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I-League 2

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I-League 2nd division
File:I-League 2nd Division Logo 2015.png
Organising bodyAll India Football Federation (AIFF)
Founded1997; 27 years ago (1997) (as NFL Second Division)
2008; 16 years ago (2008) (as I-League 2nd Division)
CountryIndia
ConfederationAFC
Number of teams9
Level on pyramid2 (currently)
3 (from 2022)
Promotion toI-League
Domestic cup(s)Durand Cup
IFA Shield
Current championsRajasthan United (1st title)
TV partners1Sports (including Facebook live streaming)
Websitei-league.org
Current: 2021

The I-League 2nd division (or Hero 2nd division for sponsorship ties with Hero MotoCorp) is an Indian men's professional football league.[1] It is currently the 2nd tier of Indian football, behind Indian Super League and I-League. It operates as a system of promotion with I-League and state leagues teams. In 2020, due to COVID-19 pandemic in India, the I-League 2nd Division format was changed into I-League Qualifiers.

The 2nd Division league was introduced for 2008 season, having been previously known as the National Football League 2nd Division. State FA's nominate teams who have finished in the top of their respective state leagues, which are later to be approved by AIFF to participate in the consequent qualifiers.

History

I-League 2nd Division was introduced during the 2008 season, with first game played on 25 March between Mohammedan Sporting and Amity United.[2]

That season saw Mohammedan, Mumbai, Vasco and Chirag United get promoted to I-League. The next season saw Pune, Shillong Lajong, Viva Kerala and Salgaocar getting promoted.

Since 2010, only top 2 teams were promoted to I-League. ONGC and HAL in that year, in 2011 Shillong Lajong and Sporting Clube de Goa, with Lajong being promoted for the second time, while in 2012 ONGC and United Sikkim were promoted for upcoming season. The 2013 season saw Rangdajied United FC and Mohammedan qualifying for I-League.

In 2014 only one team got promoted from the 2nd Division, and similarly only one team got relegated from 2013–14 season.

In 2016, again only one team was promoted from the 2nd division (Aizawl F.C.), and only one was relegated from I-League (Dempo).

Due to pandemic, usual final round format was scrapped off in 2020. It was decided that the league will be rescheduled into a new format and all non-reserve teams from the preliminary stage will automatically progress to this round. It was officially named as I-League Qualifiers.[3]

I-League Qualifiers logo

Champions

Sponsorship

From 2008 to 2011 the league was sponsored by Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) and was named the ONGC I-League 2nd Division. ONGC was also the title sponsor of the I-League. In October 2011 ONGC was dropped as a sponsor.

Period Sponsor Tournament
2008—11 ONGC ONGC I-League 2nd Division
2011—17 No Sponsor I-League 2nd Division
2017—Present Hero MotoCorp Hero I-League 2nd Division

Format

2008–15

Previously, the league was formatted as a neutral venue competition with teams split into groups in which all the groups play in one stadium each. The final round is contested in a double round-robin format, after which the top two teams get promoted to the I-League.

2015–17

The I-League core committee approved the plans for the 2015–16 I-League 2nd division matches to be played on a home and away basis. The preliminary rounds will be played as the conference system with the teams being divided into Eastern and Western conferences. Top 3 teams from each conference will qualify for the final round of the 2015–2016 season of 2nd division I-League.[4]

To widen the football map of the country and to bolster the football structure, l-League Core Committee decide to launch the 2nd division qualifier for 2016–17 season. Participants from all the state associations would be invited to take part in 2nd division league 2016–17 qualifiers. The state associations need to nominate two teams with best results, apart from the teams who would compete in Hero I-League and 2nd division league in 2015–16 season, from the state league 2015–16, to compete in the 2nd division qualifiers. The teams will fight it out amongst themselves in the zonal round followed by the final round. Eventually top two teams from the final round will get a nod to the 2nd division league 2016–17, provided that they fulfill the club licensing requirements in the due time.[5]

2017–18

The format was further altered from 2017–18 season, the league was divided in two stages: the Preliminary and the Final. The tournament will also feature reserve teams of Indian Super League clubs. In the preliminary stage, 18 teams were divided into three groups where all matches would be played on a home and away basis. The winners of each group plus the best second-placed team would qualify for the final round. However, if reserve teams of ISL clubs finish as winners or runners-up in any group, the position was passed on onto the next non-ISL team. The final round will be played at a central venue, the winners of which would be promoted to the next tier of Indian Football.[6]

2018–19

Sixteen teams were allowed to participate in this season by the league committee.[7]

Clubs

Clubs participating in 2021 I-League 2nd Division:[8]

Current clubs

Team City/State Stadium Founded Capacity
ARA FC Ahmedabad, Gujarat EKA Arena 2016 22,000
Corbett FC Rudrapur, Uttarakhand 2020
Delhi FC New Delhi, Delhi Ambedkar Stadium 1994 30,000
FC Bengaluru United Bengaluru, Karnataka Bangalore Football Stadium 2018 8,400
Kenkre FC Mumbai, Maharashtra Cooperage Ground 2000 5,000
Kerala United FC Malappuram, Kerala Malappuram District Sports Complex 1976 (rebranded in 2020) 30,000
Madan Maharaj FC Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh TT Nagar Stadium 1992 15,000
Rajasthan United FC Bhilwara, Rajasthan Rajasthan University Sports Complex 2018 6,000
Ryntih FC Shillong, Meghalaya Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium (Shillong) 1998 30,000

Source:[9]

Former clubs

Clubs participated in previous seasons of I-League 2nd Division:

Club Seasons in 2nd division league Best finish Worst finish Current league
Aizawl F.C. 2012 to 2015 Champions, 2015 Group-stage I-League
Amity United FC
AU Rajasthan FC 2019-20 R-League A Division
BEML F.C.
Bengal Mumbai FC Defunct
Bhawanipore FC Calcutta Football League
Chandni FC Defunct
Chanmari FC Mizoram Premier League
Chhinga Veng FC 2018-19 2nd in Final round, 2018-19 Mizoram Premier League
Delhi United SC DSA Senior Division
Denzong Boys FC
DSK Shivajians Defunct
Eagles F.C. Kerala Premier League
Fateh Hyderabad
FC Green Valley Assam State Premier League
FC Kerala Kerala Premier League
Garhwal FC DSA Senior Division
Gangtok Himalayan S.C. Sikkim Premier Division League
Gauhati Town Club
George Telegraph S.C. Calcutta Football League
Golden Threads FC Kerala Premier League
Guwahati FC
HAL Bangalore Super Division
Happy Entertainment
Hindustan FC DSA Senior Division
Indian Bank Recreational Club
Indian Nationals FC DSA Senior Division
JBC Bhillai Brothers
Josco FC
Kalighat Milan Sangha FC Calcutta Football League
KGF Academy Bangalore Super Division
Kohima Komets Nagaland Premier League
Langsning SC Shillong Premier League
Lonestar Kashmir FC JKFA Professional League 2021
Luangmual FC
Madhya Bharat SC
Malabar United FC
Minerva Punjab I-League
MP United FC Defunct
Mumbai Defunct
Mumbai Tigers FC Defunct
Mumbai United
New Delhi Heroes FC
North Imphal Sporting Association Manipur State League
Oil India Ltd FC
ONGC Mumbai Football League
Ozone FC Bangalore Super Division
PIFA Sports Mumbai Football League
Pride Sports FC Defunct
Pune Defunct
Rainbow AC Calcutta Football League
Rangdajied United Shillong Premier League
Rajasthan United I-League
Real Kashmir FC I-League
Royal Wahingdoh Defunct
Salgaocar Goa Professional League
Samaleswari SC
SBI Kerala Defunct
Sesa Football Academy Goa Professional League
Shillong Lajong Shillong Premier League
Simla Youngs FC
Southern Samity Calcutta Football League
South United FC Bangalore Super Division
Sudeva Moonlight I-League
Techno Aryan Calcutta Football League
Titanium FC
TRAU FC 2017-18 to 2018-19 Champions, in 2018-19 I-League
United SC Calcutta Premier Division B
United Sikkim Champions, in 2012 Sikkim Premier Division League
Vasco Goa Professional League
Viva Kerala Defunct

Previous seasons

Relegated teams (from I-League to I-League 2nd Division)

Season Clubs
2007–08 Viva Kerala, Salgaocar
2008–09 Mohammedan, Vasco
2009–10 Sporting Clube de Goa, Shillong Lajong
2010–11 JCT, ONGC
2011–12 Chirag United Kerala, HAL
2012–13 Air India, United Sikkim
2013–14 Mohammedan
2014–15 Dempo
2015–16 None[a]
2016–17 Mumbai
2017–18 None[b]
2018–19 Shillong Lajong
2019-20 None[c]
2020-21 None[d]
  1. ^ Aizawl FC were relegated, but reinstated to I-League due to withdrawal of 3 Goan clubs.[10]
  2. ^ Churchill Brothers S.C. were relegated, but reinstated to I-League after the appeal.[11]
  3. ^ Aizawl FC were relegated, but reinstated to I-League after inclusion of two I-League to Indian Super League
  4. ^ NEROCA FC were relegated,but were reinstated by AIFF after the viewing the situation of Covid-19 pandemic.[12]

Prize money

As updated on 28 February 2018[citation needed]

Purse
Champions 50 Lakhs
Runners-up 25 Lakhs
Matchday Subsidy 50 Thousand
Match winner 25 Thousand
Hero of the Match 12.5 Thousand

Winning coaches

Head coach Club Wins Winning years
India L.Nandakumar Singh Royal Wahingdoh,TRAU 2 2014, 2018–19
England Dave Booth Mumbai 1 2008
India Peter Vales Salgaocar 1 2009
India Caetano Pinho ONGC 2010
Scotland Pradyum Reddy Shillong Lajong 2011
Belgium Philippe De Ridder United Sikkim 2012-13
India Karsing Kurbah Rangdajied United 2013-14
India Hmingthana Zadeng Aizawl 2014-15
India Mauricio Afonso Dempo 2015-16
India Gift Raikhan NEROCA 2016-17
Scotland David Robertson Real Kashmir 2017-18
India Yan Law
(sacked midway)
Mohammedan SC 2019-20
India Vikrant Sharma Rajasthan United 2020-21

Top scorers

Season Top scorer Club Goals
2008 Nigeria Fredrick Okwagbe HAL 6
2009 Nigeria Badmus Babatunde Viva Kerala 6
2010 Nigeria Badmus Babatunde ONGC 4
India Joy Ferrao Vasco
2011 Nigeria Stanley Okoroigwe Techno Aryan 6
2012 Nigeria Daniel Bedemi United Sikkim 11
2013 Nigeria Badmus Babatunde Rangdajied United 8
Brazil Hudson Lima Da Silva Bhawanipore
2014 Nigeria Daniel Bedemi Bhawanipore 8
2015 India Ajay Singh Mohammedan 11
2015–16 Nigeria Felix Chidi Odili Dempo 7
India Atinder Mani Lonestar Kashmir
2016–17 Nigeria Odafa Okolie Southern Samity 9
Nigeria Felix Chidi Odili NEROCA
2017–18 Brazil Robert de Souza Ribiero Ozone 10
2018–19 Ghana Phillip Adjah Mohammedan 10
Nigeria Princewill Emeka TRAU
2019-20 India Syed Shoaib Ahmed ARA 7
Nigeria Ekombong Victor Philip Garhwal
2021-22 India Anwar Ali jr Delhi FC 4

References

  1. ^ "Hero I-League Qualifiers". www.the-aiff.com. Retrieved 4 September 2021.
  2. ^ I-League 2nd Division 2016-17 kolkatafootball.com. Retrieved 6 August 2021
  3. ^ "Hero I-League Qualifier 2020 to get underway on October 8 | Hero I-League". Retrieved 8 October 2020.
  4. ^ Abhishek Jain (26 August 2015). "Change in format for I-League 2nd division". Archived from the original on 27 August 2015. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
  5. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 21 September 2015. Retrieved 4 September 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. ^ "AIFF LEAGUE COMMITTEE MEETS AT FOOTBALL HOUSE". 19 February 2018. Archived from the original on 19 February 2018. Retrieved 19 February 2018.
  7. ^ "LEAGUE COMMITTEE MEETS AT AIFF HQ IN NEW DELHI". AIFF. 7 December 2018. Archived from the original on 9 December 2018. Retrieved 8 December 2018.
  8. ^ "Hero Second Division". www.the-aiff.com. Retrieved 4 September 2021.
  9. ^ "I-League Qualifiers: FCBU, Kerala United among 10 teams picked by AIFF". Khel Now. 30 August 2021. Retrieved 4 September 2021.
  10. ^ "I-League 2016/17: Aizawl FC reinstated after getting relegated last season, Salgaocar FC opt out". sportskeeda.com. 26 September 2016. Archived from the original on 17 August 2018. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  11. ^ "AIFF reinstates Churchill Brothers in I-League". 20 September 2018. Archived from the original on 18 November 2019. Retrieved 21 September 2018.
  12. ^ "AIFF likely to keep relegation on hold in I-League". The Times of India. 29 April 2021. Archived from the original on 6 May 2021. Retrieved 20 July 2021.