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Last weekend we saw the SC PADERBORN v VfL BOCHUM game at the Home Deluxe Arena ⚽️ In this video we explore the history of football in Paderborn, take a closer look around their old stadium, thoughts on the beer and more! 🍻 Paderborn has/had a big British expat community due to the British Army being based there for decades 🇬🇧 More info on SC Paderborn 07 below 👇🏽 Share YOUR thoughts in the comments 👍🏽 #football #germanfootball #bundesliga Sport-Club Paderborn 07 e.V., commonly known as simply SC Paderborn 07 (pronounced [ʔɛs t͡seː paːdɐˈbɔʁn nʊl ziːbm̩]) or SC Paderborn, is a German association football club based in Paderborn, North Rhine-Westphalia. The club has enjoyed its greatest success since the turn of the millennium, becoming a mainstay in the 2. Bundesliga before securing promotion to the Bundesliga in the 2013–14 season. However, they got relegated to the 2. Bundesliga after only a season in the top division, and then again to the 3. Liga the season after. This relegation streak almost continued as low as the Regionalliga West, but were saved in the 2016-17 season because 1860 Munich were refused a license. The club returned to 2. Bundesliga, reaching 2nd place in the 2018–19 season and was promoted to the Bundesliga. The club finished 18th in the 2019–20 season and returned to the 2. Bundesliga. Fusion into SC Paderborn For most of the twentieth century, Paderborn had two football clubs: TuS Schloss Neuhaus and FC Paderborn, who remained rivals until the 1980s. After Neuhaus had been promoted to the 2. Bundesliga and finished last in 1983, this set-up had reached its athletic and financial ceiling. Thus, in 1985, the two clubs merged into TuS Paderborn/Neuhaus. In 1997, the club adopted its current identity by assuming the name SC Paderborn 07, named after TuS Neuhaus's founding date 1907. Beginnings in amateur football (1985–2005) During most of the 1980s, the recently merged club competed in the third-tier Oberliga Westfalen, where they counted among the leading teams but never achieved promotion. In 1994, Paderborn won the league and thereby qualified for the promotion playoffs. The team lost to Eintracht Braunschweig and Fortuna Düsseldorf, but secured a place in the newly formed third-tier of the German football pyramid, the Regionalliga West/Südwest. Except for a brief stint in the fourth tier, Paderborn enjoyed moderate success with regular trips to the DFB Pokal. During one of these, in 2004/5, the club reached the round of 16, beating MSV Duisburg and Bundesliga side Hamburger SV on the way. It later emerged that latter match had been affected by match fixing; referee Robert Hoyzer had received a bribe to let Paderborn win the game. The incident remains the most significant betting scandal in the history of German football. Paderborn returned to the 2. Bundesliga for the first time in nearly thirty years at the end of the same season. The team's advance into professional football brought with it a professionalisation of its structures, and, in 2005, construction began on a new 15,000-seat stadium, which replaced the dated Hermann-Löns-Stadion. All of this helped to establish the club as a regular component of Germany's professional football landscape. This process culminated in the club's first promotion to the Bundesliga after the 2013/14 season under coach André Breitenreiter, who had only joined the club from TSV Havelse at the start of the season. Having never been in the Bundesliga before, Paderborn were described as "the biggest outsider in Bundesliga history" going into the season. The team started well; in the fourth game of the campaign against Hannover 96, midfielder Moritz Stoppelkamp scored a volley from 83 metres out, headline a Bundesliga record for the furthest ever goal. This goal also put the team top of the Bundesliga table at the time. ----------------------------------------------- Ry's Football Paradise is the Home of German Football content made for an English-speaking audience. Unlike most Football YouTubers - I make videos on clubs/stadiums I have a personal passion for... Sharing these journeys on YouTube helps fund this passion 💙 Rather than chasing views and subscribers - I pride this channel on authenticity and giving you a realistic experience of the German football fan scene, culture, atmospheres, traditions and so on 🇩🇪 As a "vlogger" we must ensure that the integrity of the German fan scene isn't compramised - REAL fans are what make the Bundesliga, the 2. Bundesliga, 3. Liga & Regionalliga so GREAT 🍻 I personally left my fandom of Manchester United behind, along with the Premier League and English football as a whole and in it's place I found VfL Bochum and a country where I was meant to be, where we're valued and not treated like a customer... Ladies & Gents Willkommen in Deutschland and WELCOME to the wonderful world of German Football 🔥 Hit that SUBSCRIBE button and find out more about the Greatest football leagues in the World 🌍