The 2011–12 Austrian Football First League was the 38th season of the Austrian second-level football league. It began on 10 June 2011 and ended on 18 May 2012 after the 36th and final round.[1] The Carinthian cooperative associations Wolfsberger AC and SK St. Andrä won the championship. WAC, which ended its cooperative with SK St. Andrä after the 2011–12 season, moved up to the Bundesliga for the first time. The last place team of TSV Hartberg had to move down to the Austrian Regional League Central. The second-to-last place team had to play two relegation matches against Grazer AK, the champion of the Central Regional League.
Season | 2011–12 |
---|---|
Champions | WAC/St. Andrä |
Relegated | LASK Linz TSV Hartberg |
Matches played | 180 |
Goals scored | 520 (2.89 per match) |
Top goalscorer | David Poljanec |
Total attendance | 428,262 |
Average attendance | 2,379 |
← 2010–11 2012–13 → |
Overview
editThe First League is the second-highest league in Austrian professional soccer and held its 36th season in 2011–12. LASK Linz was new in the league as well as the two winners of the relegation matches (ninth place in the First League 2010–11 against the champion of the Regional League East 2010–11 and the champion of the Regional League West 2010–11 against the champion of the Regional League Central 2010-11).
In the 2011–12 season, Vorarlberg had three clubs, Upper Austria had two clubs, and Vienna, Lower Austria, Salzburg, Styria, and Carinthia each had one club. Burgenland and Tyrol were not represented in the First League.
sky Deutschland owned the television rights for the First League as in the Bundesliga which allowed them to show every game in full length. The games were broadcast on sky sport austria and as part of a conference circuit with four games beginning at 6:30PM. In the last two rounds, all games had to be played at the same time, and sky was allowed to pick an additional game which would be designated as the "Top Game of the Round" and would be shown at 8:30PM on Fridays. ORF also had the rights to broadcast the Top Game of the Round live and in full length. They broadcast the games on their channel ORF Sport +.[2]
Method
editIn the 2011–12 season, which began on 10 July 2011, ten clubs competed against each other in 36 rounds, as had been done in previous seasons. The championship ended on 13 May 2012.[1]
The champion of the league moved up to the Bundesliga. The last place team had to move down to its corresponding region in the Regional League. This team was replaced by the winner of the two qualification matches between the champions of the Regional League West and Regional League East. The next-to-last team had to play two relegation matches against the champion of the Regional League Central. The winner of the relegation matches qualified for the First League for the 2012–13 season.
League table
editPos | Team | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts | Promotion or relegation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | WAC/St. Andrä (P) | 36 | 19 | 11 | 6 | 71 | 49 | +22 | 68 | Promotion to 2012–13 Austrian Bundesliga |
2 | SCR Altach | 36 | 18 | 8 | 10 | 62 | 39 | +23 | 62 | |
3 | LASK Linz[a] (R) | 36 | 16 | 13 | 7 | 55 | 40 | +15 | 61 | Relegated to 2012–13 Austrian Regionalliga because of license withdrawal[3] |
4 | SC Austria Lustenau | 36 | 16 | 10 | 10 | 59 | 47 | +12 | 58 | |
5 | SKN St. Pölten | 36 | 14 | 9 | 13 | 45 | 45 | 0 | 51 | |
6 | FC Blau-Weiß Linz[b] | 36 | 13 | 10 | 13 | 49 | 52 | −3 | 49 | |
7 | SV Grödig | 36 | 11 | 9 | 16 | 46 | 52 | −6 | 42 | |
8 | First Vienna FC 1894[c] | 36 | 9 | 10 | 17 | 44 | 56 | −12 | 37 | |
9 | FC Lustenau 07 | 36 | 9 | 10 | 17 | 51 | 66 | −15 | 37 | |
10 | TSV Hartberg (O) | 36 | 7 | 6 | 23 | 38 | 74 | −36 | 27 | Qualification to relegation playoffs |
Results
editGoal scoring statistics
editRank | Goals | Name | Country | Club |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 19 | David Poljanec | Slovenia | FC Blau-Weiß Linz |
2 | 18 | Christian Falk | Austria | WAC/St. Andrä |
3 | 17 | Daniel Lucas Segovia | Spain | SKN St. Pölten |
4 | 14 | Johannes Aigner | Austria | LASK Linz |
14 | Tomi Correa | Spain | SCR Altach | |
14 | Jacobo Ynclán | Spain | WAC/St. Andrä | |
7 | 13 | Patrick Seeger | Austria | SCR Altach |
8 | 11 | Pierre Boya | Cameroon | SC Austria Lustenau |
11 | Diego Viana | Brazil | SV Grödig | |
10 | 10 | Manuel Hartl | Austria | FC Blau-Weiß Linz |
10 | Lukas Mössner | Austria | TSV Hartberg | |
10 | Stephan Stückler | Austria | WAC/St. Andrä |
Cities, venues, and attendance
editCity | Residents | Club | Stadium | Capacity | Total attendance | Average attendance | ± from 2010–11 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Altach | 6,356 | SC Rheindorf Altach | Stadion Schnabelholz | 8,200 | 63,741 | 3,541 | − 5.48% |
Grödig | 6,862 | SV Grödig | Untersberg-Arena | 2,955 | 15,300 | 850 | + 21.26% |
Hartberg | 6,602 | TSV Hartberg | Stadion Hartberg | 4,000 | 18,900 | 1,050 | − 16.67% |
Linz | 189,311 | FC Blau-Weiß Linz | Linzer Stadion | 18,000 | 46,834 | 2,602 | +183.84% |
Linz | 189,311 | LASK Linz | Linzer Stadion | 18,000 | 60,700 | 3,372 | − 43.97% |
Lustenau | 21,076 | FC Lustenau 07 | Reichshofstadion | 8,500 | 30,000 | 1,667 | − 5.96% |
Lustenau | 21,076 | SC Austria Lustenau | Reichshofstadion | 8,500 | 78,600 | 4,367 | + 21.67% |
St. Pölten | 51,688 | SKN St. Pölten | Voithplatz | 8,000 | 26,115 | 1,451 | + 30.96% |
Vienna | 1,705,080 | First Vienna FC 1894 | Hohe Warte Vienna | 4,500 | 39,800 | 2,211 | + 12.96% |
Wolfsberg | 25,162 | WAC/St. Andrä | Lavanttal-Arena | 4,100 | 48,272 | 2,682 | + 69.78% |
The champions WAC/St. Andrä
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Promotion/relegation playoffs
editIn the new class reform of 2009, it was decided that the promotion candidates of the Regional Leagues together with the ninth place in the First League must compete in the relegation matches in order to remain in or be promoted to the First League. An alternating method of relegation matches was agreed upon for the Regional League teams. Accordingly, the Regional League Central had to compete against the ninth place in the First League and the Regional League East had to compete against the Regional League West in this season.[4] On the basis of the license withdrawal of LASK Linz and the associated demotion to the Regional League Central, the ninth place in the First League, FC Lustenau 07, remained in the second level of play without a relegation match. The last place in the First League, TSV Hartberg, moved up to the relegation place and competed against the Regional League Central champion.
In the first pairing, the last place in the First League, TSV Hartberg, played against the champion of the Regional League central, Grazer AK.
Date | Home team | Away team | Result | |
---|---|---|---|---|
5 June 2012 | Grazer AK | – | TSV Hartberg | 0–0 |
Ref.: Gerhard Grobelnik | Goal scorers: None | |||
8 June 2012 | TSV Hartberg | – | Grazer AK | 3–0 (1–0) Stopped in the 77th minute after GAK fans stormed the field [1] |
Ref.: Markus Hameter | Goal scorers: 1:0 (19th) Luca Tauschmann, 2:0 (60th) Matej Milatović, 3:0 (76th) Daniel Rossmann |
In the second pairing, the champion of the Regional League East, SV Horn, played against the Regional League West champion WSG Swarovski Wattens.
Date | Home team | Away team | Result | |
---|---|---|---|---|
4 June 2012 | WSG Wattens | – | SV Horn | 1–5 (0–3) |
Ref.: Thomas Prammer | Goal scorers: 0:1 (21st) Mario Konrad, 0:2 (31st) Mario Konrad, 0:3 (40th) Salmin Cehajić, 0:4 (50th) Miroslav Milosević, 1:4 (83rd) Benjamin Pranter, 1:5 (90+2nd) Salmin Cehajić | |||
8 June 2012 | SV Horn | – | WSG Wattens | 4–0 (0–0) |
Ref.: Rene Eisner | Goal scorers: 1:0 (48th) Phillip Zulechner, 2:0 (54th) Emir Dilić, 3:0 (74th) Slaven Lalić, 4:0 (89th) Miroslav Milosević |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b Austrian Bundesliga: 2011–12 Austrian Bundesliga schedule Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine (PDF file, 77KB; retrieved on 14 June 2011)
- ^ 90minuten.at: First League: Live game on Sky and ORF Sport Plus Archived 29 July 2012 at archive.today, retrieved on 22 June 2010
- ^ http://kurier.at/sport/fussball/4497883-lask-endgueltig-ohne-bundesliga-lizenz.php [dead link ]
- ^ Soccer: ÖFB sets the relegation matches of the regional divisions