Northern German Football Association

Northern German Football Association
Formation

1905

1948 (reformed)

Type Football association
Location
Membership
1,054,310 (2015)
President
Eugen Gehlenborg
Parent organization
German Football Association
Affiliations Bremen Football Association
Hamburg Football Association
Lower Saxony Football Association
Schleswig-Holstein Football Association
Website www.nordfv.de

The Northern German Football Association (German: Norddeutscher Fußball-Verband; NFV) is one of the five regional associations of the German Football Association (German: Deutscher Fußball-Bund; DFB) and covers the four German states of Bremen, Hamburg, Lower Saxony and Schleswig-Holstein.[1]

Structure

DFB, its five regional and 21 state associations

In 2015, the NFV had 1,054,310 members, 3,818 member clubs and 29,017 teams playing in all its men, women and junior league systems.[2] In the 2012-13 season, at the top of the NFV men's league system sits the Regionalliga Nord, a level four division in the German football league system.

The NFV itself is formed by the following state associations:

History

The NFV was founded in 1905 as a merger of several local football associations in Northern Germany and used to administer the Northern German football championship for the next decades. In 1933, the association along with all other regional associations was disbanded by the Nazi government, with all German football competitions now organized by the Reich. Soon after the World War II, football competitions in Northern Germany typically restarted on an informal basis, with the NFV officially reintroduced in 1948. Until 1963, the NFV had the jurisdiction on the Oberliga Nord, the regional division of the former lop level German Oberliga.[3] After the introduction of the Bundesliga in 1963, the NFV league system became a feeder to the nationwide divisions.

References

  1. dfb.de: Regional Associations, accessed: 3 August 2012
  2. "Mitglieder-Statistik 2015" (PDF) (in German). Deutscher Fussball-Bund. Retrieved 2015-09-26.
  3. nordfv.de: History of the NFV (German), accessed: 3 August 2012

External links

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