2011–12 Hannover 96 season

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
Hannover 96
2011–12 season
Chairman Martin Kind
Manager Mirko Slomka
Bundesliga 7th
DFB-Pokal Round 2
UEFA Europa League Quarter Finals
Top goalscorer League:
Mohammed Abdellaoue (11)
All:
Mohammed Abdellaoue (16)
Highest home attendance 49,000 vs. Multiple Opponents
Lowest home attendance 35,400 vs. 1.FC Nürnberg, 28 January 2012
Home colours
Away colours
Third colours

The 2011–12 season of Hannover 96 began on 26 June with their first friendly match.

Off-season

Christian Pander of Schalke 04 became the first official signing of Hannover's 2011–12 season. The next two signings were Polonia Warszawa forward Artur Sobiech and Norweigen Henning Hauger. The remaining signings were Daniel Royer and Samuel Radlinger from SV Ried. Hannover brought Deniz Ayçiçek and Erdal Akdarı from the youth setup.

After losing his starter's spot, goalkeeper Florian Fromlowitz departed for DFB Pokal runners-up MSV Duisburg.[1] Constant Djakpa finished his loan and returned to Bayer Leverkusen,[2] while American DaMarcus Beasley left after one season to join Mexican club Puebla[3] after an injury-struck season left him surplus to requirements.

During January, Hannover 96 signed Mame Biram Diouf from Manchester United for a reported £1.5 million on a two-year deal.[4] He made his debut against Hertha BSC as a substitute, then started his first game in a Hannover shirt against Mainz 05.

Friendlies

Matches

Bundesliga

The 2011–12 Bundesliga campaign began on 6 August when Hannover played in the opening game of the season against Hoffenheim.

Match
Date
Ground
Opponent
Score1
Pos.
Pts.
GD
Report
1 6 August H 1899 Hoffenheim 2 – 1 1 3 1
2 13 August A 1. FC Nürnberg 2 – 1 2 6 2
3 21 August H Hertha BSCGermany 1 – 1 2 7 2
4 28 August H Mainz 05Germany 1 – 1 4 8 2
5 10 September A VfB Stuttgart 0 – 3 9 8 -1
6 18 September H Borussia Dortmund 2 – 1 5 11 0
7 24 September A FC Augsburg 0 – 0 7 12 0
8 2 October H Werder Bremen 3 – 2 5 15 1
9 16 October A 1. FC Köln 0 – 2 7 15 -1
10 23 October H Bayern Munich 2 – 1 4 18 0
11 29 October A Borussia Mönchengladbach 1 – 2 7 18 -1
12 6 November H Schalke 04Germany 2 – 2 6 19 -1
13 19 November A VfL Wolfsburg 1 – 4 8 19 -4
14 26 November H Hamburger SV 1 – 1 8 20 -4
15 3 December A SC FreiburgGermany 1 – 1 8 21 -4
16 10 December H Bayer LeverkusenGermany 0 – 0 8 22 -4
17 18 December A 1. FC Kaiserslautern 1 – 1 7 23 -4
18 21 January A 1899 Hoffenheim 0 – 0 7 24 -4
19 27 January H 1. FC Nürnberg 1 – 0 7 27 -3
20 4 February A Hertha BSCGermany 1 – 0 7 30 -2
21 11 February A Mainz 05Germany 1 – 1 7 31 -2
22 19 February H VfB Stuttgart 4 – 2 7 34 0
23 26 February A Borussia Dortmund 1 – 3 7 34 -2
24 3 March H FC Augsburg 2 – 2 7 25 -2
25 11 March A Werder Bremen 0 – 3 7 35 -5
26 18 March H 1. FC Köln 4 – 1 7 38 -2
27 24 March A Bayern Munich 1 – 2 7 38 -3
28 1 April H Borussia Mönchengladbach 2 – 1 5 41 -2
29 8 April A Schalke 04Germany 0 – 3 7 41 -5
30 11 April H VfL Wolfsburg 2 – 0 7 44 -3
31 14 April A Hamburger SV 0 – 1 7 44 -4
32 22 April H SC FreiburgGermany 0 – 0 7 45 -4
33 28 April A Bayer LeverkusenGermany 0 – 1 7 45 -5
34 5 May H 1. FC Kaiserslautern 2 – 1 7 48 -4

Last updated: 5 May 2012
Source: [19]
1Hannover 96 goals come first.
Ground's country's flag and opponent's country's flag shown when from a different country of Hannover 96.
Pos. = Position in league, Pts. = Points, GD = Goal difference, Ground: H = Home, A = Away, N = Neutral, HR = Home replacement, AR = Away replacement.

DFB-Pokal

Hannover kicked off the 2011–12 DFB-Pokal against FC Anker Wismar in Lübeck, where they advanced to the second round with a 6-0 victory

Europa League

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

Hannover 96 qualified for the play-off round of the 2011–12 UEFA Europa League by finishing fourth in the Bundesliga in 2010–11.

Play-off Round

After beating Sevilla 3–2 on aggregate in the play-offs, Hannover 96 advanced to Group B of the 2011–12 UEFA Europa League.

Group stage

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Belgium Standard Liège 6 4 2 0 9 1 +8 14
Germany Hannover 96 6 3 2 1 9 7 +2 11
Denmark Copenhagen 6 1 2 3 5 9 −4 5
Ukraine Vorskla Poltava 6 0 2 4 4 10 −6 2

Knockout phase

After winning 3–1 on aggregate, Hannover 96 advance to the round of 16 to play Standard Liège

After winning 6–2 on aggregate, Hannover 96 advance to the quarterfinals to play Atlético Madrid

Hannover 96 lose 2-4 on aggregate

Goal scorers

Reserve team

Hannover's reserve team play in the fourth tier Regionalliga Nord and are coached by Jürgen Willmann.

Squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
Germany GK Marcel Klonz
Germany GK Pascal Nagel
Turkey DF Erdal Akdarı
Germany DF Christopher Avevor
Germany DF Christian Brinkmann
Germany DF Niko Gießelmann
Germany DF Jannik Löhden
Ethiopia DF Khaled Mesfin-Mulugeta
Germany DF Jannis Pläschke
Germany DF Florian Rutter
Germany DF Tim Wendel
Germany MF Deniz Ayçiçek
Germany MF Lars Fuchs
Turkey MF Engin Kiy
No. Position Player
Germany MF Patrick Jöcks
Germany MF Marc-Kemo Kranich
Germany MF Tom Merkens
Kosovo MF Bajram Mustafa-Muzaqi
Japan MF Masahito Noto
Germany MF Sascha Schünemann
Cameroon FW Conrad Azong
Germany FW Florian Beil
Germany FW Florian Büchler
Turkey FW Ali Gökdemir
Senegal FW Saliou Sane
Italy FW Giacomo Serrone
Lebanon FW Feiz Chamsine

References