3. Liga Explained

Pixels:200
Country:Germany
Confed:UEFA
Organiser:DFB
First:2008–09
Teams:20
Promotion:2. Bundesliga
Relegation:Regionalliga
Level:3
Domest Cup:DFB-Pokal
Champions:SSV Ulm (1st title)
Season:2023–24
Most Successful Club:Dynamo Dresden
1. FC Magdeburg
VfL Osnabrück (2 titles)
Current:2024–25 3. Liga
Top Goalscorer:Anton Fink (136)

The 3. Liga is a professional association football league and the third division in Germany. In the German football league system, it is positioned between the 2. Bundesliga and the fourth-tier Regionalliga.

The modern 3. Liga was formed for the 2008–09 season, replacing the Regionalliga, which had previously served as the third-tier in the country.[1] In Germany, the 3. Liga is also the highest division that a club's reserve team can play in.

History

In January 2006, the discussion was made about a reorganization of the amateur leagues and the establishment of a single-track "3. Bundesliga". The aim of the reform was to create a great performance density for the substructure of the 2. Bundesliga with better support and development opportunities for talented players. In addition, better marketing of the third division should be achieved. A violent dispute broke out in the run-up to the decision scheduled for September 2006 at the DFB-Bundestag about the participation of second teams in the first and second division. After the U23 teams of the professional clubs were initially not supposed to take part in the newly created league for reasons of distortion of competition and low attendance, several Bundesliga clubs demanded, an unrestricted right to participate. Ultimately, a compromise was worked out that initially only allowed four-second substitutes to play in the premier season of the third division.[2]

On 8 September 2006, the introduction of the single-track 3. Liga was finally decided at an extraordinary DFB Bundestag. Half of the clubs from the existing Regionalliga North and South were able to qualify for the premiere season, plus four relegated teams from the 2. Bundesliga. The German Football Association, the DFB, announced the formation of the 3. Liga. It was originally anticipated that the league's name would be 3. Bundesliga, but the DFB chose 3. Liga instead, as the league will be directly administered by the DFB, not by the German Football League DFL (Deutsche Fußball Liga) who runs both Bundesliga and 2. Bundesliga.[3] On 10 April 2008, the DFB presented the logo for the new division to the public.[4]

In contrast to the introduction of the 2. Liga in 1974 or the merging of the north and south seasons to form the single-track 2. Bundesliga for the 1981–82 season, there was no multi-year rating when determining the participants for the first season of the new 3. Liga. It was only the performance of the teams in the qualifying period of the Regionalliga relays were athletically qualified for the 3. Liga. In addition, there were four 2. Liga relegated teams in the 2007–08 season. The Regionalliga players who were not qualified for the new division after completing the admission process competed in the new three-pronged fourth division Regionalliga, provided they were granted a license for this.[5]

The first match of the 3. Liga was played on 25 July 2008 between Rot-Weiß Erfurt and Dynamo Dresden at the Steigerwaldstadion in Erfurt. Dynamo Dresden won the match 1–0, with Halil Savran scoring the only goal in the closing stages of the first half. The first goal scorer in the 3. Liga was Halil Savran and the first table leader was SC Paderborn 07. The first champions of the 3. Liga were 1. FC Union Berlin on 9 May 2009, who received the eight-and-a-half-kilogram silver championship trophy.[6]

In the 2018–19 season, four relegated teams were determined for the first time in the history of the 3. Liga,[7] and for the first-time regular Monday games took place.[8] Furthermore, for the first time no U23 team from a higher-class club was able to qualify for the league. With the relegation of the last founding member of the 3. Liga, FC Rot-Weiß Erfurt, in the preseason, for the first time, no team that been part of the league without interruption took part in the game. In addition, at the beginning of the 2018–19 season, the DFB and Adidas signed a partner contract that would run until the end of the 2021–22 season, according to which the company provides a uniform match ball; in all previous seasons each club had its own ball sponsor. The first ball provided by Adidas for all the clubs was the Telstar 18, which was also used at the 2018 FIFA World Cup.[9]

For the 2019–20 season, as in the two national leagues, warnings for club officials were introduced in the form of cards. On the 13th match day, the DFB expanded the regulation by an addition – as with players, club officials are threatened with suspension of more than one game and yellow card suspensions after being sent off after being checked by the competent authority.[10] In view of the global COVID-19 pandemic, gaming operations had to be temporarily suspended after 27 match days on 11 March 2020 and finally completely ceased on 16 March; the measure was initially valid until 30 April 2020.[11] [12] On 3 April, the DFB announced extensive changes to the game rules as a result. Among other things, it was possible to carry out seasonal operations beyond 30 June 2020, so the following season was opened later than the planned time. Ultimately, the final game day took place on 4 July 2020. In addition, a possible application to open insolvency proceedings within the 2019–20 season would no longer have resulted in a point deduction, in the following season only three points would be deducted instead of the usual nine; from the 2021–22 season onwards, the usual regulation should apply again.[13] On 21 May, it was decided to resume game operations on 30 May, and the DFB and DFL had worked out a hygiene concept for all three leagues with the help of the "Task Force Sports Medicine/Special Game Operations".[14] In parallel to the two national leagues, the DFB increased the substitutions quota per team from three to five player for the 3. Liga until the end of the season, and the third-highest German division was not allowed be played in front of spectators.[15]

While small numbers of spectators are allowed from the start of the 2020–21 season under certain conditions, it was decided in an internal league survey to limit the substitution contingent to three players again.

Financial situation

From its foundation in 2008 to 2013, the league operated at a financial loss, with a record deficit of €20.9 million in 2012–13. The 2013–14 season saw the league make a profit for the first time, of €4.9 million. The league earned €164.5 million, well behind the two Bundesligas above it, but also well ahead of other professional sports leagues in Germany. The Deutsche Eishockey Liga followed with €106.1 million and the Basketball Bundesliga and Handball-Bundesliga were each around the €90 million mark.[16] This makes it the third-most economically successful professional league in all German sports.[17]

Clubs

Since the establishment of the 3. Liga in 2008, a total of 63 clubs have played in this division. In the 2023–24 season, SSV Ulm were represented in the league for the first time. The last club that has been in the 3. Liga without interruption since it was founded in 2008 is FC Rot-Weiß Erfurt, which was relegated in 2018. The longest uninterrupted club playing in the league is SV Wehen Wiesbaden, which from 2009 until its promotion to the 2. Bundesliga in 2019, played in the 3. Liga for 10 years and also leads the all-time table. The club that has remained the longest at the moment is Hallescher FC, which has remained in the division since 2012. The clubs with the currently most – 12 – seasons in the 3. Liga is also SV Wehen Wiesbaden.

Members of and stadiums in the 2023–24 3. Liga

TeamLocationStadiumCapacity
data-sort-value="Aue" Erzgebirge AueAue-Bad SchlemaErzgebirgsstadion15,711
data-sort-value="Bielefeld" Arminia BielefeldBielefeldSchüco-Arena27,300
data-sort-value="Dortmund" Borussia Dortmund IIDortmundStadion Rote Erde9,999
data-sort-value="Dresden" Dynamo DresdenDresdenRudolf-Harbig-Stadion32,085
data-sort-value="Duisburg" MSV DuisburgDuisburgSchauinsland-Reisen-Arena31,500
data-sort-value="Essen" Rot-Weiss EssenEssenStadion an der Hafenstraße20,650
data-sort-value="Freiburg" SC Freiburg IIFreiburg im BreisgauDreisamstadion24,000
data-sort-value="Halle" Hallescher FCHalleLeuna-Chemie-Stadion15,057
data-sort-value="Ingolstadt" FC IngolstadtIngolstadtAudi Sportpark15,000
data-sort-value="Koln" Viktoria KölnCologneSportpark Höhenberg10,001
data-sort-value="Mannheim" Waldhof MannheimMannheimCarl-Benz-Stadion25,667
data-sort-value="Munich, 1860" 1860 MunichMunichGrünwalder Stadion15,000
data-sort-value="Munster" Preußen MünsterMünsterPreußenstadion14,300
data-sort-value="Regensburg" Jahn RegensburgRegensburgJahnstadion Regensburg15,210
data-sort-value="Saarbrucken" 1. FC SaarbrückenSaarbrückenLudwigsparkstadion16,003
data-sort-value="Sandhausen" SV SandhausenSandhausenGP Stadion am Hardtwald15,414
data-sort-value="Ulm" SSV UlmUlmDonaustadion19,500
data-sort-value="Unterhaching" SpVgg UnterhachingUnterhachingSportpark Unterhaching15,053
data-sort-value="Verl" SC VerlVerlSportclub Arena5,207

Structure

Season3. Liga Champion
2008–091. FC Union Berlin
2009–10VfL Osnabrück
2010–11Eintracht Braunschweig
2011–12SV Sandhausen
2012–13Karlsruher SC
2013–141. FC Heidenheim
2014–15Arminia Bielefeld
2015–16Dynamo Dresden
2016–17MSV Duisburg
2017–181. FC Magdeburg
2018–19VfL Osnabrück
2019–20FC Bayern München II
2020–21Dynamo Dresden
2021–221. FC Magdeburg
2022–23SV Elversberg
2023–24SSV Ulm

Since the first season in 2008–09, 20 teams have been playing for promotion to the 2. Bundesliga. The first two teams are promoted directly, the third in the table has to play for promotion in two playoffs in the relegation against the third from the bottom of the 2. Bundesliga. The three (from the 2018–19 season four[18]) last-placed teams will be relegated to the fourth-class Regionalliga and will be replaced by four (until 2018–19 three) promoted teams from the Regionalligas. The four best teams in the league qualify for the DFB-Pokal.

The teams which are not reserve teams of Bundesliga teams among the 20 teams in the league compete for promotion to the 2. Bundesliga, while the four bottom teams are relegated to one of the five Regionalligen: Regionalliga Nord, Regionalliga Nordost, Regionalliga West, Regionalliga Südwest, and Regionalliga Bayern. Until 2018, three were relegated. If, however, a reserve team is playing in the 3. Liga and the respective first team is relegated to the 3. Liga, the reserve team will be demoted to the fifth-level Oberliga regardless of its league position, because reserve teams of 3. Liga clubs are ineligible to play in the Regionalliga.

Qualifying for the 3. Liga

At the end of the 2007–08 season, the two best non-reserve teams from each of the two divisions of the Regionalliga were promoted to the 2. Bundesliga. The teams ranked third to tenth in both Regionalliga entered the new 3. Liga, joining the four teams relegated from the 2. Bundesliga to form the new 20-team league. Teams finishing 11th or lower in their Regionalliga remained where they were.

On 18 May 2008, at the end of the 2007–08 2. Bundesliga season, four clubs were relegated from the 2. Bundesliga and became charter members of the 3. Liga: Kickers Offenbach, Erzgebirge Aue, SC Paderborn and FC Carl Zeiss Jena.

On 31 May 2008, at the end of the 2007–08 Regionalliga seasons, clubs placing third through tenth in the Regionalliga Nord and the Regionalliga Süd also qualified for the new 3. Liga.

From the Regionalliga Nord:

From the Regionalliga Süd:

U23 Regulation

The teams of the 3. Liga are obliged to list at least 4 players in the match report sheet (game day squad) for each game who are eligible to play for a DFB selection team and who are not older than 23 years for the entire season (1 July to 30 June), i.e. were born on or after 1 July 1998 (U23 players) for the 2021–22 season.[19]

Eligibility to play in the second teams of licensed clubs (Bundesliga and 2. Bundesliga) is based on the regulation that applies from the Regionalliga downwards. According to this, only U23 players (see above) may be used, with 3 older players being allowed to be in the game at the same time.[20]

Promotion and relegation

The winner and runner-up in a given season are automatically promoted to the 2. Bundesliga. The third place team enters a home/away playoff against the 16th placed team of the 2. Bundesliga for the right to enter/stay in the 2. Bundesliga. Teams placing in the bottom four (three prior to 2019) are automatically sent to the Regionalliga.

Economy

With an annual turnover of €186 million (as of 2017–18), the 3. Liga was ahead of the Deutsche Eishockey Liga, the Handball-Bundesliga and Basketball Bundesliga (see: List of professional sports leagues by revenue).

License terms

In addition to sporting qualifications, the clubs concerned must also meet the economic and technical- organizational requirements that are mandatory by the DFB Presidium. As of the 2023-24 season, the minimum required capacity of stadiums has been reduced from 10,001 to 5,001, as a part of the DFB's "3. Liga Economic Task Force".[21] Club managers must also have hold a UEFA Pro License.[22]

In particular, the conditions relating to the arcade infrastructure repeatedly prompt potential climbers from the subordinate regional leagues not to submit any licensing documents; for example SV Rödinghausen or Berliner AK 07, both of which play in stadiums that are clearly too small.[23] [24] On the other hand, cases such as that of KFC Uerdingen 05, 1. FC Saarbrücken or Türkgücü München show that even a temporary game operation in alternative venues is just as problematic as the search for one.[25] [26] [27]

Broadcast rights

The media rights contract with SportA, the sports rights agency of the German public broadcasters ARD and ZDF, ran until the end of the 2017–18 season. Under this contract, the ARD and its third programs broadcast at least 100, a maximum of 120 games as well as the promotion games to the 3. Liga live.[28] The third programs broadcast further games via live stream on the internet. This reached an average of around four million viewers.[29] in addition, the ARD Sportschau showed summaries of selected games on Saturday from 6 pm to 6:30 pm.

Since the start of the 2017–18 season, Deutsche Telekom has been broadcasting all games for customers and subscribers as internet live streams. From the 2018–19 season to the 2020–21 season, a new contract came into force, with which SportA and Telekom jointly held the media rights to the 3. Liga. The ARD and its state broadcasters will then show 86 games from the 3. Liga as well as the promotion games to the 3. Liga live.

The clubs in the 3. Liga have each received well over a million euros for television rights since the 2018–19 season, around 40 percent more than before.[30] When the 3. Liga was introduced, the clubs received a total of €10 million.[31] Since the 2009–10 season, the annual payout has been €12,8 million.[32] [33] The second teams of the professional clubs do not participate in the television money.

Approximately 1–2 matches per week are broadcast with English commentary on the German Football Association YouTube channel.[34]

Spectators

The number of spectators in the 3. Liga varies greatly. Big city traditional clubs like Dynamo Dresden, 1. FC Kaiserslautern, 1. FC Magdeburg, FC Hansa Rostock, MSV Duisburg, Arminia Bielefeld, Karlsruher SC, Alemannia Aachen, Eintracht Braunschweig, TSV 1860 Munich and Fortuna Düsseldorf, but also the ambitious newcomer RB Leipzig often had an average attendance of well over 10,000 viewers per game.[35] Dynamo Dresden achieved the highest amount with an average of 27,500 spectators in the 2015–16 season. For the reserve teams, the average attendance is often less than 1,500 spectators per game. Werder Bremen II had the lowest value in the 2011–12 season with an average of 626. In the 2018–19 season, more than 3 million spectators were registered for the first time with an average of over 8,000, and six clubs achieved a five-digit average attendance.

Overall the 3. Liga has attendance numbers that are comparable to the second-tier soccer leagues in Italy (Serie B), France (Ligue 2) and Spain (Segunda División).[36] Only the third-tier English football league One has similarly high or higher attendance numbers.[37]

Economic situation of the clubs

Since its first season, the 3. Liga has had a higher turnover than the first-class German Leagues in all other sports.[38] For a number of clubs their participation in the 3. Liga ended with major financial problems. In 2009, the Stuttgarter Kickers got down after the DFB had imposed a three-point deduction for a loan that was not repaid on time. In addition, Kickers Emden had to withdraw its application for a license for the 3. Liga for economic reasons. In 2010–11, the opening of insolvency proceeding resulted in the forced regulation of Rot Weiss Ahlen. In the same season, TuS Koblenz waived their right to start the following third division season due to financial bottlenecks. In 2013, after the opening of insolvency proceedings, Alemannia Aachen was determined to be relegated early on and Kickers Offenbach's third division license was revoked. In 2016–17, VfR Aalen and FSV Frankfurt. In March 2018, FC Rot-Weiß Erfurt filed for bankruptcy, followed by Chemnitzer FC in April.[39] Both clubs were relegated after deducting ten or nine points. Several other clubs are constantly threatened with bankruptcy.

At a press conference in mid-October 2019, the DFB published the balance sheet report for the 2018–19 season. A record turnover of €185 million was offset by an average loss of €1.5 million, which meant a new negative record. It was also the ninth of eleven years in which the clubs showed a total deficit, while seven clubs were still able to generate a profit. One of the main drivers of this situation, according to the report, was increased spending on human resources, particularly on player transfers and salaries. The average earnings of a 3. Liga player for 2018–19 was given as around €7,000 per month. In addition, the number of spectators in the stadiums continued to rise, but in return it fell significantly on television.[40]

Financial fair play and the promotion of young talent

In order to counteract the problem, the DFB decided in September 2018 to introduce so-called financial fair play in the 3. Liga as well as a youth development fund to improve the economic situation of the clubs and strengthen their talent development. A total of around €3.5 million is to be distributed to the clubs. Up to €550,000 is to be distributed equally among clubs with a "positive seasonal result" and clubs that "have achieved or even exceeded their target season goal". A further €2.95 million is to flow into the youth development of the participants, whereby the use of U21 players with German nationality should have a positive effect on the distribution rate per club.[41]

The pots are distributed in September at the end of a season. With the first distribution, Hansa Rostock received the highest amount for the top position in the categories "positive annual result" and "planned quiality" after a record turnover of €19 million in the 2018–19 season.[42]

League statistics

Up to and including the 2021–22 season the top goal scorers, attendance statistics and records for the league are:

Attendance

SeasonLeague total
attendance
League average
attendance
Best supported clubAverage
attendance
2008–09[43] 2,134,4255,617Fortuna Düsseldorf14,875
2009–10[44] 1,949,3925,130Dynamo Dresden14,440
2010–11[45] 2,122,0255,584Eintracht Braunschweig17,425
2011–12[46] 1,736,3924,569Arminia Bielefeld8,935
2012–13[47] 2,341,6856,162Karlsruher SC11,974
2013–14[48] 2,306,9186,071RB Leipzig16,734
2014–15[49] 2,563,0786,745Dynamo Dresden22,748
2015–16[50] 2,665,9947,068Dynamo Dresden27,554
2016–17[51] 2,265,0885,9761. FC Magdeburg17,101
2017–18[52] 2,348,6306,1811. FC Magdeburg18,231
2018–19[53] 3,089,3548,1301. FC Kaiserslautern21,156
2019–20[54] [55] 2,350,1906,185Eintracht Braunschweig13,600
2020–21[56] [57] 133,125350Hansa Rostock1,995
2021–22[58] [59] 2,093,2735,6121. FC Kaiserslautern16,594
2022–23[60] 3,115,1028,219Dynamo Dresden24,495
2023–24[61] 3,662,8939,639Dynamo Dresden28,752

Top scorers

SeasonPlayerGoalsClub
2008–09[62] Anton Fink21SpVgg Unterhaching
2009–10[63] Régis Dorn22SV Sandhausen
2010–11[64] Domi Kumbela
Patrick Mayer
19Eintracht Braunschweig
1. FC Heidenheim
2011–12[65] Marcel Reichwein17Rot-Weiß Erfurt
2012–13[66] Anton Fink
Fabian Klos
20Chemnitzer FC
Arminia Bielefeld
2013–14[67] Dominik Stroh-Engel27Darmstadt 98
2014–15[68] Fabian Klos23Arminia Bielefeld
2015–16[69] Justin Eilers23Dynamo Dresden
2016–17[70] Christian Beck171. FC Magdeburg
2017–18[71] Manuel Schäffler22Wehen Wiesbaden
2018–19[72] Marvin Pourié22Karlsruher SC
2019–20[73] Kwasi Okyere Wriedt24Bayern Munich II
2020–21[74] Sascha Mölders221860 Munich
2021–22[75] Marcel Bär211860 Munich
2022–23[76] Ahmet Arslan25Dynamo Dresden
2023–24[77] Jannik Mause18FC Ingolstadt

Records

As of 22 May 2021

Highest win 7–0 FC Carl Zeiss Jena 07 1. FC Saarbrücken (11 August 2010)[78]
Most goals in a game 10 Eintracht Braunschweig 55 Fortuna Düsseldorf (10 May 2009)[79]
Most league appearances 347 Robert Müller (FC Carl Zeiss Jena, Holstein Kiel, Hansa Rostock, SV Wehen Wiesbaden, VfR Aalen, KFC Uerdingen 05, Energie Cottbus, SpVgg Unterhaching)[80]
Most goals scored 136 Anton Fink (Karlsruher SC, SpVgg Unterhaching, Chemnitzer FC, VfR Aalen)[81]

Placings in the 3. Liga

The teams are ordered here based on when they were last in the league, starting with the longest promoted teams, current teams, and longest relegated teams. The following clubs have played in the league and achieved the following final positions:[82]

Club09101112131415161718192021222324
Union Berlin12B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2BBBBBB
Fortuna Düsseldorf22B2B2BB2B2B2B2B2BBB2B2B2B2B
1. FC Heidenheim694512B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2BB
RB Leipzig22B2BBBBBBBBB
Darmstadt 981141832BBB2B2B2B2B2B2BB
Holstein Kiel191631422B2B2B2B2B2B2B
SC Paderborn32B2B2B2B2BB2B1822BB2B2B2B2B
Karlsruher SCB2B2B2B12B2B2B2B322B2B2B2B2B
Hansa Rostock2B2B22B121317101566622B2B2B
1. FC Magdeburg4412B141112B2B
Eintracht Braunschweig13412B2BB2B2B2B2B1632B22B2B
1. FC Kaiserslautern2B2BBB2B2B2B2B2B2B9101432B2B
SV Elversberg1812B
VfL Osnabrück2B12B73511561712B2B632B
Wehen Wiesbaden2B15416749167432B6842B
SV Sandhausen8141212B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B8
Arminia BielefeldB2B2B1322B12B2B2B2B2BBB2B14
Jahn Regensburg1516832B112032B2B2B2B2B2B3
SC Freiburg II11220
1. FC Saarbrücken61011205755
Dynamo Dresden91232B2B2B612B2B2B2B12B64
SV Waldhof Mannheim985716
TSV 1860 Munich2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B12844815
FC Viktoria Köln121213913
SC Verl7161012
FC Ingolstadt2B32B2B2B2B2BBB2B2B432B1110
MSV Duisburg2B2B2B2B2B722B12B2B515151218
Borussia Dortmund II1816141891311
Erzgebirge Aue1222B2B2B2B2B22B2B2B2B2B2B146
Rot-Weiss Essen157
Hallescher FC109101313134159141617
VfB Lübeck1919
SpVgg Unterhaching41114159171991011209
Preußen Münster1246899108182
SSV Ulm1
SV Meppen7137171217
VfB Oldenburg18
FSV Zwickau515716101019
SpVgg Bayreuth20
Viktoria Berlin17
Würzburger Kickers32B5522B18
TSV Havelse19
Türkgücü München1320
KFC Uerdingen111316
Bayern Munich II5819118
Chemnitzer FC96125681917
Sonnenhof Großaspach15710141519
Carl Zeiss Jena1651518111420
Energie CottbusB2B2B2B2B2B71917
Sportfreunde Lotte121618
Fortuna Köln141116819
VfR Aalen191622B2B2B15111220
Werder Bremen II17131820171718
Rot-Weiß Erfurt1095513101281420
Mainz 05 II161219
FSV Frankfurt2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B20
Stuttgarter Kickers20178418
VfB Stuttgart II1110101114151320
Wacker Burghausen1817176819
Kickers Offenbach1777815
SV Babelsberg131719
Alemannia Aachen2B2B2B2B20
Rot-Weiß Oberhausen2B2B2B19
TuS Koblenz32B2B11
Rot Weiss Ahlen42B2B20
Wuppertaler SV1420
Kickers Emden56

Notes

SymbolKey
BBundesliga
2B2. Bundesliga
1League champions
League place
Blanknot in 3. Liga, Bundesliga or 2. Bundesliga

Promotion rounds

To the 2. Bundesliga

See main article: Promotion to the 2. Bundesliga.

At the end of the regular season the third placed team in the 3. Liga play the 16th placed team in the 2. Bundesliga over two matches. The overall winner plays in the 2. Bundesliga in the following season, and the loser in the 3. Liga.

2008–09[86]

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2009–10[87]

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2010–11[88]

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2011–12[89]

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2012–13[90]

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2013–14[91]

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2014–15[92]

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2015–16[93]

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2016–17[94]

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2017–18[95]

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2018–19[96]

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2019–20[97]

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2020–21[98] |}
2021–22[99]
2022–23[100]
2023–24[101]

To the 3. Liga

See main article: Promotion to the 3. Liga.

From the 2012–13 to 2017–18 seasons, the champions of the five Regionalligas and the runners-up of the Regionalliga Südwest entered an end-of-the season play-off to determine the three teams promoted to the 3. Liga. From the 2018–19 season, three out of those five champions take direct promotion, leaving the remaining two to contest the play-off for the fourth promotion.

Key

SymbolKey
2. Bundesliga – 16th placed team
3. Liga – 3rd placed team
Regionalliga Bayern
Regionalliga Nord
Regionalliga Nordost
Regionalliga Südwest – Champions
Regionalliga Südwest – Runners-up
Regionalliga West

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 20 July 2008 . 3. Liga: Germany's Newest Professional League . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131112113650/http://pitchinvasion.net/blog/2008/07/20/3liga-germanys-newest-professional-league/ . 12 November 2013 . 19 July 2012 . pitchinvasion.net.
  2. Web site: DFL legt ursprüngliches Modell ad acta: Dritte Liga doch mit zweiten Mannschaften? . 16 August 2006 . kicker . 30 November 2020 . German.
  3. Web site: 3. Liga Qualifikation Modus . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121102120300/https://www.dfb.de/uploads/media/OM-09-2006.pdf . 2 November 2012 . 19 July 2012 . Deutscher Fußball Bund . German .
  4. Web site: "Dynamik des Fußballs": Logo der neuen 3. Liga präsentiert. . 10 April 2008 . German Football Association . 1 December 2020 . German.
  5. Web site: Offizielle Mitteilungen= . 30 September 2006 . German Football Association . https://web.archive.org/web/20140801114646/http://www.dfb.de/uploads/media/OM-09-2006.pdf. 4 December 2020 . 1 August 2014. German.
  6. Web site: 3. Liga Trophäe . 17 May 2009 . German Football Association . https://web.archive.org/web/20100324143320/http://www.dfb.de/index.php?id=508638 . 8 December 2020 . 24 March 2010 . German.
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  8. Web site: Auch die Dritte Liga bekommt künftig Montagsspiele . 1 June 2018 . kicker . 8 December 2020 . German.
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  10. Web site: DFB-Bundestag beschließt Gelbsperren für Trainer . 24 October 2019 . kicker . 11 December 2020 . German.
  11. Web site: 3. Liga verlegt 28. und 29. Spieltag . 11 March 2020 . Deutscher Fußball-Bund . 15 December 2020 . de.
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  13. Web site: DFB mit umfassenden Änderungen der Spiel- und Jugendordnung . 3 April 2020 . German Football Association . 17 December 2020 . German.
  14. Web site: DFB-Pressemitteilung zum Spielbetrieb in der 3. Liga . 28 April 2020 . Thüringer Fussball-Verband . 18 December 2020 . German.
  15. Web site: Auch in der 3. Liga fünf Auswechslungen erlaubt . 29 May 2020 . liga3-online.de . 21 December 2020 . German.
  16. Web site: 1 December 2014 . 3. Liga erstmals in der Gewinnzone . Third League in the Winning Zone for the First Time . 2 December 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  17. Web site: 22 July 2011 . Helmut Sandrock: "Die 3. Liga ist europaweit führend" . Helmut Sandrock: "The 3rd Liga is the European leader" . 10 February 2012 . . German.
  18. Web site: Änderung der Aufstiegsregelung in der Regionalliga beschlossen . 8 December 2017 . German Football Association . 7 January 2021 . German.
  19. Web site: § 12 Nr. 4.1 der DFB-Spielordnung . German Football Association . 12 January 2021 . German.
  20. Web site: §§ 12 Nr. 4.2, 12 Nr. 1 der DFB-Spielordnung . German Football Association . 12 January 2021 . German.
  21. Web site: NACH TASK FORCE: PRÄSIDIUM BESCHLIESST MASSNAHMENPAKET FÜR 3. LIGA . DFB . 19 March 2024 . German.
  22. Web site: So läuft das Zulassungsverfahren zur 3. Liga . German Football Association . 14 January 2021 . German.
  23. Web site: SVR arbeitet auch in Zukunft nachhaltig . 13 February 2020 . SV Rödinghausen . 20 January 2021 . German.
  24. Web site: BAK verzichtet auf Lizenzantrag für Liga 3 . 5 March 2019 . FuPa.net . 20 January 2021 . German.
  25. Web site: Türkgücü-Ataspors Ziele: Großsponsor, 2. Bundesliga und Stadionlösung . Pfister . Kirsten . 27 February 2019 . Merkur.de . 20 January 2021 . German.
  26. Web site: Ligaauftakt im Ludwigspark steht auf der Kippe . Dresen . Daniel . 2 February 2020 . SR.de . 20 January 2021 . German . 28 January 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210128172240/https://www.sr.de/sr/home/sport/lupa_keine_garantie_auf_fertigstellung_im_sommer_100.html . dead .
  27. Web site: Die Stadionfrage beim KFC Uerdingen ist entschieden . Loyda . Stefan . 28 February 2020 . RevierSport . 20 January 2021 . German.
  28. Web site: 3. Liga live bei der Telekom: Alle Fakten . 20 June 2017 . German Football Association . 26 January 2021 . German.
  29. Web site: Jubiläum in der 3. Liga – kein Grund zum Feiern . van der Felden . Frank . 21 July 2017 . Sportschau . https://web.archive.org/web/20180731183741/https://www.sportschau.de/fussball/bundesliga3/dritte-liga-saisonstart-100.html . 26 January 2021 . 31 July 2018 . German.
  30. Web site: Telekom zahlt 16 Millionen Euro pro Saison für 3. Liga . Franzke . Rainer . kicker . 29 January 2021 . German.
  31. Web site: Fußball – DFB: Verteilung der Fernsehgelder für 3. Liga geregelt. . 28 November 2007 . FOCUS ONLINE . 29 January 2021 . German . 20 March 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160320063859/https://www.focus.de/sport/fussball/fussball-dfb-verteilung-der-fernsehgelder-fuer-3-liga-geregelt_aid_275680.html . dead .
  32. Web site: Neuer Fernseh-Vertrag bis 2012 perfekt . 13 May 2008 . lifePR . 29 January 2021 . German.
  33. Web site: Clubs in der 3. Fußball-Liga erhalten mehr Fernsehgelder . 20 February 2009 . DIGITALfernsehen . 29 January 2021 . German.
  34. Web site: German Football – YouTube. 4 May 2021. YouTube.
  35. Kicker.de: Spectator statistics 2018–19,2017–18,2016–17,2015–16, 2014–15, 2013–14, 2012–13, 2011–12, 2010–11, 2009–10, 2008–09
  36. News: Von wegen Zweite Liga . Lopez . Edgar . 28 July 2017 . Die Zeit . 12 February 2021 . German.
  37. Web site: England " League One 2016/2017 " Zuschauer " Heimspiele . 31 March 2016 . weltfussball.de . 12 February 2021 . German.
  38. Web site: Helmut Sandrock: "Die 3. Liga ist europaweit führend" . 22 July 2011 . German Football Association . 17 February 2021 . German.
  39. Web site: Chemnitzer FC stellt Insolvenzantrag . kicker . 17 February 2021 . German.
  40. Web site: Trotz Rekordumsatz: Drittligisten machen Rekordverlust . Koch . Julian . 16 October 2019 . liga3-online.de . 26 February 2021 . German.
  41. Web site: DFB beschließt Financial Fair Play für 3. Liga . 21 August 2018 . FOCUS Online . 2 March 2021 . German.
  42. Web site: Financial Fairplay: Hansa Rostock mit Drittliga-Bestwert . Koch . Julian . 27 December 2019 . liga3-online.de . 2 March 2021 . German.
  43. Web site: 3. Liga 2008/2009 .:. Zuschauer .:. Heimspiele . 9 January 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  44. Web site: 3. Liga 2009/2010 .:. Zuschauer .:. Heimspiele . 9 January 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  45. Web site: 3. Liga 2010/2011 .:. Zuschauer .:. Heimspiele . 9 January 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  46. Web site: 3. Liga 2011/2012 .:. Zuschauer .:. Heimspiele . 9 January 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  47. Web site: 3. Liga 2012/2013 .:. Zuschauer .:. Heimspiele . 9 January 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  48. Web site: 3. Liga 2013/2014 .:. Zuschauer .:. Heimspiele . 13 May 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  49. Web site: 3. Liga 2014/2015 .:. Zuschauer .:. Heimspiele . 19 May 2015 . weltfussball.de . German.
  50. Web site: 3. Liga 2015/2016 .:. Zuschauer .:. Heimspiele . 4 May 2016 . weltfussball.de . German.
  51. Web site: 3. Liga 2016/2017 .:. Zuschauer .:. Heimspiele . 24 May 2017 . weltfussball.de . German.
  52. Web site: 3. Liga 2017/2018 .:. Zuschauer .:. Heimspiele . 13 May 2018 . weltfussball.de . German.
  53. Web site: 3. Liga 2018/2019 .:. Zuschauer .:. Heimspiele . 18 May 2019 . weltfussball.de . German.
  54. Web site: 3. Liga 2019/2020 .:. Zuschauer .:. Heimspiele . 4 July 2020. weltfussball.de . German.
  55. The last eleven matchdays were played behind closed doors, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  56. Web site: 3. Liga 2020/2021 .:. Zuschauer .:. Heimspiele . 22 May 2021. weltfussball.de . German.
  57. Fans were not allowed for the majority of the season due to the COID-19 pandemic.
  58. Web site: 3. Liga 2021/2022 .:. Zuschauer .:. Heimspiele . 14 May 2022. weltfussball.de . German.
  59. Fans were not allowed for the majority of the first half of the season due to the COID-19 pandemic.
  60. Web site: 3. Liga 2022/2023 .:. Zuschauer .:. Heimspiele . 27 May 2023. weltfussball.de . German.
  61. Web site: 3. Liga 2023/2024 .:. Zuschauer .:. Heimspiele . 20 May 2024. weltfussball.de . German.
  62. Web site: 3. Liga 2008/2009 .:. Torschützenliste . 9 January 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  63. Web site: 3. Liga 2009/2010 .:. Torschützenliste . 9 January 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  64. Web site: 3. Liga 2010/2011 .:. Torschützenliste . 9 January 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  65. Web site: 3. Liga 2011/2012 .:. Torschützenliste . 9 January 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  66. Web site: 3. Liga 2012/2013 .:. Torschützenliste . 9 January 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  67. Web site: 3. Liga 2013/2014 .:. Torschützenliste . 10 May 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  68. Web site: 3. Liga 2014/2015 .:. Torschützenliste . 19 May 2015 . weltfussball.de . German.
  69. Web site: 3. Liga 2015/2016 .:. Torschützenliste . 4 May 2016 . weltfussball.de . German.
  70. Web site: 3. Liga 2016/2017 .:. Torschützenliste . 20 May 2017 . weltfussball.de . German.
  71. Web site: 3. Liga 2017/2018 .:. Torschützenliste . 12 May 2018 . weltfussball.de . German.
  72. Web site: 3. Liga 2018/2019 .:. Torschützenliste . 18 May 2019 . weltfussball.de . German.
  73. Web site: 3. Liga 2019/2020 .:. Torschützenliste . 4 July 2020 . weltfussball.de . German.
  74. Web site: 3. Liga 2020/2021 .:. Torschützenliste . 22 May 2021 . weltfussball.de . German.
  75. Web site: 3. Liga 2021/2022 .:. Torschützenliste . 14 May 2022 . weltfussball.de . German.
  76. Web site: 3. Liga 2022/2023 .:. Torschützenliste . 27 May 2023 . weltfussball.de . German.
  77. Web site: 3. Liga 2023/2024 .:. Torschützenliste . 18 May 2024 . weltfussball.de . German.
  78. Web site: 3. Liga .:. Statistik .:. Die höchsten Siege . 6 April 2018 . weltfussball.de . German.
  79. Web site: 3. Liga .:. Statistik .:. Die torreichsten Spiele . 6 April 2018 . weltfussball.de . German.
  80. Web site: 3. Liga .:. Rekordspieler . 6 January 2022 . weltfussball.de . German.
  81. Web site: 3. Liga .:. Ewige Torjäger . 6 April 2018 . weltfussball.de . German.
  82. 3. Liga – Spieltag / Tabele . . German . 21 June 2018.
  83. 3 June 2013 . Ruhl: "Ein bitterer Tag für den OFC" . kicker.de . German . 9 January 2014.
  84. News: 2 June 2017 . TSV 1860 München erhält keine Zulassung für die 3. Liga . German . TSV 1860 Munich does not receive approval for the 3. Liga . DFB.de . . 28 May 2018.
  85. News: 9 June 2017 . Teilnehmerfeld der 3. Liga für Saison 2017/2018 komplett . German . DFB.de . German Football Association . 28 May 2018.
  86. Web site: Relegation 2. Bundesliga 2008/2009 . 9 January 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  87. Web site: Relegation 2. Bundesliga 2009/2010 . 9 January 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  88. Web site: Relegation 2. Bundesliga 2010/2011 . 9 January 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  89. Web site: Relegation 2. Bundesliga 2011/2012 . 9 January 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  90. Web site: Relegation 2. Bundesliga 2012/2013 . 9 January 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  91. Web site: Relegation 2. Bundesliga 2013/2014 . 13 May 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  92. Web site: Relegation 2. Bundesliga 2014/2015 . 13 May 2014 . weltfussball.de . German.
  93. Web site: Relegation 2. Bundesliga 2015/2016 . 4 May 2016 . weltfussball.de . German.
  94. Web site: Relegation 2. Bundesliga 2016/2017 . 24 May 2017 . Weltfussball.de . German.
  95. Web site: Relegation 2. Bundesliga 2017/2018 . 12 May 2018 . Weltfussball.de . German.
  96. Web site: Relegation 2. Bundesliga 2018/2019 . 18 May 2019 . Weltfussball.de . German.
  97. Web site: Relegation 2. Bundesliga 2019/2020 . 16 July 2020 . Weltfussball.de . German.
  98. Web site: Relegation 2. Bundesliga 2020/2021 . de . Weltfussball.de . 24 April 2021.
  99. Web site: Relegation 2. Bundesliga 2021/2022 . de . Weltfussball.de . 14 May 2022.
  100. Web site: Relegation 2. Bundesliga 2022/2023 . de . Weltfussball.de . 27 May 2023.
  101. Web site: Relegation 2. Bundesliga 2023/2024 . de . Weltfussball.de . 18 May 2024.