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Rheinlandliga


FieldValue
nameRheinlandliga
founded1952
countryGermany
imageKarte-DFB-Regionalverbände-RL.png
pixels180px
stateRhineland-Palatinate
regionRheinland
organiserRhineland Football Association
promotionOberliga Rheinland-Pfalz/Saar
relegation{{plainlist
teams18
levelLevel 6
domest_cupRhineland Cup
season2021–22
championsAhrweiler BC
  • Bezirksliga Rheinland-Mitte
  • Bezirksliga Rheinland-Ost
  • Bezirksliga Rheinland-West}} The Rheinlandliga is a German amateur football division administered by the Rhineland Football Association, one of the 21 German state football associations. Being the top flight of the Rhineland state association, the Verbandsliga is currently a level 6 division of the German football league system.

Overview

The Amateurliga Rheinland was formed in 1952 in the northern half of the state of Rhineland-Palatinate. Before its inception, three separate leagues operated in the area as the highest level of play. The league was a feeder league to the 2nd Oberliga Südwest. From 1952 until the establishment of the Oberliga Südwest in 1978, it was the third tier of the football league system.

The winner of the Amateurliga Rheinland was not automatically promoted to its superior league but rather had to take part in a promotion play-off. The champion would have to compete with the winners of the Amateurligen Saarland and Südwest.

Until 1933, the region covered by the Rhinrland FA was politically part of the now dissolved German state of Prussia. It was part of the Prussian Rhine Province.

The league was established in 1952 with sixteen teams, the winner gaining promotion to the 2nd Oberliga Südwest. The founder members were:

  • SpVgg Bendorf
  • FC Urbar
  • VfL Trier
  • SpVgg Neuwied
  • SC Wirges
  • SV Niederlahnstein
  • SV Ehrang
  • Germania Mudersbach
  • TuS Konz
  • SSV Heimbach-Weis
  • SpVgg Zewen
  • VfB Lützel
  • SV Remagen
  • TuS Mayen
  • SV Trier-West
  • SG Betzdorf

In 1956 the league was split into a western and an eastern group with twelve teams each. In 1963 it reverted to its old single group setup.

With the introduction of the Bundesliga in 1963 the Amateurliga was placed below the new Regionalliga Südwest but still retained its third-tier status. It continued to do so after the introduction of the 2nd Bundesliga Süd in 1974.

SC Bad Neuenahr and SC Sinzig hold the record for years in the Amateurliga, each with 22 out of a possible 26.

In 1978, the league was renamed Verbandsliga Rheinland. At the same time, the Oberliga Südwest was reintroduced. The top five teams out of the Amateurliga went to the new Oberliga while the teams from place 6 to 15 found themselves in the Verbandsliga. The bottom team was relegated. The Verbandsliga was now the fourth tier of the league system.

The winner of the Rheinlandliga, like the winners of the Verbandsliga Südwest and the Saarlandliga gains direct promotion to the Oberliga Rheinland-Pfalz/Saar, formerly the Oberliga Südwest. The runners-up will only get a chance for promotion when there is additional spots to fill in the Oberliga, like 1994 when the Regionalligas were introduced and SpVgg EGC Wirges and the SG Betzdorf were promoted.

In the Rheinland, the Verbandsliga is called Rheinlandliga.

The Rheinland contains an unproportional amount of SG's, which are joint teams without the contributing clubs actually merging. The reason for this is the relatively low population density and therefore a lack of players. SG's can usually not be promoted above their Verbandsliga.

Feeder Leagues to the Rheinlandliga

  • Bezirksliga Rheinland-Mitte
  • Bezirksliga Rheinland-Ost
  • Bezirksliga Rheinland-West

Until 2003, two Landesligas, north and south, existed in the region, set between Verbandsliga and Bezirksliga. Those leagues were disbanded in 2003.

League champions

The league champions:

SeasonClub
1952–53SpVgg Bendorf
1953–54VfL Trier
1954–55VfL Trier
1955–56SV Niederlahnstein
1956–57Germania Metternich
1957–58Spfr. Herdorf
1958–59Germania Metternich
1959–60Germania Metternich
1960–61SV Ehrang
1961–62VfB Wissen
1962–63VfL Neuwied
1963–64Germania Metternich
1964–65SpVgg Bendorf
1965–66Germania Metternich
1966–67SSV Mülheim
1967–68SC Sinzig
1968–69SSV Mülheim
1969–70VfL Neuwied
1970–71SpVgg Andernach
1971–72Eisbachtaler SF
1972–73SpVgg Andernach
1973–74SV Leiwen
1974–75Eintracht Trier
1975–76Eintracht Trier
SeasonClub
1976–77TuS Neuendorf
1977–78TuS Neuendorf
1978–79SV Leiwen
1979–80TuS Mayen
1980–81SV Leiwen
1981–82VfL Hamm/Sieg
1982–83SpVgg EGC Wirges
1983–84TuS Mayen
1984–85VfL Hamm/Sieg
1985–86SV Leiwen
1986–87SpVgg EGC Wirges
1987–88VfB Wissen
1988–89TuS Mayen
1989–90Eisbachtaler SF
1990–91VfB Wissen
1991–92SV Wittlich
1992–93SV Prüm
1993–94TuS Koblenz
1994–95VfL Trier
1995–96SV Prüm
1996–97TuS Montabaur
1997–98SpVgg EGC Wirges
1998–99TuS Mayen
SeasonClub
1999–2000Germania Metternich
2000–01TuS Mayen
2001–02FV Engers 07
2002–03SV Klausen
2003–04SG Betzdorf
2004–05Eintracht Trier
2005–06SG Rossbach–Verscheid
2006–07SV Rossbach-Verscheid
2007–08SG Betzdorf
2008–09Eisbachtaler SF
2009–10Eintracht Trier
2010–11FSV Salmrohr
2011–12SV Mehring
2012–13SpVgg Burgbrohl
2013–14SpVgg EGC Wirges
2014–15FC Karbach
2015–16TuS Rot-Weiss Koblenz
2016–17FV Engers 07
2017–18TSV Emmelshausen
2018–19Eisbachtaler SF
2019–20SG 2000 Mülheim-Karlich
2020–21Season curtailed and annulled
2021–22Ahrweiler BC

| access-date = 19 March 2008

  • bold denotes club gained promotion.
  • In 1994 SpVgg EGC Wirges and SG Betzdorf were also promoted.
  • SG Betzdorf was again promoted as runner–up in 1998.
  • In 2006 FSV Salmrohr was promoted instead of the first placed SG Rossbach–Verscheid. The reason for this is the fact that a conglomerate of clubs, usually called SG (Spielgemeinschaft), can be refused promotion by their Verband. Rossbach–Verscheid were two separate clubs fielding a joint team, not a merger of two clubs. In 2007, promotion was granted as the club was now an SV (Sportverein).
  • In 2015 runner–up SV Mehring was also promoted after play–offs.
  • In 2020 runners-up TSV Emmelshausen and FSV Salmrohr were also promoted.
  • In 2022 runner-up TuS Kirchberg was also promoted after play-offs.

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
  • Süddeutschlands Fussballgeschichte in Tabellenform 1897-1988 History of Southern German football in tables, by Ludolf Hyll
  • Die Deutsche Liga-Chronik 1945-2005 History of German football from 1945 to 2005 in tables. DSFS. 2006.

References

  1. [http://www.kicker.de/news/fussball/amateure/rheinlandliga–fb–1/2017–18/34/0/spieltag.html Rheinlandliga tables & results]{{dead link. (January 2025). de ''[[kicker.de]]''. Retrieved 9 June 2014
  2. [http://www.f-archiv.de Historic German football league tables] {{in lang. de ''Das Deutsche Fussball Archiv''. Retrieved 9 June 2014
  3. (2006). "History of SV Rossbach (in German)". SV Rossbach website.
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This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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