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1994–95 Austrian Football Bundesliga

77th season of top-tier football league in Austria


77th season of top-tier football league in Austria

FieldValue
competitionAustrian Bundesliga
season1994–95
winnersSV Austria Salzburg
league topscorerSouleyman Sané (20)
prevseason1993–94
nextseason1995–96

The Austrian Football Bundesliga of 1994–95 was organised by the Austrian Football Association (ÖFB). The Austrian First League served as a stepping stone for promotion to the 1. Bundesliga. The Regional Leagues acted as a third step on the footballing ladder, East (Vienna, Lower Austria and Burgenland), Central (Mitte) (Carinthia, Upper Austria, and Styria) and West (Salzburg, Tirol, and Vorarlberg).

Bundesliga

The Bundesliga was contest by 10 teams, who played against each other four times. SV Austria Salzburg won the Austrian Football Bundesliga for the second time. As champions they were able to take part in the qualifying rounds of the Champions League the following season, but they were knocked out in the qualifying rounds. Rapid Vienna were able to take part in the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup due to their cup victory, where they played in the final in Brussels. Sturm Graz as well as Austria Vienna represented Austrian football in UEFA Cup 1996, where Austria Vienna made Round 1. FC Tirol Innsbruck, Linz ASK and SK Vorwärts Steyr all took part in the UEFA Intertoto Cup of 1995, where Tirol made the final. VfB Mödling were relegated for finishing bottom. A play-off for the final relegation place occurred between FC Linz and SV Ried, which saw SV Ried win 3–0 over two legs, thereby relegating FC Linz to the Austrian First League and promoting Ried into the Bundesliga.

Teams and location

Teams of 1994–95 Austrian Football Bundesliga

  • FC Admira/Wacker
  • Austria Salzburg
  • Austria Wien
  • LASK
  • FC Linz
  • VfB Mödling
  • Rapid Wien
  • Sturm Graz
  • Tirol Innsbruck
  • Vorwärts Steyr

League standings

Results

Teams played each other four times in the league. In the first half of the season each team played every other team twice (home and away), and then did the same in the second half of the season.

First half of season

Second half of season

Top goalscorers

RankScorerClubGoals12367
Senegal Souleyman SanéTirol Innsbruck20
Norway Mons Ivar MjeldeAustria Wien17
Austria Mario HaasSturm Graz13
Austria Thomas JaneschitzTirol Innsbruck
Austria Marcus PürkRapid Wien
Austria Christian StumpfFC Linz12
Austria Heimo PfeifenbergerAustria Salzburg11
Austria Herfried SabitzerLinzer ASK
Austria Christoph WesterthalerVorwärts Steyr

Austria Salzburg's Team

Otto Konrad, Herbert Ilsanker – Christian Fürstaller, Leo Lainer, Peter Artner, Wolfgang Feiersinger – Thomas Winklhofer, Hermann Stadler, Franz Aigner, Adi Hütter, Tomislav Kocijan, Mladen Mladenović, Arnold Freisegger, Martin Hiden – Heimo Pfeifenberger, Martin Amerhauser, Nikola Jurčević, Eduard Glieder, Ralph Hasenhüttl, Klaus Dietrich, Dean Računica, Helmut Rottensteiner, Gerhard Struber – Manager: Otto Barić

Relegation play-offs

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First League

Top goalscorers

RankScorerClubGoals12357
NED Marcel OerlemansFirst Vienna20
AUT Matthias BleyerSV Braunau16
AUT Herbert WiegerGrazer AK15
AUT Markus WeissenbergerSV Spittal
AUT Peter PospisilFirst Vienna14
AUT Manfred WachterFirst Vienna
AUT Eduard GliederGrazer AK13
AUT Joachim MoitziAustria Lustenau
FR Yugoslavia Zoran ToskićFC Kufstein

Regional Leagues

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Attendances

#ClubAverage
1Salzburg12,889
2Rapid9,472
3LASK8,906
4Tirol8,011
5Sturm7,417
6Austria5,494
7Linz4,564
8Steyr4,500
9Admira2,297
10Mödling1,772

Source:

Literature

  • Josef Huber: Tagebuch des Jahrhunderts, Fußball-Österreich von 1901 bis 2000, Verlag Wolfgang Drabesch, Wien 2000

References

References

  1. https://www.european-football-statistics.co.uk/attn/archive/aut/aveaut95.htm
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