2010–11 Frauen-Bundesliga

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Frauen-Bundesliga
Season2010–11
ChampionsTurbine Potsdam
RelegatedSaarbrücken, Herford
UEFA Women's Champions LeaguePotsdam, Frankfurt
Matches played132
Goals scored550 (4.17 per match)
Top goalscorerConny Pohlers (25)
Biggest home win9–0 Frankfurt v Saarbrücken, Duisburg v Leverkusen
Biggest away win0–8 Bad Neuenahr v Frankfurt, Essen- Schönebeck v Frankfurt, Herford v Wolfsburg
Highest scoring8–2 Frankfurt v München
Highest attendance7,000 Potsdam v Essen- Schönebeck
Lowest attendance78 Hamburg v Saarbrücken
Average attendance836

The 2010–11 season of the Frauen-Bundesliga was the 21st season of Germany's premier women's football league. The season started on 15 August 2010 and ended early on 13 March 2011,[1] so that the German national team has time to prepare for the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup. At the end of the season Turbine Potsdam won their third consecutive championship. Saarbrücken and Herford were relegated.

Changes from 2009–10[edit]

For this season, the league runner-up gained direct entry to the UEFA Women's Champions League Round of 32. In the preceding year the runner-up had to start in the qualifying round.

Teams[edit]

The teams promoted from last season's 2nd Bundesliga were Bayer 04 Leverkusen as winners of the South division and Herforder SC as winners of the North division.

Team Home city Home ground
SC 07 Bad Neuenahr Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler Apollinarisstadion
FCR 2001 Duisburg Duisburg PCC-Stadion
SG Essen-Schönebeck Essen Sportpark Am Hallo
1. FFC Frankfurt Frankfurt Stadion am Brentanobad
Hamburger SV Hamburg Wolfgang-Meyer-Sportanlage
Herforder SC Herford Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Stadion
FF USV Jena Jena Sportzentrum Oberaue
Bayer 04 Leverkusen Leverkusen Kurt-Rieß-Anlage
FC Bayern Munich Munich Sportpark Aschheim
1. FFC Turbine Potsdam Potsdam Karl-Liebknecht-Stadion
1. FC Saarbrücken Saarbrücken Stadion Kieselhumes
VfL Wolfsburg Wolfsburg VfL-Stadium

Managerial changes[edit]

Team
Outgoing manager
Manner of departure
Date of vacancy
Replaced by
Date of appointment
Table
Essen-Schönebeck Ralf Agolli resigned[2] 11 May 2010 Markus Högner 25 May 2010 pre-season
Herford Tanja Schulte sacked[3] 15 October 2010 Jürgen Prüfer 16 October 2010 12th
Jena Torsten Zaunmüller sacked[4] 4 November 2010 Konrad Weise 29 December 2010 11th
Saarbrücken Stephan Fröhlich resigned[5] 4 February 2011 Tobias Jungfleisch 5 February 2011 10th
Duisburg Martina Voss-Tecklenburg sacked[6] 17 February 2011 Marco Ketelaer 17 February 2011 3rd

Standings[edit]

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Turbine Potsdam (C) 22 19 1 2 67 17 +50 58 2011–12 UEFA Champions League Round of 32
2 FFC Frankfurt 22 19 0 3 103 16 +87 57
3 FCR 2001 Duisburg 22 16 3 3 61 19 +42 51
4 Hamburg 22 12 2 8 42 42 0 38
5 Bayern Munich 22 11 2 9 43 36 +7 35
6 Bad Neuenahr 22 11 0 11 54 48 +6 33
7 Wolfsburg 22 10 2 10 52 46 +6 32
8 Bayer Leverkusen 22 6 3 13 32 67 −35 21
9 Essen-Schönebeck 22 5 5 12 27 50 −23 20
10 Jena 22 5 4 13 24 57 −33 19
11 Saarbrücken (R) 22 4 2 16 20 72 −52 14 Relegation to 2011–12 2. Bundesliga
12 Herford (R) 22 1 2 19 25 80 −55 5
Updated to match(es) played on 13 March 2011. Source: dfb.de (in German)
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champions; (R) Relegated

Results[edit]

Home \ Away POT FFC FCR HSV MUN NEU WOL LEV ESS JEN SAA HER
1. FFC Turbine Potsdam 1–0 3–0 4–1 2–1 1–0 4–0 6–1 3–0 5–0 7–0 1–0
1. FFC Frankfurt 4–1 0–1 5–1 8–2 4–1 5–1 5–1 6–0 5–0 9–0 6–0
FCR 2001 Duisburg 1–1 1–2 2–2 2–1 2–0 2–1 9–0 3–1 1–0 5–0 4–0
Hamburger SV 0–1 0–4 1–5 2–1 0–3 2–1 0–1 1–0 2–2 3–1 3–0
Bayern Munich 0–3 0–2 2–4 1–4 1–2 2–1 4–0 1–1 5–0 4–0 3–2
SC 07 Bad Neuenahr 2–5 0–8 0–2 2–6 0–1 1–2 5–1 4–3 2–1 6–0 5–1
Wolfsburg 2–1 4–3 3–2 2–3 0–0 1–4 3–3 1–0 1–2 4–0 6–3
Bayer 04 Leverkusen 1–7 0–4 2–3 4–1 1–2 1–4 3–2 1–1 0–4 0–1 5–1
SG Essen-Schönebeck 1–4 0–8 0–2 1–3 1–2 2–1 3–2 1–1 1–2 3–1 4–2
FF USV Jena 2–3 0–3 2–2 0–1 0–4 0–7 1–4 0–3 0–0 1–3 2–1
1. FC Saarbrücken 0–2 1–4 0–3 1–3 0–5 2–3 2–3 2–0 1–3 1–1 2–2
Herforder SV 1–2 0–7 0–5 1–3 0–2 4–2 0–8 2–3 1–1 3–4 1–2
Source: [citation needed]
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Top scorers[edit]

Conny Pohlers scored six goals in the last two games to overtake the opposition and won the individual scorer award a third time after 2002 and 2006.

Rank Player Team Goals[7][8]
1 Germany Conny Pohlers FFC Frankfurt 25
2 Germany Inka Grings Duisburg 23
Germany Kerstin Garefrekes FFC Frankfurt 23
Germany Birgit Prinz FFC Frankfurt 23
5 Germany Martina Müller Wolfsburg 20
6 Germany Célia Okoyino da Mbabi SC 07 Bad Neuenahr 17
7 Germany Anja Mittag Turbine Potsdam 15
8 Equatorial Guinea Genoveva Añonma FF USV Jena 13
Germany Fatmire Bajramaj Turbine Potsdam 13

References[edit]

  1. ^ dfb.de. "Schedule". Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  2. ^ (in German) womensoccer.de Archived 24 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine; Markus Högner neuer Trainer der SG Essen-Schönebeck
  3. ^ (in German) womensoccer.de Archived 27 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine; Jürgen Prüfer übernimmt in Herford
  4. ^ (in German) kicker.de; Jena wird fündig: Weise übernimmt
  5. ^ (in German) fc-saarbruecken.de; FCS-Frauen: Trio beerbt Stephan Fröhlich
  6. ^ (in German) kicker.de; Voss-Tecklenburg ist maßlos enttäuscht
  7. ^ dfb.de; top goal scorers
  8. ^ fussball.de; top goal scorers