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2. Bundesliga Nord (1974–1981)


FieldValue
name2. Bundesliga Nord
imageDeutschland Lage der 2. Bundesliga Nord.PNG
altMap of West Germany and West Berlin: Position of the 2nd Bundesliga Nord highlighted
countryWest Germany
state{{plainlist
founded1974
folded1981 (7 seasons)
successor2. Bundesliga
promotionBundesliga
relegation{{plainlist
levelLevel 2
championsSV Werder Bremen
season1980–81
  • West Berlin
  • Lower Saxony
  • Schleswig-Holstein
  • Bremen
  • Hamburg
  • North Rhine-Westphalia
  • Oberliga Berlin
  • Oberliga Nord
  • Oberliga Nordrhein
  • Oberliga Westfalen The 2. Bundesliga Nord was the second-highest level of the West German football league system in the north of West Germany from its introduction in 1974 until the formation of the single-division 2. Bundesliga in 1981. It covered the northern states of North Rhine-Westphalia, Lower Saxony, Bremen, Hamburg, Schleswig-Holstein and the city of West Berlin.

Overview

The league was established in 1974 to reduce the number of second divisions in Germany from five to two and thereby allow direct promotion to the league winners. Along with the foundation of the 2. Bundesliga Nord, formed from clubs of the three former Regionalligas of Nord, Berlin and West, went the foundation of the 2. Bundesliga Süd, which was created from clubs of the other two Regionalligas, Süd and Südwest.

The league was created from twelve clubs from the West, seven from the North and one from Berlin, reflecting the playing strength of the old Regionalligas.

The winner of the 2. Bundesliga Nord was directly promoted to the Bundesliga, the runners-up played a home-and-away series versus the southern runners-up for the third promotion spot.

The bottom four teams were relegated to the Amateurligas, after 1978 to the new Oberligas. In 1979 only three teams were relegated. The winners of the Amateurligas/Oberligas had to determine the promoted teams by the way of a promotion play-off.

The league operated with 20 teams in its first six seasons, expanding to 22 in its last in 1981.

Until 1978, below the 2. Bundesliga Nord ranked the following Verbandsligas and Oberligas:

  • Oberliga Nord
  • Oberliga Berlin
  • Verbandsliga Mittelrhein
  • Verbandsliga Niederrhein
  • Verbandsliga Westfalen 1
  • Verbandsliga Westfalen 2

In 1978 these leagues were reduced to four:

  • Oberliga Nord
  • Oberliga Berlin
  • Oberliga Nordrhein
  • Oberliga Westfalen

In 1981, the two 2. Bundesligas merged into one, country-wide division. Nine clubs from the south and eight from the north plus the three relegated teams from the Bundesliga were admitted into the new league, the 2. Bundesliga.

SG Wattenscheid 09, VfL Osnabrück, Alemannia Aachen, SC Fortuna Köln and SC Preußen Münster all played every single one of the seven seasons of the league.

Disbanding of the 2. Bundesliga Nord

The league was dissolved in 1981. Eight clubs of the league went to the new 2. Bundesliga while the champion and runners-up were promoted to the Bundesliga. The twelve remaining clubs were relegated to the Amateurligas.

The teams admitted to the 2. Bundesliga were:

  • Hertha BSC
  • Hannover 96
  • Alemannia Aachen
  • VfL Osnabrück
  • Union Solingen
  • Rot-Weiss Essen
  • SC Fortuna Köln
  • SG Wattenscheid 09

Relegated to the Oberligas were:

  • to Oberliga Nordrhein: Viktoria Köln, 1. FC Bocholt, Rot-Weiss Oberhausen
  • to Oberliga Westfalen: SC Preußen Münster, SC Herford, Rot-Weiß Lüdenscheid, SpVgg Erkenschwick
  • to Oberliga Nord: VfB Oldenburg, SC Göttingen 05, Holstein Kiel, OSV Hannover
  • to Oberliga Berlin: Tennis Borussia Berlin

Winners and runners-up

The winners and runners-up of the league were:

1980–81SV Werder BremenEintracht Braunschweig
  • Promoted teams in bold.

Play-offs for Bundesliga promotion

The third promotion spot to the Bundesliga was decided through a play-off round of the runners-up of the two 2nd Bundesligas. Here are the results of this round:

1981Kickers OffenbachEintracht Braunschweig1–0 / 0–2
  • Bold denotes promotion-winner.

Placings in the 2. Bundesliga Nord 1974–1981

The league placings from 1974 to 1981:

Club1975197619771978197919801981
Borussia Dortmund62BBBBB
Bayer 04 Leverkusen151081BB
Bayer Uerdingen2B472BB
Arminia Bielefeld4921B1B
SV Werder BremenBBBBBB1
Eintracht BraunschweigBBBBBB2
Hertha BSCBBBBBB3
Hannover 961B551534
Alemannia Aachen1512714775
VfL Osnabrück869161886
Union Solingen13199997
Rot-Weiss EssenBBB2828
SC Fortuna Köln54124469
SG Wattenscheid 097815610510
Viktoria Köln16411
1. FC Bocholt1812
SC Preußen Münster936331013
Rot-Weiß Oberhausen181514
VfB Oldenburg15
SC Herford14171716
Tennis Borussia BerlinB1B10111317
SC Göttingen 0510111718
Holstein Kiel141419
Rot-Weiß Lüdenscheid13191620
SpVgg Erkenschwick161821
OSV Hannover1222
DSC Wanne-Eickel1311
OSC Bremerhaven1918
Arminia Hannover13151219
Wuppertaler SVB53111720
FC St. Pauli3141B6
Westfalia Herne1011125
Wacker 04 Berlin13161820
Schwarz-Weiß Essen127820
Bonner SC16
VfL Wolfsburg1920
1. FC Mülheim1117
DJK Gütersloh1419
Spandauer SV20
Olympia Wilhelmshaven17
HSV Barmbeck-Uhlenhorst20

Source:{{Cite web | access-date = 8 January 2008 | archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20080105000729/http://www.f-archiv.de/| archive-date= 5 January 2008 | url-status= live}}

Key

SymbolKey
BBundesliga
PlaceLeague
BlankPlayed at a league level below this league

Notes

  • Westfalia Herne withdrew from the league in 1979 for financial reasons.
  • FC St. Pauli was refused a licence in 1979 and relegated.
  • DSC Wanne-Eicke' withdrew from the league in 1980 for financial reasons.

References

Sources

  • Deutschlands Fußball in Zahlen, An annual publication with tables and results from the Bundesliga to Verbandsliga/Landesliga, publisher: DSFS
  • kicker Almanach, The yearbook on German football from Bundesliga to Oberliga, since 1937, published by the kicker Sports Magazine
  • Die Deutsche Liga-Chronik 1945–2005 History of German football from 1945 to 2005 in tables, publisher: DSFS, published: 2006

References

  1. "Kicker Almanach" The Football Yearbook on German football from Bundesliga to Oberliga, since 1937, published by the Kicker Sports Magazine
  2. [http://www.f-archiv.de/ Das deutsche Fußball-Archiv] {{in lang. de Historical German domestic league tables
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