2. Liga
Founded | 1975 |
---|---|
Country | Austria |
Level on pyramid | 2 |
Most championships | LASK (5) |
Admiral Zweite Liga is the name of the second division in Austrian football.
History
The league was formed in 1975. The name "Erste Liga" was not new, because before the Second World War the name was in use for the second division in football. From 1949 to 1975 the 3 Regionalligen were the second level. With some modifications the league still exists.
There were ten clubs in the league. The champion promotes to the Bundesliga, the last team of the Bundesliga is relegated to the Erste Liga. The last three teams of this league are relegated to the Regionalliga, the champions of the 3 Regionalligen are promoted to the Erste Liga as fare they are licenced. Beginning with the 2018–19 season the former First League changed its name to the Second League[1] and expanded from ten teams to 16 teams. [2] Also amateurteams of a club from the Bundesliga are allowed.
In the 2020-21 season the Regionalliga was suspended due to the COVID-pandemic. Therefor no team was relegated from Liga 2. SK Rapid Wien II , SK Vorwärts Steyr and SV Horn stayed in the league. [3] The 3rd of the league Austria Klagenfurt played relegationmatches versus SKN St. Pölten and won 5:0 (4:0 and 1:0) and was promoted to the Bundesliga.
Clubs in the Admiral 2. Liga 2023-24
Club Name | City | Stadium | Capacity |
---|---|---|---|
Schwarz-Weiß Bregenz | Bregenz | ImmoAgentur-Stadion | 12 000 |
Floridsdorfer AC | Vienna | FAC-Platz | 3,000 |
Kapfenberger SV | Kapfenberg | Franz-Fekete-Stadion | 12,000 |
Liefering | Salzburg | EM Stadion Wals-Siezenheim | 17 000 |
St. Pölten | Sankt Pölten | NV Arena | 8,000 |
Vienna | Wien | Hohe Warte Stadium | 5,000 |
Grazer AK | Graz | Merkur-Arena | 15,323 |
FC Dornbirn | Dornbirn | Stadion Birkenwiese | 7,500 |
FC Admira Wacker Mödling | Maria Enzensdorf | Bundesstadion Südstadt | 12,000 |
SV Horn | Horn | Sparkasse Horn Arena | 7,870 |
SKU Amstetten | Amstetten | Ertl Glas Stadion | 2,000 |
SV Lafnitz | Lafnitz | Sportplatz Lafnitz | 3,000 |
SV Stripfing | Stripfing | Sportplatz Stripfing | 500 |
-
Franz Fekete-Stadion
-
Reichshofsstadion
-
Red Bull Arena Wals
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Stadion Birkenwiese
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ImmoAgentur-Stadion
-
NV Arena
Champions
Topscorer
Season | Name/Club | Goals |
---|---|---|
1999/00 | Armin Hobel WSG Tirol | 15 |
2000/01 | Roland Kollmann FC Kärnten | 28 |
2001/02 | Christian Stumpf LASK | 17 |
2002/03 | Armin Hobel BSV Juniors | 23 |
2003/04 | Samuel Koejoe FC Wacker Innsbruck | 22 |
2004/05 | Sanel Kuljic SV Ried | 34 |
2005/06 | Ivica Vastić LASK | 19 |
2006/07 | Ivica Vastić LASK | 23 |
2007/08 | Rene Gartler FC Lustenau | 21 |
2008/09 | Diego Viana SV Grödig | 20 |
2009/10 | Patrick Bürger TSV Hartberg | 18 |
2010/11 | Benjamin Sulimani Admira Wacker | 19 |
2011/12 | David Poljanec FC Blau-Weiß Linz | 19 |
2012/13 | Hannes Aigner SC Rheindorf Altach | 18 |
2013/14 | Hannes Aigner SC Rheindorf Altach | 22 |
2014/15 | Markus Pink SV Mattersburg | 21 |
2015/16 | Thomas Pichlmann FC Wacker Innsbruck | 20 |
2016/17 | Patrik Eler FC Wacker Innsbruck | 24 |
2017/18 | Seifedin Chabbi SV Ried Hamdi Salihi SC Wiener Neustadt |
22 |
2018/19 | Ronivaldo SC Austria Lustenau | 26 |
2019/20 | Ronivaldo SC Austria Lustenau | 24 |
2020/21 | Fabian Schubert FC Blau-Weiß Linz | 33 |
2021/22 | Haris Tabakovic SC Austria Lustenau | 27 |
2022/23 | Ronivaldo Blau-Weiß Linz | 19 |
Other websites
References
- ↑ Bundesliga.at (German)
- ↑ Bundesliga.at (German)
- ↑ Sport ORF.at (German)
- ↑ Sport.de-Stadien 2. Liga Österreich
- ↑ [1] (in German) weltfussball.de. Retrieved 6 February 2022