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Regionalliga Nord

Regionalliga Nord

FieldValue
nameRegionalliga Nord
image[[File:REGIONALLIGA NORD.svg180pxRegionalliga Nord]]
countryGermany
states{{plainlist
organiserNorthern German Football Association
founded1994 (reformed in 2012)
teams18
divisions1
promotion3. Liga
relegation{{plainlist
domest_cup{{plainlist
levelLevel 4
season2024–25
championsTSV Havelse
current2025–26 Regionalliga Nord
  • Lower Saxony
  • Schleswig-Holstein
  • Bremen
  • Hamburg
  • Oberliga Hamburg
  • Bremen-Liga
  • Oberliga Schleswig-Holstein
  • Oberliga Niedersachsen
  • DFB-Pokal
  • Lower Saxony Cup
  • Schleswig-Holstein Cup
  • Bremen Cup
  • Hamburg Cup The Regionalliga Nord () is the fourth tier of the German football league system in the states of Lower Saxony, Schleswig-Holstein, Bremen and Hamburg. It is one of five leagues at this level, together with the Regionalliga Bayern, Regionalliga Nordost, Regionalliga Südwest and the Regionalliga West. Until the introduction of the 3. Liga in 2008 it was the third tier.

From 1963 to 1974, a Regionalliga Nord existed as the second tier of the German football league system, but it is not related to the current Regionalliga.

Overview

The Regionalliga Nord was introduced in 1994 along with three other Regionalligas, those being:

  • Regionalliga Süd
  • Regionalliga Nordost
  • Regionalliga West/Südwest

The reason for its introduction was to create a highest regional league for the north of Germany and to allow its champions, and some years the runners-up too, to be directly promoted to the 2nd Bundesliga. Prior to the introduction of the four Regionalligas, the leagues below the second division were the Oberligas, in which there was ten. Those ten Oberliga champions had to go through a promotion play-off rather than being directly promoted. The champions of the Regionalligas Nord and Nordost however had to play-off for a spot in the 2nd Bundesliga from 1996 to 2000. The winner of this contest was promoted, the loser faced the runners-ups of the Regionalligas Süd and West/Südwest for another spot in the second division.

The Regionalliga Nord was direct continuation of the Oberliga Nord, which was disbanded in 1994 in favour of the Regionalliga. Fourteen out of sixteen Oberliga Nord clubs qualified for the new league, only the bottom two teams were relegated to the two new Oberligas.

To replace the Oberliga Nord below the Regionalliga, two new leagues were formed, those being the Oberligas Niedersachsen/Bremen and Hamburg/Schleswig-Holstein. These two leagues were in turn disbanded in 2004 when the Oberliga Nord was reformed.

In 2001, Union Berlin of this league became only the second Regionalliga side to reach a German Cup final, losing 2−0 to Schalke 04.

With the league changes in Germany in 2008, the Oberliga Nord was again disbanded and the level below the Regionalliga Nord in this region were the five Verbandligas. This required a promotion play-off for this league winners as there were not five promotion spots available for their region. No changes were made in the NOFV region, where the two Oberligas Nord and Süd remained.

The following four teams were promoted to the Regionalliga from 2009:

  • NOFV-Oberliga Nord champions
  • NOFV-Oberliga Süd champions
  • Lower Saxony champions, being the winner of the home-and-away series of the champions of the Oberliga Niedersachsen-West and Ost; since 2010 that Oberliga is a single division
  • Winner of the promotion play-off for the champions of the Oberliga Hamburg, Bremen and Schleswig-Holstein, and the Oberliga Niedersachsen runners-up

League history

Founding members

Map of Germany: Position of the Regionalliga Nord (1994–2000) highlighted

The Regionalliga Nord was formed in 1994 with 18 clubs, fourteen from the Oberliga Nord and one each from the Verbandsligas of Niedersachsen, Bremen, Hamburg and Schleswig-Holstein.

The founding members were:

From the Oberliga Nord:

  • Kickers Emden
  • Eintracht Braunschweig
  • VfL Osnabrück
  • VfL Herzlake
  • TuS Hoisdorf
  • VfB Oldenburg
  • Holstein Kiel
  • Werder Bremen II
  • VfB Lübeck
  • Hamburger SV II
  • VfL 93 Hamburg
  • TuS Celle
  • 1. SC Göttingen 05
  • SV Lurup

From the Verbandsliga Schleswig-Holstein:

  • Lüneburger SK From the Verbandsliga Hamburg:
  • Concordia Hamburg

From the Verbandsliga Bremen:

  • FC Bremerhaven From the Verbandsliga Niedersachsen:
  • SV Wilhelmshaven

The "new" Regionalliga Nord was actually a reformation of the "old" Regionalliga Nord which operated from 1963 to 1974 in the same region but then as the second tier of German football. Unlike the "old" Regionalliga, the new one allowed reserve teams to compete in it.

Expansion of the league in 2000

Map of Germany: Position of the Regionalliga Nord (2000–2008) highlighted

After six seasons, in 2000, the number of Regionalligas was reduced from four to two. Only the Regionalligas Süd and Nord survived. The clubs of the other two were spread according to their geographical location.

Only the teams placed two to six were permitted to remain in the league. The league champion, VfL Osnabrück, was promoted to the 2nd Bundesliga and all clubs from place seven to eighteen were relegated to the Verbandsligas. The league was expanded to nineteen teams and fourteen clubs from the 2nd Bundesliga, Regionalliga West/Südwest and Regionalliga Nordost were admitted.

Remaining in the Regionalliga Nord:

  • VfB Lübeck
  • Eintracht Braunschweig
  • SV Wilhelmshaven
  • Werder Bremen II
  • Lüneburger SK Relegated from the 2nd Bundesliga:
  • SC Fortuna Köln
  • Tennis Borussia Berlin

Admitted from the Regionalliga West/Südwest:

  • Preußen Münster
  • SC Verl
  • SG Wattenscheid 09
  • KFC Uerdingen 05
  • Rot-Weiß Essen
  • Fortuna Düsseldorf
  • Borussia Dortmund II Admitted from the Regionalliga Nordost:
  • Union Berlin
  • Babelsberg 03
  • Erzgebirge Aue
  • Dresdner SC
  • FC Sachsen Leipzig

The league reform in 2008

Map of Germany: Position of the Regionalliga Nord highlighted

With the introduction of the 3. Liga in 2008 and of a third Regionalliga, the Regionalliga West, the league became the fourth tier of German football. The clubs from North Rhine-Westphalia left the league again and joined the new Regionalliga West.

The make up of the leagues was:

  • Winner and runners-up of the Regionalliga Nord qualified for the 2nd Bundesliga (unless they are reserve teams)
  • Clubs placed third to tenth went to the new 3. Liga (only the two best placed reserve teams were admitted)
  • Clubs placed eleventh to eighteen remained in the Regionalligas (clubs from North Rhine-Westphalia left for the Regionalliga West)
  • The five best teams from the Oberliga Nord joined the Regionalliga. The sixth placed team played-off with the five Verbandsliga winners from this region for one more place in the Regionalliga.
  • The three best teams from the NOFV-Oberliga Nord and Süd each and a play-off winner of the two fourth placed teams.

The following 18 teams fulfilled the various qualification criteria and were granted a license for play in the new Regionalliga Nord for the 2008–09 season.

Remaining in the Regionalliga Nord:

  • 1. FC Magdeburg
  • Hamburger SV II
  • Babelsberg 03
  • Energie Cottbus II
  • VfB Lübeck
  • VfL Wolfsburg II From the Oberliga Nord:
  • Holstein Kiel
  • SV Wilhelmshaven
  • FC Altona 93
  • Hannover 96 II
  • FC Oberneuland (as play-off winner)

From the NOFV-Oberliga Nord:

  • Hertha BSC Berlin II
  • Hansa Rostock II
  • Türkiyemspor Berlin From the NOFV-Oberliga Süd:
  • Chemnitzer FC
  • Hallescher FC
  • VFC Plauen
  • Sachsen Leipzig (as play-off winner)

The league reform in 2012

In October 2010, another reform of the Regionalligas expanded the number of leagues to five, with the Nordost clubs leaving the Regionalliga Nord to form their own Regionalliga Nordost once more. The new system came into operation in the 2012–13 season. It was also decided to limit the number of reserve teams per Regionalliga to seven.

The league reform in 2019

As four teams were relegated from the 3. Liga at the end of the 2018–19 season, the champions of the Regionalliga Nordost, Regionalliga Südwest and Regionalliga West were promoted directly to the 3. Liga and the remaining two champions, VfL Wolfsburg II of the Regionalliga Nord and Bayern Munich II of the Regionalliga Bayern, played a two-legged promotion play-off for the last promotion spot, which was won by Bayern Munich II. In 2020, the three direct promotion spots went to the champions of the Regionalliga Südwest, Regionalliga Nord and Regionalliga Bayern, while the Nordost and the West champions participated in the play-off. This format was installed initially as a temporary solution until the DFB-Bundestag in September 2019 decided on a format that could have enabled all Regionalliga champions to be promoted. On that date, the Bundestag delegates voted to grant the Südwest and West champions two direct promotions indefinitely from 2021, with the third direct promotion place rotating between the Regionalliga Nord, Nordost and Bavarian champions. The representatives from the two remaining Regionalligen enter a two-legged play-offs to determine the fourth promotion place.

Winners and runners-up of the Regionalliga Nord

The winners and runners-up of the league:

SeasonWinnerRunner-up
1994–95VfB LübeckVfL Osnabrück
1995–96VfB OldenburgEintracht Braunschweig
1996–97Hannover 96Eintracht Braunschweig
1997–98Hannover 96Eintracht Braunschweig
1998–99VfL OsnabrückVfB Lübeck
1999–2000VfL OsnabrückVfB Lübeck
2000–01Union BerlinBabelsberg 03
2001–02VfB LübeckEintracht Braunschweig
2002–03Erzgebirge AueVfL Osnabrück
2003–04Rot-Weiß EssenDynamo Dresden
2004–05Eintracht BraunschweigSC Paderborn
2005–06Rot-Weiß EssenCarl Zeiss Jena
2006–07FC St PauliVfL Osnabrück
2007–08Rot-Weiß AhlenRot-Weiß Oberhausen
2008–09Holstein KielHallescher FC
2009–10Babelsberg 03VfL Wolfsburg II
2010–11Chemnitzer FCVfL Wolfsburg II
2011–12Hallescher FCHolstein Kiel
2012–13Holstein KielTSV Havelse
2013–14VfL Wolfsburg IIWerder Bremen II
2014–15Werder Bremen IIVfL Wolfsburg II
2015–16VfL Wolfsburg IIVfB Oldenburg
2016–17SV MeppenWeiche Flensburg
2017–18Weiche FlensburgHamburger SV II
2018–19VfL Wolfsburg IIVfB Lübeck
2019–20VfB LübeckVfL Wolfsburg II
2020–21Not completed
2021–22VfB OldenburgWeiche Flensburg
2022–23VfB LübeckHamburger SV II
2023–24Hannover 96 IISV Meppen
2024–25TSV HavelseKickers Emden

| access-date = 19 March 2008

  • Promoted teams in bold.

Season abandoned in June 2020, with final standings decided on a points-per-game basis.

Season abandoned in April 2021 with Weiche Flensburg leading the north division and Werder Bremen II leading the south division. TSV Havelse were nominated for the promotion play-offs.

League statistics

The top goalscorers and attendance figures for the league are:

SeasonTotal
attendanceAverage
attendanceBest supported clubAverage
attendanceTop scorerGoals
1994–95492,6291,610Eintracht Braunschweig4,351Christian Classen (SVW)26
1995–96438,7981,434Eintracht Braunschweig4,854Hakan Cengiz (AD)21
1996–97587,4841,920Hannover 969,789Hakan Cengiz (VfLH)28
1997–98680,6202,224Eintracht Braunschweig9,181Markus Erdmann (AH)34
1998–99642,3572,099Eintracht Braunschweig7,456Daniel Bärwolf (VfB)26
1999–2000710,5242,322VfL Osnabrück9,347Daniel Bärwolf (VfB)
Marinus Bester (LSK)25
2000–011,108,9173,242Eintracht Braunschweig9,993Daniel Teixeira (1. FCU)32
2001–021,152,0643,764Eintracht Braunschweig11,921Veselin Gerov (SCP)
Daniel Teixeira (EB)19
2002–03936,2973,060Rot-Weiss Essen9,482Dmitrijus Guščinas (HK)23
2003–041,472,0894,811FC St. Pauli17,335Markus Feldhoff (KFC)22
2004–051,547,9504,526FC St. Pauli16,144Ahmet Kuru (EB)24
2005–061,577,5634,613FC St. Pauli17,296Thomas Reichenberger (VfL)17
2006–071,823,7205,333FC St. Pauli16,775Thomas Reichenberger (VfL)
Massimo Cannizzaro (HSV)17
2007–081,863,6625,449Eintracht Braunschweig14,889Mahir Saglik (WSV)27
2008–09de}} weltfussball.de. Retrieved 31 October 2010.1,7291. FC Magdeburg8,626Wojciech Pollok (SVW)22
2009–10de}} weltfussball.de. Retrieved 31 October 2010.1,2201. FC Magdeburg5,491Daniel Frahn (SVB)29
2010–11de}} weltfussball.de. Retrieved 16 June 2011.1,4631. FC Magdeburg4,586Benjamin Förster (CFC)25
2011–12de}} weltfussball.de. Retrieved 26 May 2012.1,733RB Leipzig7,401Daniel Frahn (RBL)26
2012–13de}} weltfussball.de. Retrieved 27 May 2013.816Holstein Kiel3,628Rogier Krohne (BVC)24
2013–14de}} weltfussball.de. Retrieved 22 May 2014.603SV Meppen1,825Addy-Waku Menga (VfB)25
2014–15de}} weltfussball.de. Retrieved 19 May 2015.721VfB Lübeck1,723Ahmet Arslan (HSV)19
2015–16229,239726VfB Oldenburg2,201Dino Međedović (WOL)23
2016–17216,199707SV Meppen2,645Benjamin Girth (MEP)20
2017–18186,006606VfB Lübeck1,426Törles Knöll (HSV)20
2018–19187,623613VfB Lübeck2,152Daniel Hanslik (WOL)19
2019–20167,053792VfB Lübeck3,114Ahmet Arslan (LÜB)16
2020–2131,551322VfB Oldenburg688Eren Dinkçi (WB2)7
League record

Placings in the Regionalliga Nord

Current extent of league

Final league positions for clubs from the region currently covered by the league:

Club95969798990001020304050607080910111213141516171819202122232425
FC St. Pauli2BBB2B2B2B2BB2B87612B2B2BB2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2BB
Holstein Kiel1118148131312941513L6213L3L3L3L2B2B2B2B2B2B2BB
Hannover 962B2B112B2B2B2BBBBBBBBBBBBBBB2BBB2B2B2B2B2B2B
Eintracht Braunschweig622233822B612B2B103L3L3L2B2BB2B2B2B2B3L3L2B3L2B2B2B
VfL Osnabrück2543112B722B41022B2B3L2B3L3L3L3L3L3L3L3L2B2B3L3L2B3L
Hannover 96 II689641114121186126s9313L
TSV Havelse15527466111192s3L681
Kickers Emden4498169493L192
SV Drochtersen/Assel4912543n14843
Werder Bremen II71534451510651412853L3L3L3L5213L3L3L361s3154
1. FC Phönix Lübeck4n111335
SV Meppen2B2B2B2B1111121148513L3L3L3L3L3L26
VfB Lübeck12B2B722312B2B3391689311187744213L513L7
Hamburger SV II1465141516149613617135881414314527147n6278
Blau-Weiß Lohne9109
FC St. Pauli II71615171713991514614136n1671210
VfB Oldenburg512B5918103102813984s13L511
Eintracht Norderstedt13716121210611791352n12101312
Weiche Flensburg765321431n251513
SSV Jeddeloh712155s13111414
Bremer SV141115
FC Teutonia Ottensen5n74916
Holstein Kiel II1079n412617
SV Todesfelde18
Eimsbütteler TV16
Kilia Kiel17
SC Spelle-Venhaus18
Schwarz-Weiß Rehden9811816158103s1516
VfV 06 Hildesheim10151610s1017
Atlas Delmenhorst (2012)11s818
Lüneburger SK Hansa1213131015118n17
Hannoverscher SC1810s18
FC Altona 931516181611n19
FC Oberneuland916171720
Heider SV1710n21
VfL Wolfsburg II17195224312133129s
Germania Egestorf10516
VfL Oldenburg17
Lupo Martini Wolfsburg1718
Eintracht Braunschweig II16131391214
Eutin 0817
SV Eichede1718
Goslarer SC 0818851516
BV Cloppenburg17107RL12121617
TSV Schilksee18
VfR Neumünster1861517
FT Braunschweig18
SV Wilhelmshaven910139741019111413131616
SC Victoria Hamburg1518
Lüneburger SK88176617
1. SC Göttingen 051610189
SV Arminia Hannover61310
Eintracht Nordhorn10513
TuS Celle133612614
FC Bremerhaven1717
VfL Herzlake3981517
Sportfreunde Ricklingen111318
VfL 93 Hamburg121611
Atlas Delmenhorst (1973)141217
Concordia Hamburg151214
SV Lurup101118
TuS Hoisdorf18

Former extent of league

Final league positions for clubs from the regions formerly covered by the league:

Club95969798990001020304050607080910111213141516171819202122232425
RB Leipzig ‡43RL3L2B2BBBBBBBBBB
Union BerlinRLRLRLRLRLRL12B2B2B191243L2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2BBBBBBB
Fortuna Düsseldorf †2BBB2B2BRL1617851033L2B2B2BB2B2B2B2B2BBB2B2B2B2B2B
SC Paderborn †RLRLRLRLRLRL148322B2B2B3L2B2B2B2B2BB2B3L3L2BB2B2B2B2B2B
1. FC MagdeburgRLRLRL12311461218RLRLRL3L3L3L2B3L3L3L2B2B2B
Preußen Münster †RLRLRLRLRLRL51512131115RLRLRL3L3L3L3L3L3L3L3L3LRLRLRL3L2B
Erzgebirge Aue ‡RLRLRLRLRLRL7912B2B2B2B2B3L3L2B2B2B2B2B3L2B2B2B2B2B2B3L3L3L
Dynamo Dresden ‡BRLRLRLRLRL722B2B783L3L3L2B2B2B3L3L2B2B2B2B3L2B3L3L3L
SC Verl †RLRLRLRLRLRL6111518RLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRL3L3L3L3L3L
Borussia Dortmund II †RLRL18510161413RL3LRLRL3L3L3LRLRLRLRLRLRL3L3L3L3L
Rot-Weiß Essen †RLRL2BRLRL133312B12B12RLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRL3L3L3L
Hallescher FC ‡24513L3L3L3L3L3L3L3L3L3L3L3LRL
Carl Zeiss Jena ‡RL2B2B2BRLRLRL22B2B3L3L3L3LRLRLRLRLRL3L3L3LRLRLRLRLRL
Chemnitzer FC ‡2B2BRLRLRL2B2B6111115197313L3L3L3L3L3L3LRL3LRLRLRLRLRL
Fortuna Köln †2B2B2B2B2B2B418RLRLRL3L3L3L3LRLRLRLRLRLRLRL
Babelsberg 03 ‡RLRLRL22B1615313L3L3LRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRL
Rot-Weiß Oberhausen †RLRLRL2B2B2B2B2B2B2B1722B2B2B3LRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRL
ZFC Meuselwitz ‡10119RLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRL
Hertha BSC Berlin II ‡RLRLRL137181211714RLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRL
Borussia Mönchengladbach II †16RLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRL
1. FC Köln II9141218RLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRL
Wuppertaler SV †RLRLRLRLRL458563L3LRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRL
FC Schalke 04 II †16RLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRL
Rot-Weiß Erfurt ‡RLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRL2B141173L3L3L3L3L3L3L3L3L3L3LRLRLRLRL
KFC Uerdingen †BB2B2B2BRL12510710RLRLRL3L3L3LRLRL
VFC Plauen ‡RLRLRLRL1471410RLRLRLRL
Berliner AK 07 ‡7RLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRL
Rot-Weiß Ahlen †RLRLRLRL2B2B2B2B2B2B1312B2B3LRLRLRLRLRLRL
Germania Halberstadt ‡16RLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRLRL
Tennis Borussia Berlin ‡RLRLRLRL2B2B1915RLRLRL
SG Wattenscheid 09 †2B2BRL2B2BRL11441516RLRLRLRLRLRLRLRL
Bayer Leverkusen II †RLRL8171117RLRLRLRLRLRL
Energie Cottbus II ‡14181015RL
Türkiyemspor Berlin ‡151318
Arminia Bielefeld II †18RL
Hansa Rostock II ‡1012
FC Sachsen Leipzig ‡RLRLRLRLRLRL141717
Dresdner SC ‡RLRL91618

| access-date = 11 December 2007

Key

SymbolKey
BBundesliga
2B2. Bundesliga
3L3. Liga
1League champions
PlaceLeague
BlankPlayed at a league level below this league
nNorthern section
sSouthern section
RLPlayed in one of the other Regionalligas
Denotes club from North Rhine-Westphalia which is not part of the league anymore after 2008.
Denotes club from the northeast region which is not part of the league anymore after 2012.

Notes

In 2002, 1. FC Magdeburg were refused a licence for the Regionalliga.

In 2001, SV Wilhelmshaven was refused a licence for the Regionalliga.

In 2009, Türkiyemspor Berlin avoided relegation after Kickers Emden withdrew from the 3. Liga.

In 2001, FC Sachsen Leipzig was refused a licence for the Regionalliga.

In 2005, KFC Uerdingen was refused a licence for the Regionalliga.

In 1998, VfL Hamburg 93 withdrew their team from the league.

Tennis Borussia Berlin declared insolvency on 21 May 2010 and was automatically relegated.

Hansa Rostock II withdrew from the league in 2010 for financial reasons.

VfB Lübeck and FC Oberneuland declared insolvency in 2013 and were relegated from the league.

Eintracht Braunschweig II was relegated to the Oberliga in 2018 following the first team's relegation from the 2. Bundesliga, sparing Schwarz-Weiß Rehden from relegation.

In 2021, VfL Wolfsburg II withdrew their team from the league.

References

Sources

  • Deutschlands Fußball in Zahlen, An annual publication with tables and results from the Bundesliga to Verbandsliga/Landesliga. DSFS.
  • Kicker Almanach, The yearbook on German football from Bundesliga to Oberliga, since 1937. Kicker Sports Magazine.
  • Die Deutsche Liga-Chronik 1945-2005 History of German football from 1945 to 2005 in tables. DSFS. 2006.

References

  1. "Official DFB article on the 3rd Liga and Regionalliga". DFB.
  2. "Regionalliga Nord 2008/2009 - 1. Spieltag".
  3. [https://www.dfb.de/news/detail/dfb-bundestag-beschliesst-reform-der-spielklassen-25239/ DFB-Bundestag beschließt Reform der Spielklassen] DFB website, 22 October 2010. Retrieved 28 October 2010.
  4. (27 April 2018). "Lauth lost Aufstiegsspiele zur 3. Liga aus". [[German Football Association]].
  5. (8 December 2017). "Änderung der Aufstiegsregelung in der Regionalliga beschlossen". [[Deutscher Fußball-Bund]].
  6. (27 September 2019). "Eigener Ausschuss und neue Aufstiegsregelung zur 3. Liga". DFB.
  7. [http://www.weltfussball.de/torschuetzenkoenige/regionalliga-nord/ Torschützenkönige (Top goal scorers) Regionalliga Nord] {{in lang. de weltfussball.de. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  8. ''Die Regionalligen 1994/95''. [[DSFS]]. 1995. p. 28. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  9. ''Die Regionalligen 1995/96''. [[DSFS]]. 1996. p. 35. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  10. ''Die Regionalligen 1996/97''. [[DSFS]]. 1997. p. 38. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  11. ''Saison-Statistik 1997/98''. [[DSFS]]. 1998. p. 9. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  12. ''Saison-Statistik 1998/99''. [[DSFS]]. 1999. p. 9. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  13. ''Die Regionalligen 1999/2000''. [[DSFS]]. 2000. p. 54. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  14. ''Deutschlands Fussball in Zahlen 2000/2001''. [[DSFS]]. 2001. p. 182. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  15. ''Deutschlands Fussball in Zahlen 2001/2002''. [[DSFS]]. 2002. p. 178. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  16. ''Deutschlands Fussball in Zahlen 2002/2003''. [[DSFS]]. 2003. p. 180. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  17. ''Deutschlands Fussball in Zahlen 2003/2004''. [[DSFS]]. 2004. p. 178. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  18. ''Deutschlands Fussball in Zahlen 2004/2005''. [[DSFS]]. 2005. p. 180. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  19. ''Deutschlands Fussball in Zahlen 2005/2006''. [[DSFS]]. 2006. p. 142. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  20. ''Deutschlands Fussball in Zahlen 2006/2007''. [[DSFS]]. 2007. p. 142. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  21. ''Deutschlands Fussball in Zahlen 2007/2008''. [[DSFS]]. 2008. p. 142. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  22. [http://www.weltfussball.de/zuschauer/regionalliga-nord-2008-2009/1/ Zuschauertabele (Spectator figures) Regionalliga Nord 2008-09] {{in lang. de weltfussball.de. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  23. [http://www.weltfussball.de/zuschauer/regionalliga-nord-2009-2010/1/ Zuschauertabele (Spectator figures) Regionalliga Nord 2009-10] {{in lang. de weltfussball.de. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  24. [http://www.weltfussball.de/zuschauer/regionalliga-nord-2010-2011/1/ Zuschauertabele (Spectator figures) Regionalliga Nord 2010-11] {{in lang. de weltfussball.de. Retrieved 16 June 2011.
  25. [http://www.weltfussball.de/zuschauer/regionalliga-nord-2011-2012/1/ Zuschauertabele (Spectator figures) Regionalliga Nord 2011-12] {{in lang. de weltfussball.de. Retrieved 26 May 2012.
  26. [http://www.weltfussball.de/zuschauer/regionalliga-nord-2012-2013/1/ Zuschauertabele (Spectator figures) Regionalliga Nord 2012-13] {{in lang. de weltfussball.de. Retrieved 27 May 2013.
  27. [http://www.weltfussball.de/zuschauer/regionalliga-nord-2013-2014/1/ Regionalliga Nord 2013/2014 .:. Zuschauer .:. Heimspiele] {{in lang. de weltfussball.de. Retrieved 22 May 2014.
  28. [http://www.weltfussball.de/torjaeger/regionalliga-nord-2013-2014/ Regionalliga Nord 2013/2014 » Torschützenliste] {{in lang. de weltfussball.de. Retrieved 22 May 2014.
  29. [http://www.weltfussball.de/zuschauer/regionalliga-nord-2014-2015/1/ Regionalliga Nord 2014/2015 .:. Zuschauer .:. Heimspiele] {{in lang. de weltfussball.de. Retrieved 19 May 2015.
  30. [http://www.weltfussball.de/torjaeger/regionalliga-nord-2014-2015/ Regionalliga Nord 2014/2015 » Torschützenliste] {{in lang. de weltfussball.de. Retrieved 19 May 2015.
  31. "Regionalliga Nord 2015/2016 Zuschauer Heimspiele".
  32. "Regionalliga Nord 2015/2016 Torschützenliste".
  33. "Regionalliga Nord 2016/2017 Zuschauer Heimspiele".
  34. "Regionalliga Nord 2016/2017 Torschützenliste".
  35. "Regionalliga Nord 2017/2018 Zuschauer Heimspiele".
  36. "Regionalliga Nord 2017/2018 Torschützenliste".
  37. "Regionalliga Nord 2018/2019 Zuschauer Heimspiele".
  38. "Regionalliga Nord 2018/2019 Torschützenliste".
  39. "Regionalliga Nord 2019/2020 Zuschauer Heimspiele".
  40. "Regionalliga Nord 2019/2020 Torschützenliste".
  41. "Regionalliga Nord 2020/2021 Zuschauer Heimspiele".
  42. "Regionalliga Nord 2020/2021 Zuschauer Heimspiele".
  43. "Regionalliga Nord 2020/2021 Torschützenliste".
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