1980–81 2. Bundesliga Explained

Competition:2. Bundesliga
Season:1980–81
Winners:Nord: Werder Bremen
Süd: SV Darmstadt 98
Relegated:Nord: 12 clubs
Süd: 10 clubs
League Topscorer:Nord: Frank Mill
(40 goals)
Süd: Horst Neumann
(26 goals)
Matches:Nord: 462
Süd: 380
Average Attendance:Nord: 5,672
Süd: 4,379
Prevseason:1979–80
Nextseason:1981–82

The 1980–81 2. Bundesliga season was the seventh season of the 2. Bundesliga, the second tier of the German football league system. It was played in two regional divisions, Nord and Süd. This was the final season of the original two region 2. Bundesliga, as the DFB sought to integrate the Nord and Süd divisions into a single division for the next campaign. This meant 22 teams faced the drop to the Oberliga (12 from the Nord, 10 from the Süd). There were three promotion spots to the Bundesliga on offer, while the remaining teams would enter the new single league 2. Bundesliga in the next season.

Werder Bremen, Eintracht Braunschweig and SV Darmstadt 98 were promoted to the Bundesliga while twenty two clubs were relegated to the Oberligas.

Nord

The 1980–81 season saw 1. FC Bocholt, Göttingen 05, SpVgg Erkenschwick and VfB Oldenburg promoted to the 2. Bundesliga from the Oberligas while Hertha BSC, Werder Bremen and Eintracht Braunschweig had been relegated to the 2. Bundesliga Nord from the Bundesliga.

Top scorers

GoalsPlayerTeam
40 Frank MillRot-Weiss Essen
36 Werner KillmaierHertha BSC Berlin
30 Horst FeilzerVfL Osnabrück
Ronald WormEintracht Braunschweig
29 Erwin KosteddeSV Werder Bremen
27 Dieter SchatzschneiderHannover 96
22 Thomas RemarkHertha BSC Berlin
21 Bernd KrumbeinSG Union Solingen/OSV Hannover
20 Werner LenzSG Union Solingen
Harald Snater1. SC Göttingen 05

Süd

The 1980–81 season saw Borussia Neunkirchen, FC Augsburg, Hessen Kassel and VfB Eppingen promoted to the 2. Bundesliga from the Oberligas while no club had been relegated to the 2. Bundesliga Süd from the Bundesliga.

Top scorers

The league's top scorers:[1]

GoalsPlayerTeam
26 Horst NeumannSV Darmstadt 98
25 Uwe BeinKickers Offenbach
23 Franz GerberESV Ingolstadt
22 Paul LinzFreiburger FC
Bodo MatternVfR Wormatia Worms
19 Lothar LeiendeckerEintracht Trier
Heinz Traser1. FC Saarbrücken
18 Herbert DemangeFC 08 Homburg
Hans JörgFC Augsburg
17 Peter CestonaroSV Darmstadt 98
Werner HofmannFSV Frankfurt
Werner NickelStuttgarter Kickers

Promotion play-offs

The final place in the Bundesliga was contested between the two runners-up in the Nord and Süd divisions. Eintracht Braunschweig won on aggregate and were promoted to the Bundesliga.[2]

Qualification for single-division 2. Bundesliga

There was a sophisticated system for qualifying for the new single-division 2. Bundesliga. First, the clubs had to meet technical qualification criteria. These stipulated that the stadiums had to accommodate at least 15,000 spectators and had to be equipped with floodlights within a certain period of time. If these requirements were met, sporting criteria would come into play. The non-promoted teams in fourth place and above from the Nord and Süd divisions, along with the three relegated teams from the 1980–81 Bundesliga, automatically qualified. The other participants (teams from 5th to 16th place in the Nord and Süd) were determined by a so-called "placement number" (German: Platzziffer). This was calculated from the positions achieved by teams in the last three seasons. The lower this number was, the better the club was placed. For the 1978–79 season, the table position was multiplied by one, the 1979–80 season by two and the current 1980–81 season by three. Seasons in the Bundesliga were tallied as zero. For Oberliga seasons in which teams did not achieve promotion, 20 points were added, and 16 points for seasons which teams were promoted. It was also important from which region the three relegated teams of the Bundesliga were from, as well as how many teams were promoted from the respective Nord and Süd divisions. At the end, 10 teams from the Nord and Süd divisions had represented in the next season. Teams in 17th and below from the Nord and Süd were relegated, irrespective of their placement number. There was no promotion for teams from the Oberliga going into the single-division season.[3]

Nord
Team
1Werder Bremen3
2Eintracht Braunschweig6
3Hertha BSC9
4Hannover 9633
5Alemannia Aachen36
6Rot-Weiss Essen36
7Fortuna Köln43
8Union Solingen48
9SG Wattenscheid50
10VfL Osnabrück52
11Viktoria Köln57
12Preußen Münster62
131. FC Bocholt88
14Rot-Weiß Oberhausen88
15VfB Oldenburg97
16SC Herford98
17Tennis Borussia Berlin88
18Göttingen 05106
19Holstein Kiel99
20Rot-Weiß Lüdenscheid111
21SpVgg Erkenschwick115
22OSV Hannover106
Süd
Team
1Darmstadt 9811
2Kickers Offenbach28
3Stuttgarter Kickers24
4Hessen Kassel64
5SC Freiburg48
6SpVgg Bayreuth55
7Waldhof Mannheim56
8Wormatia Worms59
9SpVgg Fürth60
10Freiburger FC61
11SSV Ulm63
12Eintracht Trier64
13FC Homburg64
14VfR Bürstadt83
15FSV Frankfurt93
16ESV Ingolstadt98
171. FC Saarbrücken69
18FC Augsburg104
19Borussia Neunkirchen109
20VfB Eppingen112

References

General references

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.weltfussball.de/torjaeger/2-bundesliga-1980-1981-nord/ 2. Bundesliga 1980/1981 Nord Torschützenliste
  2. http://www.weltfussball.de/spielplan/relegation-bundesliga-1980-1981-spiele/2/ Relegation Bundesliga 1980/1981
  3. Web site: Saison 1980/1981 . 1980–81 season . spvgg-erkenschwick.de . . 24 May 2019 . German . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20190524220142/http://www.spvgg-erkenschwick.de/index.php/historie/ergebnisse-tabellen/3956-saison-19801981 . 24 May 2019.