1964–65 Bundesliga

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The team that finished first in the second season of the German men's Bundesliga (football), and thus became German football champions in the 1964/65 season, was 1860 München. The Austrian football champions were, in the Nationalliga 1965/66, Admira Wien.

Final Table

The final table of the 1st Bundesliga, Season 1964/65

                             P.  w   l   d   Goals   Pkte.
 1. Werder Bremen           30  15  11  04   54:29  41:19
 2. 1.FC Köln (M)           30  14  10  06   66:45  38:22
 3. Borussia Dortmund       30  15  06  09   67:48  36:24
 4. TSV München 1860 (P)    30  14  07  09   70:50  35:25
 5. SV Hannover 96 (N)      30  13  07  10   48:42  33:27
 6. 1.FC Nürnberg           30  11  10  09   44:38  32:28
 7. Meidericher SV          30  12  08  10   46:48  32:28
 8. Eintracht Frankfurt     30  11  07  12   50:58  29:31
 9. Eintracht Braunschweig  30  10  08  12   42:47  28:32
10. Borussia Neunkirchen (N)30  09  09  12   44:48  27:33
11. Hamburger SV            30  11  05  14   46:56  27:33
12. VfB Stuttgart           30  09  08  13   46:50  26:34
13. 1.FC Kaiserslautern     30  11  03  16   41:53  25:35
14. Hertha BSC Berlin *     30  07  11  12   40:62  25:35
15. Karlsruher SC           30  09  06  15   47:62  24:36
16. FC Schalke 04           30  07  08  15   45:60  22:38
German football champions 1965 : Werder Bremen
Relegated                     : Hertha BSC Berlin (Lizenzentzug)
Promoted                    : Tasmania 1900 Berlin, Bayern München,
                                Borussia Mönchengladbach

Top Goal scorer              : Rudi Brunnenmeier (TSV München 1860) 24 Tore



The final table of the Bundesliga (football): (Lists until 1973/74 only include Germany, later tables include Austria)

1963/64 | 1964/65 | 1965/66 | 1966/67 | 1967/68 | 1968/69 | 1969/70 | 1970/71 | 1971/72 | 1972/73 | 1973/74 | 1974/75 | 1975/76 | 1976/77 | 1977/78 | 1978/79 | 1979/80 | 1980/81 | 1981/82 | 1982/83 | 1983/84 | 1984/85 | 1985/86 | 1986/87 | 1987/88 | 1988/89 | 1989/90 | 1990/91 | 1991/92 | 1992/93 | 1993/94 | 1994/95 | 1995/96 | 1996/97 | 1997/98 | 1998/99 | 1999/2000 | 2000/01 | 2001/02 | 2002/03

| 2003/04