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Landesliga Bayern-Süd

Landesliga Bayern-Süd

FieldValue
nameLandesliga Bayern-Süd
founded1963
folded2012
countryGermany
imageDeutschland Lage von Bayern.svg
pixels100px
altMap of Germany with the location of Bavaria highlighted
stateBavaria
promotionBayernliga
relegation{{plainlist
levelLevel 6
season2011–12
championsWacker Burghausen II
  • Bezirksoberliga Oberbayern
  • Bezirksoberliga Schwaben

The Landesliga Bayern-Süd () was the sixth tier of the German football league system in southern Bavaria. Until the introduction of the 3. Liga (Third League) in 2008, it was the fifth tier of the league system, until the introduction of the Regionalligas in 1994 the fourth tier.

The winner of the Landesliga Süd was automatically qualified for the Bayernliga, while the runners-up needed to compete with the runners-up of Landesliga Bayern-Mitte and Landesliga Bayern-Nord and the 15th-placed team of the Bayernliga for another promotion spot.

The league was disbanded in 2012, when the Regionalliga Bayern was introduced as the new fourth tier of the German league system in Bavaria. Below this league, the Bayernliga was expanded to two divisions while the number of state leagues grew from three to five divisions. However, none of the new leagues carried the name Landesliga Bayern-Süd, with the Landesliga Bayern-Südwest coming closest in territorial coverage.

Overview

The Landesligas from 1963 to 2012.

The Landesligen in Bavaria were formed in 1963, in place of the 2nd Amateurligas, which operated below the Bayernliga until then. In the region of the Landesliga Süd, the 2nd Amateurligas were split into three groups, Schwaben, Oberbayern A and Oberbayern B. The league was formed from sixteen clubs, six of them from the Amateurliga Südbayern (III) and ten from the 2nd Amateurligas.

In the first eighteen seasons, up until 1980, only the league champions were promoted to the Bayernliga. This was altered in 1981, when the three Landesliga runners-up were given the opportunity to earn promotion, too, via a promotion round. The Bavarian football association actually stipulates in its rules and regulations that every league champion has to be promoted, unless it declines to do so, and every runners-up has to have the opportunity to earn promotion, too.

Below the league, the Bezirksligas were set as the fifth tier of league football, until 1988, when the Bezirksoberligas were formed. In the early years, three teams were promoted from the Bezirksligas, two from Oberbayern and one from Schwaben; from 1966, it was four clubs, two from each region. The Landesliga Süd is now fed by the two Bezirksoberligen of Schwaben and Oberbayern.

In the early years, the league operated with a strength of sixteen clubs, occasionally dropping to fifteen. From 1968, it was enlarged to eighteen. In 1981, TSV Schwaben Augsburg became the first club to be promoted from the Landesligas as a runners-up. Alongside, the number of clubs promoted to the league was increased to five. The league strength now became more fluctuating due to the unpredictability of promotion-relegation play-offs, and it moved between sixteen and nineteen clubs.

With the introduction of the Bezirksoberligas below it in 1988, the winner of those were automatically promoted, while the runners-up played-off for another promotion spot. The loser of this game then faced the 15th placed team of Landesliga to determine the winner of the last available spot in the Landesliga.

Clubs from the border region to Baden-Württemberg traditionally chose to play in the Baden-Württemberg Football League System rather than in the Bavarian Football League System. These so-called "Iller Vereine", after the river Iller who forms the boundary between the two states in this area, left the Schwaben FA in 1946. Notable clubs are the SpVgg Lindau, FV Illertissen and SpVgg Au/Iller. The later played in the Oberliga Baden-Württemberg on a number of occasions.

In the 1993–94 and 2007–08 season, two direct promotion spots to the Bayernliga were available, while the third placed team qualified for the promotion round. The MTV Ingolstadt and TSV Rain am Lech qualified through this process as the third team. The reason for this was changes in the German league system, the introduction of the Regionalliga in 1994 and the 3. Liga in 2008.

Disbanding

The Bavarian football federation carried out drastic changes to the league system at the end of the 2011–12 season. With the already decided introduction of the Regionalliga Bayern from 2012–13, it also placed two Bayernligas below the new league as the new fifth tier of the German league system. Below those, five Landesligas instead of the existing three were set, which would be geographically divided to limit travel and increase the number of local derbies.

The clubs from the Landesliga Bayern-Süd joined the following leagues:

  • Champions and runners-up: Promotion round to the Regionalliga, winners to the Regionalliga, losers to the Bayernliga.
  • Teams placed 3rd to 8th: Directly qualified to the Bayernliga.
  • Teams placed 9th to 15th: Promotion round to the Bayernliga, winners to the Bayernliga, losers to the Landesliga.
  • Teams placed 16th or worse: Directly qualified to the Landesliga.

Founding members

When the league was formed in 1963 as the new fourth tier of the Bavarian league system in Upper Bavaria and Swabia, in place of the 2nd Amateurligas, it consisted of the following sixteen clubs from the following leagues:

  • From the Amateurliga Südbayern
    • SpVgg Kaufbeuren
    • TSV Kottern
    • FC Kempten
    • FC Bayern Munich II
    • TSV 1860 Munich II
    • TSV Gersthofen
  • From the 2nd Amateurliga Schwaben
    • Meringer SV
    • TSG Augsburg
    • FC Memmingen
    • TSV Kriegshaber
    • BC Aichach
  • From the 2nd Amateurliga Oberbayern-A
    • TSV 1860 Rosenheim
    • FC Deisenhofen
    • FSV Pfaffenhofen
  • From the 2nd Amateurliga Oberbayern-B
    • ASV Dachau
    • Sportfreunde Pasing

The clubs in the Amateurliga Südbayern placed seventh or better were admitted to the new Amateurliga Bayern, all others went to the new Landesligas. Schwaben had originally only four qualifying spots for its 2nd Amateurliga while Oberbayern had six, this was altered to a five each ratio. The top teams in each league were qualified. The two third placed teams in the two Oberbayern leagues had to play a decider, which Sportfreunde Pasing won 3–0 over FC Traunstein.

Top-three of the Landesliga

The following teams have finished in the top-three in the league:

2011–12**Wacker Burghausen II****FC Augsburg II****TSV Schwabmünchen**
  • Promoted teams in bold.
  • The Bavarian football association requires deciders to be played when two teams are on equal points at the end of the season to determine promotion/relegation. Championship deciders were necessary in the following years:
  • For first place:
    • 1979: TSV Ampfing defeated SC Fürstenfeldbruck.
    • 1983: TSV Eching defeated TSV Aindling.
    • 1995: TSV 1860 Rosenheim defeated TSV Eching 2–1.
    • 2004: MTV Ingolstadt defeated BCF Wolfratshausen 5–2.
    • 2010: SV Heimstetten defeated VfB Eichstätt 2–1.
  • For second place:
    • none

Multiple winners

The following clubs have won the league more than once:

FC Bayern Munich II21967, 1973

All-time table 1963–2012

In the all-time table of the league from its formation in 1963 to its disbanding in 2012, TSV 1860 Rosenheim is the clear leader, 388 points ahead of second placed FC Gundelfingen, with BC Aichach third. The last place, number 121, goes to SpVgg Günz-Lauben with only 12 points. The 121st and last-ever team to enter the league was the VfB Durach for the 2011–12 season.

The TSV 1860 Rosenheim holds the record for all three Landesligen with 1,833 points from 1,206 games in 36 seasons, of a possible 49 up to 2012, the final year of the league.

Pos.ClubSeasonsMWDLGFGAP
1TSV 1860 Rosenheim36120650332437919911678**1833**
2FC Gundelfingen31101639625736316851669**1445**
3BC Aichach2997235224537516601725**1310**
4–118*115 clubs*
119VfB Durach13445253176**17**
120SK Srbija München13436253485**15**
121SpVgg Günz-Lauben134332832104**12**

League placings since 1988–89

Main article: List of clubs in the Landesliga Bayern-Süd

The complete list of clubs and placings in the league since the 1988–89 season:

ClubS899091929394959697989900010203040506070809101112
Wacker Burghausen236548**1****B****B****R****R****R****R****R****R****R****2B****2B****2B****2B****2B****R****3L****3L****3L****3L**
TSV 1860 München II *1*14**1****B****R****R****R****R****B****B****B****R****R****R****R****R****R****R****R**
FC Memmingen82**B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****1****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****R****R**
FC Ingolstadt 04 II *3*262**B****B****B****R**
TSV Aindling111471562**B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B**
FC Ismaning4843**1****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B****B**
SpVgg Unterhaching II232**B****B****B****B****B****B****B****R****B****B****B**
TSV Buchbach41265**1****B****B****B****B**
TSV Rain am Lech13694109753733**B****B****B****B**
TSV 1860 Rosenheim3612714785**1****B****1****B**712126111353118**1****B****B****B**
SV Heimstetten574**1****B****B**10**1****B****B**
SB/DJK Rosenheim9945**1****B**
TSV Gersthofen51512132**B**
Wacker Burghausen II913103**1****B****B**65615**1**
FC Augsburg II11105449352
TSV Schwabmünchen81519711133
VfB Eichstätt32144
[1. FC Sonthofen](1-fc-sonthofen)4106165
TSV Kottern914111715111736
BCF Wolfratshausen952**B**413788107
BC Aichach29410745121751115178
SC Fürstenfeldbruck22161010812911108**1****B****B****B****B****B**511789
TSV Landsberg1711154102**B**1812710
FC Pipinsried17141112161595916118121214151111
FC Unterföhring2412
FC Gundelfingen311311222**B****B****B****B**177631714913
TSV Eching2010**1****B****B****B**4244121314411817171714
SV Pullach439615
SV Kirchanschöring216
VfB Durach117
TSG Thannhausen8171218922**B****B****B**1218
FC Affing6129132416
Falke Markt Schwaben16**1****B****B**46131016131017
FC Gerolfing118
TSV Großhadern187312131551161616107111518
SV Raisting3161416
FC Memmingen II118
FC Kempten257158**1****B****B**4482**B****1****B**17
TSV 1861 Nördlingen2496121416171414817
FC Königsbrunn155983147891851013181418
SC Eintracht Freising13106386118915
TSV München-Grünwald68139161616
Schwaben Augsburg22**B****B****1****B**13831210**1****B****B****B**2**B**971518
DJK Lechhausen75111519141516
FT Starnberg 09 *4*416121317
SK Srbija München118
SC Bubesheim5714141516
SC Fürstenfeldbruck II118
TSV Neusäss3121019
MTV Ingolstadt *3*15**B****B****B****B**43**B**33382**B****B**3**1**
SV Gendorf *2*3726
TSV Ampfing13**B**1239111614165451115
TSV Bobingen771310291418
Türk SV München *6*11**B****B****B****B**3**1****B****B**725111319
SV Lohhof432**B****B****B****B****R****B****B****B****B****R****B**20
TSV Ebersberg116
FC Miesbach914131313914121317
TuS Geretsried696176818
TSV Mindelheim811171571418
SpVgg Kaufbeuren191517
FSV München3171613
[1. FC Garmisch](1-fc-garmisch-partenkirchen)61418
ESV Freilassing21518
FC Enikon Augsburg *5*12**B**
BSG Himolla Taufkirchen68106101116
TSV Dasing745106918
ESV Ingolstadt *3*991751217
BSC Sendling518
SpVgg Starnberg *4*12**1****B**6**1**
FC Wacker München7**B**61315
MSV München117
VfL Günzburg115

Key

SymbolKey
**B**Bundesliga
**RL** **2B**Regionalliga Süd (1963–74) [2. Bundesliga](2-bundesliga) (1974–present)
**3L**[3. Liga](3-liga)
**R**Regionalliga Süd (1994–present)
**B**Bayernliga
**1**League champions
PlaceLeague
BlankPlayed at a league level below this league
  • S = No of seasons in league (as of 2011–12)

Notes

  • 1 The TSV 1860 Munich II withdrew from the league in 1982 after the forced relegation of its first team to the Bayernliga.
  • 2 The SV Gendorf Burgkirchen withdrew its team from the league in 2004.
  • 3 The MTV Ingolstadt and ESV Ingolstadt merged in 2004 to form FC Ingolstadt 04.
  • 4 The football departments of FT Starnberg 09 merged with SpVgg Starnberg to form FC Starnberg in 1992. In 2001, the FC Starnberg was dissolved and the football department re-joined FT Starnberg 09.
  • 5 The FC Enikon Augsburg folded in 1995.
  • 6 Türk Gücü München folded in 2001 and reformed as Türkischer SV 1975 München. In 2009, the club merged with SV Ataspor to form SV Türkgücü-Ataspor München.
  • 7 The FSV München folded in 1999.

League records 1963–2012

The league records in regards to points, wins, losses and goals for and against the clubs in the league are:

RecordTeamSeasonNumber
Most wins*SC Fürstenfeldbruck*1984–8528
Fewest wins*FC Moosinning*1971–721
*TSV Marktoberdorf*1978–79
*TSV Kösching*1979–80
*TSV Schwaben Augsburg*2006–07
Most defeats*SpVgg Günz-Lauben*1985–8628
Fewest defeats*SpVgg Unterhaching*1980–811
Most goals for*FC Wacker München*1986–87115
Fewest goals for*TSV München-Grünwald*1991–9218
Most goals against*SV Lohof*2001–02131
Fewest goals against*FC Gundelfingen*1991–9218
Highest points (2 for a win)*SC Fürstenfeldbruck*1984–8558
Lowest points (2 for a win)*TSV Kottern*1963–648
Highest points (3 for a win)*SC Fürstenfeldbruck*2001–0283
Lowest points (3 for a win)*TSV Schwaben Augsburg*2006–077

References

Sources

  • Die Bayernliga 1945 – 1997, published by the DSFS, 1998
  • 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
  • Süddeutschlands Fussballgeschichte in Tabellenform 1897–1988 History of Southern German football in tables, publisher & author: Ludolf Hyll
  • 50 Jahre Bayrischer Fussball-Verband 50-year-anniversary book of the Bavarian FA, publisher: Vindelica Verlag, published: 1996

References

  1. [http://www.bfv.de/cms/docs/Auf-_und_Abstiegsregelung_der_Bayernliga_und_der_Landesligen-2011-07-11.pdf Auf- und Abstiegsregelung der Bayernliga und der Landesligen für das Qualifikationsspieljahr 2011/2012] {{webarchive. link. (5 September 2011 {{in lang). de Bavarian FA website – Regulations for promotion and relegation in 2012, accessed: 16 July 2011
  2. ''Die Bayernliga 1945–1997'' {{in lang. de publisher: [[DSFS]], published: 1998, page: 55 & 56, accessed: 26 June 2009
  3. ''Die Bayernliga 1945–1997'' {{in lang. de publisher: [[DSFS]], published: 1998, page: 116, accessed: 26 June 2009
  4. [http://www.f-archiv.de/ Landesliga Bayern-Süd] Das Deutsche Fussball Archiv, accessed: 27 June 2009
  5. [http://www.bfv.de/cms/seiten/39356_51617.html Attraktive Gegner, regionale Einteilung, weniger Fahrtkosten] {{webarchive. link. (11 March 2012 {{in lang). de ''BFV'' website, published: 12 February 2011, accessed: 29 April 2011
  6. [http://www.manfredsfussballarchiv.de/Landesligasued/llsuedanfang.htm Tables and results of the Landesliga Bayern-Süd] {{webarchive. link. (9 February 2012 {{in lang). de Manfreds Fussball Archiv, accessed: 4 February 2011
  7. [http://www.bfv.de/cms/seiten/1192_5398.html Spielordnung: § 14 (2) Feststellung des Meisters] {{webarchive. link. (22 July 2012 {{in lang). de BFV website – Rules of the game: § 14 (2) How to determine the league champion, accessed: 7 February 2011
  8. [http://www.fcgundelfingen.de/Fussball/Historie/EW-LATA.pdf All-time table of the Landesliga Süd 1963–2011] {{Webarchive. link. (19 July 2011 , source: FC Gundelfingen accessed: 28 June 2013)
  9. [http://www.f-archiv.de/ Das deutsche Fussball Archiv: Landesliga Bayern-Süd] {{in lang. de Historic German league tables, accessed: 7 February 2011
  10. [http://ftstarnberg09.de/index.php/verein FT Starnberg 09 website – History] {{in lang. de accessed: 8 March 2011
  11. [http://www.dsfs.de/uploads/media/Ehrentafel_der_Meister_der_Bezirksoberligen_in_Bayern_Teil_3_1989 Champions of the BOL Oberbayern 1988–2010]{{dead link. (December 2017)
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