Italy Serie B Bitcoin Sports Betting
Italy’s Serie B is currently known as Serie B Conte.it due to sponsorship reasons was founded in 1929 and has 22 active teams under its division. The league is also the second tier of Italian professional football. Bet on teams like Spezia Calcio, Ternana Uniscusano Calcio, Frosinone Calcio, and A.C. Cesena to name a few. Please take advantage of our betting odds below for the next Serie B game.
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Serie B, known as Serie BKT for sponsorship reasons, is the 2nd professional level of the Italian football championship, run by the Lega Nazionale Professionisti B.
Formula
Like the A Series (immediately superior category), the single group was established in 1929-30. The formula is also the same: an Italian round with round-trip races, among the 19 participating teams. They are assigned 3 points to the winner of the match, one point each for the draw and no points to the team defeated. The rules provide for 3 promotions in the highest series, against 4 relegation to Serie C. The first 2 classified are automatically promoted: the third promotion is instead decided through the play-offs, unless between 3rd and 4th classified there is a gap of more than 14 points. On the contrary, teams from 20th to 22nd place go directly backwards: the 18th and 19th ranked teams play a play-out, unless the play-out is 5 or more points apart. As of the 2005-06 season, the out-of-place ranking is the criterion used to formulate the final ranking in the event of a draw.
The winning team of the cadet tournament is awarded the Wings of Victory Cup, delivered on the field after the last home match: previously, the awarding ceremony took place in the form of a private ceremony. The title is obviously not defensible in the following season.
Play-off
The playoffs are played if there is a gap of no more than 14 points between the 3rd and 4th place. If the 3rd and 4th are separated by at least 15 points, the 3rd classified will be promoted directly to Serie A. From the 2017-18 season, the play-offs are played between the teams classified from 3rd to 8th position, except in the case indicated above, therefore without considering the gap from 3rd place. The preliminary round includes only one home game of the team best classified at the end of the Championship. In the event of a draw at the end of the match, extra time will be played. In the event of a further draw, the team best placed in the Championship will be entered in the semifinals, without taking the penalty shootings.
In the semifinals, round-trip matches are played: in the event of a tie between the goals, the team best classified in the Championship goes to the final, without extra or penalty shots. In the final, round-trip matches are played: in the event of goal difference parity, the team best placed in the Championship is promoted to Serie A, without extra or penalty. Only in the event that the two teams have finished the Championship with equal points, additional points and possibly penalties will be disputed. In both the semi-finals and the finals, therefore, the rule does not apply that, in the event of a tie between goals, the goal scored in the away match “is worth double”.
Play-out
The last three ranked will be relegated to Serie C, followed by the fourth to last if the separation from the fifth to last exceeds 4 points. On the other hand, the play-outs are played with a round-trip match: in the event of a tied score, the difference between the goals is taken into account to determine the winning team. In case of a further draw, the fifth last team classified at the end of the Championship will be allowed to remain in the Serie B Championship; only in the case where the two teams have finished the Championship with the same score in the standings, the return competition will also provide for extra time and, if necessary, penalty shootings.
Evolution
The first Italian football championships were extremely elitist and composed of a small number of teams. It was in 1904 that the tournament expanded with the first edition of the Second Category: it was a competition in which on the one hand took part the formations of the reserves of the companies belonging to the First Category, and on the other those provincial associations that had recently joined the Federation.
For the provincials it was not enough to beat the reserves of the metropolitan teams by winning the league of reinforcement: they had to prove to a Federal Technical Commission that they had acquired a technical and football rate that could compete with the owners who played in the First Category and therefore they were asked to prove it in a single test, not comparable to a playoff match, a test-match against a team of the First Category in front of major football players of the time, a race that even the Casale, newcomer of 1910, had to face.
The status quo was undermined by a federal manager with a letter published in the football columns of the Gazzetta dello Sport in February 1912: there was no change between the First Category and the Second, who had to bear the costs of a whole season to see them frustrated even by a single match against the reserves of the major teams. The manager proposed the introduction of the promotion-retrocession mechanism and immediately received the consent of many clubs and as a result were drawn up several proposals for changes to the Championship Regulations in place, in view of the annual Federal Assembly. This mechanism was introduced by the Federal Assembly on August 31, 1912, in which the Valvassori-Faroppa project was approved, which modified the Italian football pyramid, transforming the Second Category into the new Promotion Championship, creating a dedicated championship for Reserves. Just as in the past the Second Category had been managed, the Promotion Championship was entrusted to the Regional Committees, which the F.I.G.C. had established in 1909.
It was only in 1921 that the Well Project created a real national cadet championship by establishing the Second Division, a tournament in which all those companies that were victims of the heavy skimming met the First Category now renamed as First Division. The new regulations introduced, strongly desired by the C.C.I. (which already applied it in the 1921-1922 season) and approved by the Progetto Pozzo provided for the subdivision of Italy into 2 large geographical areas managed by two leagues North and South with a clear cut in central Italy that led the teams of Tuscany to play the championships in the North and Marche and Umbria in the South. As a consequence, the Second Division suffered two different championship regulations due to the clear difference between the different organisations and contingent geographical situations: in the North organised outside the regional framework directly by the Northern League and in the South again by the Regional Committees because the distances and the means of communication did not allow the management of this championship at an interregional level. Only the winning regional qualifications met in one or more final rounds for promotion to the higher category.
In the North, the new event started in 1922-1923 with a staff of 48 teams divided into six groups, structured at interregional level but still vaguely corresponding to the jurisdictions of the regional committees, while in 1924-1925 it fell to 40 associations and four groups, now geographically more extensive. In the South, not all the Regional Committees were able to organise the Second Division championship immediately, something that was impossible especially in the island regions where the regulatory fields were counted on the fingers of one hand. At the first championship about 25 teams were lined up and the following season there were 40 units but, later on, the problems of an age particularly troubled at a political level were felt. There were few clubs that were able to play all 4 championships organized by the Southern League from 1922-1923 to 1925-1926 because of the high cost of management.
In 1926 the Viareggio Charter renamed the highest championship in the National Division, consequently climbing the name of the minor categories, with the Second Division that took the label of First Division: but it was not the only change, because the two bodies that ran the tournament, Northern League and Southern League, were reunited to become the national Directory Higher Divisions. This led to the fact that only one of the groups was reserved for southern football, which made place for many clubs in the North de facto de facto downgraded office.
The epoch-making reform conceived by the Viareggio Charter was completed in 1928 by the new president of the FIGC, the Bolognese fascist hierarch Leandro Arpinati. The influential politician established the creation of a radically different cadet championship one year later, that is, no longer an interregional tournament, but a single national round exactly identical to the one designed for the major championship: thus, in 1929, the Serie B was born.
The first edition saw 18 teams registered, a format that remained unchanged until 1933-1934, when the division into two groups was tried. The experiment was not happy, however, and in 1935-1936 we returned to the original model that, except for an attempt to reduce between 1936 and 1938, lasted until the stop due to the Second World War.
In the immediate post-war period, the colossal destruction of war combined with widespread poverty prevented the immediate repetition of the tournament, which developed in different ways between the two areas of the country, the North and the South. In 1948-1949 the F.I.G.C. finally managed to recreate a single round of 22 teams, then reduced again to 18 in 1952-1953. In 1958-1959 it was decided to enlarge the staff to 20 clubs, establishing a format that, except on one occasion (1967-1968 championship, to 21 teams for the reduction from 18 to 16 of the participants in the Serie A) remained unchanged for 35 years. The consequences of the so-called Catania case in 2003-2004 disrupted the consolidated tradition and brought the lot of registered teams to the absolute record of 24 teams, then fell to 22 the following year. In 2018-2019 due to the failure to register of Avellino, Bari and Cesena, the impossibility of fishing for teams in a short time (within the submission of calendars for the season 2018-2019), the cadet championship returns to have an odd number of participating teams, from 22 drops to 19.
Sponsorships
From 1998-1999 to 2009-2010, Serie B used for the first time a trade name, Serie B TIM, following a sponsorship contract involving all the events organised by the then Lega Calcio.
From the 2010-2011 season, with the break-up of the Lega Calcio and the consequent birth of the new Lega Serie B, the second Italian series began to manage its own search for title sponsors, assuming from here on the commercial names of Serie bwin (2010-2013), Serie B Eurobet (2013-2014), Serie B Conte.It (2015-2018) and BKT Series (from 2018). In addition, in the 2014-2015 season the play-off and play-out rounds received further sponsorship from Compass, thus adopting the names of Playoff Compass and Playout Compass.
In the 2013-2014 season, finally, the B Series had for the first time a single top sponsor for all the teams participating in the championship, reported on the back of the jerseys; sponsorship replicated in the 2014-2015 and 2018-2019 editions.