Landesliga Westfalen Explained

Landesliga Westfalen
Country:Germany
State:North Rhine-Westphalia
Region:Westphalia
Confed:Westphalian Football and
Athletics Association
Founded:1945
Teams:64
Divisions:4
Promotion:Westfalenliga (2 divisions)
Relegation:Bezirksliga (12 divisions)
Level:Level 7
Season:2017–18
Champions:Group 1: VfL Theesen
Group 2: RSV Meinerzhagen
Group 3: BSV Schüren
Group 4: Borussia Emsdetten

The Landesliga Westfalen is a German amateur football division administered by the Westphalian Football and Athletics Association, one of the 21 German state football associations. Being the third level of the Westphalian state association, the Landesliga is currently a level seven division of the German football league system.

History

The Landesliga was introduced in September 1945 under the name of 1. Division West as successor to the defunct Gauliga Westfalen. The first season started in February 1946 in an eastern and a western division separated due to geographical considerations.[1] Founding member were those 18 teams that took part in the Gauliga between 1939 and 1944. The first division winners were FC Schalke 04 (western division) and SpVgg Erkenschwick (eastern division). In the early years, the number of divisions varied from one to three; from 1952 the Landesliga was held in five parallel divisions.[2]

Upon its introduction in 1946, the Landesliga was one of the many top level divisions in Germany. During the years, it has become a level seven division in the German football league system. Since 1956 the Landesliga is the feeder league to the Westfalenliga.

Current format

The 2012–13 season was the first after six decades, when the Landesliga format was changed from five to four divisions. The four division winners promote to the Westfalenliga.[3]

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: revierkick.de: Gründung der Landesliga, retrieved 30 July 2012 (German) . 30 July 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120913225405/http://www.revierkick.de/1945-46.html . 13 September 2012 . dead .
  2. http://www.f-archiv.de f-archiv.de: Landesliga Westfalen tables from 1946 to 2011
  3. http://www.flvw.de/fussball/senioren/weiterentwicklung-der-spielklassenstruktur-im-fussballentwicklungsplan.html flvw.de: Die neue Spielklassenstruktur, retrieved 30 July 2012