Northern Ireland Football League Cup

This article is about the tournament in Northern Ireland. For the equivalent tournament in the Republic of Ireland, see League of Ireland Cup.
Northern Ireland Football League Cup
Founded 1987
Region Northern Ireland
Number of teams 40
Current champions Cliftonville
(2015–16)
Most successful club(s) Linfield (9 wins)
2015–16

The Northern Ireland Football League Cup (known as the JBE League Cup for sponsorship purposes)[1] and previously the Irish League Cup, is a national football knock-out cup competition in Northern Ireland open to the 40 Northern Ireland Football League clubs. It is the third-highest rated competition in domestic Northern Irish football after the NIFL Premiership and Irish Cup. It should not be confused with the Irish League Floodlit Cup which ran from 1987–88 to 1997–98 initially under the sponsorship of Budweiser and latterly Coca-Cola. Unlike the Irish Cup, the competition does not have a berth for UEFA Europa League qualification, however the winners qualify for the next season's all-Ireland Setanta Sports Cup. The cup is operated by the Northern Ireland Football League, who in 2013 took over the administration from the Irish Football Association (IFA) for the 2013–14 season onwards, after which the cup became known as the Northern Ireland Football League (NIFL) Cup.[2]

Currently sponsored by JBE Mechanical Electrical, the competition's previous sponsors include WASP Solutions (2013–14 and 2014–15),[3] Irn Bru (2011–12 and 2012–13),[4] Co-operative Insurance (2001–02 to 2010–11), Coca-Cola (1998–99 to 2000–01), Wilkinson Sword (1991–92 to 1997–98), and Roadferry Freight (1986–87 to 1990–91).

Cliftonville are the current holders, after they defeated Ards 3–0 in the 2016 final.[5] In doing so, they won the competition for a fifth time overall and became the first club ever to reach four consecutive League Cup finals, and the first club ever to win four consecutive Cups.

Format

Unlike the Irish Cup, the League Cup is restricted to the 40 Northern Ireland Football League clubs. It is contested by the 12 NIFL Premiership clubs, and the 28 clubs in NIFL Championship 1 and NIFL Championship 2. The competition uses a knock-out system. Each round consists of a single match. In the event that the scores are level, extra time is played, and if the teams are still level, there is a penalty shoot-out.

The top 16 ranked clubs from the previous season receive byes into the second round, which includes the 12 Premiership clubs, and the top four ranked clubs from Championship 1. Of the remaining 24 Championship clubs, 16 enter in the first round, with the remaining eight randomly drawn to receive byes into the second round. The second round draw is seeded so that the top 16 clubs from the previous season avoid each other. The second round is the only round of the competition in which seeding is used. From there on, the competition has a third round, quarter-finals, semi-finals and a neutral venue final.

History

The competition began with 32 clubs in a straight knock-out format in February 1987, and included teams from the Irish League B Division until 1997–98. From 1998–99 until 2007–08, only senior (Irish League and Irish Premier League) teams competed, but the competition was opened up to the 17 Championship clubs in 2008–09, and again in 2010–11 to include clubs from Championship 2, after the Championship 2 League Cup was abolished. From 2001–02 until 2007–08, a group stage followed by a knock-out system was used instead of the straight knock-out system, and for two seasons (2008–09 and 2009–10) two-legged home and away aggregate ties were used up until the quarter-finals, instead of single matches.

When it was first introduced in the 1980s, it was one of a number of senior cup competitions run by the Irish League, originally to compensate for the relatively few league fixtures (traditionally 22 or 26), but also as vehicles for sponsorship revenue. The League Cup would have been considered less prestigious than the long-standing Gold Cup and Ulster Cup. Over time however, these other cup competitions were phased out as the number of Irish League fixtures increased and the public appetite for additional competitions reduced, leaving the League Cup as the only cup competition run by the Northern Ireland Football League and now established as the third most prestigious competition in Northern Ireland after the national top-flight and national cup. The actual trophy presented to the winners is the old City Cup, which was another senior Irish League competition that was discontinued in 1975.

The first final took place on 9 May 1987 at Glentoran's ground, the Oval, and was contested by Linfield and Crusaders. Linfield became the inaugural winners of the cup, defeating Crusaders 2–1. Linfield have gone on to win the competition nine times overall – more than any other club. They have appeared in twelve different finals, which is a record they share with rivals Glentoran. Linfield and Cliftonville have both won the competition in three consecutive seasons, which is the record for the most consecutive wins. The most common final has been the Big Two Derby which has occurred seven times, with the last meeting taking place in 2005. Linfield have won on four occasions and Glentoran on three. The 1988–89 final, played between the two sides at the Oval on 11 November 1988 was won courtesy of a goal by Glentoran goalkeeper Alan Patterson, via a kick from his own penalty area. This was the first time that a goalkeeper had ever scored in a British football final.[6]

Thirteen different clubs have reached the final, but only ten clubs have won the cup and only five of them have done so more than once. Ballymena United, Larne and Newry City are the three clubs to have played in the final but never won. In 2011, Lisburn Distillery became the tenth different club to win the cup, in what was their first and to date only ever appearance in the final. In 2008–09, Championship side Portadown became the first intermediate club and the first club from outside the top flight to reach the final. They subsequently became the first intermediate club and the first club from outside the top flight to win the cup, after defeating Premiership side Newry City 1–0. That was also the first final to be played outside Belfast, with Mourneview Park, Lurgan hosting the match. It was attended by UEFA President Michel Platini and Northern Ireland manager Nigel Worthington who was in Northern Ireland for the FIFA meeting held in Newcastle.

The biggest winning margin ever recorded in a final is 4–0, which has occurred twice: in 1999–2000 when Linfield defeated Coleraine, and in 2012–13 when Cliftonville defeated Crusaders. On four occasions, the same two clubs have met in consecutive finals. Linfield and Glentoran have done so three times: 1997–98 & 1998–99, 2001–02 & 2002–03 and 2004–05 & 2005–06, while Cliftonville and Crusaders repeated the feat in 2012–13 and 2013–14. Both clubs agreed to toss a coin for home advantage in the 2013–14 final, with Cliftonville winning the toss. As a result, Solitude was chosen as the final venue for the first time in the competition's history.[7]

In the 2015–16 competition, Cliftonville defeated Ards 3–0 in the final to become the first club ever to reach four consecutive League Cup finals, and the first club ever to win four consecutive Cups.[8] Ards were appearing in the final for the third time overall, and became only the second club from outside the top flight ever to reach the League Cup final, emulating Portadown (then in the second tier) in 2008–09. Ards' previous final appearance had also been against Cliftonville, when they won the Cup 2–0 on penalties after a 0–0 draw in 1994–95. Ards also set a record for the longest gap between final appearances of 21 years between 1994–95 and 2015–16. This broke the previous record of 19 years between Newry City's appearances in 1989–90 and 2008–09.

Media coverage

The final was initially broadcast as highlights on UTV throughout the 1990s and early 2000s. Live coverage of the final first began on the BBC in 2005, and continued until Sky acquired the rights to show the 2013 and 2014 finals on Sky Sports as part of a deal to cover Northern Ireland international matches. Following the 2014 final, it returned to the BBC in 2015 after Sky ceased their coverage of Irish League football.[9]

Records

Final results

* Match level after 90 minutes. Decided in extra time.
Match level after 90 minutes and extra time. Decided by a penalty shootout.


Season Date Winner
(number of wins)
Score Runner-up Venue Attendance
1986–87 9 May 1987 Linfield (1) 2 1 Crusaders The Oval, Belfast
1987–88 28 November 1987 Coleraine (1) 1 0 * Portadown
1988–89 30 November 1988 Glentoran (1) 2 1 Linfield 10,000
1989–90 19 December 1989 Glenavon (1) 3 1 Newry Town Windsor Park, Belfast 1,000
1990–91 13 March 1991 Glentoran (2) 2 0 Ards 4,000
1991–92 14 April 1992 Linfield (2) 3 0 Larne The Oval, Belfast
1992–93 20 April 1993 Bangor (1) 3 0 Coleraine Windsor Park, Belfast 2,000
1993–94 26 April 1994 Linfield (3) 2 0 Coleraine The Oval, Belfast 4,500
1994–95 25 April 1995 Ards (1) 0 0 (2 0 p) Cliftonville Windsor Park, Belfast 3,500
1995–96 19 September 1995 Portadown (1) 2 1 Crusaders 2,600
1996–97 15 October 1996 Crusaders (1) 1 0 Glentoran 3,000
1997–98 9 September 1997 Linfield (4) 1 0 Glentoran
1998–99 4 May 1999 Linfield (5) 2 1 Glentoran 6,500
1999–2000 18 April 2000 Linfield (6) 4 0 Coleraine 2,963
2000–01 24 April 2001 Glentoran (3) 1 0 Glenavon 2,515
2001–02 27 November 2001 Linfield (7) 3 1 Glentoran 6,200
2002–03 3 December 2002 Glentoran (4) 2 0 Linfield 5,700
2003–04 11 November 2003 Cliftonville (1) 1 1 (5 4 p) Larne 3,000
2004–05 9 November 2004 Glentoran (5) 2 1 * Linfield 6,000
2005–06 10 December 2005 Linfield (8) 3 0 Glentoran 6,845
2006–07 2 December 2006 Glentoran (6) 1 0 Cliftonville 6,910
2007–08 2 February 2008 Linfield (9) 3 2 Crusaders 5,200
2008–09 28 February 2009 Portadown (2) 1 0 Newry City Mourneview Park, Lurgan 4,000
2009–10 27 March 2010 Glentoran (7) 2 2 (4 1 p) Coleraine Windsor Park, Belfast
2010–11 2 April 2011 Lisburn Distillery (1) 2 1 Portadown Mourneview Park, Lurgan
2011–12 28 January 2012 Crusaders (2) 1 0 Coleraine Ballymena Showgrounds, Ballymena
2012–13 26 January 2013 Cliftonville (2) 4 0 Crusaders Windsor Park, Belfast 4,948
2013–14 25 January 2014 Cliftonville (3) 0 0 (3 2 p) Crusaders Solitude, Belfast 4,300
2014–15 24 January 2015 Cliftonville (4) 3 2 Ballymena United Windsor Park, Belfast
2015–16 13 February 2016 Cliftonville (5) 3 0 Ards Solitude, Belfast

Performance by club

Club Winners Runners-up Winning Years
Linfield 9 3 1986–87, 1991–92, 1993–94, 1997–98, 1998–99, 1999–00, 2001–02, 2005–06, 2007–08
Glentoran 7 5 1988–89, 1990–91, 2000–01, 2002–03, 2004–05, 2006–07, 2009–10
Cliftonville 5 2 2003–04, 2012–13, 2013–14, 2014–15, 2015–16
Crusaders 2 5 1996–97, 2011–12
Portadown 2 2 1995–96, 2008–09
Coleraine 1 5 1987–88
Ards 1 2 1994–95
Glenavon 1 1 1989–90
Bangor 1 0 1992–93
Lisburn Distillery 1 0 2010–11
Larne 0 2
Newry City 0 2
Ballymena United 0 1

Total cups won by town or city

Ten different clubs have won the cup, and the overwhelming majority of cups have been won by clubs from Belfast.

Town or city Cups won Clubs
Belfast 23 Linfield (9), Glentoran (7), Cliftonville (5), Crusaders (2)
Portadown 2 Portadown (2)
Coleraine 1 Coleraine (1)
Newtownards 1 Ards (1)
Lurgan 1 Glenavon (1)
Bangor 1 Bangor (1)
Ballyskeagh 1 Lisburn Distillery (1)

Final venues

There have been 30 League Cup finals contested during the competition's history so far, played at five different grounds. Windsor Park has been the most common venue, having hosted 20 finals.

Venue Finals hosted First final Last final
Windsor Park 20 1989–90 2014–15
The Oval 5 1986–87 1993–94
Mourneview Park 2 2008–09 2010–11
Solitude 2 2013–14 2015–16
Ballymena Showgrounds 1 2011–12 2011–12

References

  1. "JBE TO SPONSOR LEAGUE CUP". nifootballleague.com. 6 August 2015. Retrieved 18 August 2015.
  2. "NORTHERN IRELAND FOOTBALL LEAGUE". NIFL Premiership.
  3. "NI FOOTBALL LEAGUE CUP SPONSORSHIP ANNOUNCEMENT". nifootballleague.com. 20 January 2014. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  4. Irn Bru unveiled as new League Cup sponsor
  5. "League Cup final: Cliftonville beat Ards 3-0 at Solitude". BBC Sport. 13 February 2016. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  6. Glentoran Football Club – The Pride of East Belfast – Legends
  7. "Cliftonville get home advantage for League Cup final". BBC Sport. 28 December 2013. Retrieved 28 December 2013.
  8. "League Cup final: Cliftonville beat Ards 3-0 at Solitude". BBC Sport. 13 February 2016. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  9. "Sky Sports drop Irish League". belfasttelegraph.co.uk. Belfast Telegraph. Retrieved 30 May 2015.

External links

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