Austrian Oberliga: Difference between revisions

From International Hockey Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (1 revision)
 
No edit summary
Line 14: Line 14:
The '''Austrian Oberliga''' was the third level of ice hockey in [[Austria]]. The league lay below the [[Austrian Hockey League]] and the [[Austrian National League]]. The Oberliga folded following the 2010-11 season.
The '''Austrian Oberliga''' was the third level of ice hockey in [[Austria]]. The league lay below the [[Austrian Hockey League]] and the [[Austrian National League]]. The Oberliga folded following the 2010-11 season.


It also functioned as the second-tier Austrian league in some years that the [[Austrian National League]] did not operate.
It also functioned as the second-tier Austrian league when the [[Austrian National League]] did not operate from 1968-1975 and from 1994-1996. The third-level league was known as the '''Regionalliga''' in 1975-76 and from 1979-1986.


==2010-11 teams==
==2010-11 teams==
Line 25: Line 25:
| [[EC Oilers Salzburg]] || [[Salzburg]] || [[Eisarena Salzburg]] || 3.500
| [[EC Oilers Salzburg]] || [[Salzburg]] || [[Eisarena Salzburg]] || 3.500
|-
|-
| [[Kapfenberg Bulls (Eishockey)|Kapfenberg Bulls]] || [[Kapfenberg]] || [[Sportzentrum Kapfenberg]] || 4.000
| [[Kapfenberg Bulls]] || [[Kapfenberg]] || [[Sportzentrum Kapfenberg]] || 4.000
|-
|-
| [[EC KAC|EC KAC II]] || [[Klagenfurt]] || [[Eissportzentrum Klagenfurt]] || 5.088
| [[EC KAC|EC KAC II]] || [[Klagenfurt]] || [[Eissportzentrum Klagenfurt]] || 5.088
Line 38: Line 38:
|}
|}


==Champions==
{| class="wikitable"
|- class="hintergrundfarbe6"
! Season || Champion
|-
| 1968-69 || [[EC Innsbruck-Pradl]]
|-
| 1969-70 || [[Grazer AK]]
|-
| 1970-71 || [[WAT Stadlau]]
|-
| 1971-72 || [[HC Salzburg]]
|-
| 1972-73 || [[Kapfenberger SV]]
|-
| 1973-74 || [[EHC Lustenau]]
|-
| 1974-75 || [[EK Zell am See]]
|-
| 1975-76 || [[Spetrans Wien]]
|-
| 1976-77 || [[WAT Stadlau]]
|-
| 1977-78 || [[EV Zeltweg]]
|-
| 1979-80 || [[Grazer SV]]
|-
| 1980-81 || [[SV Leoben]]
|-
| 1983-84 || [[ATSE Graz]] (Ost)
|-
| 1984-85 || [[Kapfenberger SV]]
|-
| 1985-86 || [[ASKÖ-EHC Linz]]
|-
| 1994-95 || [[DSG Rotschitzen]]
|-
| 1995-96 || [[EC Kitzbühel]]
|-
| 1999-2000 || [[EHC Fischerbräu Wien]]
|-
| 2000-01 ||  [[EC Red Bulls Salzburg]]
|-
| 2003-04|| [[EC Kitzbühel|EC "Die Adler" Stadtwerke Kitzbühel]]
|-
| 2004-05 || [[EC Kitzbühel|EC "Die Adler" Stadtwerke Kitzbühel]]
|-
| 2005-06 || [[UEC "The Dragons" Mödling]]
|-
| 2006-07 || [[UEC "The Dragons" Mödling]]
|-
| 2007-08 || [[Weiz Bulls|ATUS Weiz Bulls]]
|-
| 2008-09 || [[ATSE Graz]]
|-
| 2009-10 || [[ATSE Graz]]
|-
| 2010-11 || [[EC Graz 99ers]]
|}
==See also==
==See also==
*[[List of Austrian Oberliga seasons]]
*[[List of Austrian Oberliga seasons]]

Revision as of 14:54, 1 March 2017

Austrian Oberliga
Sport Ice hockey
Founded 1968
No. of teams 8 (2010-11)
Country(ies) Flag of Austria Austria
Ceased 2011
Last champion(s) Graz 99ers II

The Austrian Oberliga was the third level of ice hockey in Austria. The league lay below the Austrian Hockey League and the Austrian National League. The Oberliga folded following the 2010-11 season.

It also functioned as the second-tier Austrian league when the Austrian National League did not operate from 1968-1975 and from 1994-1996. The third-level league was known as the Regionalliga in 1975-76 and from 1979-1986.

2010-11 teams

Team City Arena Capacity
EHC Linz II Linz Linzer Eissporthalle 3.800
EC Oilers Salzburg Salzburg Eisarena Salzburg 3.500
Kapfenberg Bulls Kapfenberg Sportzentrum Kapfenberg 4.000
EC KAC II Klagenfurt Eissportzentrum Klagenfurt 5.088
EC VSV II Villach Stadthalle Villach 4.500
EC Graz 99ers II Graz Eisstadion Graz-Liebenau 4.700
Vienna Capitals II Wien Albert-Schultz-Halle 4.500
Weiz Bulls Weiz Weizer Stadthalle

Champions

Season Champion
1968-69 EC Innsbruck-Pradl
1969-70 Grazer AK
1970-71 WAT Stadlau
1971-72 HC Salzburg
1972-73 Kapfenberger SV
1973-74 EHC Lustenau
1974-75 EK Zell am See
1975-76 Spetrans Wien
1976-77 WAT Stadlau
1977-78 EV Zeltweg
1979-80 Grazer SV
1980-81 SV Leoben
1983-84 ATSE Graz (Ost)
1984-85 Kapfenberger SV
1985-86 ASKÖ-EHC Linz
1994-95 DSG Rotschitzen
1995-96 EC Kitzbühel
1999-2000 EHC Fischerbräu Wien
2000-01 EC Red Bulls Salzburg
2003-04 EC "Die Adler" Stadtwerke Kitzbühel
2004-05 EC "Die Adler" Stadtwerke Kitzbühel
2005-06 UEC "The Dragons" Mödling
2006-07 UEC "The Dragons" Mödling
2007-08 ATUS Weiz Bulls
2008-09 ATSE Graz
2009-10 ATSE Graz
2010-11 EC Graz 99ers

See also

External links

This page uses Creative Commons Licensed content from Wikipedia (view authors).