Brandenburg-Liga Explained

Brandenburg-Liga
Founded:1990
Country:Germany
Pixels:100px
State:Brandenburg
Promotion:NOFV-Oberliga Nord or Süd
Relegation:
  • Landesliga Brandenburg-Nord
  • Landesliga Brandenburg-Süd
Teams:16
Level:Level 6
Season:2022–23
Champions:TuS 1896 Sachsenhausen

The Brandenburg-Liga (VI) (formerly the Verbandsliga Brandenburg) is the highest league for football teams exclusively in the German state of Brandenburg and at step six of the German football league system. Until the introduction of the 3. Liga in 2008 it was the fifth tier of the league system, until the introduction of the Regionalligas in 1994 the fourth tier. The champions of the Brandenburg-Liga are directly promoted to the NOFV-Oberliga Nord. If the champion is from the southern part of the state, it enters the Oberliga Süd.

Overview

The Brandenburg-Liga, previously referred to as the Verbandsliga Brandenburg, was established in 1990 from thirteen clubs as a highest league for the German state of Brandenburg, which was established after the league in October 1990, and the Brandenburg Football Association, FLB (German: Fußball-Landesverband Brandenburg). It comprised the area of the three Bezirksligas of Potsdam, Frankfurt (Oder) and Cottbus. Each of those three Bezirke contributed four clubs to the new league, with one club coming from the 2nd Division. The Verbandsliga was established within the East German football league system and incorporated in the league system of the united Germany after the end of its first season, in 1991.

The league was (and still is) a feeder league to the NOFV-Oberliga Nord, together with the Berlin-Liga and Verbandsliga Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, which its champion is directly promoted to. As such, it was the fourth tier of the German league system.

The Brandenburg Football Association itself was formed on 28 July 1990.[1]

The league expanded to sixteen clubs in its second season and this number remained as the preferred strength of the league.

With the introduction of the Regionalliga Nordost as third tier of the league system in 1994, the Verbandsligas slipped to tier five.

In 2008, the league again was demoted one level when the 3. Liga was established. However, this changed nothing in the leagues status as a feeder league to the NOFV-Oberliga.

In 2020, the FLB conducted a board conference on 11 May and decided after that to terminate the 2019–20 season due to the coronavirus containment regulation issued by the Brandenburg state government during the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany, therefore there was no champion.[2] The club at the top of the table during the termination, RSV Eintracht 1949, won promotion. The 2020–21 season was also annulled during the pandemic.

While the majority of clubs from the Brandenburg-Liga go on to play in the NOFV-Oberliga Nord, one club from the very south of the state was entered into the southern division, the NOFV-Oberliga Süd, for geographical reasons, this was the FC Energie Cottbus II.

League champions

The league champions:

SeasonChampions
1990–91FSV PCK Schwedt
1991–92FSV Optik Rathenow
1992–93SV Schwarz-Rot Neustadt/Dosse
1993–94FV Motor Eberswalde
1994–95SG Bornim
1995–96SV Babelsberg 03
1996–97Frankfurter FC Viktoria
1997–98Energie Cottbus II
1998–99Brandenburger SC Süd 05
1999–00SV Schwarz-Rot Neustadt/Dosse
2000–01MSV Neuruppin
2001–02Oranienburger FC Eintracht
2002–03Frankfurter FC Viktoria
2003–04Ludwigsfelder FC
2004–05SV Falkensee-Finkenkrug
2005–06SV Germania Schöneiche
2006–07FSV Optik Rathenow
2007–08SV Falkensee-Finkenkrug
2008–09FSV 63 Luckenwalde
2009–10SV Altlüdersdorf
2010–11FSV Union Fürstenwalde
2011–12SG Blau-Gelb Laubsdorf
2012–13FC Strausberg
2013–14SV Germania Schöneiche
2014–151. FC Frankfurt
2015–16SV Grün-Weiß Brieselang
2016–17VfB Krieschow
2017–18Ludwigsfelder FC
2018–19SV Victoria Seelow
2019–20No champion
2020–21No champion
2021–221. FC Frankfurt

Founding members of the league

The league was established from thirteen clubs from four leagues in 1990. Most of the East German clubs changed their names in the years after the reunion, some reverted to their old ones after a brief period, current names, when different from the one in 1990, are listed. The clubs are:

From the 2nd Division-Group A:

From the Bezirksliga Potsdam:

From the Bezirksliga Frankfurt/Oder:

From the Bezirksliga Cottbus:

References

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Geschichte – 1990. https://web.archive.org/web/20140829132237/http://www.flb.de/FLB/Geschichte.php. dead. August 29, 2014. Fußball-Landesverband Brandenburg. 21 February 2008. German.
  2. News: Entscheidung über die Saison 2019/2020 im Fußball-Landesverband Brandenburg gefallen. FLB.de. 11 May 2020. 20 May 2020. German.