Deutsche Fußball Liga Explained

DFL Deutsche Fußball Liga GmbH
Hq Location City:Frankfurt
Hq Location Country:Germany
Area Served:Germany
Key People:Donata Hopfen (CEO)
Parent:Die Liga – Fußballverband
Subsid:See below

The DFL Deutsche Fußball Liga GmbH (or simply Deutsche Fußball Liga; ; often shortened to DFL) is a wholly owned subsidiary of Die Liga – Fußballverband. The DFL is responsible for entire operating business of the Ligaverband, including the Bundesliga and 2. Bundesliga leagues.[1] [2] The chairman of supervisory board of the DFL is Reinhard Rauball. Christian Seifert is CEO of the DFL.[3]

Since 1 July 2001, the DFL has organised the Bundesliga and 2. Bundesliga. From 2005 until 2007, they also organised the DFL-Ligapokal. Since 2010, the DFL also has organised the DFL-Supercup.

Function

The DFL was founded on 19 December 2000 as an independent GmbH. Since then, the Ligaverband has been the sole shareholder of the DFL, which has provided the capital stock in the amount of €1 million. The organisation is a subsidiary of the Ligaverband, which acts as a representative for the 36 professional clubs in the top two leagues of German football. Today the Bundesliga and 2. Bundesliga are operated by the DFL, but jointly hosted by the German Football Association (Deutscher Fußball-Bund, DFB) and the Ligaverband.

Duties

The DFL itself divides its operating business into the areas of operation, licensing, and marketing. The "operations" business area includes, in particular, the management of the licensed players' activities and the organisation of the competitions of the Ligaverband, which includes the Bundesliga, 2. Bundesliga, and DFL-Supercup, along with the promotion/relegation play-offs.

The business area of "marketing" includes the allocation of broadcasting rights and licenses for the leagues on various media platforms, including television, radio, and on the Internet. The Bundesliga broadcasting rights include a total of 209 territories around the world.

The third business area, "licensing", is the implementation and development of the former DFB licensing procedure. The DFL applies the procedure for the clubs of the Bundesliga and the 2. Bundesliga, as well as for some of the clubs of the lower leagues under a business contract. In doing so, the DFL will examine the extent to which the individual clubs fulfill the requirements for participation in the professional football competitions. The list of requirements includes sporting, financial, legal, infrastructural, personnel, administrative, media, and safety-related criteria. Highly important, and to date the only criterion which led to major problems for certain clubs, is the financial criterion. With this criterion the DFL tries to ascertain that all clubs remain solvent during the season in order to be able to maintain the club operations for as long as possible. The DFL can refuse to issue a license if a club does not meet these requirements.

Since 1 September 2012, the new organizational structure of the DFL now sees only two business areas rather than three.

With 23 other national professional league associations, the DFL is founding member of the World Leagues Forum, founded in Zürich in February 2016. The organisation aims, among other things, to centrally combine and represent the interests of the professional leagues and their common views before FIFA and other institutions engaged in sports and politics.

Subsidiaries

Bodies

The leadership of the DFL, which includes the CEO and the supervisory, attend the annual shareholders' meeting.[4] Part of the supervisory board of the DFL forms a personal union with the Vorstand of the Ligaverband.

Wilfried Straub was the first CEO of the DFL, serving from 2001 until 2005. In 2005, Christian Seifert became the chief executive. His contract ended 2021. In 2022 Donata Hopfen became the first female CEO of the DFL. In February 2022, she was open to plans to introduce playoffs in the Bundesliga. There is also the idea of holding the Supercup abroad.[5]

+ Supervisory board of the DFL
NameSinceFunction
Reinhard Rauball2007Chairman of the supervisory board
Peter Peters2007Vice-chairman of the supervisory board
Stefan Schippers2010Member
Ingo Schiller2013Member
Fritz Keller2016Member
Robert Schäfer2016Member
+ Management of the DFL
NameSinceFunction
Donata Hopfen2022Chief executive officer
+ All chief executive officers of the DFL
PeriodName
2001–2005Wilfried Straub
2005–2022Christian Seifert
2022–presentDonata Hopfen

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Deutsche Fußball Liga/Ligaverband . DFB.de . 27 November 2013 . . 2 January 2017 . German . 2 February 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200202101052/https://www.dfb.de/bundesliga/liga-information/dflligaverband/ . live .
  2. Web site: Profil der DFL Deutsche Fußball Liga GmbH . Profile of DFL Deutsche Fußball Liga GmbH . Bundesliga.de . Deutsche Fußball Liga . 2 January 2017 . German . 6 June 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170606124238/http://www.bundesliga.de/de/dfl/profil/ . dead .
  3. Web site: Profil Christian Seifert . DFL Deutsche Fußball Liga . 9 June 2016 . German . 14 June 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170614201945/http://www.bundesliga.de/de/dfl/profil/christian-seifert/ . dead .
  4. Web site: DFL Profile . Bundesliga.com . Deutsche Fußball Liga . 2 January 2017 . 19 January 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170119050215/http://www.bundesliga.com/en/about/organisation/ . dead .
  5. Web site: Hopfen offen für Bundesliga-Playoffs und Supercup im Ausland . spiegel.de . Spiegel . 15 February 2021 . 6 February 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220206144650/https://www.spiegel.de/sport/fussball/donata-hopfen-dfl-chefin-erwaegt-bundesliga-playoffs-und-supercup-im-ausland-a-aec27924-ca79-4002-ac7f-223961dd9de3 . live .