Norwegian Second Division

(Redirected from 2. divisjon)

The Norwegian Second Division, also called 2. divisjon and often referred to as PostNord-ligaen for sponsorship reasons, is the third-highest level of the Norwegian football league system.

Norwegian Second Division
Founded2016– (as PostNord-ligaen)
2012–2015 (as Oddsen-ligaen)
2009–2011 (as Fair Play ligaen)
1991–2008 (as 2. divisjon)
1963–1990 (as 3. divisjon)
CountryNorway
ConfederationUEFA
Number of teams28 (divided into 2 groups of 14)
Level on pyramid3
Promotion toNorwegian First Division
Relegation toNorwegian Third Division
Domestic cup(s)Norwegian Cup
Current championsEgersund (Group 1), Levanger (Group 2)
(2023)
Websitefotball.no
Current: 2024 Norwegian Second Division

There are 28 teams divided into two groups, and at the end of the season the winner of each group earns promotion to the second-highest division, 1. divisjon. The teams finishing in second place in their respective group will qualify for the promotion play-offs, where they will face each other. The winner will play against the 14th placed team in 1. divisjon for promotion. The bottom three teams in each group are relegated to 3. divisjon.

2. divisjon is the highest league a reserve team can participate in, and only reserve teams from the Eliteserien clubs (first tier) are allowed to enter. The participation of reserve teams stirs debate from time to time.[1]

History

Between 1963 and 1990, 2. divisjon was the second highest level of the Norwegian football league system, therefore the name of the third highest level was 3. divisjon. When the highest level was rebranded in 1991, this level changed its name to 2. divisjon. From 2009 to 2011, the official name of the league was Fair Play ligaen, and from 2012 to 2015 the name was Oddsen-ligaen (after the main sponsor Norsk Tipping's betting-game called Oddsen).[2][3] The league is currently branded as PostNord-ligaen, sponsored by PostNord.

Current members

The following 28 clubs are competing in the 2023 Norwegian Second Division.[4][5][6]

ClubGroupLocationStadiumCapacity
Aalesund 21ÅlesundColor Line Stadion10,778
Alta2AltaFinnmarkshallen1,200
Arendal1ArendalNorac Stadion5,000
Brattvåg1BrattvågBrattvåg Stadion1,500
Bærum2BærumSandvika Stadion1,500
Brann 22BergenVarden Amfi3,500
Egersund1EgersundIdrettsparken2,000
Fløy1FlekkerøyFlekkerøy Kunstgress2,000
Fram Larvik1LarvikFramparken2,500
Gjøvik-Lyn2GjøvikGjøvik Stadion3,000
Grorud1OsloGrorud Arctic Match1,700
Junkeren2BodøNordlandshallen5,500
Kjelsås1OsloGrefsen Stadion2,000
Kvik Halden2HaldenHalden Stadion4,200
Levanger2LevangerTOBB Arena2,200
Lyn1OsloBislett Stadion15,400
Notodden1NotoddenIdrettsparken4,000
Sotra2SotraStraume Idrettspark1,200
Stjørdals-Blink2StjørdalM.U.S Stadion Sandskogan2,000
Strømmen2StrømmenStrømmen Stadion1,850
Strømsgodset 22DrammenMarienlyst Stadion8,935
Tromsdalen2TromsøTUIL Arena3,000
Træff1MoldeReknesbanen1,500
Ull/Kisa2JessheimJessheim Stadion4,500
Ullern2OsloCC Vest Arena1,500
Vålerenga 21OsloIntility Arena16,555
Vard Haugesund1HaugesundHaugesund Stadion8,754
Ørn Horten1HortenLystlunden Stadion3,000

Winners

1991–1995

All group winners, excluding second teams of top division teams, were promoted to 1. divisjon.

SeasonGroup 1Group 2Group 3Group 4Group 5Group 6
1991OddBærumVard HaugesundBrann 2[nb 1]Rosenborg 2[nb 2]Bodø/Glimt
1992Lillestrøm 2[nb 3]SkeidÅssidenÅsaneNardoMjølner
1993JevnakerÅndalsnesStabækVidarStjørdals-BlinkAlta
1994Sarpsborg FKOdd GrenlandSandefjord BKHaugesundAalesundStålkameratene
1995ElverumUllernMjøndalenVidarByåsenHarstad

1996–2000

Each group winner played qualification play-offs to decide which teams promote to 1. divisjon. Teams in bold promoted to 1. divisjon through qualification play-offs.

SeasonGroup 1Group 2Group 3Group 4Group 5Group 6Group 7Group 8
1996[nb 1]Sarpsborg FKSkjettenRunarVigørRosenborg 2[nb 2]Finnsnes
1997KjelsåsRaufossUllernVidarFanaKolstadStrindheimLofoten
1998Liv/FossekallenSkjettenØrn-HortenVidarFyllingenClausenengenRosenborg 2[nb 3]Lofoten
1999HamKamAskerSandefjordVidarFyllingenAalesundStrindheimTromsdalen
2000SkjettenFF LillehammerØrn-HortenMandalskamerateneHøddAalesundStålkamerateneLofoten

2001–2016

All group winners, excluding second teams of top division teams, were promoted to 1. divisjon.

SeasonGroup 1Group 2Group 3Group 4
2001SkeidÅsaneOslo ØstLørenskog
2002FredrikstadBærumMandalskamerateneAlta
2003Pors GrenlandKongsvingerVard HaugesundTromsdalen
2004FK TønsbergFolloLøv-HamAlta
2005Sparta SarpsborgOslo ØstViking 2[nb 1]Tromsdalen
2006NotoddenSkeidMandalskamerateneRaufoss
2007NybergsundHøddSandnes UlfAlta
2008MjøndalenSkeidStavangerTromsdalen
2009StrømmenFolloSandnes UlfRanheim
2010AskerHøddRandabergHamKam
2011Ullensaker/KisaBærumNotoddenTromsdalen
2012ElverumKristiansundVard HaugesundFollo
2013BærumAltaNest-SotraTromsdalen
2014JervLevangerÅsaneFollo
2015KFUMRaufossUllensaker/KisaKongsvinger
2016TromsdalenElverumFlorøArendal

2017–

Teams in bold were promoted to 1. divisjon.
Teams in italics were relegated to 2. divisjon.

SeasonGroup 1Group 2Play-off teams
2017Ham-KamNest-SotraFredrikstad (1. div), Raufoss (2. div, gr. 1), Notodden (2. div, gr. 2)
2018RaufossSkeidÅsane (1. div), Fredrikstad (2. div, gr. 1), KFUM Oslo (2. div, gr. 2)
2019Stjørdals-BlinkGrorudNotodden (1. div), Kvik Halden (2. div, gr. 1), Åsane (2. div, gr. 2)
2020FredrikstadBryneStjørdals-Blink (1. div), Skeid (2. div, gr. 1), Asker (2. div, gr. 2)
2021KongsvingerSkeidStjørdals-Blink (1. div), Hødd (2. div, gr. 1), Arendal (2. div, gr. 2)
2022MossHøddSkeid (1. div), Arendal (2. div, gr. 1), Ull/Kisa (2. div, gr. 2)
2023EgersundLevangerHødd (1. div), Lyn (2. div, gr. 1), Tromsdalen (2. div, gr. 2)

Reserve teams

Reserve teams of clubs from the two top divisions can participate in the 2. divisjon. Reserve teams of clubs from the 1. divisjon can not play in the 2. divisjon, so if a team is relegated from the 1. divisjon, the club's reserve team will be relegated to the 3. divisjon regardless of their final position in the league.[7]

Sponsorship

From 2016, 2. divisjon has its title sponsorship rights sold to PostNord.

PeriodSponsorName
1963–1990No sponsor3. divisjon
1991–20082. divisjon
2009–2011Fair Play ligaen
2012–2015Norsk TippingOddsen-ligaen
2016–PostNordPostNord-ligaen

Records and statistics

Team records

2001–2016

4 groups
RecordTeamSeason
Most points70 (Kongsvinger)2003
Fewest points3 (Stord and Skjervøy)2001 and 2003
Most goals in one season105 (Tromsdalen)2011
Fewest goals in one season18 (Langevåg)2003
Most goals conceded in one season130 (Skjervøy)2003
Fewest goals conceded in one season13 (Elverum)2016
Most goals in one game15–0 (StrindheimSalangen)
15–0 (Sparta SarpsborgFram Larvik)
2004
2005
Biggest win15–0 (StrindheimSalangen)
15–0 (Sparta SarpsborgFram Larvik)
2004
2005

2017–

2 groups
RecordTeamSeason
Most points65 (HamKam)2017
Fewest points13 (Byåsen)2017
Most goals in one season66 (Åsane)2019
Fewest goals in one season21 (Brumunddal)2017
Most goals conceded in one season69 (Odd 2 and Stabæk 2)2017 and 2018
Fewest goals conceded in one season18 (HamKam)2017
Most goals in one game5–5 (BærumOppsal)
2019
Biggest win8–0 (RaufossFollo)2017

Average attendances

SeasonAverage
2014258
2015285
2016262
2017350
2018493
2019474

Top ten most attended games

No.SeasonGameAttendance
12018FredrikstadMoss10 413
22019FredrikstadByåsen7 912
32002FredrikstadKvik Halden7 013
42018FredrikstadAsker5 691
52002FredrikstadEidsvold Turn5 370
62003KongsvingerUllensaker/Kisa5 024
72010HamarkamerateneBrumunddal4 565
82019FredrikstadKvik Halden4 462
92018FredrikstadRaufoss4 291
102019FredrikstadStjørdals-Blink4 245

References

External links