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1992–93 Bundesliga
30th season of the Bundesliga
30th season of the Bundesliga
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| competition | Bundesliga |
| season | 1992–93 |
| dates | 14 August 1992 – 5 June 1993 |
| winners | Werder Bremen |
| 3rd Bundesliga title | |
| 3rd German title | |
| relegated | Bochum |
| Uerdingen | |
| [Saarbrücken](1-fc-saarbrucken) | |
| continentalcup1 | [Champions League](1993-94-uefa-champions-league) |
| continentalcup1 qualifiers | Werder Bremen |
| continentalcup2 | [Cup Winners' Cup](1993-94-european-cup-winners-cup) |
| continentalcup2 qualifiers | Bayer Leverkusen |
| continentalcup3 | [UEFA Cup](1993-94-uefa-cup) |
| continentalcup3 qualifiers | Bayern Munich |
| Frankfurt | |
| Borussia Dortmund | |
| Karlsruhe | |
| league topscorer | Ulf Kirsten, |
| Tony Yeboah (20) | |
| biggest home win | Dortmund 6–0 Wattenscheid (16 April 1993) |
| Bayern 6–0 [Saarbrücken](1-fc-saarbrucken) (23 April 1993) | |
| biggest away win | Uerdingen 0–5 [K'lautern](1-fc-kaiserslautern) (21 November 1992) |
| highest scoring | Bayern 5–3 Stuttgart (8 goals) (30 April 1993) |
| matches | 306 |
| total goals | 881 |
| prevseason | [1991–92](1991-92-bundesliga) |
| nextseason | [1993–94](1993-94-bundesliga) |
3rd Bundesliga title 3rd German title Uerdingen Saarbrücken Frankfurt Borussia Dortmund Karlsruhe Tony Yeboah (20) Bayern 6–0 Saarbrücken (23 April 1993) The 1992–93 Bundesliga was the 30th season of the Bundesliga, Germany's premier football league. It began on 14 August 1992 and ended on 5 June 1993. VfB Stuttgart were the defending champions.
Competition format
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 2. Bundesliga.
Team changes to 1991–92
Stuttgarter Kickers, Hansa Rostock, MSV Duisburg and Fortuna Düsseldorf were relegated to the 2. Bundesliga after finishing in the last four places. Due to a size reduction back to 18 teams, only two teams were promoted. These were Bayer 05 Uerdingen, winners of the 2. Bundesliga Northern Division and 1. FC Saarbrücken, champions of the Southern Division.
Team overview
| Club | Location | last=Grüne | first=Hardy | title=Enzyklopädie des deutschen Ligafußballs, Band 7: Vereinslexikon | publisher=AGON Sportverlag | location=Kassel | year=2001 | isbn=3-89784-147-9 | language=de}} | Capacity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bochum | Ruhrstadion | 40,000 | ||||||||
| Bremen | Weserstadion | 32,000 | ||||||||
| Dortmund | Westfalenstadion | 52,616 | ||||||||
| Dresden | Rudolf-Harbig-Stadion | 30,000 | ||||||||
| Frankfurt | Waldstadion | 62,000 | ||||||||
| Hamburg | Volksparkstadion | 62,000 | ||||||||
| Kaiserslautern | Fritz-Walter-Stadion | 38,500 | ||||||||
| Karlsruhe | Wildparkstadion | 50,000 | ||||||||
| Cologne | Müngersdorfer Stadion | 55,000 | ||||||||
| Leverkusen | Ulrich-Haberland-Stadion | 27,800 | ||||||||
| Mönchengladbach | Bökelbergstadion | 34,500 | ||||||||
| Munich | Olympiastadion | 70,000 | ||||||||
| Nuremberg | Frankenstadion | 55,000 | ||||||||
| Saarbrücken | Ludwigspark | 36,000 | ||||||||
| Gelsenkirchen | Parkstadion | 70,000 | ||||||||
| Stuttgart | Neckarstadion | 68,000 | ||||||||
| Krefeld | Grotenburg-Stadion | 34,500 | ||||||||
| Wattenscheid | Lohrheidestadion | 15,000 |
League table
Results
Top goalscorers
;20 goals
- Germany Ulf Kirsten (Bayer 04 Leverkusen)
- Ghana Tony Yeboah (Eintracht Frankfurt)
;17 goals
- New Zealand Wynton Rufer (SV Werder Bremen)
;15 goals
- Switzerland Stéphane Chapuisat (Borussia Dortmund)
;13 goals
- Germany Andreas Thom (Bayer 04 Leverkusen)
- Germany Fritz Walter (VfB Stuttgart)
- Germany Uwe Wegmann (VfL Bochum)
;11 goals
- Russia Sergei Kiriakov (Karlsruher SC)
- Germany Bruno Labbadia (FC Bayern Munich)
Attendances
Source:
| No. | Team | Attendance | Change | Highest |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bayern München | 46,059 | 41.6% | 64,000 |
| 2 | Schalke 04 | 41,724 | -12.1% | 70,200 |
| 3 | Borussia Dortmund | 40,957 | -7.7% | 43,000 |
| 4 | [1. FC Kaiserslautern](1-fc-kaiserslautern) | 33,403 | -0.8% | 38,000 |
| 5 | [1. FC Nürnberg](1-fc-nurnberg) | 33,221 | -12.7% | 50,114 |
| 6 | [1. FC Köln](1-fc-koln) | 29,824 | 29.1% | 55,000 |
| 7 | VfB Stuttgart | 27,841 | -17.6% | 55,000 |
| 8 | Eintracht Frankfurt | 25,382 | -15.0% | 59,000 |
| 9 | Hamburger SV | 23,774 | 5.2% | 60,500 |
| 10 | Borussia Mönchengladbach | 23,661 | 9.1% | 34,500 |
| 11 | VfL Bochum | 23,377 | 24.8% | 41,021 |
| 12 | [1. FC Saarbrücken](1-fc-saarbrucken) | 23,267 | 120.9% | 36,000 |
| 13 | Karlsruher SC | 22,118 | 23.4% | 40,000 |
| 14 | Werder Bremen | 21,860 | 25.7% | 40,800 |
| 15 | Bayer Leverkusen | 17,009 | 11.8% | 26,900 |
| 16 | Dynamo Dresden | 15,656 | -5.9% | 29,000 |
| 17 | Bayer 05 Uerdingen | 11,571 | 76.0% | 26,000 |
| 18 | Wattenscheid 09 | 11,106 | -22.5% | 28,000 |
References
References
- "Schedule Round 1". DFB.
- "Archive 1992/1993 Round 34". DFB.
- Grüne, Hardy. (2001). "Enzyklopädie des deutschen Ligafußballs, Band 7: Vereinslexikon". AGON Sportverlag.
- "Bayer Uerdingen – Eintracht Frankfurt". fussballdaten.de.
- https://www.european-football-statistics.co.uk/attn/archive/ger/aveger93.htm
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