Mittelrheinliga


The Mittelrheinliga, sometimes also referred to as Oberliga Mittelrhein after its elevation to Oberliga status in 2012, is a German amateur football division administered by the Football association of the Middle Rhine, one of the 21 German state football associations. Being the top flight of the Middle Rhine state association, the league is currently a level 5 division of the German football league system.

Overview

Until 1956, a total of ten Landesliga divisions, among them two divisions of Landesliga Mittelrhein were the highest amateur level in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia. After the regular season, the ten Landesliga champions had to play-off for two promotion spots to 2. Oberliga West. Upon decision of the superior Western German football association, in 1956 four divisions of Verbandsliga were introduced, one of them being the Verbandsliga Mittelrhein. These four divisions of Verbandsliga still exist today, with the Verbandsliga Mittelrhein in 2008 renamed to Mittelrheinliga and later in 2012 renamed to Mittelrheinliga.
The Verbandsliga Mittelrhein was upon its interception the third tier of the German football league system. The league champion had to play-off the winners of the Verbandsliga Niederrhein and the two divisions of Verbandsliga Westfalen for two promotion spots to the 2. Oberliga West. Upon introduction of the Bundesliga in 1963, the league was set below the new Regionalliga West but remained as the third tier. With the exception of 1963 and 1974, when the league systems were changed, the champion continued to have the opportunity to win promotion. The clubs from the Verbandsliga Mittelrhein remained mostly unsuccessful as that, only achieving promotion in 1966, 1967, 1968, 1973, 1975, 1976 and 1978.
The league operated with 16 clubs throughout most of its existence, only occasionally altering the numbers to balance out promotion and relegation.
With the replacement of the Regionalliga by the 2nd Bundesliga Nord in 1974, the league champion had to gain promotion through a play-off system with the winners of the other tier-three leagues in northern Germany.
In 1978, the Amateur-Oberliga Nordrhein was formed as the third tier of football in the region compromising the area of the Verbandsliga Mittelrhein and Verbandsliga Niederrhein. One of the main reasons for this move was to provide direct promotion for the tier-three champions again. This seasons league winner, Viktoria Köln, was promoted to the 2nd Bundesliga, the clubs placed two to ten in the league were admitted to the new Oberliga, these being:
Verbandsliga Mittelrhein, together with Niederrhein, remained as a feeder league for the new Oberliga, but now as a tier-four competition. Its champion, and some years the runners-up, were directly promoted to the Oberliga Nordrhein.
With the re-introduction of the Regionalligas in 1994, the league slipped to tier five but remained unchanged otherwise.
From 2008, with the introduction of the 3rd Liga, the Verbandsliga Mittelrhein was downgraded to the sixth tier. The league above it was then the new NRW-Liga, a merger of the Oberligas Nordrhein and Westfalen. The champion of the Verbandsliga continued to be directly promoted but since there was now four Verbandsligen below the Oberliga, the runners-up did not have the option of promotion unless the league winner declined.
The NRW-Liga existed for only four seasons before it was disbanded again in 2012 in the wake of the Regionalliga West becoming a league for clubs from North Rhine-Westphalia only. While the Oberliga Westfalen was established again in one half of the state the regions of Lower Rhine and Middle Rhine opted to elevate the Niederrheinliga and Mittelrheinliga to Oberliga status instead of reforming the Oberliga Nordrhein.

League champions

The league champions since 1956:

Source:
  • In 1966, the second placed Bonner SC was promoted instead of SG Düren 99.
  • In 1967, the second placed Fortuna Köln was promoted because 1. FC Köln II was ineligible.
  • In 1973, the second placed Viktoria Köln was promoted instead of SV Frechen 20.
  • In 2008, the second placed Fortuna Köln was promoted because VfL Leverkusen was refused a Regionalliga licence.
  • The Bonner SC holds the record number of titles, seven, two of them won by its predecessor sides Tura and BFV.
  • FC Hennef 05 declined promotion in 2012 and 2013 but accepted it in 2014.

    Clubs in the Mittelrheinliga since 2012

The final league placings of all clubs in the league since receiving Oberliga status in 2012:
Club131415161718192021
Bonner SC721RRRRR
TV Herkenrath521R
SV Bergisch Gladbach 09R51035101RR
FC Wegberg-Beeck721R1R21R
1. FC Düren82x
FC Pesch163x
FC Hennef 0511R913234x
Siegburger SV 04103135x
Borussia Freialdenhoven311967546x
FC Hürth15476957x
SpVg Wesseling-Urfeld131012158x
SpVg Frechen 2099x
VfL 08 Vichttal111210x
SV Deutz 05711x
SV Breinig136612x
Viktoria Arnoldsweiler4368971113x
Blau-Weiß Friesdorf11841014x
Fortuna Köln II15x
SV Eilendorf81616x
VfL Alfter1165231214x
BC Viktoria Glesch-Paffendorfx
SSV Merten131315
TSC Euskirchen28344816
Hilal Bergheim8141114
FC Inde Hahn14
VfL Rheinbach15
Germania Windeck610121216
Alemannia Aachen II94714
VfL Leverkusen1115
SC Brühl 06/455913
TSV Hertha Walheim1414
FC Bergheim 200015
Germania Erftstadt121216
SV Nierfeld15
SF Troisdorf 051016
SG Köln-Worringen16

Key

Founding members of the league

From the 2. Oberliga West:
  • Rhenania Würselen
From the Landesliga Gruppe 1:
  • SSV Troisdorf 05
  • Rapid Köln
  • VfL Köln 99
  • SV Habbelrath-Grefrath
  • SG Eschweiler
  • SV Stolberg
  • Tura Hennef
From the Landesliga Gruppe 2:
  • SSG Bergisch Gladbach
  • SC Fortuna Köln
  • FV Godesberg 08
  • SV Merkstein
  • Viktoria Alsdorf
  • BC Kohlscheid
  • Tura Bonn
OWIKI.org. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.