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1974–75 Bundesliga

12th season of the Bundesliga


12th season of the Bundesliga

FieldValue
competitionBundesliga
season1974–75
dates24 August 1974 – 14 June 1975
winnersBorussia Mönchengladbach
3rd Bundesliga title
3rd German title
relegatedVfB Stuttgart
Tennis Borussia Berlin
Wuppertaler SV
continentalcup1[European Cup](1975-76-european-cup)
continentalcup1 qualifiersBorussia Mönchengladbach
FC Bayern Munich (title holders)
continentalcup2[Cup Winners' Cup](1975-76-european-cup-winners-cup)
continentalcup2 qualifiersEintracht Frankfurt
continentalcup3[UEFA Cup](1975-76-uefa-cup)
continentalcup3 qualifiersHertha BSC
Hamburger SV
[1. FC Köln](1-fc-koln)
MSV Duisburg (losing [DFB-Pokal](1974-75-dfb-pokal) finalists to Frankfurt)
league topscorerJupp Heynckes (27)
biggest home winFrankfurt 9–1 Essen (5 October 1974)
biggest away winEssen 0–5 Frankfurt (22 March 1975)
highest scoringDüsseldorf 6–5 FC Bayern (11 goals) (7 June 1975)
total goals1056
average goals
prevseason[1973–74](1973-74-bundesliga)
nextseason[1975–76](1975-76-bundesliga)

3rd Bundesliga title 3rd German title Tennis Borussia Berlin Wuppertaler SV FC Bayern Munich (title holders) Hamburger SV 1. FC Köln MSV Duisburg (losing DFB-Pokal finalists to Frankfurt) The 1974–75 Bundesliga was the 12th season of the Bundesliga, West Germany's premier football league. It began on 24 August 1974 and ended on 14 June 1975. FC Bayern Munich were the defending champions.

Competition modus

Every team played two games against each other team, one at home and one away. Teams received two points for a win and one point for a draw. If two or more teams were tied on points, places were determined by goal difference and, if still tied, by goals scored. The team with the most points were crowned champions while the three teams with the fewest points were relegated to their respective 2. Bundesliga divisions.

Team changes to 1973–74

Fortuna Köln and Hannover 96 were relegated to the newly introduced 2. Bundesliga after finishing in the last two places. Both teams were replaced by Tennis Borussia Berlin and Eintracht Braunschweig, who won their respective promotion play-off groups.

Team overview

Clublast=Grünefirst=Hardytitle=Enzyklopädie des deutschen Ligafußballs, Band 7: Vereinslexikonpublisher=AGON Sportverlaglocation=Kasselyear=2001isbn=3-89784-147-9language=German}}Capacity
Olympiastadion100,000
Mommsenstadion18,000
Ruhrstadion40,000
Eintracht-Stadion38,000
Weserstadion32,000
Wedaustadion38,500
Rheinstadion59,600
Georg-Melches-Stadion40,000
Waldstadion87,000
Volksparkstadion80,000
Stadion Betzenberg42,000
Radrennbahn Müngersdorf29,000
Bökelbergstadion34,500
Olympiastadion70,000
Bieberer Berg30,000
Parkstadion70,000
Neckarstadion53,000
Stadion am Zoo28,000

League table

Results

Top goalscorers

;27 goals

  • Germany Jupp Heynckes (Borussia Mönchengladbach)

;24 goals

;23 goals

  • Germany Gerd Müller (FC Bayern Munich)

;21 goals

;18 goals

  • Denmark Allan Simonsen (Borussia Mönchengladbach)
  • Germany Erwin Kostedde (Kickers Offenbach)
  • Germany Manfred Burgsmüller (Rot-Weiss Essen)

;17 goals

  • Germany Klaus Fischer (FC Schalke 04)
  • Germany Hermann Ohlicher (VfB Stuttgart)

;16 goals

  • Germany Bernd Hölzenbein (Eintracht Frankfurt)

Champion squad

Borussia Mönchengladbach
**Goalkeeper:** Wolfgang Kleff (34).

Attendances

Source:

No.TeamAttendanceChangeHighest
1Schalke 0439,988-5.8%70,300
2Bayern München36,412-3.1%73,000
3Hertha BSC36,23531.3%91,000
4Hamburger SV31,94129.1%57,000
5VfB Stuttgart26,599-3.5%65,000
6Eintracht Frankfurt23,788-2.6%58,400
7OFC Kickers22,41250.9%35,000
8Fortuna 9522,235-7.0%55,000
9Borussia Mönchengladbach22,150-0.5%34,500
10BTSV Eintracht21,235131.7%38,000
11[1. FC Kaiserslautern](1-fc-kaiserslautern)19,82411.8%37,000
12Werder Bremen18,76518.5%40,000
13[1. FC Köln](1-fc-koln)18,5008.0%28,000
14VfL Bochum17,647-1.2%34,000
15MSV Duisburg16,588-12.3%31,000
16RW Essen15,047-12.7%30,000
17Tennis Borussia Berlin10,605666.8%75,000
18Wuppertaler SV9,165-42.4%22,000

References

References

  1. "Schedule Round 1". DFB.
  2. "Archive 1973/1974 Round 34". DFB.
  3. Grüne, Hardy. (2001). "Enzyklopädie des deutschen Ligafußballs, Band 7: Vereinslexikon". AGON Sportverlag.
  4. https://www.european-football-statistics.co.uk/attn/archive/ger/aveger75.htm
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