Denmark Superliga Corners Bitcoin Sports Betting
The Danish Superliga is the highest tier of professional football in the Danish league. Replacing the original 1st division back in 1991, the league has been producing all-time-high matches with 14 teams competing each year for glory. What are you waiting for? Bet on teams like AaB, AC Horsens, AGF, Hobro IK, FC Midtjylland, OB, Randers FC, and Silkeborg IF. Take advantage of the provided game odds for the Denmark Superliga Corners listed below.
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The Superliga is the highest league in Danish football. When it was founded in 1991, it replaced the first division as the first league, which has since formed the second level of the Danish league hierarchy. At the same time, the game operations were switched from the usual Scandinavian season (games from spring to autumn, championship decisions in late autumn and long winter break) to the usual European mode (games from late summer to late spring and long summer break).
History
The Danish Super League was founded in 1991 and has since replaced the 1st Division as the highest division in Danish football. Since the 1991/1992 season was to start in August 1991 and the previous season ended in the 1990 calendar year, the first season of the Danish Super League was held in the spring of 1991. Ten teams played against each other in the first and second half of the season. From the summer of 1991, the Super League was held in two rounds. The first round took place in autumn 1991. In this round, ten teams played against each other in a first and second round. The first eight played in the second round in spring 1992 again in a first and second round for the championship. Half of the points scored in the first round were taken to the second round. The goals were set to zero again.
For the 1995/96 season, the number of teams was increased to twelve and the game mode was changed. Coca-Cola also became the main sponsor of the league, which was then called the Coca-Cola Ligaen. After one season, Faxe Kondi became the main sponsor of the league and was renamed Faxe Kondi Ligaen. Between the 2001/02 and 2009/10 seasons, SAS Scandinavian Airlines was the name-giver of the league, which bore the name SAS Ligaen. In October 2014, the Superliga and the Danish insurance company Alka signed a sponsorship agreement for the league name. Since 1 January 2015, the league has been officially known as Alka Superligaen. The contract runs for three and a half years until mid-2018. The insurer Alka pays DKK 12 million annually to the league.
Together with 23 other national professional league associations, the Superliga is a founding member of the international World Leagues Forum, which was founded in Zurich in February 2016. One of its aims is to pool the interests of the professional leagues and represent their common views before FIFA and other institutions from the world of sport and politics.
Mode
Since the 1995/96 season, instead of ten twelve teams play against each other in three rounds in the Super League, which results in 33 matchdays. All teams play against each other three times, so that each team plays two home matches against the same opponent in one season. However, it is ensured that no team has more than 17 home matches.
According to the three-point rule, there are three points for a win and one point for a draw. The last two in the final table are relegated to the first division without relegation matches, and both of the first-placed players are promoted.
For the 2016/17 season, the Super League has been given a new mode in which the league has been increased to 14 teams. In the new mode, each team will only play two matches against each opponent. At the end of this phase, the six teams that scored the most points will play out the title among themselves, while retaining the points they previously scored in the league. The eight teams at the bottom, on the other hand, play in two separate groups: The better 4 teams play for the chance of a place in the Europa League and the last teams play for class retention.
Division
In the transitional season 1991 a shortened championship was played out, because the last season had only ended in winter 1990 (champion: Brøndby IF) and the season 1991/92 should already start in autumn. So only ten teams played a season of first and second rounds (18 matchdays), and the champion was Brøndby again.
The 1991/92 season was also a transitional season: as the second league had not yet switched to the summer break, two teams retired at the halfway point of the season (after the 18th matchday), and the eight remaining teams determined the champions in 14 further matches. Lyngby BK surprisingly won the game.
What is striking about this list (see below) is that the champions come from the Copenhagen area (FC Copenhagen, Lyngby BK, Brøndby IF, FC Nordsjælland and Herfølge BK). Only the clubs Silkeborg IF (1994), Aalborg BK (1995, 2008 and 2014) and FC Midtjylland (2015, 2018) were able to break the dominance of the greater Copenhagen area.