven the gameplay and are even exciting to watch. The only other game I can recall from the same period that animates matches like this is On The Ball, but The Manager is a couple of years older.

With accurate statistics, excellent game engine, a solid gameplay, and plenty of nice little touches, The Manager belongs in the top echelon of soccer simulators. It may not boast as much production value as Championship Manager, but if you are looking for a pleasant game with no frills, it ranks up there with the best. Highly recommended!

Review By HOTUD

Captures and Snapshots

Screenshots from MobyGames.com

Screenshots from MobyGames.com

Comments and reviews

Jamaica2018-06-031 point

This is only the english Version of the game called 'Manager' and not the German game as titled here and shown in the screenshots above. Unfortunately the Bundeslige Manager Professional is not available here :(

Olpuh5672016-03-18-5 points

Sports

its a noob game

Luke2014-03-060 point DOS version

It is not 'Bundesliga Manager Professional'.
It's the english version 'The Manager'.

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DOS Version

Amiga ROM

Fussball bundesliga oesterreich
  • Year:1991
  • Publisher:Software 2000
  • Developer:Kron Simulation Software

Atari ST ROM

  • Year:1991
  • Publisher:Software 2000
  • Developer:Kron Simulation Software

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Bundesliga
Season1999–2000
ChampionsBayern Munich
15th Bundesliga title
16th German title
PromotedArminia Bielefeld
Unterhaching
Ulm
RelegatedUlm
Arminia Bielefeld
Duisburg
Champions LeagueBayern Munich
Bayer Leverkusen
Hamburg
1860 Munich
UEFA CupKaiserslautern
Hertha BSC
Werder Bremen (domestic cup finalists)
Intertoto CupWolfsburg
Stuttgart
Matches played306
Goals scored885 (2.89 per match)
Top goalscorerMartin Max (19)
Biggest home winseven games with a differential of +5 each (6–1 twice, 5–0 five times)
Biggest away winUlm 1–9 Leverkusen (18 March 2000)
Highest scoringUlm 1–9 Leverkusen (10 goals) (18 March 2000)
2000–01 →

The 1999–2000 Bundesliga was the 37th season of the Bundesliga, Germany's premier football league. It began on 13 August 1999[1] and ended on 20 May 2000.[2]FC Bayern Munich were the defending champions.

Competition modus[edit]

Every team played two games against each other team, one at home and one away. Teams received three points for a win and one point for a draw. If two or more teams were tied on points, places were determined by goal difference and, if still tied, by goals scored. The team with the most points were crowned champions while the three teams with the fewest points were relegated to 2. Bundesliga.

Team changes to 1998–99[edit]

Bundesliga 2000 Der Fussball Manager 15 Torrent

1. FC Nürnberg, VfL Bochum and Borussia Mönchengladbach were relegated to the 2. Bundesliga after finishing in the last three places. They were replaced by Arminia Bielefeld, SpVgg Unterhaching and SSV Ulm.

Season overview[edit]

Five matches before the end of the league, Bayer Leverkusen had 61 points and defending champions Bayern Munich was in 60. At the 30th fixture, Bayer 04 got 3 points ahead, and continued winning till the 33rd round. Before the final fixture start, Bayer had 73 points, with Bayern having 70. However, Leverkusen lost away to Unterhaching 2–0, and Bayern celebrated the championship winning against Werder Bremen 3–1 at home, due to their superior goal difference over Bayer 04.

Team overview[edit]

Location of teams in Bundesliga 1999–2000
ClubLocationGround[3]Capacity[3]
Hertha BSCBerlinOlympiastadion76,000
Arminia BielefeldBielefeldStadion Alm26,600
SV Werder BremenBremenWeserstadion36,000
Borussia DortmundDortmundWestfalenstadion68,600
MSV DuisburgDuisburgWedaustadion30,128
Eintracht FrankfurtFrankfurt am MainWaldstadion62,000
SC FreiburgFreiburg im BreisgauDreisamstadion25,000
Hamburger SVHamburgVolksparkstadion62,000
1. FC KaiserslauternKaiserslauternFritz-Walter-Stadion41,500
Bayer 04 LeverkusenLeverkusenBayArena22,500
TSV 1860 MunichMunichOlympiastadion63,000
FC Bayern MunichMunichOlympiastadion63,000
F.C. Hansa RostockRostockOstseestadion25,850
FC Schalke 04GelsenkirchenParkstadion70,000
VfB StuttgartStuttgartGottlieb-Daimler-Stadion53,700
SSV UlmUlmDonaustadion23,500
SpVgg UnterhachingUnterhachingStadion am Sportpark11,300
VfL WolfsburgWolfsburgVfL-Stadion am Elsterweg21,600

League table[edit]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification or relegation
1Bayern Munich3422757328+45732000–01 UEFA Champions League Group stage
2Bayer Leverkusen34211037436+3873
3Hamburger SV34161176339+24592000–01 UEFA Champions League Third qualifying round
41860 Munich34141195548+753
51. FC Kaiserslautern34155145459−5502000–01 UEFA Cup First round
6Hertha BSC341311103946−750
7VfL Wolfsburg34121395158−7492000 UEFA Intertoto Cup Third round
8VfB Stuttgart34146144447−3482000 UEFA Intertoto Cup Second round
9Werder Bremen34138136552+13472000–01 UEFA Cup First round[a]
10SpVgg Unterhaching34128144042−244
11Borussia Dortmund34913124138+340
12SC Freiburg341010144550−540
13Schalke 0434815114244−239[b]
14Eintracht Frankfurt34125174244−239[c]
15Hansa Rostock34814124460−1638
16SSV Ulm 18463498173662−2635Relegation to 2. Bundesliga
17Arminia Bielefeld3479184061−2130
18MSV Duisburg34410203771−3422
Source: www.dfb.de
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
Notes:
  1. ^As domestic cup winners FC Bayern Munich had qualified for UEFA Champions League, the UEFA Cup place belonging to the domestic cup winners was transferred to Werder Bremen.
  2. ^Head-to-head was used as a tie-breaker between Schalke 04 and Frankfurt.
  3. ^Eintracht Frankfurt were docked two points because of licensing irregularities.

Results[edit]

Home AwayBSCDSCSVWBVBDUISGESCFHSVFCKB04M60FCBROSS04VFBULMUNTWOB
Hertha BSC2–01–10–32–11–00–02–10–10–01–11–15–22–11–13–02–10–0
Arminia Bielefeld1–12–20–20–11–12–13–01–21–22–20–32–21–21–24–11–00–0
Werder Bremen4–13–13–24–03–15–22–15–01–31–30–22–10–12–12–22–22–2
Borussia Dortmund4–01–31–32–21–01–10–10–11–11–10–13–01–11–11–11–32–1
MSV Duisburg0–00–30–12–22–31–21–12–20–03–01–22–21–11–30–02–02–3
Eintracht Frankfurt4–02–11–01–12–22–03–00–11–23–11–20–00–20–12–13–04–0
SC Freiburg0–11–12–11–13–02–30–22–10–03–01–25–02–10–22–04–31–1
Hamburger SV5–15–00–01–16–11–02–02–10–22–00–01–03–13–01–23–02–2
1. FC Kaiserslautern1–20–24–31–03–21–00–22–01–31–10–22–22–11–26–24–22–2
Bayer Leverkusen3–14–13–23–13–04–11–12–23–11–12–01–13–21–04–12–14–1
1860 Munich2–15–01–00–34–12–03–10–02–11–21–04–33–31–14–12–11–2
Bayern Munich3–12–13–11–14–14–16–12–22–24–11–24–14–10–14–01–05–0
Hansa Rostock0–12–11–11–03–13–11–13–34–21–10–00–31–01–42–11–11–1
Schalke 041–11–13–10–03–00–02–21–31–21–12–21–10–23–00–01–01–1
VfB Stuttgart1–03–30–01–24–20–21–01–30–11–21–32–03–10–22–00–22–5
SSV Ulm0–12–02–10–10–33–01–11–23–11–93–00–11–11–11–11–02–0
SpVgg Unterhaching1–12–01–01–02–01–01–01–11–22–01–10–21–13–12–01–01–1
VfL Wolfsburg2–32–02–71–01–01–02–14–43–23–12–11–12–00–00–21–22–2
Source: DFB
Colours: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Top goalscorers[edit]

RankPlayerClubGoals
1Martin Max1860 Munich19
2Ulf KirstenBayer Leverkusen17
3Giovane ÉlberBayern Munich14
Ebbe SandSchalke 04
5Marco BodeWerder Bremen13
Paulo SérgioBayern Munich
7AíltonWerder Bremen12
Jonathan AkpoborieVfL Wolfsburg
Michael PreetzHertha BSC
10Stefan BeinlichBayer Leverkusen11
Youri DjorkaeffKaiserslautern
Andrzej JuskowiakVfL Wolfsburg
Bruno LabbadiaArminia Bielefeld
Adel SellimiSC Freiburg
Bundesliga 2000 Der Fussball Manager 15

Champion squad[edit]

FC Bayern Munich
Goalkeepers:Oliver Kahn (27); Bernd Dreher (6); Stefan Wessels (2).

Defenders:Thomas Linke (27 / 1); Markus Babbel (26 / 1); Bixente Lizarazu (22 / 1); Samuel Kuffour (18 / 2); Patrik Andersson (16); Lothar Matthäus (15 / 1).
Midfielders:Jens Jeremies (30 / 3); Paulo Sérgio (28 / 13); Stefan Effenberg (captain; 27 / 2); Michael Tarnat (26 / 1); Thorsten Fink (26); Mehmet Scholl (25 / 6); Michael Wiesinger (13 / 1); Thomas Strunz (9); Sławomir Wojciechowski (3 / 1); Mario Basler (2); Andrew Sinkala (1).
Forwards:Hasan Salihamidžić (30 / 4); Roque Santa Cruz (28 / 5); Giovane Élber (26 / 14); Carsten Jancker (23 / 9); Alexander Zickler (14 / 7).
(league appearances and goals listed in brackets)

Manager:Ottmar Hitzfeld.

On the roster but have not played in a league game:David Jarolím.

Transferred out during the season:Lothar Matthäus (to MetroStars); Mario Basler (to 1. FC Kaiserslautern).

References[edit]

  1. ^'Schedule Round 1'. DFB. Archived from the original on 28 September 2012.
  2. ^'Archive 1999/2000 Round 34'. DFB. Archived from the original on 28 September 2012.
  3. ^ abGrüne, Hardy (2001). Enzyklopädie des deutschen Ligafußballs, Band 7: Vereinslexikon (in German). Kassel: AGON Sportverlag. ISBN3-89784-147-9.

External links[edit]

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