Hamburg football side St. Pauli are set to play in the Bundesliga for the first time in 13 years next season after they secured promotion with a 3-1 victory over relegated VfL Osnabrück on Sunday.

A day earlier, league leaders Holstein Kiel secured a tough 1-1 draw with third-placed Fortuna Düsseldorf.

That ensured that it was no longer possible for Düsseldorf to overtake them following the last game of the season next weekend.  Being assured of either first or second in the second Bundesliga tier, meant Kiel gained automatic promotion to Germany’s top division. 

The club has never made it to the Bundesliga before. Indeed, nor has any side from Germany’s northernmost state of Schleswig-Holstein.

Fans, players and coach in ‘overwhelming’ celebrations

Supporters rushed down onto the pitch after the final whistle, and the club set up a makeshift podium where the players could stand and lead the celebrations. 

“The view from the platform of the crowd was overwhelming,” captain Philipp Sander said after the game. “I don’t know if I will ever experience something like that in my career again.” 

Kiel’s veteran midfield star Lewis Holtby, who’s played on bigger stages earlier in his career with clubs like Schalke and Blackburn, was similarly moved. 

“I’m proud and grateful to be a part of this historic success for this state,” he said, referring to Schleswig-Holstein teams’ perennial absence from the Bundesliga ever since the league was formed in 1963. 

Lewis Holtby holds a bottle of beer and smiles on the pitch near fans amid the celebrations after Holstein Kiel secured promotion. Kiel, Germany, May 11, 2024.
Lewis Holtby raised a bottle with supporters after the matchImage: Marcel von Fehrn/picture alliance/Eibner-Pressefoto

Sander acknowledged that it had been a tough night, calling the draw “hard work.”

Kiel had been faltering in recent weeks, struggling to complete the fairytale after building a big lead early in the season with a lightning start. Düsseldorf played well on Saturday — with more than 60% possession and more than twice as many shots at goal as Kiel — and were probably unlucky not to be awarded a penalty and perhaps a red card for handball from Kiel’s Patrick Erras. 

Coach Marcel Rapp called an impromptu press conference fairly soon after full time, but as has become tradition, players interrupted it within a matter of moments, barging in and dousing their coach in beer and halting Rapp’s comments. 

“The feeling’s overwhelming,” Rapp did manage to say in his brief appearance.

Holstein Kiel fans stand tightly packed, many of them holding up club scarves for the cameras, on the pitch, celebrating after Saturday night's result. Kiel, Germany, May 12, 2024.
Fans flocked onto the pitch to celebrate with players after a difficult draw against Düsseldorf, who arguably had the better of the chances on the nightImage: picture alliance/dpa

Kiel came very close to promotion a few years ago but lost the 2021 relegation playoff game against Cologne’s FC Köln and so stayed in the second division.

msh/dvv (dpa, SID)

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