Blau-Weiss Linz must face GAK on Saturday to qualify for the first league. A relegation would be the fair solution, experts say. The point-sharing has cost GAK two points and a star. Blau-Weiss Linz has earned a last chance under coach Michael Köllner before their own audience and has worked hard. In the Qualigruppe, his team has won all four home games and shares with GAK and Ried the best points average from round 23. Even the Grazers were once in the autumn relegated last. Who cannot win over these potential comeback stories has never loved football. Bitter - regardless of who - will be all the same. Georg Sohler: Fortunately, the point-sharing is only a matter for the football archives at the end of the season. Currently, it applies and then it must be the one who has the fewest points according to the rules. I would like to emphasize once again how unfair the system is in truth. Let's take WSG Tirol as an example: The Watteners had 31 points at the end of the Grunddurchgang, on TSV Hartberg only two points were missing - you go with 16 (!) points ahead of Blau-Weiss Linz into the Finalphase and must then tremble until the penultimate matchday. Eight points ahead are quickly passed with the three-point rule and at the end it can be that you have the same number of points as the relegated team. Two things I put next to each other in conclusion: It does not happen too often that coaches of small clubs are hired abroad. The usual case is that they are fired due to failure. I put forward the thesis: With Gerald Scheiblehner, the Upper Austrians would have been saved long ago. And conversely, one must ask how it is possible to be stuck behind despite Ronivaldo and Shon Weissman (each ten goals). Georg Sohler: Real derbies are always a gain for a league. I can also understand the thought that one or the other would have wished GAK or WSG Tirol relegation. I think, however, that the prospect of a Vorarlberg derby would not be so bad.