Name
Carl Zeiss Jena Women

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League Position
12

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Established
2016 (8 years old)

Sport
Soccer

Stadium/Home
Ernst-Abbe-Sportfeld
(12,990 Capacity)

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Location
Jena

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Competitions
_No League Soccer
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Last Edit
cardinaldiehard25: 27/Aug/21


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Results
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05/03 Carl Zeiss J 0 - 3 Bayern Munic
25/11 Viktoria Ber 1 - 3 Carl Zeiss J
09/09 Carl Zeiss J 1 - 0 1. FC Nürnb
13/08 Ingolstadt W 2 - 3 Carl Zeiss J
15/05 SGS Essen Wo 3 - 0 Carl Zeiss J

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FC Carl Zeiss Jena is a German women's football club from Jena, Thuringia. The club currently plays in the 2. Bundesliga, the second highest level of women's football in Germany.

Carl Zeiss Jena played regional women's football since 2016/17 but became more prominent, when it merged with FF USV Jena in 2020.

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Stadium or Home

Ernst Abbe Sportfeld is a sports facility in Jena, Germany. It was dedicated on 24 August 1924 and was named after entrepreneur Ernst Abbe 15 years later. The facility is in southern Jena, directly on the Saale River. The City of Jena purchased the stadium from the Ernst-Abbe-Stiftung (The Ernst Abbe Foundation) in 1991.

The soccer and track stadium in the Ernst-Abbe-Sportfeld is the home field of FC Carl Zeiss Jena. It was homestead for famous sprints, javelin throw and long jump athletes like Petra Felke and Heike Drechsler, when Sport-Club Motor Jena still existed, and it has a capacity of over 12,990. There are 6,540 seats with 4,010 covered seats in the main stands. The spectator capacity will be increased to 14,000. 1997 saw the replacement of the original wooden bleachers from 1924 (which could seat only 420 people) with the new, modern stands to accommodate more spectators. The stadium's lights were mounted on four massive, hollow steel towers and were the result of the 1974 and 1994 renovations of the facility. The steel towers were taken down in 2013. The electronic scoreboard was installed in 1978 and was the first of its kind in East Germany.

The attendance record was set in 1962. Despite the then official capacity of 16,000 spectators, approximately 27,500 visitors found the way into the stadium for the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup semi-final versus Atlético Madrid.

Next to the stadium are additional facilities for soccer, track, and various other sports.

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