3. deild karla

3. deild karla (e. Men's Third division) is a football league in Iceland.[1] It is the fourth level in the Icelandic football league system. The league was reformed into a 10-team double round-robin tournament for the 2013 season, with the introduction of the newly established 5th level of the Icelandic football league system, 4. deild karla.[2]

3. deild karla
Founded1997 (1997)
1982 (as 4. deild karla)
Country Iceland
ConfederationUEFA
Number of teams12
Level on pyramid4
Promotion to2. deild karla
Relegation to4. deild karla
Domestic cup(s)Bikarkeppni karla
League Cup
Current championsDalvík/Reynir (1 title)
Current: 2022

Previous formats

Ever since 1982, the first season of 3. deild karla (then named 4. deild karla), and throughout the 2012 season, it was the lowest division in the league system, and as a consequence did not have a fixed number of teams. All who wished to enter and could fill certain requirements were allowed to compete, and between each season some teams quit and some new teams came in, sometimes after having previously quit. There were various formats used during the 31 seasons when Division 3 was the lowest league, the latest version using group stages and then eight-team playoffs to decide two promoted teams.[3]

Current format

Since 2013, 3. deild karla has been a nationwide league.[2] From 2013 to 2018 ten teams played in the league. But the number of teams was then increased to 12, and 2019 was the first season with 12 teams.[4] Each team plays each other once home and once away, giving a total of 22 games per team. The two highest-placed teams are promoted to 2. deild karla, while the two lowest teams are relegated to 4. deild karla.[1]

2013 season

In 2013 the league consisted of the two teams relegated from 2. deild karla the year before, the six teams that reached the playoffs in the previous 3. deild but did not gain promotion to 2. deild, and two teams who were decided in a playoff between the four clubs in 3rd place in their groups.

2023 Clubs

TeamLocationStadium2022 season
Árbær Reykjavík (Árbær) Fylkisvöllur 3rd
Augnablik Kópavogur Kópavogsvöllur 6th
Ellíði Reykjavík (Árbær) Würth völlurinn 8th
Hvíti riddarinn Mosfellsbær Varmárvöllur 9th
ÍH Hafnarfjörður Skessan 10th
Kári Akranes Akraneshöllin 5th
KFK TBA TBA 4. deild, 2nd
KV Reykjavík (Vesturbær) KV Park 2. deild, 12th
Magni Grenivík Grenivíkurvöllur 7th
Sindri Höfn Sindravellir 2. deild, 11th
Vængir Júpiters TBA TBA 4. deild, 1st
Víðir Garður Nesfisk-völlurinn 4th

Past winners

Promoted teams shown in green

Year Winners Runners-up 3rd Place 4th Place
1997KSTindastóllAftureldingErnir Í.
1998SindriLéttirHvötLeiknir F.
1999AftureldingKÍBNjarðvíkHuginn/Höttur
2000HaukarNökkviÞróttur N.Fjölnir
2001HKVölsungurNjarðvík1KFS
2002KFSFjölnirFjarðabyggðLeiknir F.
2003Vikingur Ó.Leiknir R.NúmiHöttur
2004HuginnFjarðabyggðSkallagrímurReynir S.
2005Reynir S.SindriGróttaLeiknir F.
2006HötturMagniÍH2Kári
20073GróttaHamarHvötVíðir
2008Hamrarnir/Vinir4BÍ/BolungarvíkKVSkallagrímur
2009VölsungurKVHvíti riddarinnÝmir
2010TindastóllDalvík/ReynirÁrborg5KB
2011KVKFRKBMagni
20126SindriÆgirLeiknir F.Magni
2013FjarðabyggðHuginnKFRVíðir
2014HötturLeiknir F.BerserkirVíðir
2015MagniVölsungurReynir S.Einherji
2016TindastóllVíðirEinherjiKári
2017KáriÞróttur V.KFGVængir Júpiters
2018Dalvík/ReynirKFGKFVængir Júpiters
2019KórdrengirKFKVVængir Júpiters
2020KVReynir S.KFGAugnablik
2021Höttur/HuginnÆgirKFGSindri
2022SindriDalvík/ReynirKFGVíðir
2023Reynir SandgerðiKormákur/HvötÁrbærVíðir

1 - Njarðvík promoted due to the merger of the 1. deild clubs Leiftur and Dalvík.
2 - ÍH promoted due to expansion of 1. deild karla to 12 teams.
3 - Tindastóll also promoted due to expansion of Úrvalsdeild karla and 2. deild karla to 12 teams.
4 - Upon promotion Hamrarnir/Vinir merged with the relegated ÍH to form ÍH/HV
5 - Árborg promoted as Tindastóll merged with 2. deild karla side Hvöt, creating a new team called Tindastóll/Hvöt, playing in the 2. deild karla.
6 - Teams that finished in 3rd-10th place (Leiknir F, Magni, Huginn, Kári, ÍH, Víðir, Augnablik and Grundarfjörður) were the only teams remaining for the 2013 season, a ten-team league consisting of those 8 teams plus Fjarðabyggð and KFR who came down from 2. deild karla. The remaining teams joined a new lowest division that launched in 2013.

References

  1. "Regluggerd Ksi" (PDF). Ksi.is. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2016-06-12.
  2. Hafliði Breiðfjörð (11 February 2012). "Búið að samþykkja fjölgun deilda á Íslandsmótinu". Fótbolti.net (in Icelandic). Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  3. Sigurðsson, Víðir (2012). Íslensk knattspyrna 2012 [Icelandic football 2012] (in Icelandic) (1st ed.).
  4. Elvar Geir Magnússon (10 February 2018). "Fjölgað í 3. deild á næsta ári - Þrjú lið fara upp úr 4. deild". Fótbolti.net (in Icelandic). Retrieved 8 May 2021.
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