Spain Segunda Liga Bitcoin Sports Betting
The Segunda Division, officially known as La Liga 2 due to sponsorship reasons is at the 2nd tier of the professional football league in Spain. The league was founded in 1928 and has 22 active teams under its division. With the use of Bitcoin, fans are now able to bet on teams like Real Zaragoza, Rayo Vallecano, Real Oviedo, Real Valladolid, and CD Tenerife to name a few. Below are the upcoming betting odds for the next Segunda Liga games.
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The Second Division of Spain, known as LaLiga 2 (or LaLiga 1|2|3 for reasons of sponsorship), is the second category of the male system of football leagues in Spain, being immediately lower than LaLiga Santander (First Division) and counting like the previous one with a professional character. It began to be played in the 1928-29 season and is organized by the Professional Football League (LFP).
The current champion is the Rayo Vallecano of Madrid (with one championship), while the most successful team is Real Murcia with eight championships. A total of more than 14,800 footballers have played a match throughout the history of the First and/or Second Division.
Competition system
The competition is held annually, starting in late August or early September, and ending in May or June of the following year.
Following a league system, the twenty-two teams all face each other on two occasions – one on home turf and one on the other – for a total of forty-two rounds. The order of the matches is decided by draw before starting the competition.
The final classification is established according to the total points obtained by each team at the end of the championship. The teams get three points for each match won, one point for each draw and no points for lost matches.
If at the end of the championship two teams equal points, the mechanisms to untie the ranking are as follows:
- The one that has a greater difference between goals in favor and against in the confrontations between both.
- If the tie persists, the difference in goals for and against is taken into account in all matches of the championship.
- If they are still tied, the one who has the most goals for both of them in all the matches of the tournament wins.
If the points tie is between three or more clubs, the successive tie-breaking mechanisms are as follows:
- The best score of the one that corresponds to each according to the results of the matches played between them by the clubs involved.
- The greatest difference in goals for and against, considering only the matches played between them by the clubs involved.
- The greatest difference in goals for and against taking into account all the matches of the championship.
- The highest number of goals scored taking into account all the matches in the championship.
- The club best classified according to the scales of favor plus.
At the end of the season, the team with the most points is proclaimed champion of the Second Division and promoted, together with the runner-up, to the First Division. In addition, since the 2010/11 season, the winner of a promotion between the third, fourth, fifth and sixth classified is also promoted. The system of this promotion is of direct elimination in two games, facing the third with the sixth, as well as the fourth with the fifth, the two winners will go on to play a new knockout round and round, from which will leave the third team that ascends to First Division.
On July 6, 2011, the LFP assembly decided to dispense with the penalty shootout in the promotion play-offs. In the event of a tie in the 90-minute regulation and also in extra time, the team with the best ranking will be classified or promoted during the regular league.
Vacancies in the promoted teams are filled by those who finish in the last three places in the First Division. On the other hand, the last four classifieds of Second Division at the end of the season are relegated to Second Division B, being replaced by the winners of the promotions of promotion of this category.
Subsidiary Teams
If a subsidiary finishes the season in promotion positions, it is the next ranked one who acquires that right. Likewise, if a team is relegated to Second Division and its affiliate plays in that category, the latter is automatically relegated to Second Division B, even though it has achieved permanence during the regular league.
History
The Second Division League was launched in the 1928/29 season, at the same time as the First Division. In its first edition the following clubs participated: in group A, Sevilla F. C., Iberia S. C., Deportivo Alavés, Real Sporting de Gijón, Valencia F. C., Real Betis Balompié, Real Oviedo F. C., R. C. Deportivo de La Coruña, Real Club Celta and Racing Club de Madrid; while in group B -lower category to group A- the Cultural and Deportiva Leonesa, Real Murcia F. C., C. D. Castellón, C. D. Torrelavega, Zaragoza C. D., Real Valladolid Deportivo, C. A. Osasuna, Tolosa C. F., Barakaldo C. F. and Cartagena F. did it. C..
Over the years the number of participating teams has changed, as well as the format of the competition. In the 1934/35 season the category was divided into several groups, a structure that was maintained until the 1968/69 season, when it recovered the only group that remains today. In 1977, it was officially renamed Second Division A, with the creation of Second Division B. Since 1984, it has been organised by the National Professional Football League (LFP).
In the 2006/07 and 2007/08 seasons it received the name of Liga BBVA due to the sponsorship agreement between the LFP and the bank of the same name. Between the 2008-09 and 2015-16 seasons the silver category was renamed La Liga Adelante due to the fact that this denomination became that of the Primera División. Since the 2016-17 campaign the second division is called La Liga 1|2|3 due to the sponsorship agreement between the LFP and Banco Santander. The second division is called La Liga 1|2|3 due to the sponsorship agreement between the LFP and Banco Santander.
The club that has played the most seasons in the Second Division is Real Murcia, in addition to having won the championship eight times. It is followed by Real Sporting de Gijón with 44 seasons, Hercules de Alicante and Sabadell with 43, Club Deportivo Tenerife with 42 and Cub Deportivo Castellón and Cádiz Club de Fútbol with 40 seasons.
Of all the teams that have ever played in this category, only six have never played in lower divisions: Valencia C. F., Club Atlético de Madrid, R. C. D. Español, Sevilla F. C., Real Sporting de Gijón and Real Sociedad de Fútbol.
In the 2011/12 season, Deportivo de La Coruña broke the record for points, becoming champion with 91 points.