2008–09 Frauen-Bundesliga

Frauen-Bundesliga
Season 2008–09
Champions Turbine Potsdam
3rd Bundesliga title
3rd German title
Relegated Crailsheim
Borussia Friedenstal
Champions League Turbine Potsdam
Bayern Munich
Duisburg
Matches played 132
Goals scored 562 (4.26 per match)
Top goalscorer Germany Inka Grings (29)
Biggest home win 8–0 Frankfurt v Herford, Duisburg v Crailsheim
Biggest away win 0–7 Jena v Duisburg
Highest scoring 9–2 Hamburg v Bad Neuenahr

The Frauen-Bundesliga 2008–2009 is the 19th season of the Frauen-Bundesliga, Germany's premier women's football league. It began on 7 September 2008 and ended on 7 June 2009.[1] Turbine Potsdam won the championship with Bayern Munich coming in second by single goal.

Final standings

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Turbine Potsdam (C) 22 17 3 2 67 19 +48 54 2009–10 UEFA Champions League round of 32
2 Bayern Munich 22 17 3 2 69 22 +47 54 2009–10 UEFA Champions League qualifying round
3 FCR 2001 Duisburg 22 17 2 3 86 20 +66 53 2009–10 UEFA Champions League round of 32[lower-alpha 1]
4 1. FFC Frankfurt 22 14 3 5 58 25 +33 45
5 Essen-Schönebeck 22 9 3 10 46 39 +7 30
6 Hamburger SV 22 9 2 11 53 49 +4 29
7 SC Freiburg 22 9 2 11 36 53 17 29
8 VfL Wolfsburg 22 8 3 11 53 48 +5 27
9 FF USV Jena 22 7 2 13 32 56 24 23
10 SC 07 Bad Neuenahr 22 5 3 14 26 74 48 18
11 HSV Borussia Friedenstal (R) 22 4 2 16 23 79 56 14 Relegation to 2009–10 2. Bundesliga
12 TSV Crailsheim (R) 22 1 2 19 14 79 65 5
Source: kicker.de
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champion; (R) Relegated.
Notes:

Results

2008–09 NEU CRA DUI ESS FRA FRE BFR HSV JEN FCB POT WOF
SC 07 Bad Neuenahr5–10–41–10–53–00–41–52–10–22–20–5
TSV Crailsheim1–30–71–41–50–32–21–70–20–30–21–3
FCR 2001 Duisburg6–18–02–35–05–03–15–23–01–20–34–0
Essen-Schönebeck8–14–00–31–31–24–04–00–32–21–53–1
FFC Frankfurt1–02–01–22–24–18–05–04–11–01–24–2
SC Freiburg0–21–30–33–22–13–12–24–11–50–12–1
HSV Borussia Friedenstal3–22–00–60–40–32–11–43–40–50–41–6
Hamburg9–21–13–40–10–20–15–12–10–31–33–2
FF USV Jena5–01–00–73–11–12–12–22–30–20–51–4
Bayern Munich8–14–10–42–01–05–57–02–13–02–13–3
Turbine Potsdam3–04–02–24–02–27–13–03–13–20–33–0
VfL Wolfsburg0–06–12–21–02–32–33–02–46–01–51–5

Top scorers

RankPlayerTeamGoals
1 Germany Inka GringsDuisburg29
2 Germany Anja MittagTurbine Potsdam21
Germany Martina MüllerWolfsburg21
4 Austria Nina AignerBayern Munich17
5 Germany Kerstin GarefrekesFrankfurt14

References

  1. "Women's Bundesliga". Deutscher Fußball Bund. 2008. Archived from the original on 14 September 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-13.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.