Indonesia Soccer Championship

Indonesia Soccer Championship
Country  Indonesia
Confederation AFC
Founded 2016 (Inaugural)
Divisions ISC A
ISC B
Number of teams 18
Level on pyramid 1-2
Website http://www.indonesiansc.com

Indonesia Soccer Championship (Indonesian: Kejuaraan Sepak Bola Indonesia, also known as Torabika Soccer Championship for sponsorship reasons) is a professional soccer competition in Indonesia, replacing the temporarily-suspended Indonesia Super League.[1]

History

Origins

Further information: Indonesia Super League

After the ISL was stopped and the PSSI's management under La Nyalla Mattalitti was frozen by Minister for Youth and Sports Affairs Imam Nahrawi on 17 April 2015, FIFA then froze the membership of the PSSI, resulting in the suspension of the Indonesian Football Association. Tournaments were made to replace the competition, starting with the President's Cup (Indonesian: Piala Presiden) 2015 where Persib Bandung came out as champions, until Bhayangkara Cup (Indonesian: Piala Bhayangkara) closed the tournament games following the ISC 2016. The 2015–16 seasons of the Indonesia Super League (ISL) was originally going to be held starting from either 24 or 25 of October 2015 and would end on August 2016.[2] However, various constraints faced thwarted the plan, including the use of the name "Indonesia Super League" which was the property of PSSI. Finally PT Liga and Indonesian football clubs agreed not to use the "ISL" name for the upcoming long-term tournaments.[3]

Establishment

PT GTS held a meeting with all of the ex-ISL and Premier Division clubs on Friday, 26 February 2016, and agreed to form ISC 2016 that would contain 18 ex-ISL clubs and 59 from the Premier Division.[4] The competition was aprroved by the government.[5] using the name Torabika Soccer Championship, ISC officially launched in Hotel Mulia in Senayan, Jakarta, on Monday, 18 April 2016.[6]

Participating clubs

Indonesia Soccer Championship A

Previous 2015 Indonesia Super League clubs automatically qualify for the Indonesia Soccer Championship A. A total of 18 clubs will participate in the competition.

Club[7] Regency or City Province Stadium Capacity
Arema Cronus Malang Regency East Java Kanjuruhan Stadium 40,000
Bali United Gianyar Regency Bali Kapten I Wayan Dipta 25,000
Bhayangkara Surabaya United Surabaya East Java Delta Stadium 35.000
Barito Putera Banjar Regency South Kalimantan May 17th Stadium 15,000
Gresik United Gresik Regency East Java Petrokimia Stadium 25,000
Madura United Pamekasan Regency East Java Gelora Bangkalan Stadium 15,000
Mitra Kukar Kutai Kartanegara Regency East Kalimantan Aji Imbut Stadium 40,000
Persela Lamongan Lamongan Regency East Java Surajaya Stadium 25,000
Perseru Serui Yapen Islands Regency Papua Marora Stadium 10,000
Persib Bandung Bandung West Java Jalak Harupat Soreang Stadium 40,000
Persiba Balikpapan Balikpapan East Kalimantan Parikesit Stadium 35,000
Persija Jakarta Jakarta DKI Jakarta Gelora Bung Karno 88,083
Persipura Jayapura Jayapura Papua Mandala Stadium 30,000
PS TNI Bandung West Java Siliwangi Stadium 25,000
PSM Makassar Makassar South Sulawesi Andi Mattalatta Stadium 15,000
Pusamania Borneo Samarinda East Kalimantan Segiri Samarinda Stadium 25,000
Semen Padang Padang West Sumatra Haji Agus Salim Stadium 28,000
Sriwijaya Palembang South Sumatera Gelora Sriwijaya 40,000

References

  1. "RESMI: QNB League 2015 Dihentikan". Koran Sindo. 10 April 2015. (Indonesian)
  2. "ISL 2015/2016 Resmi Digelar 24 atau 25 Oktober". Koran Sindo. 13 August 2015. (Indonesian)
  3. "PT Liga Indonesia & Klub Sepakat Lepas Nama Indonesia Super League". Goal.com. 16 January 2016. (Indonesian)
  4. "Indonesia Soccer Championship Dimulai 15 April 2016". Liga Indonesia. 26 February 2016. (Indonesian)
  5. "Menpora Restui PT Liga Gelar Indonesia Super Competition". Liputan6.com. 21 January 2016. (Indonesian)
  6. "Dipastikan Bergulir, Indonesia Soccer Championship Berganti Nama". Republika. 18 April 2016. (Indonesian)
  7. "Info Lengkap Torabika Soccer Championship". FourFourTwo. Retrieved 26 April 2016. (Indonesian)

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, May 07, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.