Spain Segunda Division B Group 1 Bitcoin Sports Betting
Spain’s Segunda Division B was founded in 1977 and has 4 divisions with 20 teams each. The league is on the 3rd tier of Spain’s football league system. People are now able to place wagers using their Bitcoins on teams like Arandina, Astorga, Burgos, Celta B, Compostela, Lealtad, Somozas, Sporting B, and a lot more. Below are the upcoming betting odds for Segunda Division B Group 1.
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The Campeonato Nacional de Liga de Segunda División B is the third hierarchical division of the Spanish football league. It was introduced in 1977 as an intermediate category between the Second and Third Divisions. Its organization depends on the Real Federación Española de Fútbol. Its status is semi-professional and, although it is not integrated into the LFP, most of its clubs have a professional organisation. The absolute champion in the 2017/18 season was Real Club Deportivo Mallorca.
Competition system
The Second Division B is composed of a total of 80 clubs, which are divided, by geographical proximity, into four groups of 20. In the 2012/13 season Group III was formed by twenty-one teams by the inclusion of Orihuela CF through the courts. In the 2013/14 season group I was formed by only 19 teams due to the dissolution of the UD Salamanca.
The competition system is the same as in the other categories of the Spanish football league. It is played annually, starting at the end of August or beginning of September, and ends in May or June of the following year.
The twenty teams in each group all face each other on two occasions, one on their own turf and the other on the opposite turf, for a total of thirty-eight matchdays. The order of the matches is decided by drawing lots before the competition begins. The winner of a match gets three points, the loser gets none and, in the event of a draw, one point is distributed to each team.
At the end of the season, the five teams with the most points in each group (excluding the affiliate teams) qualify for the next edition of the Copa del Rey.
Promotion to Second Division
At the end of the regular season, the top four teams from each group compete for the play-off promotion to the Second Division. This promotion consists of two rounds of direct elimination, two-legged and two-legged. The teams that finished first in each group face each other in two-legged playoffs; the winner of each playoff is promoted and plays the final, two-legged, to become the category champion. The rest of the teams play a two-legged playoff from which six teams will emerge. Added to the two champions who were not promoted, they will play two-legged playoffs until there are only two teams left, which are the ones that will be promoted to the Second Division.
Descent to the Third Division
At the end of the season, the last four of each group are relegated directly to the Third Division. To these sixteen teams are added two more, which come out of a promotion for the permanence disputed by the sixteenth classified of each group. The promotion of permanence is disputed by direct elimination in two games and the pairings are determined by draw. Both defeated teams lose the category.
Subsidiary teams
Affiliate teams may participate in Second Division B if their first teams compete in a higher category of the Spanish Football League – First or Second Division. The affiliates and their respective first teams cannot compete in the same division; therefore, if a team is relegated to the Second Division and its affiliate wins the play-offs for promotion to this category, it must remain in the Second Division. Similarly, an affiliate that has qualified for promotion to the Second Division cannot compete in the Second Division if the first team plays in that category. In this case, the fifth classified of his group replaces him. This will not be the case if the first team plays in the 2nd division, but qualifies for the promotion phase to the 1st division or if it joins the top 2 teams in the 2nd division and is automatically promoted.
This competition can only be played by a second branch of a club – or “C” team – if the first team participates in the First Division and, in addition, the first branch – or “B” team – participates in the Second Division.
History
The Second Division B was introduced in the 1977/78 season as an intermediate category between the Second and Third Divisions. It initially consisted of two groups of twenty teams and, at the end of the season, the champion and runner-up in each group were promoted directly to the silver category, while the last three in each group were relegated to the Third Division.
In the 1985/86 season, due to the reduction of the Second Division, only the two champions were promoted, while the last thirteen from each group were relegated to the Third Division. Thus, in the 1986/87 season, temporarily, the Second B Division consisted of a single group of twenty-two teams. Four of them were promoted to the Second Division, in which there were no relegations due to their extension from eighteen to twenty teams and, in the same way, that season there were no relegations to the Third Division, since for the following campaign the Second Division B was extended to eighty teams, divided into four groups of twenty. The champions of those four groups were those who were promoted to the Second Division, while the last four of each group lost the category along with the sixteenth classified with fewer points from the four groups.
This system was maintained until the 1990/91 season, when direct promotions to the Second Division disappeared and a promotion involving the top four from each group was introduced. These sixteen teams were divided into four leagues of four teams, so that each league included a first, second, third and fourth from each regular league group. The champions of these leagues were those who were promoted to the silver category.
In the 1993/94 season, a permanence promotion was introduced which was played between the sixteenth-placed teams in the four groups. The loser of this promotion, played by direct elimination, was relegated to the Third Division along with the last four qualifiers from each group. Until the 2006/07 season, two playoffs were played and the losers of the first faced each other in a final playoff, in which the loser was relegated to the Third Division. Since the aforementioned 2006/07 season, only one play-off has been played, with two teams relegated in this play-off, due to the expansion of the Third Division from seventeen to eighteen groups.
In the 2004/05 season, the promotion is modified again, and the league system is replaced by a play-off in which the sixteen teams aspiring to promotion faced direct elimination, in two rounds – semifinals and final – to decide the four teams that were promoted to Second Division.
The last modification in the promotion system is made for the 2008/09 season. A round of champions is created, in which the four champions of each group face each other in two preliminaries to round and round previously drawn. The winners of these playoffs are promoted to the Second Division and then face each other to decide which team is the absolute champion of the Second Division B. The losers, as a reward for being leaders of their group, have another possibility of promotion if they win two more playoffs, against second, third and fourth survivors, who had previously played a playoff among themselves. The winners of these two playoffs are promoted to the Second Division.
History of the number of groups
2 groups of 20 teams: 1977-1986 (9 seasons).
1 group of 22 teams: 1986-1987 (1 season).
4 groups of 20 teams: 1987-present.