Date | R | Home v Away | - |
---|---|---|---|
12/15 14:30 | 17 | [8] Nyiregyhaza v Ferencvarosi TC [2] | 0-1 |
12/15 12:00 | 17 | [6] Ujpest v Kecskemeti TE [12] | 1-1 |
12/14 18:30 | 17 | [1] Puskas Academy v Paksi [4] | 3-1 |
12/14 16:00 | 17 | [9] Gyor Eto FC v Diosgyori VTK [5] | 3-4 |
12/14 13:30 | 17 | [10] Zalaegerszegi TE v Debreceni VSC [11] | 2-1 |
12/14 11:00 | 17 | [5] MTK Budapest v Fehervar FC [7] | 3-2 |
12/08 19:00 | 16 | [2] Ferencvarosi TC v Zalaegerszegi TE [10] | 1-0 |
12/08 16:00 | 16 | [11] Debreceni VSC v Ujpest [6] | 1-2 |
12/08 13:45 | 16 | [7] Fehervar FC v Nyiregyhaza [8] | 2-0 |
12/07 18:15 | 16 | [5] Paksi v MTK Budapest [4] | 4-2 |
12/07 15:45 | 16 | [1] Puskas Academy v Gyor Eto FC [9] | 0-3 |
12/07 12:30 | 16 | [12] Kecskemeti TE v Diosgyori VTK [4] | 0-0 |
12/05 19:00 | 1 | [11] Debreceni VSC v Ferencvarosi TC [2] | 5-4 |
12/04 18:00 | 5 | [9] Gyor Eto FC v Puskas Academy [1] | 0-2 |
12/03 18:00 | 5 | [5] MTK Budapest v Paksi [4] | 3-1 |
12/01 18:30 | 15 | [6] Ujpest v Ferencvarosi TC [2] | 0-0 |
12/01 16:00 | 15 | [10] Zalaegerszegi TE v Fehervar FC [8] | 0-1 |
11/30 15:30 | 15 | [5] Diosgyori VTK v Debreceni VSC [11] | 3-1 |
11/30 13:30 | 15 | [9] Gyor Eto FC v Kecskemeti TE [12] | 1-2 |
11/30 11:30 | 15 | [4] MTK Budapest v Puskas Academy [2] | 0-1 |
11/29 19:00 | 15 | [8] Nyiregyhaza v Paksi [3] | 4-2 |
11/24 16:45 | 14 | [11] Debreceni VSC v Kecskemeti TE [12] | 2-2 |
11/24 14:30 | 14 | [1] Ferencvarosi TC v Diosgyori VTK [6] | 3-3 |
11/24 12:00 | 14 | [3] Paksi v Zalaegerszegi TE [10] | 2-2 |
11/23 17:30 | 14 | [7] Fehervar FC v Ujpest [6] | 0-1 |
11/23 15:00 | 14 | [4] MTK Budapest v Gyor Eto FC [9] | 2-2 |
11/23 12:30 | 14 | [8] Nyiregyhaza v Puskas Academy [3] | 0-3 |
11/10 17:00 | 13 | [12] Kecskemeti TE v Ferencvarosi TC [1] | 0-1 |
11/10 14:30 | 13 | [6] Diosgyori VTK v Fehervar FC [7] | 1-0 |
11/09 17:30 | 13 | [6] Ujpest v Paksi [3] | 0-0 |
The Nemzeti Bajnokság (Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈnɛmzɛti ˈbɒjnokʃaːɡ], lit. 'national championship'), also known as NB I, is the top flight of Hungarian football league system. The league is officially named OTP Bank Liga after its title sponsor, OTP Bank.
Twelve teams compete in the league, playing each other three times, once at home, once away, and the third match is played at the stadium that the last match was not played at. At the end of the season, the top team enters the qualification rounds for the UEFA Champions League, while the runner-up and the third place, together with the winner of the Magyar Kupa enter the UEFA Europa Conference League qualification rounds. The bottom two clubs are relegated to Nemzeti Bajnokság II, the second-level league, to be replaced by the winner and the runner up of the NB2.
The first championship in 1901 was contested by BTC, MUE, FTC, Műegyetemi AFC, and Budapesti SC, with the latter winning the championship. Although the two first championships were won by Budapesti TC, the other titles that decade were won by FTC and MTK.
In the 1910s and 1920s, the championship was dominated by Ferencváros and MTK.
In the 1930s, the rivalry between Ferencváros and MTK Budapest expanded with another club, Újpest FC (at that time not part of Budapest). One of the most iconic figures of the 1930s Hungarian football was Újpest's Zsengellér who managed to top goalscorer three times in a row in the 1930s. Ferencváros's Sárosi and MTK Budapest's Cseh and Újpest's Zsengellér were the embodiment of the rivalry of the three clubs from Budapest, named Budapest derby.
In the 1940s, Csepel could win its first title which was followed by two other titles in 1942 and 1943. During the World War II, there were no interruptions in the Hungarian league. Due to the expansion of the territories of the country, new clubs, from the new cities Hungary had, could re-join the league such as Nagyvárad and Kolozsvár, which are both nowadays in Romania. The second half of the 1940s was dominated by Újpest by winning the championship in 1945, 1946, and 1947. The 1940s also saw Nagyvárad winning the league, marking the only time the Hungarian league was won by a team that nowadays is not from a city located in Hungary (Nagyvárad, also known as Oradea is nowadays located in Romania.).
In the 1950s, the dominance of Ferencváros and MTK weakened by the emergence of Honvéd with players such as Puskás, Bozsik, Czibor, and Budai. Later these players played in the final of the 1954 FIFA World Cup. In the 1950s, Honvéd could win the championship five times. During the early 1950s, Honvéd players formed the backbone of the legendary Mighty Magyars. In 1956, the Hungarian league was suspended due to the Hungarian Revolution. The league was led by Honvéd after 21 rounds but the championship has never been finished. In the first season (1955–56) of the European Cup, MTK Budapest reached the quarter-finals while in the 1957–58 season Vasas Budapest played in the semi-finals of the European Cup.
Vasas won four titles in the 1960s (1960–61, 1961–62, 1965, and 1966).
Újpest dominated the 1970s, winning seven titles.
In 1982, Győr won the championship becoming the first non-Budapest team who could win the Hungarian league (except Nagyvárad during the World War II). Győr could repeat the triumph in the following year in 1983. However, the 1980s was dominated by Honvéd who celebrated its second heyday during the 1980s.
Due to the collapse of communism, Hungarian football clubs lost the support of the state. Therefore, many clubs were faced with financial problems the effects of which are still present in Hungarian football. However, the 1990s were still dominated by the 'traditional' clubs of the championships such as Ferencváros, MTK and Újpest. Ferencváros always finished in the top three, except for the 1993–94 season, when they finished 4th. The financial problems affected the performance of the clubs outside the Hungarian League as well. Hungarian clubs could not compete with their European counterparts. Moreover, the Bosman ruling also had a deep impact on the Hungarian League. Since big European clubs could invest loads of money into football, clubs from the Eastern Bloc were restricted to employing only home nationals.
In the 2000s, new clubs became champions, mainly from rural Hungary. In 2002, Bozsik's Zalaegerszeg won the championship. Debrecen won the Hungarian league in 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, and 2010. In 2008 MTK could win.
The dominance of the rural clubs continued in the 2010s. In 2011 and 2015, Székesfehérvár's Videoton won the championship. In 2013, Győr and in 2014, Debrecen could win the Hungarian League title.