Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

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

1995–96 DFB-Pokal


FieldValue
titleDFB-Pokal
year1995–96
countryGermany
num_teams64
defending_championsBorussia Mönchengladbach
winners[1. FC Kaiserslautern](1-fc-kaiserslautern)
secondKarlsruher SC
matches63
scoring_leaderVladimir Beschastnykh
Pavel Kuka
Thomas Häßler (4)
prev_season[1994–95](1994-95-dfb-pokal)
next_season[1996–97](1996-97-dfb-pokal)

Pavel Kuka Thomas Häßler (4) The 1995–96 DFB-Pokal was the 53rd season of the annual German football cup competition. 64 teams competed in the tournament of six rounds which began on 15 August 1995 and ended on 24 May 1996. In the final, 1. FC Kaiserslautern defeated Karlsruher SC 1–0 thereby claiming their second title. In the first round, SV 1916 Sandhausen defeated VfB Stuttgart 13–12 on penalties, marking the game with the most goals in German professional football ever.

Matches

Times up to 23 September 1995 and from 31 March 1996 are CEST (UTC+2). Times from 24 September 1995 to 30 March 1996 are CET (UTC+1).

First round

Winkler Mack Schantz Biagioli Júlio César Möller Reinhardt

Svinggaard Marschall Wagner Flock

Chylek Meißner

Bucher

Goumai

Knäbel

Braun

Ramelow Rath

Durić Zimmermann

Klingen Korek Graskamp Beckstedde Kohn Dollberg Steinmann Labbadia

Schedlinski Vogel

Rath Sundermann Burić Korell Wassmer

Nemec Mulder

Pflipsen Sternkopf

Özcan Zinnbauer Müller Walper Cakici Buvač Akrapović Hock Weiß Kunert

Schwabl Heldt Rydlewicz

Rische

Gräfe

Bilić

Bode

Völler

Binz

Staletović Bobic Feucht Merkel Lässig Ehmann Fridemann Pukallus Mirwald Wollner Staletović Reiser Hahn Feucht Berhold Herzog Grimm Foda Buck Kruse Schneider Poschner Ziegler Balakov Berthold Herzog

Steffen

Buchheim Aurich Lenz Hoffmann Mauscksch Meißner Dammeier Reich

Second round

Cyroń Seeliger

Klingen Garcia

Tretschok Zorc

Kuka Hengen

Möckel

Rydlewicz Stević

Klein

Bender

Behlil

Sugzda Gütschow Hecker Fuchs Meißner

Kirsten

Ziemer Beschastnykh

Seifert

Dau Wiedemann Graziani

Round of 16

Kurth Straube Basler

Nemsadze

Hoffmann Hofmann Lenz Aurich Dau Grempler Bergen Reichel Nachtweih Dehoust Akpoborie Gerlach

Hartig Knup Häßler

Minkwitz Bach

Dondera Paulo Sérgio Fach Völler Schreier Thiele Neuendorf Ramon Schuster

Quarter-finals

Aurich
Topor Dau Hoffmann Bergen Barnes Münch Schuster Völler Paulo Sérgio

Arveladze Collins Flock Siegl

Nowotny Häßler

Semi-finals

Häßler

Final

Main article: 1996 DFB-Pokal Final

References

References

  1. (2008). "DFB-Pokal 1995–96". fussballdaten.de.
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 1995–96 DFB-Pokal — 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