2013 German Football League

(Redirected from German Bowl XXXV)

The 2013 German Football League season was the thirty fifth edition of the top-level American football competition in Germany and fourteenth since the renaming of the American football Bundesliga to German Football league.

2013 German Football League
Logo of German Bowl XXXV
LeagueGerman Football League
SportAmerican football
Duration4 May–12 October 2013
Number of teams16
Promoted to GFLAllgäu Comets
Relegated to GFL 2Wiesbaden Phantoms
Regular season
GFL North championsNew Yorker Lions
  GFL North runners-upDresden Monarchs
GFL South championsSchwäbisch Hall Unicorns
  GFL South runners-upMarburg Mercenaries
German Bowl XXXV
ChampionsNew Yorker Lions
  Runners-upDresden Monarchs
GFL seasons

The regular season started on 5 May and finished on 15 September 2013, followed by the play-offs. The season culminated in the German Bowl XXXV, staged on 12 October 2013 in Berlin, as in 2012, and the fourth time for the championship decider to be held in the German capital.[1]

The German Bowl was won by the New Yorker Lions, a club from the city of Braunschweig, who defeated the Dresden Monarchs by a score of 35–34. It was the club's eighth title overall and their first since 2008 while Dresden made their first-ever German Bowl appearance.[1]

Modus

edit

During the regular season each club played all other clubs in its division twice, home and away, resulting in each team playing 14 regular season games. There was no games between clubs from opposite divisions, inter conference games having been abolished after the 2011 season when the GFL was expanded from 14 to 16 teams.[2][3]

The four best teams in each division qualified for the play-offs where, in the quarter finals, teams from opposite divisions played each other, whereby the better placed teams had home advantage. The first placed team played the fourth placed from the other division and the second placed the third placed team. From the semi-finals onwards teams from the same division could meet again.[4]

The eighth placed team in each division entered a two-leg play-off with the winners of the respective division of the German Football League 2, the second tier of the league system in Germany. The winners of this contest qualified for the GFL for the following season.[2]

Season overview

edit

The 2013 season saw one newly promoted team, the Cologne Falcons, who replaced the Lübeck Cougars in the northern division of the league.[2][5]

The Wiesbaden Phantoms were relegated from the GFL South at the end of the 2013 season after losing to the Allgäu Comets while, in the northern division, the Cologne Falcons defended their league place against the Bielefeld Bulldogs. For Wiesbaden it meant the end to a three-year stint in the league.[2][4] In January 2014 the Hamburg Blue Devils withdrew from the northern division, leaving it to play with seven clubs in the 2014 season.[6]

The Dresden Monarchs played home games at three different venues that season as Heinz Steyer Stadion was unusable early in the season due to the 2013 European floods (coincidentally, the 2002 season, which saw Dresden promoted to the first division, also saw record flooding in Dresden) prompting them to move their home game against the Cologne Falcons to their training grounds at Bärnsdorfer Straße,[7] while the home game against Hamburg was held at Rudolf Harbig Stadion before the Monarchs returned to Heinz Steyer Stadion for the rest of their home games that season.[8]

Six of the eight teams qualified for the play-offs in 2012 did so again in 2013. Only the Düsseldorf Panther and the Stuttgart Scorpions missed out on post season play compare to the previous season. For Stuttgart it ended a run of fifteen consecutive post season appearances since 1998. In their stead the Munich Cowboys returned to the play-offs to make their twentieth appearance while, in the north, the New Yorker Lions returned after a two-year absence to make their sixteenth.[2][3]

In the quarter-finals of the play-offs the four northern clubs defeated their southern opponents, resulting in an all northern division semi-final for the first time since 1999. The 2011 and 2012 champions Schwäbisch Hall Unicorns were knocked-out by the Berlin Adler, losing at home in the GFL for the first time since 2010. In the semi-finals the first and second placed teams won their home games against the third and fourth placed clubs. In the German Bowl XXXV the New Yorker Lions then defeated the Dresden Monarchs in front of over 12,000 spectators 35–34, the fifth time the German Bowl had been decided by just one point. It was the first appearance from a club from the former East Germany in a German Bowl. For the Lions the 2013 title signalled a return to former dominance after four difficult seasons that had followed their twelve consecutive German Bowl appearances from 1997 to 2008.[2][3][1]

In the relegation play-offs between the last-placed southern team, the Wiesbaden Phantoms, and the winner of the GFL 2 South, the Allgäu Comets, the Comets won the first leg away 37–21 before losing 34–44 at home, thereby winning promotion to the GFL on overall points. The northern division saw the Cologne Falcons defeat the Bielefeld Bulldogs 42–30 at home and then lose 17–6 away, retaining their league place by just one point.[2]

League tables

edit

The league tables of the two GFL divisions:

GFL North
P Team G W T L PF PA PCT
1 New Yorker Lions 14 13 0 1 493 177 0.929
2 Dresden Monarchs 14 11 0 3 513 254 0.786
3 Kiel Baltic Hurricanes 14 10 0 4 485 249 0.714
4 Berlin Adler 14 7 0 7 332 342 0.500
5 Berlin Rebels 14 6 0 8 365 360 0.429
6 Hamburg Blue Devils 14 4 0 10 225 448 0.286
7 Düsseldorf Panther 14 3 0 11 207 496 0.214
8 Cologne Falcons 14 2 0 12 209 503 0.143
GFL South
P Team G W T L PF PA PCT
1 Schwäbisch Hall Unicorns 14 11 1 2 549 223 0.821
2 Marburg Mercenaries 14 10 1 3 488 353 0.750
3 Munich Cowboys 14 9 1 4 380 275 0.679
4 Rhein-Neckar Bandits 14 9 0 5 395 389 0.643
5 Saarland Hurricanes 14 5 0 9 297 389 0.357
6 Stuttgart Scorpions 14 4 1 9 272 430 0.321
7 Franken Knights 14 4 0 10 302 488 0.286
8 Wiesbaden Phantoms 14 2 0 12 283 419 0.143

Source: football-aktuell.de,[4] GFL.info

GFL2

edit

The league tables of the two GFL2 divisions:[9]

GFL2 North
P Team G W T L PF PA PCT
1 Bielefeld Bulldogs 14 13 0 1 487 263 0.929
2 Troisdorf Jets 14 10 1 3 530 400 0.750
3 Hamburg Huskies 14 7 1 6 443 363 0.536
4 Bonn Gamecocks 14 6 3 5 373 370 0.536
5 Lübeck Cougars 14 6 1 7 350 314 0.464
6 Osnabrück Tigers 14 5 0 9 448 457 0.357
7 Cottbus Crayfish 14 5 0 9 356 494 0.357
8 Rostock Griffins 14 1 0 13 243 569 0.071
GFL2 South
P Team G W T L PF PA PCT
1 Allgäu Comets# 13 12 0 1 506 247 0.923
2 Frankfurt Universe 14 9 1 4 368 249 0.679
3 Nürnberg Rams 14 8 1 5 404 325 0.607
4 Ravensburg Razorbacks 14 8 1 5 324 294 0.607
5 Kirchdorf Wildcats 14 7 0 7 366 293 0.500
6 Frankfurt Pirates 14 3 3 8 234 343 0.321
7 Starnberg Argonauts 14 3 1 10 298 526 0.250
8 Kaiserslautern Pikes# 13 1 1 11 290 513 0.115
  • # The home game of the Kaiserslautern Pikes against the Allgäu Comets was not played.[10]
GFL: Qualified for play-offs
GFL 2: Promoted
Relegation play-offs
Promotion play-offs
Relegated

Play-offs

edit

The quarter-finals of the 2013 play-offs were played on 21 and 22 September, the semi-finals on 28 September and 3 October and the German Bowl on 12 October 2013. The German Bowl was held at the Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Sportpark in Berlin.[2][11]

The South was swept out of the playoffs in the quarter finals with defending champion Schwäbisch Hall Unicorns upset at home by the Berlin Adler. Ironically it was the fourth placed finisher in the South, Rhein-Neckar Bandits, who came closest to a semifinal berth by keeping the deficit against Braunschweig to a single score. All other northern entrants won their quarterfinals with big margins. On their way home, the Berlin Adler players earned negative press attention as they tried (and failed) to steal a plastic cow at a highway rest stop, damaging it in an attempt to fit it through the bus door.[12] After their first ever playoff home game, Dresden would thus be gifted a second one in the same season by their old rival Berlin Adler. Referencing the cow incident, Dresden had a similar plastic cow displayed in the stadium for the playoff game against the Adler. Ultimately, both home teams prevailed in the semifinals, Braunschweig knocking out the previous season's German Bowl loser Kiel and Dresden dispatching the Adler. The German Bowl would thus include a representative from the New States of Germany for the first time while Braunschweig made its record thirteenth German Bowl appearance after their 2009–2012 "wilderness years" during which they had been far from championship contention.

Quarterfinals Semifinals German Bowl
         
N1 New Yorker Lions 28
S4 Rhein-Neckar Bandits 21
N1 New Yorker Lions 34
N3 Kiel Baltic Hurricanes 29
S2 Marburg Mercenaries 9
N3 Kiel Baltic Hurricanes 47
N1 New Yorker Lions 35
N2 Dresden Monarchs 34
S1 Schwäbisch Hall Unicorns 13
N4 Berlin Adler 42
N4 Berlin Adler 21
N2 Dresden Monarchs 32
N2 Dresden Monarchs 59
S3 Munich Cowboys 14

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c List of German Bowls Archived 2015-09-29 at the Wayback Machine (in German) GFL website, accessed: 23 September 2015
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h GFL 2013 football-aktuell.de, accessed: 23 September 2015
  3. ^ a b c Historic American football tables & results from Germany football-history.de, accessed: 15 September 2015
  4. ^ a b c GFL 2014 football-aktuell.de, accessed: 23 September 2015
  5. ^ GFL 2012 football-aktuell.de, accessed: 15 September 2015
  6. ^ Hamburg Blue Devils ziehen sich zuruck Archived 2014-02-26 at the Wayback Machine (in German) GFL website, published: 18 January 2014, accessed: 23 September 2015
  7. ^ "Monarchs gewinnen souverän".
  8. ^ "Hamburg Blue Devils vs Dresden Monarchs (22.06.2013)".
  9. ^ GFL 2 2013 football.aktuell.de, accessed: 27 September 2015
  10. ^ IN KÜRZE Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine (in German) Frankfurter Neue Presse, accessed: 27 September 2015
  11. ^ German Bowl (in German) Official website, accessed: 23 September 2015
  12. ^ "Berlin Adler: Footballer klauen Werbe-Kuh". 26 September 2013.
edit