Bundesliga

Borussia Mönchengladbach

Est. 1900 · Mönchengladbach, Germany

Stadium
Stadion im Borussia-Park
54,057 capacity
Manager
Eugen Polanski
since 2025

Borussia Mönchengladbach, nicknamed Die Fohlen (The Foals), is a German professional football club based in Mönchengladbach, North Rhine-Westphalia, and a founding member of the Bundesliga in 1963. The club enjoyed its greatest era in the 1970s, winning five German championships and two UEFA Cups with an attacking side featuring Günter Netzer, Berti Vogts and Jupp Heynckes. It remains one of Germany's most successful and historically significant clubs, playing its home matches at Borussia-Park.

Honours

all-time
League
Bundesliga / German championship5×
Domestic cups
DFB-Pokal3×
Europe
UEFA Europa League2×

All-time top scorers

club record
1Jupp Heynckes195goals
2Herbert Laumen97goals
3Hans-Jörg Criens92goals
4Günter Netzer82goals
5Uwe Rahn81goals

Club legends

BertiVogts
Defender1965–1979One-club man and combative right-back who won everything with the club and captained West Germany.
GünterNetzer
Midfielder1964–1973Elegant playmaker who orchestrated the club's rise before a famous move to Real Madrid.
RainerBonhof
Midfielder1970–1978Powerful midfielder and 1974 World Cup winner known for his shooting and passing range.
HerbertWimmer
Midfielder1966–1978Tireless box-to-box runner central to the great 1970s championship sides.
WolfgangKleff
Goalkeeper1968–1981Long-serving goalkeeper who guarded the net through the club's most successful era.
AllanSimonsen
Forward1972–1979Danish attacker who won the 1977 Ballon d'Or while at the club.
LotharMatthäus
Midfielder1979–1984Emerging star who began his celebrated career at Gladbach before becoming a world-class midfielder.
Marc-Andréter Stegen
Goalkeeper2011–2014Academy graduate who established himself as first-choice keeper before joining Barcelona.

Recent record

2019/20–2025/26
237
P
84
W
64
D
89
L
35%
Win %
387
Goals
-2
GD

Recent top scorers

2019/20–2025/26

Recent top assisters

2019/20–2025/26

Recent-form sections cover the seasons in Mundial (2019/20–2025/26). Not affiliated with or endorsed by any league or club.