List of Indian football champions

Summary

The Indian football champions are the winners of the highest league in Indian men's football, which is currently the Indian Super League.

Indian Football League (1st tier)
National Football League (1996–2007)
I-League (2007–2017)
I-League & Indian Super League (2017–2022)
Indian Super League (2022–present)
Country
India India
Founded
1996
Number of teams (from 2024–25)
13
Current Champions
Mohun Bagan SG
Most successful club
Mohun Bagan SG (6 titles)[1]

Though Indian football tournaments dates back to the eighteenth century, a proper league system was established in 1996 with the commencement of National Football League (NFL). Since its inception in the 1996–97 season, the champions of the NFL were considered as the national champions. However, after the 2006–07 season of the NFL, the league was rebranded as the I-League. Since 2007–08 season, the I-League champions were considered the national champions until 2016–17 season. Since 2017–18 season the ISL became the joint premier football league of the country along with I-League upto 2021–22 season. Since 2022–23 season ISL became the only top tier football league of the country and hence ISL champions are considered as the national champions. However, the winners of the ISL play-offs were considered as the ISL champions since its inception in 2014.

There are 12 clubs who have won either the National Football League or the I-League and 6 clubs who have won the Indian Super League since the league became the joint top division in India. JCT were the first club to have won any championship, winning the 1996–97 NFL. Mohun Bagan Super Giant are the most successful club via winning championships six times. They won the NFL thrice, I-League twice and ISL once.

History edit

The first Indian football league, the National Football League (commonly known as the NFL) was an association football league competition in India which was organised into three divisions. The Premier Division of the league was first introduced in 1996, though the country already had a long history in the sport thanks to the likes of the IFA Shield and the Federation Cup. The league though is now transformed into the I-League and continues with that name. The change was supposed to bring more popularity to Indian Football. The first league season of I-League consisted of eight teams from the NFL plus two promoted teams from the former Division Two.

The 1996–97 Indian National Football League was the first season of the NFL and ended with JCT Mills FC being crowned champions. The NFL era though saw Kolkata clubs East Bengal and Mohun Bagan had the most championships with three respectively. The I-League era is different though as most of the champions of the league have come from Goa.

Currently, the team with the most championships in I-League is Dempo who have won three championships in the league.

In 2014, a new football league named Indian Super League has started. In its first three seasons it was running without recognition from the AFC. Before 2017–18 season, ISL got recognition from Asian Football Confederation (AFC). In July 2017, it was proposed by the All India Football Federation (AIFF) that the Indian Super League champion be granted a spot in the AFC Cup, Asia's second-tier club competition.[2] On 25 July 2017, the AFC approved the AIFF's proposal. Thus, from the 2017–18 season, the Indian Super League champions were allowed to participate in the AFC Cup from the qualification stages of the competition.[2] Meanwhile, India's spot in the AFC Champions League, Asia's top club competition, was still kept by the I-League;[2] thus two leagues were parallelly running in the country. In October 2019, a roadmap for development of league in India was proposed. All stakeholders accepted the proposal where it was announced that ISL premiers would now be entitled to the AFC Champions League, starting from 2021 edition and the I-League champion will get to play the AFC Cup.[3] From 2022–23 season the AFC Cup slot from I-League has been transferred to Super Cup and ISL became the only top tier League in India.

National League Champions edit

National league champion determination
Season(s) Format
1996–2017 National Football League/I-League first placed team
2017–2022 Both I-League first placed team and Indian Super League playoffs winners
2022–present Indian Super League first placed team

National Football League (1996–2007) edit

Season Champions
(number of titles)
Runners-up Third place Winning manager Leading goalscorers
(Club)
Goals
1996–97 JCT Churchill Brothers East Bengal   Sukhwinder Singh   Bhaichung Bhutia (JCT) 14
1997–98 Mohun Bagan East Bengal Salgaocar   T. K. Chathunni   Raman Vijayan (Kochin) 10
1998–99 Salgaocar East Bengal Churchill Brothers   Shabbir Ali   Philip Mensah (Churchill Brothers) 11
1999–2000 Mohun Bagan (2) Churchill Brothers Salgaocar   Subrata Bhattacharya   Igor Shkvyrin (Mohun Bagan) 11
2000–01 East Bengal Mohun Bagan Churchill Brothers   Monoranjan Bhattacharya   José Ramirez Barreto (Mohun Bagan) 14
2001–02 Mohun Bagan (3) Churchill Brothers Vasco   Subrata Bhattacharya   Yusif Yakubu (Churchill Brothers) 18
2002–03 East Bengal (2) Salgaocar Vasco   Subhash Bhowmick   Yusif Yakubu (Churchill Brothers) 21
2003–04 East Bengal (3) Dempo Mahindra United   Subhash Bhowmick   Cristiano Júnior (East Bengal) 15
2004–05 Dempo Sporting Goa East Bengal   Armando Colaco   Dudu Omagbemi (Sporting Goa) 21
2005–06 Mahindra United East Bengal Mohun Bagan   Derrick Pereira   Ranti Martins (Dempo) 13
2006–07 Dempo (2) JCT Mahindra United   Armando Colaco   Odafa Onyeka Okolie (Churchill Brothers) 18

I-League (2007–2017) edit

Season Champions
(number of titles)
Runners-up Third place Winning manager Leading goalscorers
(Club)
Goals
2007–08 Dempo (3) Churchill Brothers JCT   Armando Colaco   Odafa Onyeka Okolie (Churchill Brothers) 22
2008–09 Churchill Brothers Mohun Bagan Sporting Goa   Zoran Đorđević   Odafa Onyeka Okolie (Churchill Brothers) 24
2009–10 Dempo (4) Churchill Brothers Pune   Armando Colaco   Odafa Onyeka Okolie (Churchill Brothers) 21
2010–11 Salgaocar (2) East Bengal Dempo   Karim Bencherifa   Ranti Martins (Dempo) 28
2011–12 Dempo (5) East Bengal Churchill Brothers   Armando Colaco   Ranti Martins (Dempo) 32
2012–13 Churchill Brothers (2) Pune East Bengal   Mariano Dias   Ranti Martins (Prayag United) 26
2013–14 Bengaluru East Bengal Salgaocar   Ashley Westwood   Cornell Glen (Shillong Lajong)
  Darryl Duffy (Salgaocar)
  Sunil Chhetri (Bengaluru)
14
2014–15 Mohun Bagan (4) Bengaluru Royal Wahingdoh   Sanjoy Sen   Ranti Martins (East Bengal) 17
2015–16 Bengaluru (2) Mohun Bagan East Bengal   Ashley Westwood   Ranti Martins (East Bengal) 12
2016–17 Aizawl Mohun Bagan East Bengal   Khalid Jamil   Aser Pierrick Dipanda (Shillong Lajong) 11

I-League and Indian Super League (2017–2022) edit

From 2017–18 season until 2021–22 season, I-League and Indian Super League shared joint top flight status in Indian Football

I-League edit

Season Champions
(number of titles)
Runners-up Third place Winning manager Leading goalscorers
(Club)
Goals
2017–18 Minerva Punjab NEROCA Mohun Bagan   Khogen Singh   Aser Pierrick Dipanda (Mohun Bagan) 13
2018–19 Chennai City East Bengal Real Kashmir   Akbar Nawas   Pedro Manzi (Chennai City)
  Willis Plaza (Churchill Brothers)
21
2019–20 Mohun Bagan (5) Not awarded[a]   Kibu Vicuña   Aser Pierrick Dipanda (Punjab) 12
2020–21 Gokulam Kerala Churchill Brothers TRAU   Vincenzo Alberto Annese   Bidyashagar Singh (TRAU) 12
2021–22 Gokulam Kerala (2) Mohammedan Sreenidi Deccan   Vincenzo Alberto Annese   Marcus Joseph (Mohammedan) 16

Indian Super League edit

Season Champions
(number of titles)
Runners-up League Winners Shield/Premiers
(number of titles)[b]
Regular season runners-up Winning manager
(Champions)
Leading goalscorers
(Club)
Goals
2017–18 Chennaiyin[c] Bengaluru Didn't exist[b]   John Gregory   Coro (Goa) 18
2018–19 Bengaluru (3) Goa   Carles Cuadrat   Coro (Goa) 16
2019–20 ATK[c] Chennaiyin Goa ATK   Antonio Lopez Habas   Roy Krishna (ATK)
  Nerijus Valskis (Chennaiyin)
  Bartholomew Ogbeche (Kerala Blasters)
15
2020–21 Mumbai City ATK Mohun Bagan Mumbai City ATK Mohun Bagan   Sergio Lobera   Igor Angulo (Goa)
  Roy Krishna (ATK Mohun Bagan)
14
2021–22 Hyderabad Kerala Blasters Jamshedpur Hyderabad   Manolo Márquez   Bartholomew Ogbeche (Hyderabad) 18
  1. ^ On 18 April 2020, All India Football Federation, the organising body of the league announced Mohun Bagan as champions and decided to cancel the remaining matches due to the COVID-19 pandemic. No team was relegated, and the remaining prize money (apart from the champion's prize money) was equally divided among the 10 teams as the remaining teams were closely placed in the league table.[4]
  2. ^ a b Since 2019–20 , the regular season table toppers i.e. Premiers are awarded with the League Winners Shield and were granted a spot in AFC Champions League group stage till 2022-23 ISL Season.
  3. ^ a b ATK won the ISL title in 2014 and 2016 and Chennaiyin won the ISL title in 2015 before 2017–18 season when the ISL got official recognition from AFC.

Indian Super League (2022–present) edit

Season Champions/League Winners Shield (number of titles)[a][5] Regular season runners-up Playoffs Winners (number of titles) Playoffs Runners-up Winning manager
(Champions)
Leading goalscorers
(Club)
Goals
2022–23 Mumbai City (2) Hyderabad ATK Mohun Bagan Bengaluru   Des Buckingham   Diego Maurício (Odisha)
  Cleiton Silva (East Bengal)
  Dimitri Petratos (ATK Mohun Bagan)
12
2023–24 Mohun Bagan SG (6)[6] Mumbai City   Antonio López Habas
  1. ^ Since 2023–24 ISL season, the regular season table toppers i.e. Premiers who are awarded with the League Winners Shield were granted a spot in AFC Champions League 2 group stage.

Total titles won edit

There are 12 clubs who have won either the National Football League or the I-League. There are also 6 clubs who have won the Indian Super League since the league became the joint top division in India.

Teams in bold will compete in the Indian Super League for the 2024–25 season.

Rank Club Winners Runners-up Winning seasons Runners-up seasons
1 Mohun Bagan 6 5 1997–98, 1999–2000, 2001–02, 2014–15, 2019–20, 2023–24 2000–01, 2008–09, 2015–16, 2016–17, 2020–21
2 Dempo 5 1 2004–05, 2006–07, 2007–08, 2009–10, 2011–12 2003–04
3 East Bengal 3 7 2000–01, 2002–03, 2003–04 1997–98, 1998–99, 2005–06, 2010–11, 2011–12, 2013–14, 2018–19
4 Bengaluru 3 2 2013–14, 2015–16, 2018–19 2014–15, 2017–18
5 Churchill Brothers 2 6 2008–09, 2012–13 1996–97, 1999–2000, 2001–02, 2007–08, 2009–10, 2020–21
6 Salgaocar 2 1 1998–99, 2010–11 2002–03
Mumbai City 2 1 2020–21, 2022–23 2023–24
7 Gokulam Kerala 2 0 2020–21, 2021–22 -
8 JCT 1 1 1996–97 2006–07
Chennaiyin 1 1 2017–18 2019–20
Hyderabad 1 1 2021–22 2022–23
9 Mahindra United 1 0 2005–06 -
Aizawl 1 0 2016–17 -
Minerva Punjab 1 0 2017–18 -
Chennai City 1 0 2018–19 -
ATK 1 0 2019–20 -
Never won Sporting Goa 0 1 2004–05
Pune 0 1 2012–13
NEROCA 0 1 2017–18
Goa 0 1 2018–19
Kerala Blasters 0 1 2021–22
Mohammedan 0 1 2021–22
  • † – Defunct clubs

By state edit

State Championships Clubs
West Bengal 10 Mohun Bagan (6), East Bengal (3), ATK (1)
Goa 9 Dempo (5), Churchill Brothers (2), Salgaocar (2)
Karnataka 3 Bengaluru (3)
Maharashtra 3 Mumbai City (2), Mahindra United (1)
Punjab 2 JCT (1), Minerva Punjab (1)
Tamil Nadu 2 Chennaiyin (1), Chennai City (1)
Kerala 2 Gokulam Kerala (2)
Mizoram 1 Aizawl (1)
Telangana 1 Hyderabad (1)

By city/town edit

City / Town State Championships Clubs
Kolkata West Bengal 10 Mohun Bagan SG (6), East Bengal (3), ATK (1)
Panaji Goa 5 Dempo (5)
Bangalore Karnataka 3 Bengaluru (3)
Mumbai Maharashtra 3 Mumbai City (2), Mahindra United (1)
Margao Goa 2 Churchill Brothers (2)
Vasco da Gama Goa 2 Salgaocar (2)
Kozhikode Kerala 2 Gokulam Kerala (2)
Aizawl Mizoram 1 Aizawl (1)
Chennai Tamil Nadu 1 Chennaiyin (1)
Coimbatore Tamil Nadu 1 Chennai City (1)
Hoshiarpur Punjab 1 JCT (1)
Ludhiana Punjab 1 Minerva Punjab (1)
Hyderabad Telangana 1 Hyderabad (1)

National Cup winners edit

Federation Cup (1977–2017) edit

Year Winners Runners-up
1977–78 ITI (Indian Telephone Industries) Mohun Bagan
1978–79 Mohun Bagan and East Bengal - (joint winners)
1979–80 BSF Mafatlal Mills
1980–81 Mohun Bagan and East Bengal - (joint winners)
1981–82 Mohun Bagan Mohammedan
1982–83 Mohun Bagan Mafatlal Mills
1983–84 Mohammedan Mohun Bagan
1984–85 Mohammedan East Bengal
1985 East Bengal Mohun Bagan
1986–87 Mohun Bagan East Bengal
1987–88 Mohun Bagan Salgaocar
1988–89 Salgaocar BSF
1989–90 Salgaocar Mohammedan Sporting
1990 Kerala Police Salgaocar
1991 Kerala Police Mahindra & Mahindra
1992 Mohun Bagan East Bengal
1993 Mohun Bagan Mahindra & Mahindra
1994 Mohun Bagan Salgaocar
1995 JCT East Bengal
1995–96 JCT Mills East Bengal
1996 East Bengal Dempo
1997 Salgaocar East Bengal
1998 Mohun Bagan East Bengal
1999 Not held
2000
2001 Mohun Bagan Dempo
2002 Not held
2003 Mahindra United Mohammedan Sporting
2004 Dempo Mohun Bagan
2005 Mahindra United Sporting Goa
2006 Mohun Bagan Sporting Goa
2007 East Bengal Mahindra United
2008 Mohun Bagan Dempo
2009–10 East Bengal Shillong Lajong
2010 East Bengal Mohun Bagan
2011 Salgaocar East Bengal
2012 East Bengal Dempo
2013–14 Churchill Brothers Sporting Goa
2014–15 Bengaluru Dempo
2015–16 Mohun Bagan Aizawl
2016–17 Bengaluru Mohun Bagan

Super Cup (2018–present) edit

Season Winner Runner-up
2018 Bengaluru East Bengal
2019 Goa Chennaiyin
2020–2022 Tournament suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic and Indian National Team's international fixtures
2023 Odisha Bengaluru
2024 East Bengal Odisha

Total Cups won edit

Club Winner Winning Years Runners-up Runners-up Years
Mohun Bagan SG 14 1978*, 1980*, 1981, 1982, 1986, 1987
1992, 1993, 1994, 1998
2001, 2006, 2008, 2015–16
6 1977, 1983, 1985, 2004, 2010, 2016–17
East Bengal 9 1978*, 1980*, 1985, 1996, 2007, 2009–10, 2010, 2012, 2024 9 1984, 1986, 1992, 1995-96, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2011, 2018
Salgaocar 4 1988, 1989, 1997, 2011 3 1987, 1990, 1994
Bengaluru 3 2014–15, 2016–17, 2018 1 2023
Mohammedan 2 1983, 1984 3 1981, 1989, 2003
Mahindra United 2 2003, 2005 3 1991, 1993, 2007
JCT Mills 2 1995, 1995–96 0 -
Kerala Police 2 1990, 1991[7] 0 -
Dempo 1 2004 5 1996#, 2001, 2008, 2012, 2014–15
BSF (Border Security Force) 1 1979 1 1988
Odisha 1 2023 1 2024
ITI (Indian Telephone Industries) 1 1977 0 -
Churchill Brothers 1 2013–14 0 -
Goa 1 2019 0 -
Sporting Clube de Goa 0 - 3 2005, 2006, 2013–14
Shillong Lajong 0 - 1 2009–10
Aizawl 0 - 1 2015–16
Chennaiyin 0 - 1 2019
  • * : shared
  • # :There were two federation cups in 1996

Multiple trophy wins edit

The Double edit

Club Seasons Titles
Mohun Bagan 2001–02 National Football League, Federation Cup
Dempo 2004–05 National Football League, Federation Cup
Mahindra United 2005–06 National Football League, Federation Cup

ISL Double edit

Club Seasons Titles
Mumbai City 2020–21 ISL Premiership, ISL Championship

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "REPORT: MOHUN BAGAN SUPER GIANT SEE OFF MUMBAI CITY FC TO WIN LEAGUE SHIELD". www.indiansuperleague.com.
  2. ^ a b c "ISL gets official recognition from AFC, becomes second national football league". FirstPost. 28 June 2017. Archived from the original on 2 January 2018. Retrieved 13 August 2017.
  3. ^ "India clubs agree to work together on league roadmap". AFC. 14 October 2019. Archived from the original on 26 May 2020. Retrieved 8 December 2019.
  4. ^ "League Committee sends its recommendations to the AIFF Executive Committee | Hero I-League". Archived from the original on 27 June 2021. Retrieved 18 April 2020.
  5. ^ "ISL Champions badge awarded to ISL Shield winners; Mumbai City FC set to wear the badge in the 2023-24 season". www.sportskeeda.com.
  6. ^ "MOHUN BAGAN SG ARE ISL CHAMPIONS: THE GLORY, THE RECORDS AND THE HEROES". www.indiansuperleague.com.
  7. ^ Federation Cup. the-aiff.com (archived)

External links edit

  • India – List of National Champions at the RSSSF

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