New Straits Times

Hamburg’s record run ends

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BERLIN: Former European champions Hamburg SV were relegated for the first time on Saturday, their fans throwing flares on to the pitch as their team’s record uninterrup­ted top-flight run since the Bundesliga began in 1963 came to a controvers­ial end.

VfL Wolfsburg’s 4-1 win over bottom club Cologne meant Hamburg’s 2-1 home victory over Borussia Moenchengl­adbach, which was interrupte­d for 15 minutes due to the crowd trouble in stoppage-time, proved in vain.

“This is an extremely painful moment for the entire Hamburg SV,” club president Bernd Hoffmann said. “The club has lost one of its uniqueness­es.

“The diamond (club logo) and us as a club are strong despite this current moment and we will in the future again reflect that strength.”

Hamburg, six-times German champions and European champions in 1983, will join Cologne in the second division next season, while Wolfsburg go into a relegation playoff.

Dozens of riot police, several on horses, charged on to the pitch and lined up in front of the Hamburg fans, who lit flares and threw them behind the Gladbach goal when it became clear that the team were on their way to the second division.

Hamburg were leading 2-1 in stoppage-time when referee Felix Brych stopped the game.

The fires were put out and police gradually left the field so the game could resume and the final seconds be played out.

“I cannot imagine Hamburg without Bundesliga football,” said club great Uwe Seeler, West Germany’s first post-war soccer star. “I never thought that in my lifetime I would experience the relegation of Hamburg.”

Seeler, 81, spent 18 years at the club between 1954 and 1972, scoring over 400 goals in all competitio­ns, and played in four World Cups.

“I will be watching the games in the second division and I believe Hamburg will survive that and I will see them get promoted.”

With the stadium clock marking the club’s record stay in the Bundesliga and showing 54 years and 260 days, fans stayed in their seats and with tears in their eyes gave the players their last Bundesliga cheer.

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