1990–91 Bundesliga


The 1990–91 Bundesliga was the 28th season of the Bundesliga, the premier football league in West Germany. It began on 8 August 1990 and ended on 15 June 1991. FC Bayern Munich were the defending champions.
With the Reunification of Germany on 3 October 1990, it was the last season that the league was exclusive to teams from the former West Germany before it was opened to teams from the former East Germany.

Competition modus

Every team played two games against each other team, one at home and one away. Teams received two points for a win and one point for a draw. If two or more teams were tied on points, places were determined by goal difference and, if still tied, by goals scored. The team with the most points were crowned champions while the two teams with the fewest points were relegated to 2. Bundesliga. The third-to-last team had to compete in a two-legged relegation/promotion play-off against the third-placed team from 2. Bundesliga.

Team changes to 1989–90

and FC Homburg were directly relegated to the 2. Bundesliga after finishing in the last two places. They were replaced by Hertha BSC and SG Wattenscheid 09. Relegation/promotion play-off participant VfL Bochum won on aggregate against 1. FC Saarbrücken and thus retained their Bundesliga status.

Team overview

ClubLocationGroundCapacity
BerlinOlympiastadion76,000
BochumRuhrstadion40,000
BremenWeserstadion32,000
DortmundWestfalenstadion54,000
DüsseldorfRheinstadion59,600
FrankfurtWaldstadion62,000
HamburgVolksparkstadion62,000
KaiserslauternFritz-Walter-Stadion42,000
KarlsruheWildparkstadion50,000
CologneMüngersdorfer Stadion61,000
LeverkusenUlrich-Haberland-Stadion20,000
MönchengladbachBökelbergstadion34,500
MunichOlympiastadion70,000
NurembergStädtisches Stadion64,238
HamburgStadion am Millerntor18,000
StuttgartNeckarstadion72,000
KrefeldGrotenburg-Stadion34,500
BochumLohrheidestadion15,000

Results

Relegation play-offs

and third-placed 2. Bundesliga team Stuttgarter Kickers had to compete in a two-legged relegation/promotion play-off. After a two-leg series, both teams were tied 2–2 on aggregate, so a deciding third match had to be scheduled. Stuttgarter Kickers won this match and were promoted to the Bundesliga.
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Top goalscorers

;21 goals
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1. FC Kaiserslautern
Goalkeepers: Gerald Ehrmann ; Michael Serr.

Defenders: Marco Haber ; Miroslav Kadlec ; Markus Kranz ; Reinhard Stumpf ; Joachim Stadler ; Kay Friedmann ; Roger Lutz.

Midfielders: Uwe Scherr ; Guido Hoffmann ; Markus Schupp ; Thomas Dooley ; Bjarne Goldbæk ; Rainer Ernst ; Frank Lelle ; Thomas Richter ; Axel Roos ; Kai Krämer.

Forwards: Demir Hotić ; Stefan Kuntz ; Bruno Labbadia ; Bernhard Winkler ; Robert Zimmermann.

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Manager: Karl-Heinz Feldkamp.
On the roster but have not played in a league game: Elvis Hajradinović ; Thomas Renner.
Transferred out during the season:''' none.