Switzerland Super League Bitcoin Sports Betting
The Swiss Super League is literally what it is, a “Super league”. The league was founded in 1897, which makes it one of the oldest leagues in the world. There are currently 10 active teams under the super league and to name a few we’ve got FC Basel, BSC Young Boys, FC Sion, FC Luzern, FC Lugano, FC Vaduz, and a lot more. Provided below are the upcoming betting odds for the next Swiss Super League.
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The Raiffeisen Super League (RSL) is the highest league in Swiss football. Since the 2012/13 season, it has borne the name of sponsor Raiffeisen. The sponsor is not mentioned in the public Swiss media (radio/television) and is only referred to as Super League.
The Super League is played in a league system and a double round. Each of the ten clubs will face each other four times, twice in front of a home crowd, twice away. In total, each club plays 36 matches per season. The Swiss football champion and the participants of the European Cup competitions will be played. The team in last place will be relegated to the Challenge League, the second-highest league.
The 122nd season, the Raiffeisen Super League 2018/19, will start on 21 July 2018. Defending champion of this season is the BSC Young Boys.
Ruinart Cup (1897/98)
The first Swiss championship was the 1897/98 Ruinart Cup championship. The winner of the championship for the Ruinart Cup organized by the Geneva newspaper La Suisse sportive was the Grashopper Club Zurich. At the SFV, this championship is listed as “unofficial”.
Series A (1898/99-1929/30)
1898/99 the SFV organized its own championship. It was won by the Anglo-American Club Zurich. The Ruinart Cup was also awarded that season, winning Cantonal Lausanne. In the following season, the Ruinart Cup became the Series B.
The Swiss champion was played in a final round of the regional champions of the groups East, West and since 1901/02 also Central.
1st League (1930/31)
In 1930/31 the highest league was called the 1st league, it was played in three groups and a following final round took place.
National League (1931/32-1943/44)
The league was first staged in 1931/32 as a successor to the old Serie A, against the background of the introduction of professionalism. In the two transitional championships of 1931/32 and 1932/33 the final round was still used to determine the winner, for which the champion of the second division, at that time still the 1st league, was also qualified. In 1931/32, Lausanne Sports succeeded in becoming the champion of the second division. The first champion in the single-track national league was Servette FC in the 1933/34 season.
National League A (1944/45-2002/03)
In 1944/45 the National League was divided into National League A and National League B.
During the next decades the league changed several times the number of admitted teams and the modes. In the years before the 2003 reform, the league was often divided into two groups after the basic round, called the final and relegation rounds. While the top teams fought for the championship and the international places, the weaker clubs played together with the best teams of the second league, the then National League B, for the promotion or relegation.
From 1948 to 1957, in addition to the National League of the Swiss Football Association, there was also a National Football League in the Swiss Workers’ Gymnastics and Sports Association (SATUS).
Super League (since 2003/04)
Due to the previous mode, which was perceived as too complicated, the league was reformed for the 2003/04 season, which also included a name change. For the first time, the highest division received a title sponsor. As a further step, the league was reduced from twelve to ten teams. The clubs also had to undertake to obtain the building permit to build a modern stadium by 2010. Theoretically, clubs could be forced to relegate if they did not meet this criterion, but the Swiss Football League granted postponements. As a rule, new entrants only receive top league approval if their stadium either meets the requirements or can be converted.
Since the Ligareform 2003, the name of the main sponsor of the league has also been in the official name.
From 2003 to 2012, Axpo Holding was the title sponsor of the league, which is why it was officially called the Axpo Super League.
Reform proposals 2009
After the league form in 2003, considerations were underway at the beginning of 2008 to expand the league again to twelve teams and to reintroduce the “dash”. In Switzerland, the “dash” is colloquially used to describe the mode that provides for the creation of a promotion/relegation round after the preliminary round. In this case, in a 12-man league, only the eight best teams in the preliminary round would fight for the championship title in the Super League. The remaining four teams would have to compete against the four best teams of the Challenge League preliminary round in the second half of the season and play for league status or relegation there.
In June 2009, the clubs of the Swiss Football League (SFL) decided at an Extraordinary General Meeting in Berne to increase the number of teams in the Super League to twelve, with a working group to work out details on the time and mode of introduction by November 2009. At the General Meeting in November 2009, however, the proposal was rejected.
New title sponsor and abolition of barrage 2012/13
Since the 2012/13 season, the league, named after the new title sponsor Raiffeisen Switzerland, has been called Raiffeisen Super League. The barrage of the second last against the second of the Challenge League, introduced in 2003, was dropped with a mode change for the 2012/13 season.
Reform proposals 2017/18 and reintroduction of the barrage by 2018/19
Also in October 2017 a change of mode and an increase of the league to 12 or 14 teams was considered intensively. An analysis by the Swiss Football League showed that Switzerland has a potential of a maximum of 12 teams in the highest league. A mode with 12 teams was tested with the Dutch company Hypercube. But the tight matchday calendar before Christmas and the early relegation fight deterred the Swiss Football League from the reform. The return to the barrage between the second of the Challenge League and the second last of the Super League was also rejected by 10:10 votes. A two-thirds majority would have been required. In May 2018, only half a year later, the barrage was reintroduced with 16:4 votes. The mode change is already effective for the 2018/19 season.
Purpose
The Super League serves to determine the Swiss football champion. The best player in the league at the end of a season is awarded the title of Swiss Football Champion. Since the clubs from the Principality of Liechtenstein play in the Swiss league association due to a lack of league operations of their own, there is a special rule that attributes the title exclusively to Swiss teams, even if a club from the Principality of Liechtenstein finishes the season in first place in the table. In a temporary additional agreement, the clubs of the neighbouring country also promise to waive all starting places in European competitions if they achieve them through sporting success. As a result, the Swiss starting positions in the Champions League and Europa League are in fact reserved exclusively for clubs from Switzerland. In addition to determining the Swiss football champion, the starting places for the Champions League and the Europa League are also determined for Swiss teams.
Match mode
All the clubs in the league play against each other four times, twice in their own stadium and twice in the opposing stadium. The match schedule is drawn up for the entire season (36 rounds). The final starting times per round are set in four tranches (rounds 1-9, 10-18, 19-27, 28-36), each at least 30 days before the first match of the respective quarter. Since the 1995/96 season, the three-point rule has applied: three points are awarded for a win, one point for a draw and zero points for a defeat.
The best Swiss team after 36 rounds becomes Swiss champion. The last placed club is relegated to the Challenge League. In the 2018/19 season, an extraordinary general meeting decided to reintroduce the barrage for the two highest leagues. The team is now ranked 9th against the runner-up in the Challenge League to remain in the Super League.
Winner with equal points
If at the end of the championship two clubs have the same number of points, the champion will be determined according to the following rule:
- the better goal difference
- the higher number of goals scored
- the points scored in the direct encounters
- the lot
Defined in the Regulations for the Operation of the SFL (Swiss Football League), Art. 22 No. 1.
- 1st place: Swiss champion and participation in the group stage or qualification for the UEFA Champions League
- 2nd place: Participation in UEFA Champions League or UEFA Europa League qualification.
- 3rd and possibly 4th place: Participation in the UEFA Europa League qualifying round
Comments
- If a Liechtenstein team occupies 1st place, the title Swiss Champion and the right to participate fall to the runner-up.
- Depending on the current ranking in the UEFA five-year ranking and the resulting qualification entitlements
- If a Liechtenstein team occupies 2nd place, the UEFA places are shifted accordingly.
- Depending on the current ranking in the UEFA five-year ranking and the resulting qualifying eligibility.
- If Liechtensteiner teams are among them, the UEFA seats shall be moved accordingly.
The Swiss champions
The title of Swiss Champion has been awarded since 1897. This happened every year with the exception of the 1922/23 season, when first-placed FC Bern used an illegal player. The first Swiss champions were the Zürcher Grasshoppers, who won the most titles overall. To date, 19 different teams have won the Swiss championship.
Thanks to their successes, some clubs are allowed to wear so-called championship stars in their club emblems. For ten championship titles, each club may wear one star. The following list always lists the clubs that won the last title first, with the same number of championship titles.
Spectators
In the regular 2017/18 season, the average number of spectators per match was 11,181. FC Basel (25,857) and Young Boys Bern (21,971) had the highest average number of spectators in the league.