Suvarna Garge (Editor)

1993–94 Bundesliga

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Season
  
1993–94

Cup Winners' Cup
  
Werder Bremen

Champions League
  
Bayern Munich

1993–94 Bundesliga

Champions
  
Bayern Munich 12th Bundesliga title 13th German title

Relegated
  
1. FC Nuremberg Wattenscheid 09 VfB Leipzig

UEFA Cup
  
1. FC Kaiserslautern Bayer Leverkusen Borussia Dortmund Eintracht Frankfurt

The 1993–94 Bundesliga was the 31st season of the Bundesliga, Germany's premier football league. It began on 6 August 1993 and ended on 7 May 1994. SV Werder Bremen were the defending champions.

Contents

Teams

VfL Bochum, Bayer 05 Uerdingen and 1. FC Saarbrücken were relegated to the 2. Bundesliga after finishing in the last three places. They were replaced by SC Freiburg, MSV Duisburg and VfB Leipzig.

League table

Source: www.dfb.de
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored
1Dynamo Dresden were docked four points because of financial irregularities.
(C) = Champion; (R) = Relegated; (P) = Promoted; (E) = Eliminated; (O) = Play-off winner; (A) = Advances to a further round.
Only applicable when the season is not finished:
(Q) = Qualified to the phase of tournament indicated; (TQ) = Qualified to tournament, but not yet to the particular phase indicated; (RQ) = Qualified to the relegation tournament indicated; (DQ) = Disqualified from tournament.

Results

Source: www.dfb.de
^ The home team is listed in the left-hand column.
Colours: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Top goalscorers

18 goals
  • Stefan Kuntz (1. FC Kaiserslautern)
  • Anthony Yeboah (Eintracht Frankfurt)
  • 17 goals
  • Stéphane Chapuisat (Borussia Dortmund)
  • Paulo Sérgio (Bayer Leverkusen)
  • Toni Polster (1. FC Köln)
  • 14 goals
  • Thomas von Heesen (Hamburger SV)
  • 13 goals
  • Karsten Bäron (Hamburger SV)
  • Ulf Kirsten (Bayer Leverkusen)
  • Peter Közle (MSV Duisburg)
  • Marek Leśniak (SG Wattenscheid 09)
  • Souleyman Sané (SG Wattenscheid 09)
  • Fritz Walter (VfB Stuttgart)
  • Sergio Zárate (1. FC Nuremberg)
  • References

    1993–94 Bundesliga Wikipedia