Deutsche Eishockey Liga

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Deutsche Eishockey Liga
Deutsche Eishockey Liga
Sport Ice hockey
Founded 1994
No. of teams 16 (since 2008/09)
Country(ies) Flag of GermanyGermany
Most recent
champion(s)
Eisbären Berlin
Most championship(s) Adler Mannheim (5x)
Official website Official DEL website

The Deutsche Eishockey Liga (German Ice Hockey League, shortname DEL) is a German high-calibre ice hockey league, and has the highest number of American and Canadian players overseas. It was formed as a replacement for the Ice hockey Bundesliga and is also called DEL - Die 1. Bundesliga.

Contents

[edit] Rules & Regulations

The DEL is an independently run league, fully owned and operated by its member clubs. The league currently operates with 15 clubs in the 2007-08 season. The leagues maximum strength however is 16, meaning a 2nd Bundesliga team could be elected to the league in this season, providing the club fulfills the DEL's basic requirements:

  • A written application for membership
  • "On the field qualification" (championship in the 2nd Bundesliga)
  • A stadium that meets DEL standards
  • Financial qualification
  • Formation of an ordinary company (the DEL consists of franchises, not clubs)
  • Development program for young players
  • Purchase of a licence (currently, the licence fee is set at € 800.000)

The DEL can only admit one 2nd Bundesliga club per season to the league, unless the league strength falls below fourteen, in which case two clubs can be admitted. Since the 2006-07 season, no DEL club can be automatically relegated, a club can only lose its league status through non-compliance with the leagues regulations(see above).

From the 2008-09 season, each DEL club will only be allowed to have ten non-German players under contract. Currently, the number is set at twelve.

The ESBG guarantees to admit any DEL club wishing to step down to the 2nd Bundesliga or Oberliga which are the two leagues operated by it. The club however has to purchase a licence (licence fee for the 2nd Bundesliga is currently set at € 100.000).

To regulate the relationship between the DEL, the DEB and the ESBG (2nd Bundesliga), a so called Kooperationsvertrag exists, the cooperation contract, signed in December 2005. It is valid until 2011. This contract ended years of disbute between the three organisations over competencies and financial issues[1][2].

[edit] Format changes 2007

In November 2007, the DEL announced another change in format. The league will be expanded to 16 teams for the 2008-09 season, resulting in direct promotion for the 2nd Bundesliga winner, should they fulfill all requirements and be interested. Should this not be the case or a current DEL team resign from the league, a selection process would determined the club or clubs required to archive the number of 16 teams.

A new layout for the game schedule will also limit the number of games per club in the regular season to 52. This is achieved by each club playing four games against eleven others and two games against the remaining four. To determine which clubs play which, the final standings of the previous season are used.

The DEL will also reintroduce promotion once more. The teams placed 15th and 16th will play a best-of-seven series to determine which club faces the 2nd Bundesliga champion for a place in the league. There is, however, an ongoing dispute about those games as second division clubs can only have five foreign players on contract and therefore face a handicap in comparison to the DEL clubs with currently twelve[3]. For now, the ESBG has declared that no club from the 2nd Bundesliga would take part in these matches and therefore no promotion/relegation with the DEL will take place[4].

[edit] League champions

The Ice hockey Bundesliga (English:Federal Ice Hockey League) was formed in 1957 as the elite hockey competition in the Federal Republic of Germany, replacing the Oberliga in this position. From the 1994-95 season, it was in turn replaced by the DEL, which now also carries the name 1st Bundesliga in its logo. Unlike the old Bundesliga, the DEL is not under the administration of the DEB.

In women's ice hockey, the Bundesliga is still the highest league, dived in a northern and a southern division.

[edit] Bundesliga champions

Season Club
1957-58 EV Füssen
1958-59 EV Füssen
1959-60 SC Riessersee
1960-61 EV Füssen
1961-62 EC Bad Tölz
1962-63 EV Füssen
1963-64 EV Füssen
1964-65 EV Füssen
1965-66 EC Bad Tölz
1966-67 Düsseldorfer EG
1967-68 EV Füssen
1968-69 EV Füssen
1969-70 EV Landshut
1970-71 EV Füssen
1971-72 Düsseldorfer EG
1972-73 EV Füssen
1973-74 Berliner Schlittschuhclub
1974-75 Düsseldorfer EG
1975-76 Berliner Schlittschuhclub
Season Club
1976-77 Kölner EC
1977-78 SC Riessersee
1978-79 Kölner EC
1979-80 Mannheimer ERC
1980-81 SC Riessersee
1981-82 SB Rosenheim
1982-83 EV Landshut
1983-84 Kölner EC
1984-85 SB Rosenheim
1985-86 Kölner EC
1986-87 Kölner EC
1987-88 Kölner EC
1988-89 SB Rosenheim
1989-90 Düsseldorfer EG
German reunification
1990-91 Düsseldorfer EG
1991-92 Düsseldorfer EG
1992-93 Düsseldorfer EG
1993-94 EC Hedos München
  • Until 1990, the Bundesliga covered only West Germany. After the reunification of the country, East German clubs took part in the competition to.
  • For champions of Germany previous to the Bundesliga and East German champions, see here

[edit] DEL-Champions

Season Club
1994-95 Kölner Haie
1995-96 Düsseldorfer EG
1996-97 Adler Mannheim
1997-98 Adler Mannheim
1998-99 Adler Mannheim
1999-2000 München Barons
2000-01 Adler Mannheim
2001-02 Kölner Haie
2002-03 Krefeld Pinguine
2003-04 Frankfurt Lions
2004-05 Eisbären Berlin
2005-06 Eisbären Berlin
2006-07 Adler Mannheim
2007-08 Eisbären Berlin

[edit] Deutsche Eishockey Liga

[edit] History

[edit] Establishment

The DEL was founded in the 1994-95 season, made up of teams from the ice hockey Bundesliga's 1st and 2nd division. The condition of this earlier leagues had become intolerable: many of the 1st and 2nd division teams were heavily in debt, while the 2nd division attracted few sponsors and spectators; thus many clubs were forced to fold or withdraw to the lower leagues. For this reason, in the last Bundesliga season 1993-94, only 11 teams wanted to play in the 2nd Bundesliga. Furthermore, two teams folded during the season and after season's end.

The goal behind the DEL was to create a league, based on the model of the North American NHL, in which the teams could play consistently without relegation concerns and create a stable league. The constant mismanagement of clubs in the old Bundesliga had tarnished ice hockeys reputation in Germany and made it difficult to attract serious sponsorship. The clubs in the DEL from now on formed their own, financial independent, companies, based largely on a franchise system. Clubs were required to have financial guaranties.

[edit] 1994-95: Season One

The first season 1994-95 started with 18 teams, twelve from the old 1st Bundesliga, six from the 2nd Bundesliga.

In the main round the 18 teams played a home-and-away schedule and, in regional groups, a second single round. After this, the play-off round of the last sixteen in the mode best of seven took place . The semi-finals and final were played in the mode best of five. The hope to be able to avoid the troubles of the old Bundesliga by stricter financial controls did not materialise in the first season. EC Hedos München, the Bundesligas last champion, now renamed Mad Dogs Munich, folded on 18 December 1994.

[edit] Founding members of the league

From the Bundesliga:

From the 2nd Bundesliga:

[edit] Current Teams

Team City Arena Capacity
Augsburger Panther Augsburg, Bavaria Curt Frenzel Stadium 7,774
Eisbären Berlin (Berlin Polar Bears) Berlin O2 World 17,000
EV Duisburg "Die Füchse" (The Foxes) Duisburg, North Rhine-Westphalia Scania Arena 4,800
DEG Metro Stars Düsseldorf, North Rhine-Westphalia ISS Dome 13,400
Frankfurt Lions Frankfurt, Hesse Eissporthalle Frankfurt 6,946
Hamburg Freezers Hamburg Color Line Arena 12,947
Hannover Scorpions Hanover, Lower Saxony TUI Arena 10,767
ERC Ingolstadt Ingolstadt, Bavaria Saturn Arena 4,815
Iserlohn Roosters Iserlohn, North Rhine-Westphalia Eissporthalle Iserlohn 4,999
Kölner Haie (Cologne Sharks) Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia Kölnarena 18,500
Krefeld Pinguine (Krefeld Penguins) Krefeld, North Rhine-Westphalia König Palast 8,000
Adler Mannheim (Mannheim Eagles) Mannheim, Baden-Württemberg SAP Arena 13.600
Sinupret Ice Tigers Nuremberg, Bavaria Nuremberg Arena 8,400
Straubing Tigers Straubing, Bavaria Eisstadion am Pulverturm 6,000
EHC Wolfsburg Grizzly Adams Wolfsburg, Lower Saxony Eisarena Wolfsburg 4,660

[edit] Placings in the DEL 1995 to 2008

Club 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
Nürnberg Ice Tigers 12 11 15 12 1 10 5 4 5 2 3 4 3 1
Eisbären Berlin 17 17 4 1 2 13 13 7 1 1 2 1 9 2
Kölner Haie 6 1 2 3 5 1 2 6 2 4 4 5 5 3
Frankfurt Lions 10 8 12 2 4 7 10 11 13 5 1 9 8 4
Iserlohn Roosters 15 12 9 12 11 11 11 5
Manheimer Adler 3 6 1 4 3 5 1 2 4 6 6 10 1 6
Hamburg Freezers * 8 3 8 6 7 7
Hannover Scorpions 14 7 11 9 7 10 10 13 12 7 6 8
Düsseldorfer EG 5 3 9 5 11 9 3 8 10 3 2 9
Ingolstadt Panther 12 7 5 2 4 10
Krefeld Pinguine 4 7 8 11 7 3 9 3 6 10 9 8 10 11
Augsburger Panther 13 12 11 13 8 8 14 8 11 9 7 12 13 12
EHC Wolfsburg 13 13
Straubing Tigers 12 14
EV Duisburg 14 14 15
Kassel Huskies 7 9 3 10 9 4 4 5 7 11 14 13
Freiburg Wölfe 14
Schwenninger Wild Wings 9 5 10 9 10 11 12 16 14
Revier Löwen Oberhausen 14 14 14 6 13
Moskitos Essen 15 16 14
BSC Preussen Berlin Capitals 1 2 5 8 13 6 8 15
München Barons * 2 3 1
Star Bulls Rosenheim 8 13 6 15 12 12
Landshut Cannibals * 2 4 7 6 6
Ratinger Löwen 16 10 16
ESV Kaufbeuren 11 15 13
SC Riessersee 14
Hannover Indians 14 16
Lausitzer Füchse 15 18
Mad Dogs München * 18
Colour Result
Gold Champion
Silver Finalist
Green Semi finalist
Blue 1st round
Purple Preliminary round
White not qualified for play-offs
  • In 1995, the Mad Dogs München folded during the regular season.
  • In 1999, the Landshut Cannibals sold their DEL licence to the München Barons.
  • In 2002, the München Barons relocated to become the Hamburg Freezers.
  • In the 1995 and 1996 season, 16 clubs were qualified for the play offs.
  • In the 1998 season, 14 clubs were qualified for the play offs.
  • In the 2007 and 2008 seasons, 10 clubs were qualified for the play offs.

[edit] Former Teams

(1994-95 - 2005-06)

  • Berlin Capitals (96-97 - 01-02)
  • BSC Preussen Berlin (94-95 - 95-96)
  • EC Hannover (94-95 - 95-96)
  • Essen Moskitoes (99-00 - 01-02)
  • Freiburg Wölfe (03-04)
  • Kassel Huskies (94-95 - 05-06)
  • Kaufbeurer Adler (94-95 - 97-98)
  • EV Landshut (94-95 - 98-99)
  • Mad Dogs München (94-95)
  • München Barons (99-00 - 01-02)
  • EC Ratingen/Revier Löwen (94-95 - 01-02)
  • SC Riessersee (95-96)
  • Star Bulls Rosenheim (94-95 - 99-00)
  • Sachsen/Weißwasser Füchse (94-95 - 95-96)
  • Schwenninger Wild Wings (94-95 - 02-03)

[edit] External links

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Kooperationsvertrages (in German). DEL (November 2005). Retrieved on 2008-03-30.
  2. ^ Fragen zur DEL (in German). DEL (2007). Retrieved on 2008-03-30.
  3. ^ DEL: Neuer Modus mit Auf- und Abstieg (in German). Hockeyweb.de (21 November 2007). Retrieved on 2008-03-30.
  4. ^ DEL: Kein Auf- und Abstieg(in German). kicker.de (14 March 2008). Retrieved on 2008-03-30.

[edit] Sources