TFF 1. Lig: Difference between revisions
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!style="text-align:center"|[[2014–15 TFF First League|2014–15]] |
!style="text-align:center"|[[2014–15 TFF First League|2014–15]] |
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|bgcolor=cfffaf|'''[[Kayserispor]]''' |
|bgcolor=cfffaf|'''[[Kayserispor]]''' |
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|bgcolor=cfffaf|'''[[Osmanlıspor]]''' |
|bgcolor=cfffaf|'''[[Ankaraspor|Osmanlıspor]]''' |
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|[[Alanyaspor]] |
|[[Alanyaspor]] |
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|[[Adana Demirspor]] |
|[[Adana Demirspor]] |
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|bgcolor=cfffaf|'''[[Gençlerbirliği]]''' |
|bgcolor=cfffaf|'''[[Gençlerbirliği]]''' |
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|bgcolor=d9d9d9|[[Hatayspor]] |
|bgcolor=d9d9d9|[[Hatayspor]] |
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|[[Osmanlıspor]] |
|[[Ankaraspor|Osmanlıspor]] |
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|bgcolor=ffff99|'''[[Gaziantep F.K.|Gazişehir Gaziantep]]''' |
|bgcolor=ffff99|'''[[Gaziantep F.K.|Gazişehir Gaziantep]]''' |
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|[[Adana Demirspor]] |
|[[Adana Demirspor]] |
Revision as of 10:31, 3 June 2022
Organising body | Turkish Football Federation (TFF) |
---|---|
Founded | 1963; 58 years ago |
Country | Turkey |
Confederation | UEFA |
Number of teams | 19 |
Level on pyramid | 2 |
Promotion to | Süper Lig |
Relegation to | 2. Lig |
Domestic cup(s) | Turkish Cup |
International cup(s) | UEFA Europa League (via winning Turkish Cup) |
Current champions | Ankaragücü (3rd title) (2021–22) |
Most championships | Samsunspor (6 titles) |
TV partners | beIN Sports, TRT |
Website | TFF First League |
Current: 2021–22 TFF First League |
The TFF 1. Lig is the second level of the Turkish football league system. The league was founded in 2001 as the Turkish Second League Category A after the reorganization of the Second Football League, which was the second level of the Turkish league system between 1963 and 2001. The league was called Türk Telekom Lig A in the 2006–2007 season, and was renamed to TFF First League prior to the 2007–08 season. As of 16 January 2008 the league was renamed as Bank Asya 1. Lig.[1][2] In April 2012 Bank Asya withdrew as sponsor of the league.[3] During the 2012-2016 seasons the league was known under the terms of a sponsorship deal as the PTT 1. Lig.[4] Nowadays the league is called the TFF First League once again.[5]
Before the 2005–06 season, the top three teams were promoted to Süper Lig and the bottom three teams were relegated to the Turkish Second League Category B. Since the 2005–06 season through 2008–09, the top two teams are directly promoted to the Süper Lig, the teams finishing 3rd through 6th competed in a play-off. The third-placed team played a match with the sixth-placed team, while the fourth-placed team played against the fifth-placed team. The winners of both matches then played against each other to decide the third team that was promoted. In 2009–10 the third team was determined by play-off group games, in which the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th teams of normal season played in a one-game league system in a neutral venue. In 2010–11 play-off status changed again and elimination match system came back but this time on a two match (home and away) basis.
Current clubs
Winners and promoted clubs
Bold | Promoted to Süper Lig |
Direct promotion | |
Play-off winners | |
Play-off finalists |
Season | Champions | Runners-up | 3rd Club |
---|---|---|---|
2001–02 | Altay | Elazığspor | Adanaspor |
2002–03 | Konyaspor | Çaykur Rizespor | Akçaabat Sebatspor |
2003–04 | Sakaryaspor | Kayserispor [6] | Ankaraspor |
2004–05 | Sivasspor | Manisaspor | Kayseri Erciyesspor |
Play-off era
Promoted clubs
1 Third teams were play-off winner.
Relegated clubs
See also
- Süper Lig
- TFF Second League
- TFF Third League
- Turkish Regional Amateur League
- Turkish Amateur Football Leagues
- Turkish Cup
References
- ^ (in Turkish) Türk Telekom Lig A
- ^ (in Turkish) TFF 1. Lig becomes Bank Asya 1. Lig
- ^ (in Turkish) Bank Asya withdraws as sponsor
- ^ "1.Lig'in yeni adı PTT 1. Lig oldu - Spor Toto 1. Lig Haber Detay Sayfası TFF". www.tff.org.
- ^ (in Turkish) TFF 1. Lig
- ^ Kayserispor switched names with Kayseri Erciyesspor before the start of 2004–05 Süper Lig.
External links
- (in Turkish) Turkish Football Federation