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List of Danish football champions

The Danish football champions are the winners of the highest league of football in Denmark. The title has been contested since 1913,[1] in a varying form of competitions. Since 1991, the winners have been found through the Danish Superliga championship. The Danish football championship is governed by the Danish Football Association (DBU).

The early Danish football championships were decided in a single game, and the competition was not nationwide until its structure was altered before the 1927–28 season. Until the 1950s, the winners' list included teams exclusively from the Copenhagen area. Kjøbenhavns Boldklub (KB) thus won 12 of its record 15 Danish championships before the 1954–55 season, when Køge Boldklub became the first non-Copenhagen team to be crowned Danish football champions.

A Danish champion has been found every year since 1913, except for 1915 and 1928. In 1915, the tournament was not played because of World War I. In 1928, there was no rule defined for the possibility that two or more teams had the same number of points at the end of the tournament, when three clubs all ended in first place.

History

Upon its founding in 1889, the Danish Football Association (DBU) inaugurated The Football Tournament contested by Copenhagen clubs only, though the winners are not considered official Danish champions. Upon the creation of the Copenhagen Football Association (KBU) in 1903, the administration of The Football Tournament was handed over to the newly founded regional football association, who went on to arrange yearly Copenhagen football championships. As the five other regional football associations emerged – namely Jutland FA (JBU), Zealand FA (SBU), Funen FA (FBU), Lolland-Falster FA (LFBU) and Bornholm FA (BBU) – they also started arranging championships for their own regions, parallel with the Copenhagen Championship.

The first Danish championship, the "National Football Tournament", was played from 1912 to 1913. Through to 1927, the championship was decided in a single final match,[1] with the winner of KBU's Copenhagen football championship directly qualified to play the winner of a series of play-off games between the regional champions from the rest of Denmark.[a] From 1914 to 1917, the runner-up team from the KBU tournament played a semi-final game against the best team from the rest of Denmark, with the winner facing the KBU champions in the Danish championship final. As the Copenhagen clubs were stronger than the provincial teams, this meant the final game ended up being contested by two clubs from Copenhagen.

Before the 1927–28 season, the first nationwide tournament, the "Denmark Tournament", was inaugurated.[1] 20 teams were divided into five groups of four teams. They played each other once, and the five group winners qualified for a championship deciding group. Here they again played each other once, and the top placed team was declared champions after seven games in all. This lasted only two years before the league system was changed and the tournament renamed to the "Championship League" for the 1929–30 season.[1] The teams were divided into two leagues, a championship series of ten teams and a promotion series with a varying number of clubs each year. This meant that the number of teams competing for the championship was fixed for the course of the tournament, and that every team played each other. The lowest placed team in the championship series and the top placed team in the promotion series would swap places between each season.[2] From the start of the competition in 1929–30, the clubs played each other once to give a total of nine games a season, but from 1936 to 1937 they met twice in a season for a total of 18 games.[1]

 
A match between Frem (horizontal stripes) and AB (vertical stripes), circa 1940. 1937 top goalscorer Pauli Jørgensen is on the far left, jumping.

During the German occupation of Denmark in World War II from 1940 to 1945, the championship was again decided in a single final.[1] The format varied throughout the occupation, as a differing number of teams played in three separate tournaments. The best placed teams in each tournament would go on to a string of play-off games, before two teams met in the final.

From the 1945–46 season, the competition reverted to the "Championship League" format, with the tournament now named the "1st Division".[1] There were 10 teams in the top division once again, playing each other twice, with the lowest team being relegated.[3] The 1953–54 season saw the first non-Copenhagen team win the Danish championship, when Køge Boldklub won the title.[4] The championship title was not reclaimed by a Copenhagen team in more than ten years, until Akademisk Boldklub (AB) won the 1967 season.

From 1958, the Danish championship was arranged through one calendar year,[1] and the 1956–57 season lasted 18 months with the teams playing each other thrice for a 27 games total.[5] From 1958 to 1974, the tournament was expanded to 12 teams,[1] playing each other twice for 22 games per season each, but now the bottom two teams faced relegation.[6] The number of teams was increased to 16 for the 1975 season,[1] which resulted in 30 games per season.[7] In 1986, the number of participants was altered once more, this time decreasing the number of teams to 14,[1] and the number of games to 26.[8]

In 1991, the 1st Division was replaced by the "Danish Superliga",[1] with only 10 teams participating. The opening Superliga season was played during the spring of 1991, with the ten teams playing each other twice for the championship title.[9] For the following seasons the tournament structure was once more stretched over two calendar years. In the summer and autumn of 1991, the 10 teams played each other twice in the regular season of the tournament.[1] In the following spring, the bottom two teams would be cut off, while the remaining eight teams entered the post-season tournament with their points cut in half and played each other twice once more, for a total of 32 games in a season.[10] This practice was abandoned before the 1995–96 season,[1] when the number of teams competing was increased to 12, playing each other thrice for 33 games per Superliga season.[11] For the 2016–17 season the league was expanded to 14 teams, and a championship round involving the top 6 teams was introduced.[12] For the 2020–21 season the league was reduced to 12 teams again, but the championship round remained.[13]

Champions

Landsfodboldturneringen (1913–1927)

Danmarksmesterskabsturneringen (1928–1929)

Year Winner (titles)[15] Runners-up[15] Top scorer
1927–28 none[b] not available[c]
1928–29 B 93 (3) KB

Mesterskabsserien (1930–1940)

Year Winner (titles)[15] Runners-up[15] Top scorer (club) (goals)[16]
1929–30 B 93 (4) Frem not available[c]
1930–31 Frem (2) KB
1931–32 KB (7) AB
1932–33 Frem (3) B 93
1933–34 B 93 (5) B 1903
1934–35 B 93 (6) Frem
1935–36 Frem (4) AB
1936–37 AB (3) Frem Pauli Jørgensen (Frem) (19)
1937–38 B 1903 (4) Frem Knud Andersen (B 1903) (23)
1938–39 B 93 (7) KB Erik Petersen (B 93) (27)
1939–40 KB (8) Fremad Amager Frede Jensen (Køge) and Kaj Hansen (B 93) (12)

War Tournaments (1941–1945)

Year Winner (titles)[15] Runners-up[15]
1940–41 Frem (5) Fremad Amager
1941–42 B 93 (8) AB
1942–43 AB (4) KB
1943–44 Frem (6) AB
1944–45 AB (5) AGF

1st Division (1946–1990)

Year Winner (titles)[15] Runners-up[15] Top scorer (club) (goals)[16]
1945–46 B 93 (9) KB Jørgen Leschly Sørensen (B 93) (16)
1946–47 AB (6) KB Helge Broneé (ØB) (21)
1947–48 KB (9) Frem John Hansen (Frem) (20)
1948–49 KB (10) AB Jørgen Leschly Sørensen (OB) (16)
1949–50 KB (11) AB James Rønvang (AB) (15)
1950–51 AB (7) OB James Rønvang (AB), Henning Bjerregaard (B 93)
and Jens Peter Hansen (Esbjerg) (11)
1951–52 AB (8) Køge Valdemar Kendzior (Skovshoved) and Poul Erik Petersen (Køge) (13)
1952–53 KB (12) Skovshoved Valdemar Kendzior (Skovshoved) (17)
1953–54 Køge (1) KB Jens-Carl Kristensen (AB) (12)
1954–55 AGF (1) AB Henning Jensen (Frem) (17)
1955–56 AGF (2) Esbjerg Gunnar Kjeldberg (AGF) (18)
1956–57 AGF (3) AB Søren Andersen (Frem) (27)
1958 Vejle (1) Frem Henning Enoksen (Vejle) (27)
1959 B 1909 (1) KB Per Jensen (KB) (20)
1960 AGF (4) KB Harald Nielsen (Frederikshavn) (19)
1961 Esbjerg (1) KB Jørgen Ravn (KB) (26)
1962 Esbjerg (2) B 1913 Henning Enoksen (AGF) and Carl Emil Christiansen (Esbjerg) (24)
1963 Esbjerg (3) B 1913 Mogens Haastrup (B 1909) (21)
1964 B 1909 (2) AGF Jørgen Ravn (KB) (21)
1965 Esbjerg (4) Vejle Per Petersen (B 1903) (18)
1966 Hvidovre (1) Frem Henning Enoksen (AGF) (16)
1967 AB (9) Frem Leif Nielsen (Frem) (15)
1968 KB (13) Esbjerg Niels-Christian Holmstrøm (KB) (23)
1969 B 1903 (5) KB Steen Rømer Larsen (B 1903) (15)
1970 B 1903 (6) AB Ole Forsing (B 1903) (18)
1971 Vejle (2) Hvidovre Uffe Brage (KB) and John Nielsen (B 1901) (19)
1972 Vejle (3) B 1903 Karsten Lund (Vejle) and John Nielsen (B 1901) (16)
1973 Hvidovre (2) Randers Freja Hans Aabech (Hvidovre) (28)
1974 KB (14) Vejle Niels-Christian Holmstrøm (KB) (24)
1975 Køge (2) Holbæk Bjarne Petersen (KB) (25)
1976 B 1903 (7) Frem Mogens Jespersen (AaB) (22)
1977 OB (1) B 1903 Allan Hansen (OB) (23)
1978 Vejle (4) Esbjerg John Eriksen (OB) (22)
1979 Esbjerg (5) KB John Eriksen (OB) (20)
1980 KB (15) Næstved Hans Aabech (KB) (19)
1981 Hvidovre (3) Lyngby Allan Hansen (OB) (28)
1982 OB (2) AGF Ib Jacquet (Vejle) (20)
1983 Lyngby (1) OB Vilhelm Munk Nielsen (OB) (20)
1984 Vejle (5) AGF Steen Thychosen (Vejle) (24)
1985 Brøndby (1) Lyngby Lars Bastrup (Ikast) (20)
1986 AGF (5) Brøndby Claus Nielsen (Brøndby) (16)
1987 Brøndby (2) Ikast FS Claus Nielsen (Brøndby) (20)
1988 Brøndby (3) Næstved Bent Christensen (Brøndby) (21)
1989 OB (3) Brøndby Miklos Molnar (Frem), Flemming Christensen (Lyngby)
and Lars Jakobsen (OB) (14)
1990 Brøndby (4) B 1903 Bent Christensen (Brøndby) (17)

Danish Superliga (1991–present)

Year Winner (titles)[15] Runners-up[15] Top scorer (club) (goals)[16]
1991 Brøndby (5) Lyngby Bent Christensen (Brøndby) (11)
1991–92 Lyngby (2) B 1903 Peter Møller (AaB) (17)
1992–93 F.C. Copenhagen (1) OB Peter Møller (AaB) (22)
1993–94 Silkeborg (1) F.C. Copenhagen Søren Frederiksen (Silkeborg) (18)
1994–95 AaB (1) Brøndby Erik Bo Andersen (AaB) (24)
1995–96 Brøndby (6) AGF Thomas Thorninger (AGF) (20)
1996–97 Brøndby (7) Vejle Miklos Molnar (Lyngby) (26)
1997–98 Brøndby (8) Silkeborg Ebbe Sand (Brøndby) (28)
1998–99 AaB (2) Brøndby Heine Fernandez (Viborg) (23)
1999–00 Herfølge (1) Brøndby Peter Lassen (Silkeborg) (16)
2000–01 F.C. Copenhagen (2) Brøndby Peter Graulund (Brøndby) (21)
2001–02 Brøndby (9) F.C. Copenhagen Peter Madsen (Brøndby) and Kaspar Dalgas (OB) (22)
2002–03 F.C. Copenhagen (3) Brøndby Søren Frederiksen (Viborg) and Jan Kristiansen (Esbjerg) (18)
2003–04 F.C. Copenhagen (4) Brøndby Steffen Højer (OB), Mohamed Zidan (FC Midtjylland),
Tommy Bechmann (Esbjerg) and Mwape Miti (OB) (19)
2004–05 Brøndby (10) F.C. Copenhagen Steffen Højer (OB) (20)
2005–06 F.C. Copenhagen (5) Brøndby Steffen Højer (Viborg) (16)
2006–07 F.C. Copenhagen (6) FC Midtjylland Rade Prica (AaB) (19)
2007–08 AaB (3) FC Midtjylland Jeppe Curth (AaB) (17)
2008–09 F.C. Copenhagen (7) OB Morten Nordstrand (FC København) and Marc Nygaard (Randers) (16)
2009–10 F.C. Copenhagen (8) OB Peter Utaka (OB) (18)
2010–11 F.C. Copenhagen (9) OB Dame N'Doye (FC København) (25)
2011–12 FC Nordsjælland (1) F.C. Copenhagen Dame N'Doye (FC København) (18)
2012–13 F.C. Copenhagen (10) FC Nordsjælland Andreas Cornelius (FC København) (18)
2013–14 AaB (4) F.C. Copenhagen Thomas Dalgaard (Viborg) (18)
2014–15 FC Midtjylland (1) F.C. Copenhagen Martin Pusic (Esbjerg/FC Midtjylland) (17)
2015–16 F.C. Copenhagen (11) SønderjyskE Lukas Spalvis (AaB) (18)
2016–17 F.C. Copenhagen (12) Brøndby Marcus Ingvartsen (FC Nordsjælland) (23)
2017–18 FC Midtjylland (2) Brøndby Pål Alexander Kirkevold (Hobro IK) (22)
2018–19 F.C. Copenhagen (13) FC Midtjylland Robert Skov (FC Copenhagen) (29)
2019–20 FC Midtjylland (3) F.C. Copenhagen Ronnie Schwartz (Silkeborg IF/FC Midtjylland) (18)
2020–21 Brøndby (11) FC Midtjylland Mikael Uhre (Brøndby) (19)
2021–22 F.C. Copenhagen (14) FC Midtjylland Nicklas Helenius (Silkeborg IF) (17)

Total titles won

The following 20 clubs have won the top league in Danish football.

Club Winners Runners-up Winning years
KB[d] 15 13 1912–13, 1913–14, 1916–17, 1917–18, 1921–22, 1924–25, 1931–32, 1939–40, 1947–48, 1948–49, 1949–50, 1952–53, 1968, 1974, 1980
F.C. Copenhagen[d] 14 7 1992–93, 2000–01, 2002–03, 2003–04, 2005–06, 2006–07, 2008–09, 2009–10, 2010–11, 2012–13, 2015–16, 2016–17, 2018–19, 2021–22
Brøndby 11 11 1985, 1987, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1995–96, 1996–97, 1997–98, 2001–02, 2004–05, 2020–21
AB 9 10 1918–19, 1920–21, 1936–37, 1942–43, 1944–45, 1946–47, 1950–51, 1951–52, 1967
B 93 9 2 1915–16, 1926–27, 1928–29, 1929–30, 1933–34, 1934–35, 1938–39, 1941–42, 1945–46
B 1903[d] 7 5 1919–20, 1923–24, 1925–26, 1937–38, 1969, 1970, 1976
Frem 6 9 1922–23, 1930–31, 1932–33, 1935–36, 1940–41, 1943–44
AGF 5 8 1954–55, 1955–56, 1956–57, 1960, 1986
Vejle 5 3 1958, 1971, 1972, 1978, 1984
Esbjerg 5 3 1961, 1962, 1963, 1965, 1979
AaB 4 1994–95, 1998–99, 2007–08, 2013–14
OB 3 6 1977, 1982, 1989
FC Midtjylland 3 5 2014–15, 2017–18, 2019–20
Hvidovre 3 1 1966, 1973, 1981
Lyngby 2 3 1983, 1991–92
Køge[e] 2 1 1953–54, 1975
B 1909 2 1959, 1964
FC Nordsjælland 1 1 2011–12
Silkeborg 1 1 1993–94
Herfølge[e] 1 1999–2000
  • Bold clubs play in top flight.
  • Italic clubs merged and created superstructures.

Total titles won by city

The 20 title-winning clubs have come from a total of 10 cities. The most successful city is Copenhagen.

Total titles won by city
City Titles Winning clubs
Storkøbenhavn 76 KB (15), F.C. Copenhagen (14), Brøndby (11), AB (9), B 93 (9), B 1903 (7), Frem (6), Hvidovre (3), Lyngby (2)
Aarhus 5 AGF (5)
Esbjerg 5 Esbjerg fB (5)
Odense 5 OB (3), B 1909 (2)
Vejle 5 Vejle Boldklub (5)
Aalborg 4 AaB (4)
Herning 3 FC Midtjylland (3)
Køge 3 Køge (2), Herfølge (1)
Farum 1 FC Nordsjælland (1)
Silkeborg 1 Silkeborg IF (1)

Notes

  1. ^ The winners of the regional JBU (Jutland), FBU (Funen), SBU (Zealand), LFBU (Lolland-Falster) and BBU (Bornholm) competitions.
  2. ^ No rule was defined for the possibility of two or more teams finishing the tournament with the same number of points. B 93, Frem and B 1903 all ended equal at 6 points, and DBU proposed rematches. When B 93 and Frem refused, B 1903 forfeited the championship, and no champion was chosen. Danish League Tables 1927–1998 by RSSSF.
  3. ^ a b No sources chronicle the top goal scorers of the earliest league championships.
  4. ^ a b c KB and B 1903 merged to form FC København in 1992. Together the three have won 36 championships and been runners-up 25 times.
  5. ^ a b Herfølge BK and Køge BK merged to form HB Køge in 2009. Together the three have won 3 championships and been runners-up 1 time.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n (in Danish). Danish Football Association. Archived from the original on 1 December 2006. Retrieved 22 February 2007.
  2. ^ . Haslund.info. Archived from the original on 8 August 2010. Retrieved 6 May 2010.
  3. ^ . Haslund.info. Archived from the original on 8 August 2010. Retrieved 6 May 2010.
  4. ^ "Køges første DM-titel blev til på "Ungarsk Rapsodi"" (in Danish). Køge Boldklub. Archived from the original on 7 September 2012. Retrieved 22 February 2007.
  5. ^ . Haslund.info. Archived from the original on 5 April 2012. Retrieved 6 May 2010.
  6. ^ . Haslund.info. Archived from the original on 28 March 2012. Retrieved 6 May 2010.
  7. ^ . Haslund.info. Archived from the original on 23 March 2012. Retrieved 6 May 2010.
  8. ^ . Haslund.info. Archived from the original on 12 September 2011. Retrieved 6 May 2010.
  9. ^ "Danmarksturneringen 1991, Superligaen, resultater". DanskFodbold.com. Danish Football Association. Retrieved 6 May 2010.
  10. ^ . Haslund.info. Archived from the original on 8 August 2010. Retrieved 6 May 2010.
  11. ^ "Superligaen (Coca-Cola Superligaen) 1995/96". DanskFodbold.com. Danish Football Association. Retrieved 6 May 2010.
  12. ^ "Superligaen 2016/17". DanskFodbold.com. Danish Football Association. Retrieved 21 May 2022.
  13. ^ "Superligaen 2020/21". DanskFodbold.com. Danish Football Association. Retrieved 21 May 2022.
  14. ^ a b Denmark – København A-Raeken and National Playoffs 1889–1927 at RSSSF
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j (in Danish) End tables of the Danish football championships since 1927–28 by the Danish Football Association
  16. ^ a b c Denmark – List of Topscorers at RSSSF

Sources

  • (in Danish) at the Danish Football Association
  • (in Danish) DanskFodbold.com by the Danish Football Association
  • (in Danish) at Haslund.info
  • Denmark – List of Champions at RSSSF.com

list, danish, football, champions, this, article, about, danish, football, league, champions, women, title, list, list, danish, women, football, champions, danish, football, champions, winners, highest, league, football, denmark, title, been, contested, since,. This article is about men s Danish football league champions For women s title list see List of Danish women s football champions The Danish football champions are the winners of the highest league of football in Denmark The title has been contested since 1913 1 in a varying form of competitions Since 1991 the winners have been found through the Danish Superliga championship The Danish football championship is governed by the Danish Football Association DBU The early Danish football championships were decided in a single game and the competition was not nationwide until its structure was altered before the 1927 28 season Until the 1950s the winners list included teams exclusively from the Copenhagen area Kjobenhavns Boldklub KB thus won 12 of its record 15 Danish championships before the 1954 55 season when Koge Boldklub became the first non Copenhagen team to be crowned Danish football champions A Danish champion has been found every year since 1913 except for 1915 and 1928 In 1915 the tournament was not played because of World War I In 1928 there was no rule defined for the possibility that two or more teams had the same number of points at the end of the tournament when three clubs all ended in first place Contents 1 History 2 Champions 2 1 Landsfodboldturneringen 1913 1927 2 2 Danmarksmesterskabsturneringen 1928 1929 2 3 Mesterskabsserien 1930 1940 2 4 War Tournaments 1941 1945 2 5 1st Division 1946 1990 2 6 Danish Superliga 1991 present 3 Total titles won 3 1 Total titles won by city 4 Notes 5 References 6 SourcesHistory EditUpon its founding in 1889 the Danish Football Association DBU inaugurated The Football Tournament contested by Copenhagen clubs only though the winners are not considered official Danish champions Upon the creation of the Copenhagen Football Association KBU in 1903 the administration of The Football Tournament was handed over to the newly founded regional football association who went on to arrange yearly Copenhagen football championships As the five other regional football associations emerged namely Jutland FA JBU Zealand FA SBU Funen FA FBU Lolland Falster FA LFBU and Bornholm FA BBU they also started arranging championships for their own regions parallel with the Copenhagen Championship The first Danish championship the National Football Tournament was played from 1912 to 1913 Through to 1927 the championship was decided in a single final match 1 with the winner of KBU s Copenhagen football championship directly qualified to play the winner of a series of play off games between the regional champions from the rest of Denmark a From 1914 to 1917 the runner up team from the KBU tournament played a semi final game against the best team from the rest of Denmark with the winner facing the KBU champions in the Danish championship final As the Copenhagen clubs were stronger than the provincial teams this meant the final game ended up being contested by two clubs from Copenhagen Before the 1927 28 season the first nationwide tournament the Denmark Tournament was inaugurated 1 20 teams were divided into five groups of four teams They played each other once and the five group winners qualified for a championship deciding group Here they again played each other once and the top placed team was declared champions after seven games in all This lasted only two years before the league system was changed and the tournament renamed to the Championship League for the 1929 30 season 1 The teams were divided into two leagues a championship series of ten teams and a promotion series with a varying number of clubs each year This meant that the number of teams competing for the championship was fixed for the course of the tournament and that every team played each other The lowest placed team in the championship series and the top placed team in the promotion series would swap places between each season 2 From the start of the competition in 1929 30 the clubs played each other once to give a total of nine games a season but from 1936 to 1937 they met twice in a season for a total of 18 games 1 A match between Frem horizontal stripes and AB vertical stripes circa 1940 1937 top goalscorer Pauli Jorgensen is on the far left jumping During the German occupation of Denmark in World War II from 1940 to 1945 the championship was again decided in a single final 1 The format varied throughout the occupation as a differing number of teams played in three separate tournaments The best placed teams in each tournament would go on to a string of play off games before two teams met in the final From the 1945 46 season the competition reverted to the Championship League format with the tournament now named the 1st Division 1 There were 10 teams in the top division once again playing each other twice with the lowest team being relegated 3 The 1953 54 season saw the first non Copenhagen team win the Danish championship when Koge Boldklub won the title 4 The championship title was not reclaimed by a Copenhagen team in more than ten years until Akademisk Boldklub AB won the 1967 season From 1958 the Danish championship was arranged through one calendar year 1 and the 1956 57 season lasted 18 months with the teams playing each other thrice for a 27 games total 5 From 1958 to 1974 the tournament was expanded to 12 teams 1 playing each other twice for 22 games per season each but now the bottom two teams faced relegation 6 The number of teams was increased to 16 for the 1975 season 1 which resulted in 30 games per season 7 In 1986 the number of participants was altered once more this time decreasing the number of teams to 14 1 and the number of games to 26 8 In 1991 the 1st Division was replaced by the Danish Superliga 1 with only 10 teams participating The opening Superliga season was played during the spring of 1991 with the ten teams playing each other twice for the championship title 9 For the following seasons the tournament structure was once more stretched over two calendar years In the summer and autumn of 1991 the 10 teams played each other twice in the regular season of the tournament 1 In the following spring the bottom two teams would be cut off while the remaining eight teams entered the post season tournament with their points cut in half and played each other twice once more for a total of 32 games in a season 10 This practice was abandoned before the 1995 96 season 1 when the number of teams competing was increased to 12 playing each other thrice for 33 games per Superliga season 11 For the 2016 17 season the league was expanded to 14 teams and a championship round involving the top 6 teams was introduced 12 For the 2020 21 season the league was reduced to 12 teams again but the championship round remained 13 Champions EditLandsfodboldturneringen 1913 1927 Edit Year Winner titles 14 Runners up 14 1912 13 KB 1 B 19011913 14 KB 2 B 931914 15 no competition held due to World War I1915 16 B 93 1 KB1916 17 KB 3 AB1917 18 KB 4 Randers Freja1918 19 AB 1 B 19011919 20 B 1903 1 B 19011920 21 AB 2 AGF1921 22 KB 5 B 19011922 23 Frem 1 AGF1923 24 B 1903 2 B 19131924 25 KB 6 AGF1925 26 B 1903 3 B 19011926 27 B 93 2 SkovshovedDanmarksmesterskabsturneringen 1928 1929 Edit Year Winner titles 15 Runners up 15 Top scorer1927 28 none b not available c 1928 29 B 93 3 KBMesterskabsserien 1930 1940 Edit Year Winner titles 15 Runners up 15 Top scorer club goals 16 1929 30 B 93 4 Frem not available c 1930 31 Frem 2 KB1931 32 KB 7 AB1932 33 Frem 3 B 931933 34 B 93 5 B 19031934 35 B 93 6 Frem1935 36 Frem 4 AB1936 37 AB 3 Frem Pauli Jorgensen Frem 19 1937 38 B 1903 4 Frem Knud Andersen B 1903 23 1938 39 B 93 7 KB Erik Petersen B 93 27 1939 40 KB 8 Fremad Amager Frede Jensen Koge and Kaj Hansen B 93 12 War Tournaments 1941 1945 Edit Year Winner titles 15 Runners up 15 1940 41 Frem 5 Fremad Amager1941 42 B 93 8 AB1942 43 AB 4 KB1943 44 Frem 6 AB1944 45 AB 5 AGF1st Division 1946 1990 Edit Year Winner titles 15 Runners up 15 Top scorer club goals 16 1945 46 B 93 9 KB Jorgen Leschly Sorensen B 93 16 1946 47 AB 6 KB Helge Bronee OB 21 1947 48 KB 9 Frem John Hansen Frem 20 1948 49 KB 10 AB Jorgen Leschly Sorensen OB 16 1949 50 KB 11 AB James Ronvang AB 15 1950 51 AB 7 OB James Ronvang AB Henning Bjerregaard B 93 and Jens Peter Hansen Esbjerg 11 1951 52 AB 8 Koge Valdemar Kendzior Skovshoved and Poul Erik Petersen Koge 13 1952 53 KB 12 Skovshoved Valdemar Kendzior Skovshoved 17 1953 54 Koge 1 KB Jens Carl Kristensen AB 12 1954 55 AGF 1 AB Henning Jensen Frem 17 1955 56 AGF 2 Esbjerg Gunnar Kjeldberg AGF 18 1956 57 AGF 3 AB Soren Andersen Frem 27 1958 Vejle 1 Frem Henning Enoksen Vejle 27 1959 B 1909 1 KB Per Jensen KB 20 1960 AGF 4 KB Harald Nielsen Frederikshavn 19 1961 Esbjerg 1 KB Jorgen Ravn KB 26 1962 Esbjerg 2 B 1913 Henning Enoksen AGF and Carl Emil Christiansen Esbjerg 24 1963 Esbjerg 3 B 1913 Mogens Haastrup B 1909 21 1964 B 1909 2 AGF Jorgen Ravn KB 21 1965 Esbjerg 4 Vejle Per Petersen B 1903 18 1966 Hvidovre 1 Frem Henning Enoksen AGF 16 1967 AB 9 Frem Leif Nielsen Frem 15 1968 KB 13 Esbjerg Niels Christian Holmstrom KB 23 1969 B 1903 5 KB Steen Romer Larsen B 1903 15 1970 B 1903 6 AB Ole Forsing B 1903 18 1971 Vejle 2 Hvidovre Uffe Brage KB and John Nielsen B 1901 19 1972 Vejle 3 B 1903 Karsten Lund Vejle and John Nielsen B 1901 16 1973 Hvidovre 2 Randers Freja Hans Aabech Hvidovre 28 1974 KB 14 Vejle Niels Christian Holmstrom KB 24 1975 Koge 2 Holbaek Bjarne Petersen KB 25 1976 B 1903 7 Frem Mogens Jespersen AaB 22 1977 OB 1 B 1903 Allan Hansen OB 23 1978 Vejle 4 Esbjerg John Eriksen OB 22 1979 Esbjerg 5 KB John Eriksen OB 20 1980 KB 15 Naestved Hans Aabech KB 19 1981 Hvidovre 3 Lyngby Allan Hansen OB 28 1982 OB 2 AGF Ib Jacquet Vejle 20 1983 Lyngby 1 OB Vilhelm Munk Nielsen OB 20 1984 Vejle 5 AGF Steen Thychosen Vejle 24 1985 Brondby 1 Lyngby Lars Bastrup Ikast 20 1986 AGF 5 Brondby Claus Nielsen Brondby 16 1987 Brondby 2 Ikast FS Claus Nielsen Brondby 20 1988 Brondby 3 Naestved Bent Christensen Brondby 21 1989 OB 3 Brondby Miklos Molnar Frem Flemming Christensen Lyngby and Lars Jakobsen OB 14 1990 Brondby 4 B 1903 Bent Christensen Brondby 17 Danish Superliga 1991 present Edit Main article Danish Superliga Year Winner titles 15 Runners up 15 Top scorer club goals 16 1991 Brondby 5 Lyngby Bent Christensen Brondby 11 1991 92 Lyngby 2 B 1903 Peter Moller AaB 17 1992 93 F C Copenhagen 1 OB Peter Moller AaB 22 1993 94 Silkeborg 1 F C Copenhagen Soren Frederiksen Silkeborg 18 1994 95 AaB 1 Brondby Erik Bo Andersen AaB 24 1995 96 Brondby 6 AGF Thomas Thorninger AGF 20 1996 97 Brondby 7 Vejle Miklos Molnar Lyngby 26 1997 98 Brondby 8 Silkeborg Ebbe Sand Brondby 28 1998 99 AaB 2 Brondby Heine Fernandez Viborg 23 1999 00 Herfolge 1 Brondby Peter Lassen Silkeborg 16 2000 01 F C Copenhagen 2 Brondby Peter Graulund Brondby 21 2001 02 Brondby 9 F C Copenhagen Peter Madsen Brondby and Kaspar Dalgas OB 22 2002 03 F C Copenhagen 3 Brondby Soren Frederiksen Viborg and Jan Kristiansen Esbjerg 18 2003 04 F C Copenhagen 4 Brondby Steffen Hojer OB Mohamed Zidan FC Midtjylland Tommy Bechmann Esbjerg and Mwape Miti OB 19 2004 05 Brondby 10 F C Copenhagen Steffen Hojer OB 20 2005 06 F C Copenhagen 5 Brondby Steffen Hojer Viborg 16 2006 07 F C Copenhagen 6 FC Midtjylland Rade Prica AaB 19 2007 08 AaB 3 FC Midtjylland Jeppe Curth AaB 17 2008 09 F C Copenhagen 7 OB Morten Nordstrand FC Kobenhavn and Marc Nygaard Randers 16 2009 10 F C Copenhagen 8 OB Peter Utaka OB 18 2010 11 F C Copenhagen 9 OB Dame N Doye FC Kobenhavn 25 2011 12 FC Nordsjaelland 1 F C Copenhagen Dame N Doye FC Kobenhavn 18 2012 13 F C Copenhagen 10 FC Nordsjaelland Andreas Cornelius FC Kobenhavn 18 2013 14 AaB 4 F C Copenhagen Thomas Dalgaard Viborg 18 2014 15 FC Midtjylland 1 F C Copenhagen Martin Pusic Esbjerg FC Midtjylland 17 2015 16 F C Copenhagen 11 SonderjyskE Lukas Spalvis AaB 18 2016 17 F C Copenhagen 12 Brondby Marcus Ingvartsen FC Nordsjaelland 23 2017 18 FC Midtjylland 2 Brondby Pal Alexander Kirkevold Hobro IK 22 2018 19 F C Copenhagen 13 FC Midtjylland Robert Skov FC Copenhagen 29 2019 20 FC Midtjylland 3 F C Copenhagen Ronnie Schwartz Silkeborg IF FC Midtjylland 18 2020 21 Brondby 11 FC Midtjylland Mikael Uhre Brondby 19 2021 22 F C Copenhagen 14 FC Midtjylland Nicklas Helenius Silkeborg IF 17 Total titles won EditThe following 20 clubs have won the top league in Danish football Club Winners Runners up Winning yearsKB d 15 13 1912 13 1913 14 1916 17 1917 18 1921 22 1924 25 1931 32 1939 40 1947 48 1948 49 1949 50 1952 53 1968 1974 1980F C Copenhagen d 14 7 1992 93 2000 01 2002 03 2003 04 2005 06 2006 07 2008 09 2009 10 2010 11 2012 13 2015 16 2016 17 2018 19 2021 22Brondby 11 11 1985 1987 1988 1990 1991 1995 96 1996 97 1997 98 2001 02 2004 05 2020 21AB 9 10 1918 19 1920 21 1936 37 1942 43 1944 45 1946 47 1950 51 1951 52 1967B 93 9 2 1915 16 1926 27 1928 29 1929 30 1933 34 1934 35 1938 39 1941 42 1945 46B 1903 d 7 5 1919 20 1923 24 1925 26 1937 38 1969 1970 1976Frem 6 9 1922 23 1930 31 1932 33 1935 36 1940 41 1943 44AGF 5 8 1954 55 1955 56 1956 57 1960 1986Vejle 5 3 1958 1971 1972 1978 1984Esbjerg 5 3 1961 1962 1963 1965 1979AaB 4 1994 95 1998 99 2007 08 2013 14OB 3 6 1977 1982 1989FC Midtjylland 3 5 2014 15 2017 18 2019 20Hvidovre 3 1 1966 1973 1981Lyngby 2 3 1983 1991 92Koge e 2 1 1953 54 1975B 1909 2 1959 1964FC Nordsjaelland 1 1 2011 12Silkeborg 1 1 1993 94Herfolge e 1 1999 2000Bold clubs play in top flight Italic clubs merged and created superstructures Total titles won by city Edit The 20 title winning clubs have come from a total of 10 cities The most successful city is Copenhagen Total titles won by city City Titles Winning clubsStorkobenhavn 76 KB 15 F C Copenhagen 14 Brondby 11 AB 9 B 93 9 B 1903 7 Frem 6 Hvidovre 3 Lyngby 2 Aarhus 5 AGF 5 Esbjerg 5 Esbjerg fB 5 Odense 5 OB 3 B 1909 2 Vejle 5 Vejle Boldklub 5 Aalborg 4 AaB 4 Herning 3 FC Midtjylland 3 Koge 3 Koge 2 Herfolge 1 Farum 1 FC Nordsjaelland 1 Silkeborg 1 Silkeborg IF 1 Notes Edit The winners of the regional JBU Jutland FBU Funen SBU Zealand LFBU Lolland Falster and BBU Bornholm competitions No rule was defined for the possibility of two or more teams finishing the tournament with the same number of points B 93 Frem and B 1903 all ended equal at 6 points and DBU proposed rematches When B 93 and Frem refused B 1903 forfeited the championship and no champion was chosen Danish League Tables 1927 1998 by RSSSF a b No sources chronicle the top goal scorers of the earliest league championships a b c KB and B 1903 merged to form FC Kobenhavn in 1992 Together the three have won 36 championships and been runners up 25 times a b Herfolge BK and Koge BK merged to form HB Koge in 2009 Together the three have won 3 championships and been runners up 1 time References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Historien om Danmarksmesterskabet i fodbold in Danish Danish Football Association Archived from the original on 1 December 2006 Retrieved 22 February 2007 DANMARKSTURNERINGEN 1929 1930 Haslund info Archived from the original on 8 August 2010 Retrieved 6 May 2010 DANMARKSTURNERINGEN 1945 1946 Haslund info Archived from the original on 8 August 2010 Retrieved 6 May 2010 Koges forste DM titel blev til pa Ungarsk Rapsodi in Danish Koge Boldklub Archived from the original on 7 September 2012 Retrieved 22 February 2007 DANMARKSTURNERINGEN 1956 1957 1 DIVISION Haslund info Archived from the original on 5 April 2012 Retrieved 6 May 2010 DANMARKSTURNERINGEN 1958 1 DIVISION Haslund info Archived from the original on 28 March 2012 Retrieved 6 May 2010 DANMARKSTURNERINGEN 1975 1 DIVISION Haslund info Archived from the original on 23 March 2012 Retrieved 6 May 2010 DANMARKSTURNERINGEN 1986 1 DIVISION Haslund info Archived from the original on 12 September 2011 Retrieved 6 May 2010 Danmarksturneringen 1991 Superligaen resultater DanskFodbold com Danish Football Association Retrieved 6 May 2010 DANMARKSTURNERINGEN 1991 1992 Haslund info Archived from the original on 8 August 2010 Retrieved 6 May 2010 Superligaen Coca Cola Superligaen 1995 96 DanskFodbold com Danish Football Association Retrieved 6 May 2010 Superligaen 2016 17 DanskFodbold com Danish Football Association Retrieved 21 May 2022 Superligaen 2020 21 DanskFodbold com Danish Football Association Retrieved 21 May 2022 a b Denmark Kobenhavn A Raeken and National Playoffs 1889 1927 at RSSSF a b c d e f g h i j in Danish End tables of the Danish football championships since 1927 28 by the Danish Football Association a b c Denmark List of Topscorers at RSSSFSources Edit in Danish Historien om Danmarksmesterskabet i fodbold at the Danish Football Association in Danish DanskFodbold com by the Danish Football Association in Danish DANMARKSTURNERINGEN at Haslund info Denmark List of Champions at RSSSF com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of Danish football champions amp oldid 1101932423, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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