Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Süd

Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Süd
Map of Bavaria with the location of Upper Bavaria highlighted
Country  Germany
State  Bavaria
Founded 1963
Number of teams 16
Level on pyramid Level 7
Promotion to Landesliga
Relegation to
  • Kreisliga Zugspitze 1
  • Kreisliga Zugspitze 2
  • Kreisliga München 2
Current champions SC Olching
(2015–16)

The Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Süd (English: District league Upper Bavaria-South) is currently the seventh tier of the German football league system in the southern part of the Bavarian Regierungsbezirk of Upper Bavaria (German: Oberbayern). Until the disbanding of the Bezirksoberliga Oberbayern in 2012 it was the eighth tier. From 2008, when the 3. Liga was introduced, was the seventh tier of the league system, until the introduction of the Regionalligas in 1994 the sixth tier. From the leagues interception in 1963 to the introduction of the Bezirksoberliga in 1988 it was the fifth tier.

Overview

History

Before the Bezirksoberligas in Bavaria were introduced in 1988 the Bezirksligas were the leagues set right below the Landesligas Bayern in the football pyramid from 1963 onwards, when the Landesligas were established. Until the establishment of the Bezirksoberliga, the league champions were not automatically promoted but instead had to play-off for promotion as there was five Bezirksligas feeding the Landesliga but initially only three, later four promotion spots.[1][2]

In 1988, when the Bezirksoberligas were introduced, the league lost some of its status as it was relegated one tier. On a positive note, the league champions were now always promoted and the league runners-up had the opportunity to play-off for promotion as well.[1]

With the league reform at the end of the 2011–12 season, which included an expansion of the number of Landesligas from three to five, the Bezirksoberligas were disbanded. Instead, the Bezirksligas took the place of the Bezirksoberligas once more below the Landesligas.[3]

The following qualifying modus applied at the end of the 2011-12 season:[4][5]

Format

The winner of the Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Süd, like the winner of the Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Nord and Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Ost was, until 2011, directly promoted to the Bezirksoberliga Oberbayern. The runners-up of the Bezirksligas in Upper Bavaria would take part in a promotion round with the best-placed Bezirksoberliga team which did finish on a relegation rank to determine one or more additional promotion spots, depending on availability. From the 2012-13 season onwards, the league champion will be promoted to one of the five Landesligas. Given that the new Landesligas, unlike the old ones, are not geographically fixed the champion could end up in either the Landesliga Bayern-Südwest or the Landesliga Bayern-Südost.[6]

The bottom three teams of each group were relegated to one of the Kreisligas. At the same time the Kreisliga champions were promoted to the Bezirksliga. The runners-up of the Kreisligas faced a play-off with each other and the 13th placed teams in the Bezirksliga.

The Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Süd is fed by the following Kreisligas:

Since 1995, the league has generally operated with a strength of 16 clubs and rarely deviated from this.[1]

League timeline

The league went through the following timeline of positions in the league system:

Years Name Tier Promotion to
1963–88 Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Süd V Landesliga Bayern-Süd
1988–94 Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Süd VI Bezirksoberliga Oberbayern
1994–2008 Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Süd VII Bezirksoberliga Oberbayern
2008–12 Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Süd VIII Bezirksoberliga Oberbayern
2012– Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Süd VII Landesliga Bayern

League champions

The winners and runners–up of the league:[1][7]

1963–88

The league champions and runners–up while being a feeder league to the Landesliga:

Season Champions Runners–up
1963–64 TSV Trostberg
1964–65 SV Wacker Burghausen
1965–66 TSV Wolfratshausen
1966–67 FC Falke Markt Schwaben FC Deisenhofen
1967–68 TSV Milbertshofen FC Deisenhofen
1968–69 1. FC Garmisch TSV Marktl
1969–70 Eintracht Freising BSG Himolla Taufkirchen
1970–71 FC Moosinning MTV 79 München
1971–72 TSV Herrsching ESV München-Laim
1972–73 SC Unterpfaffenhofen SpVgg Starnberg
1973–74 1. FC Garmisch TSV Schongau
1974–75 SpVgg Starnberg TSV Murnau
1975–76 FC Emmering TSV Murnau
1976–77 TSV Weilheim + TSV Peißenberg +
1977–78 MTV 79 München TSV Peißenberg
1978–79 SpVgg Unterhaching TSV Murnau
1979–80 SV 1880 München MTV 79 München
1980–81 TSV Murnau ESV München
1981–82 ESV München SpVgg Starnberg
1982–83 SV 1880 München ESV München
1983–84 TSV Großhadern SpVgg Starnberg
1984–85 SpVgg Unterhaching II TSV Milbertshofen
1985–86 SpVgg Starnberg TSV Ottobrunn
1986–87
1987–88

1988–2012

The league champions and runners–up while being a feeder league to the Bezirksoberliga:

Season Champions Runners–up
1988–89 SV Planegg-Krailling SVG Trudering
1989–90 TSV 1860 München II + ESV Neuaubing +
1990–91 BSC Sendling SVG Trudering
1991–92 SVG Trudering TuS Geretsried
1992–93 TSV Trudering SV Aubing
1993–94 SV Raisting ESV Neuaubing
1994–95 FSV München 1. FC Garmisch
1995–96 BSC Sendling FC Emmering
1996–97 SV Pullach SV Germering
1997–98 TSV Grünwald SV Aubing
1998–99 SV Raisting BCF Wolfratshausen +
1999–2000 TSV Forstenried TSV Gilching-Argelsried
2000–01 BCF Wolfratshausen SC Olching
2001–02 SC Fürstenfeldbruck II 1. FC Garmisch
2002–03 1. FC Miesbach SC Olching
2003–04 TSV Großhadern MTV Berg
2004–05 SV Pullach SC Oberweikertshofen
2005–06 SC Olching TSV Solln
2006–07 TuS Holzkirchen TSV Gräfelfing
2007–08 SC Gaißach FC Deisenhofen +
2008–09 SC Olching TSV Peiting
2009–10 TuS Geretsried TSV Peiting
2010–11 TuS Holzkirchen SV Raisting
2011–12 SV Planegg-Krailling TSV Grünwald

2012–present

The league champions and runners–up while being a feeder league to the Landesliga once more:

Season Champions Runners–up
2012–13 SC Oberweikertshofen TSV Grünwald
2013–14 SV Planegg-Krailling TSV Grünwald
2014–15 TuS Geretsried TSV Gilching
2015–16 SC Olching TSV Gilching

Current clubs

The clubs in the league in the 2016–17 season and their 2015–16 final placings:[8]

Club Position
SC Fürstenfeldbruck Relegated from Landesliga
SV Planegg-Krailling Relegated from Landesliga
FC Phönix München 3rd
SV Aubing 4th
FC Hertha München 5th
TSV Neuried 6th
DJK München Pasing 8th
TSV Grünwald 9th
FC Anadolu Bayern 10th
Lenggrieser SC 11th
SC Pöcking-Possenhofen 12th
MTV Berg 14th
SC Maisach Promoted from the Kreisliga
Herakles München SV Promoted from the Kreisliga
TSV Oberalting-Seefeld Promoted from the Kreisliga
FC Penzberg Promoted from the Kreisliga

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Tables and results of the Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Süd Manfreds Fussball Archiv, accessed: 30 July 2011
  2. Landesliga Süd tables (German) Das Deutsche Fussballarchiv, accessed: 29 July 2011
  3. Untere Ligen erfahren eine Aufwertung (German) Augsburger Allgemeine, published: 11 April 2011, accessed: 2 May 2011
  4. Auf- und Abstiegsregelung der Bayernliga und der Landesligen für das Qualifikationsspieljahr 2011/2012 Archived September 5, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. (German) Bavarian FA website - Regulations for promotion and relegation in 2012, accessed: 16 July 2011
  5. Die Auf- und Abstiegsregeln für die Spielzeit 2011 / 2012 Archived October 2, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. (German) Bavarian FA website - Regulations for promotion and relegation in 2012 in Upper Bavaria, accessed: 29 July 2011
  6. Die neue Landesliga-Einteilung (German) fupa.net, Map of the new Landesligas with all 2012-13 clubs, accessed: 13 June 2012
  7. "Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Süd - Spieltag / Tabelle" [Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Süd - Results & Table]. kicker.de (in German). kicker (sports magazine). Retrieved 5 May 2016.
  8. Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Süd (German) kicker website – League tables and results of the Bezirksliga Oberbayern-Süd ,accessed: 7 July 2015

Sources

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/17/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.