DateRHome v Away-
05/11 18:30 34 [2] Basel v Lugano [6] 2-0
05/11 16:15 34 [9] FC Vaduz v Young Boys [1] 0-2
05/09 14:00 33 [5] Lucerne v Servette [3] 3-0
05/09 14:00 33 [8] St Gallen v FC Sion [10] 0-3
05/09 14:00 33 [6] Lausanne Sports v FC Zurich [7] 2-2
05/08 18:30 33 [1] Young Boys v Basel [2] 2-0
05/08 16:15 33 [4] Lugano v FC Vaduz [9] 0-2
05/02 14:00 32 [10] FC Sion v Lausanne Sports [6] 1-1
05/02 14:00 32 [3] Servette v Young Boys [1] 2-1
05/02 14:00 32 [8] FC Zurich v Lugano [4] 3-0
05/01 18:30 32 [2] Basel v St Gallen [7] 1-0
05/01 16:15 32 [9] FC Vaduz v Lucerne [6] 1-2
04/25 14:00 31 [1] Young Boys v FC Sion [10] 2-1
04/25 14:00 31 [3] Lugano v Servette [5] 0-1
04/25 14:00 31 [7] Lucerne v FC Zurich [8] 3-1
04/24 18:30 31 [5] Lausanne Sports v Basel [2] 3-3
04/24 16:15 31 [8] St Gallen v FC Vaduz [9] 1-0
04/22 18:30 30 [7] FC Zurich v Young Boys [1] 1-2
04/22 16:15 30 [4] Servette v FC Sion [10] 3-5
04/21 18:30 30 [5] Lugano v St Gallen [7] 2-0
04/21 18:30 30 [9] FC Vaduz v Basel [2] 1-1
04/21 16:15 30 [8] Lucerne v Lausanne Sports [4] 1-0
04/18 14:00 29 [4] Basel v Servette [2] 5-0
04/18 14:00 29 [5] Lausanne Sports v FC Vaduz [9] 2-1
04/18 14:00 29 [1] Young Boys v Lugano [3] 3-0
04/17 18:30 29 [7] St Gallen v Lucerne [8] 0-0
04/17 16:15 29 [10] FC Sion v FC Zurich [6] 2-2
04/11 14:00 28 [6] FC Zurich v Servette [4] 1-2
04/11 14:00 28 [1] Young Boys v St Gallen [7] 2-0
04/11 14:00 28 [9] FC Vaduz v FC Sion [10] 3-0

Wikipedia - Swiss Super League

The Super League (known as the Credit Suisse Super League for sponsorship reasons) is a Swiss professional league in the top tier of the Swiss football league system and has been played in its current format since the 2003–04 season. As of March 2024, the Swiss Super League is ranked 12th in Europe according to UEFA's ranking of league coefficients, which is based upon Swiss team performances in European competitions. The 2023–24 season will be the 127th season of the Swiss top-flight, making it the longest continuously running top-flight national league.

History

Previous names
Years German French Italian
1897 Coupe Ruinart (unofficial)
1898–1929 Serie A
1930–1931 1. Liga 1e Ligue Prima Lega
1931–1933 Nationalliga Ligue Nationale Lega Nazionale
1933–1934 Challenge National
1934–1944 Nationalliga Ligue Nationale Lega Nazionale
1944–2003 Nationalliga A Ligue Nationale A Lega Nazionale A
2003–present Super League
axpo Super League (2003–2012)
Raiffeisen Super League (2012–2021)
Credit Suisse Super League (2021–present)

Serie A era

Anglo-American Club, winners of the first championship organized by the Swiss Football Association.

The Swiss Football Association was founded in 1895, but were initially unable to organize an annual competition, citing the teams' travel costs. The first unofficial championship, competed for the Ruinart Cup, was organized by Genevan newspaper La Suisse sportive as a response in 1897. It was mainly contested by teams from the French-speaking area, with the exception of FC Zürich and Grasshopper Club Zürich, the latter of which eventually won the tournament. The inaugural official championship was therefore organized for the following season, in 1898–99, and won by Anglo-American Club against Old Boys Basel. It was, however, only competed by Swiss-German teams (with the exception of a team from Neuchâtel) until 1900, due to a dispute about playing on Sundays.

Teams from the canton of Zürich continued to dominate the league until 1907–08, with Grasshoppers winning a further three, FC Winterthur winning two, and FC Zürich winning one title. Other champions from that time included Servette, St. Gallen, and Young Boys, who subsequently also won three in a row from 1908–1911. Over the next decade, FC Aarau, Montriond LS (now Lausanne-Sport), SC Brühl, and Cantonal Neuchâtel FC each won their first title as nobody managed to monopolize the league. During the 1920s and 1930s, championships were achieved almost exclusively by modern Super League regulars, namely Grasshoppers, Servette, Zürich, Young Boys, Lausanne-Sport, and FC Lugano. FC Bern was the exception in 1923; however, their championship was denied after the use of an unauthorized player.

Nationalliga era

The league was reformed into the Nationalliga in 1931 and initially changed from three regional groups to two groups with 9 teams each. The league composition thereafter varied on several occasions, ranging from 12 to 16 teams competing in a single group. Contrary to its neighboring countries, national football was not suspended during World War II due to Switzerland's neutrality, but the post-war years nevertheless brought change. The 1944–45 season saw the separation of the league into the Nationalliga A and B, with the winner of the former declared Swiss champion. The 1946–47, 1947–48, 1952–53, and 1953–54 seasons saw further maiden victories achieved by FC Biel-Bienne, AC Bellinzona, FC Basel, and FC La-Chaux-de-Fonds, respectively. In 1954, broadcasting rights were sold to SRG SSR for the first time, with the company initially being restricted in showing games on TV. For the 1956–57 season, jersey numbers were declared mandatory, with Young Boys initiating an unprecedented streak of four titles the same season.

The 1966–67 season first saw the emergence of Basel as a dominant team, as they won 7 of the following 14 seasons. As shirt sponsors first appeared by 1976, the SRG SSR refused to broadcast teams that wore advertisements on their kits. As a result, the broadcaster and the league reached a compromise, where the former would only show sponsors in reports lasting a maximum of 6 minutes, and teams would be obligated to wear neutral jerseys for longer appearances. The 1980s and 1990s saw Grasshoppers dominate and Neuchâtel Xamax, FC Luzern, and FC Sion win their first titles in 1986–87, 1988–89, and 1991–92. In 1985, the number of foreigners on a team was increased from one to two, promptly leading to a new transfer record of 1.3 million francs with Servette acquiring Mats Magnusson. In 1992–93 Aarau won the championship the first time in 79 years, while St. Gallen earned their first title in 97 years at the turn of the millennium.

Super League era

The rebranding of the Nationalliga A into the Super League occurred in 2003, when the league was restructured from 12 to 10 teams for the 2003–04 season, simplifying the format by removing the relegation playoff round. A return to 12 teams was discussed on multiple occasions in 2009 and 2018, but ultimately rejected, among others due to reservations about the early relegation battle.

This new era initially proved to be one of domination for Basel, as 11 of the first 14 seasons were won by them, including a record-breaking streak of 8 championships between 2009 and 2017. After a change in leadership in 2017, however, they were dethroned by Young Boys, who won the next four straight championships.

Format Change

In April 2022, another proposal by the SFL committee to increase the league size to 12 was announced. The proposal includes three stages: an initial round-robin qualifying stage with all 12 teams (22 rounds); an intermediary stage, with two groups (1st-6th placed in the Championship and 7-12th placed in the Qualification Group) of six teams each (10 rounds); the format of the third and final playoff phase is still to be determined. Despite pushback from fans and a general negative response from club officials, the proposal to increase the league size as well as the proposed format change were approved by the general assembly of the Swiss Football League on 20 May 2022.

The details of the final playoff stage was also finalized:

  • The first and second placed teams of the Championship Group will play a best of three Championship Final. The first placed team has home advantage in the first and third game.
  • The 3rd-6th placed teams of the Championship Group and the 1st-4th placed teams of the Qualification Group (eight teams total) will play a three round playoff for the remaining spots in international championships. The playoff will be carried out according to the European model, with home and away games except in the final match. Teams are seeded according to their placement.
  • The 5th placed team of the Qualification Group will play a relegation playoff against the second placed team of the Challenge League. The last placed team is relegated directly.

The new format will be implemented for the 2023–24 season, while the transitional 2022–23 season will have only the last placed team playing a relegation playoff against the 3rd place of the Challenge League. A change of format for the Swiss Challenge League is not yet clear.

In October 2022, following heavy fan protests, reigning champions FC Zürich officially submitted a request to repeal the decision to introduce the play-off modus. Instead they propose to use the system used in the Scottish Premiership. An according fan petition gathered 18,000 signatures (including national team star Breel Embolo) in the first day of its publication and Super League heavy-weights BSC Young Boys officially supported the motion immediately. This triggered a renewed vote by the general assembly.

On 11 November 2022, the new proposal to instead use the "Scottish Model" was approved by the general assembly of the Swiss Football League. By the time of the vote, the petition opposing the play-off system had gathered over 60,000 signatures. The increased number of teams was not up for a re-vote, though. The new format is as follows:

  • In a first phase all twelve teams play each other three times each, for a total of 33 matchdays.
  • Following that, the league is split into two groups of six each, one "Championship Group" and one "Relegation Group".
    • Each team will play every other team in their group one time (five matches each), for a total of 38 matchdays.
    • The Championship Group will play for the title of Swiss Football Champion and qualification to European championships.
    • The Relegation Group will play against relegation (last place) and qualification to the relegation play-off (second-to-last place).
  • Points won in the first phase are carried over to the second phase.

At the beginning of each season, the Swiss Football Association 'predicts' the likely positions of each club in order to produce a fixture schedule that ensures the best possible chance of all clubs playing each other twice at home and twice away. This is known as the league 'seeding' and is based on clubs' performance in the previous season. If the clubs do not finish in the half where they are predicted to finish, then anomalies can be created in the fixture list. Clubs sometimes play another three times at home and once away (or vice versa), or a club can end up playing 20 home (or away) games in a season

These "Scottish Model" format changes were implemented for the 2023-24 Swiss Super League season, alongside the expansion to 12 teams. Due to the expansion, the 2022-23 season had no automatic relegation spots and two promotion spots in the Swiss Challenge League. There was, however, a promotion/relegation playoff between 3rd in the Challenge League and 12th in the Super League.

**Switzerland Super League: Tournament Description**

The Switzerland Super League, the premier professional football league in Switzerland, showcases the nation's top clubs in a thrilling competition that captivates fans and players alike. Established in 1897, the league has a rich history and has evolved into a highly competitive tournament featuring some of the best talent in European football.

The Super League operates on a traditional league format, where each of the participating teams competes in a round-robin schedule, facing each opponent twice—once at home and once away. With a total of 10 teams vying for the coveted championship title, the league promises intense rivalries, dramatic matches, and unforgettable moments throughout the season.

Clubs such as FC Basel, BSC Young Boys, and FC Zurich have historically dominated the league, each bringing their unique style of play and passionate fan bases. The tournament not only serves as a platform for local talent but also attracts international players, enhancing the league's competitiveness and appeal.

The season typically runs from late summer to spring, culminating in a thrilling finale that determines the league champion. The top teams earn qualification for prestigious European competitions, such as the UEFA Champions League and the UEFA Europa League, providing an additional incentive for clubs to perform at their best.

In addition to the on-field action, the Switzerland Super League is known for its vibrant atmosphere, with fans creating a lively environment in stadiums across the country. The league also emphasizes community engagement and youth development, ensuring a bright future for Swiss football.

Whether you're a die-hard supporter or a casual observer, the Switzerland Super League offers an exhilarating experience filled with passion, skill, and the beautiful game at its finest. Join us as we celebrate the spirit of football in Switzerland!