Bavarian ice hockey leagues


The Bavarian ice hockey leagues are part of the German ice hockey league system and form the tiers four to six of the league system in the state of Bavaria. The leagues are operated by the Bayrischer Eissport Verband, the Bavarian association for ice sports.

Overview

The league system in Bavaria consists of three separate tiers, these being the Bayernliga , Landesliga and Bezirksliga . The overall system has remained unchanged for a lengthy period of seasons.
The number of clubs, especially in the lowest tier, the Bezirksliga, can fluctuate due to teams joining and other teams leaving the league. This is mostly due to lack of players, or, the other extreme, an over supply of players and the need to form a reserves team. Occasionally, clubs fold, reform or re-enter the league system. In the current Bayernliga season, the EC 2000 Ulm/Neu-Ulm folded in December 2007, being unable to pay their players.
The Bayernliga champion earns the right to gain promotion to the Oberliga. At the end of the 2006-07 season, the runner-up was also promoted, which is an exception.
Until the end of the 1999-2000 season, the Bayernliga was only the fifth tier of the league system. The league between Oberliga and Bayernliga, the Regionalliga, was disbanded after this season and the majority of its clubs integrated into the Oberliga.
The Bavarian Eissport Verband is the largest regional ice hockey association in Germany with 14.000 registered players in over 90 clubs. Apart from the 79 senior teams playing in its league system for the 2007-08 season, there is also eight women's teams and 284 junior teams. For this reason, the Bayernliga is the only statewide league whose champion directly qualifies for the Oberliga, all other leagues, the Regionalligas cover larger areas or have to go through a promotion play-off round.
Above the BEV there are currently five Bavarian teams in the DEL , two in the 2nd Bundesliga and twelve in the Oberliga. This means, 19 of 56 clubs in the first three divisions of German ice hockey currently come from Bavaria.

Ice hockey in Bavaria

Bavaria, especially the southern, mountainous region of it, is the "cradle" of German ice hockey with many former German internationals coming from there. Historically, the German championship was dominated by clubs from Bavaria and Berlin. Nowadays however, Bavarian teams rarely win a championship. The situation is actually very similar to the Canadian teams in the NHL, who provide the majority of players but win a minority of titles.
In 87 editions of the German championship until 2007, Bavarian clubs have won 35. Of the current DEL teams, none hold a German title to their name. In the 2nd Bundesliga, Landshut and Riessersee hold 12 titles between them and in the Oberliga, Füssen, Tölz and Rosenheim have earned 20 German championship between them. The EV Füssen is second only in numbers of titles to Berliner Schlittschuhclub, having won 16 German championships from 1949 to 1973.
One reason for the leading role Bavarian ice hockey had, and still to some extent has, is the number of ice hockey stadiums in the state. Almost 40 percent of all stadiums in Germany are in Bavaria and twice as many as in the second-ranked state Nordrhein-Westfalen:
StateNumber
Bayern73
Baden-Württemberg24
Berlin6
Brandenburg0
Bremen2
Hamburg4
Hessen10
Mecklenburg Vorpommern4
Niedersachsen10
Nordrhein Westfalen35
Rheinland- Pfalz8
Saarland2
Sachsen11
Sachsen- Anhalt1
Schleswig- Holstein2
Thüringen1
Germany193

Source:

Leagues & modus

The nine senior leagues split over three tiers, operating on the following modus:

Bayernliga

For the 2007-08 season, the Bayernliga sponsored the Bayer company operated in one single division of 16 clubs. The season went from October 2007 to March 2008.
Each team in the league played each other twice, home and away. at the end of the regular season, the top eight teams entered a play-off round. In a best-of-three modus, the winner of the Bayernliga was determined. The bottom eight teams also played a best-of-three play-down round to determine the two teams relegated to the Landesligas.
Until the end of the 1999-2000 season, the league operated on a fourteen club home-and-away season with no play-offs. From 2000, the strength of the league was increased to sixteen clubs in two regional groups of eight. After a first round, the top four of each group played another group stage, the championship group. The bottom four from each group did the same in a relegation group. From the 2002-03 season, play-offs were introduced after the championship round. The year after, the league moved to its current modus of a sixteen team home-and-away season with play-offs at the end.

Landesliga

Each of the four Landesligas played a regular season of home-and-away matches. The two first placed teams of each league then entered a championship round of eight teams. Again played in home-and-away modus, the top two teams of this round gain promotion to the Bayernliga. Should one or more teams from the Bayernliga gain entry to the Oberliga with a lesser number then that being relegated from the Oberliga to the Bayernliga, additional teams may be promoted from the Landesliga.
The other six teams in each of the four Landesligas played out another home-and-away round with the last placed team from each league being relegated to the corresponding Bezirksliga.
This modus for the 2007-08 season actually differs from the previous years, when after the first round of home-and-away games, the Landesligas were split into a top-four and a bottom-four group, with the latter determining the relegated team and the former playing for the group champion who would enter a four-team play-off for the Landesliga title and Bayernliga promotion.

Bezirksliga

In the Bezirksliga, the lowest level of play, each league again plays a home-and-away season. The winner of each 'Bezirksliga goes to the Bezirksliga championship where the four teams determined the champion of this level. Each of the four regional champions is also promoted to the corresponding Landesliga. For all other clubs in the Bezirksliga the season ends after the main round. there is no relegation as there is no league below the Bezirksliga.

Bayernliga, Landesliga and Bezirksliga champions

On top of the division champions, each tier also plays out its level champions, the Bayernliga Meister, Landesliga Meister and Bezirksliga Meister.

Bayernliga

Bezirksliga

The Landsliga and Bezirksliga are subdivided in four divisions each with the following divisional champions:

Landesliga

Bezirksliga

League system in the 2008-09 season

Source:

Placings in the Bayernliga 2000 to 2009

Club2000200120022003200420052006200720082009
EHC München *1092OLOLBLBLBLBL
Star Bulls Rosenheim *DEL31OLOLOLOLOL
EV Landsberg *RL121OLBLBLOL
EHF Passau1OLOL
Deggendorfer SC *OLOLOL72OLOL
TSV Peissenberg *RLRLRL1012431
ERV Schweinfurt1RLRLOLOLOL672
Höchstadter EC31RLOLOLOL18113
TSV Erding *OLBLOL435104
ESC DorfenRLRLRL996101195
ESV Buchloe6
VER Selb *OLOLOLOLOL137
ECDC Memmingen*RLRLRLOL41028
ERC Sonthofen24689131269
EHC Waldkraiburg7774527110
ESV Königsbrunn9425131469811
Germering Wanderers15151212
EC PfaffenhofenRL55862143413
EV Pfronten596151514
EHC Nürnberg515
EV Dingolfing863431516
EC Ulm/Neu-Ulm *OLOL1414
EV Fürstenfeldbruck111413161151616
EV Pegnitz8913
SVG Burgkirchen *12810111071615
Geretsried Riverrats *RLOLOLOL538
EA Schongau4311071211
Augsburger EV*2RLRLOL1113
ERSC Ottobrunn14128141216
ERC Lechbruck713121214
TSV Trostberg611111316
EV Lindau14
EV Regensburg II *15
EV Moosburg101616
ESC Vilshofen1315

For the 2016-17 season, the following clubs from Bavaria played in the top three German leagues:
In the DEL:
In the 2nd Bundesliga:
In the Oberliga: