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Indian Super League

The Indian Super League (ISL), officially known as the Hero Indian Super League for sponsorship reasons,[2] is an Indian professional league for men's association football clubs. At the top of the Indian football league system, it is the country's primary football competition, organised by the All India Football Federation (AIFF) and their commercial partners Football Sports Development Limited (FSDL).[3][4]

Indian Super League
Organising bodiesAIFF and FSDL
Founded21 October 2013; 9 years ago (2013-10-21)
CountryIndia
ConfederationAFC
Number of teams11
Level on pyramid1
Domestic cup(s)Durand Cup
League cup(s)Super Cup[1]
International cup(s)
Current championsHyderabad (1st title)
(2021–22)
Current premiersJamshedpur (1st title)
(2021–22)
Most championshipsATK (3 titles)
Most premiershipsGoa
Mumbai City
Jamshedpur
(1 title)
Most appearancesMandar Rao Dessai (134)
Top goalscorerBartholomew Ogbeche (60)
TV partners
Websiteindiansuperleague.com
Current: 2022–23 Indian Super League

The league currently comprises 11 clubs. Each season of the tournament generally runs from October to March. During the league stage of the competition, each club plays against all the other clubs in a round-robin style. At the end of the league stage, the team with the most points gets declared the Premiers and presented with a trophy named League Winners Shield, along with the runners up to play in the play-offs, while the next best four clubs qualify to play qualifying playoffs to join the top two in the playoffs. The season then culminates with the ISL Final to determine the Champions who are presented with the ISL Trophy.

The competition was founded on 21 October 2013 with the aim of growing the sport of football in India and increasing its exposure in the country. The league began in October 2014 with eight teams. During its first three seasons, the competition operated without official recognition from the Asian Football Confederation (AFC), the governing body for the sport in Asia. The competition was also structured along the same lines as the Indian Premier League, the country's premier Twenty20 franchise-based cricket competition. Each season lasted just 3 months, from October to December, and matches were held daily. However, before the 2017–18 season, the league expanded to ten teams, expanded its schedule to six months, and earned recognition from the AFC.

The league stage winners participates directly in the AFC Champions League and the ISL Final winner participates in the AFC Cup qualifying-playoffs.[5]

Since the league's inaugural season, a total of five clubs have been crowned as the Champions: ATK (3), Chennaiyin (2), Bengaluru (1), Mumbai City (1), and Hyderabad (1). Since its introduction of League Winners Shield in 2019–20 season, Goa, Mumbai City and Jamshedpur have won the League Winners Shield once.

History

Origins

Football in India has existed in many forms since the game first arrived in the country during the 19th century with the first nationwide club competition, the Durand Cup, beginning in 1888.[6][7] Despite India's early history in the game, the country's first nationwide football league did not begin until the semi-professional National Football League commenced in 1996.[8] Before the creation of the National Football League, most clubs played in state leagues or select nationwide tournaments.[8]

In 2006, the All India Football Federation, the governing body for the sport in India, reformatted the league as the I-League in an effort to professionalise the game.[9] However, during the following seasons, the league suffered from a lack of popularity due to poor marketing.[10]

In September 2006, the AIFF signed a 10-year television and media contract with Zee Sports. The deal would make Zee broadcast the National Football League, later the I-League, and other tournaments organised by the AIFF and selected India's international matches.[11] However, in October 2010, the deal between the AIFF and Zee Sports was terminated after differences between both parties related to payment and marketing of football in India.[12]

On 9 December 2010, it was announced that the AIFF had signed a new 15-year, ₹700 crore deal with Reliance Industries and the International Management Group.[13]

Foundation

The Indian Super League was officially launched on 21 October 2013 by IMGReliance, Star Sports, and the All India Football Federation.[14] The competition was announced to take place from January 2014 to March 2014, but was postponed shortly thereafter to September 2014.[15]

At first, it was announced that bidding for the eight Indian Super League teams would be completed before the end of 2013 and there were already high interest from big corporations, Indian Premier League teams, Bollywood stars, and other consortium.[16] However, due to the rescheduling of the league, the bidding was moved to 3 March 2014.[17] It was also revealed around this time that bidders would need to comply with financial requirements as well as promotion for football developments within their area.[18] Finally, in early April 2014, the winning bidders were announced.[19] The selected cities/states were Bangalore, Delhi, Goa, Guwahati, Kochi, Kolkata, Mumbai, and Pune.[19] Former India cricket player Sachin Tendulkar, along with PVP Ventures, won the bidding for the Kochi franchise. Another former Indian cricket player, Sourav Ganguly, along with a group of Indian businessmen and La Liga side Atlético Madrid, won the bid for the Kolkata franchise.[19] Meanwhile, Bollywood stars John Abraham, Ranbir Kapoor, and Salman Khan won the bid for the Guwahati, Mumbai, and Pune franchises respectively. Bangalore and Delhi were won by companies while Goa was won by a partnership between Videocon, Dattaraj Salgaocar, and I-League side Dempo.[19]

The first team to be launched officially was the Kolkata franchise as Atlético de Kolkata on 7 May 2014.[20] On 7 July 2014, the team announced the first head coach in league history, Antonio López Habas.[21] The next day, Kolkata also announced the first official marquee signing in the Indian Super League, UEFA Champions League winner Luis García.[22]

Eventually, all eight teams were revealed as Atlético de Kolkata, Bangalore Titans, Delhi Dynamos, Goa, Kerala Blasters, Mumbai City, NorthEast United and Pune City.[23][24] However, on 21 August 2014, it was announced that due to Bangalore's owners dropping out, Chennai would be given a franchise instead.[25] The team was eventually named Chennaiyin FC.[26] At the same time, the original marquee players were Luis García, Elano, Alessandro Del Piero, Robert Pires, David James, Freddie Ljungberg, Joan Capdevila, and David Trezeguet.[23]

The inaugural season began on 12 October 2014 at the Salt Lake Stadium when Atlético de Kolkata defeated Mumbai City, 3–0. The first goal was scored by Fikru Teferra.[27] The first Indian to score in the league was Balwant Singh for Chennaiyin FC.

Recognition and expansion (2014–2021)

 
The first-ever ISL match being played at Vivekananda Yuba Bharati Krirangan.

For the first three seasons of the Indian Super League, the competition operated without official recognition from the governing body for football in Asia, the Asian Football Confederation (AFC), and FIFA, the world governing body.[28] In October 2014, then FIFA General Secretary Jérôme Valcke stated that the world governing body only recognised the ISL as a tournament, not a league. The official league for football in India remained the I-League.[29] With no recognition from the AFC, the teams also couldn't participate in Asian club competitions, the AFC Champions League or the AFC Cup.[29]

During the first three seasons of the Indian Super League, attendances across the competition had exceeded the expectations of pundits and of the domestic I-League mainly due to the timings at which the matches took place especially on working days and needs no mention sheer promotion.[30] Television ratings were also strong for the competition, which is expected after better commentary, better telecasting, pre-match and post-match shows, as well as hourly reminders in various channels and social media interaction.[30] However, despite the general success off the pitch, the competition drew criticism in other areas. Due to the need to accommodate the ISL into the Indian football calendar, the I-League season was shortened and went from having an October to May schedule to January to May schedule.[31] Indian players would play for both an ISL team and an I-League club while the I-League continued to suffer from lack of visibility compared to the ISL.[32] India's then head coach Stephen Constantine had called for both the ISL and I-League to either run together at the same time or merge.[33]

For the first three seasons Atlético de Kolkata emerged as the dominant team by finishing in the top four every year, and winning the Final twice (2014 and 2016) by defeating Kerala Blasters both times.[34][35][36][37]

On 18 May 2016, IMG–Reliance, along with the AIFF and I-League representatives met at a meeting in Mumbai. During the meeting, it was proposed that starting from the 2017–18 season, the Indian Super League become the top-tier football league in India while the I-League be reformed as League One and be relegated to the second division. The competition would also expand by two teams and continue to operate without promotion and relegation, as stated earlier due to the 15 crore attraction of the FSDL each year, but run for 5–7 months instead of 2–3.[38] The idea was not entertained by the I-League representatives.[38]

In June 2017, IMG–Reliance, the AIFF and the I-League representatives met with the AFC in Kuala Lumpur in order to find a new way forward for Indian football.[39] The AFC were against allowing the ISL as the main league in India, while I-League clubs East Bengal and Mohun Bagan wanted a complete merger of the ISL and I-League.[39] A couple weeks later, the AIFF proposed that both Indian Super League and I-League run simultaneously on a short–term basis with the I-League champion retaining the AFC Champions League qualifying stage spot and the AFC Cup qualifying stage spot going to the ISL champion.[40] The proposal from the AIFF was officially approved by the AFC on 25 July 2017, with the ISL replacing the domestic cup competition, the Federation Cup, which was a true knockout cup competition[41] It was also stated that the competition would now run for five months starting with the 2017–18 season and the competition would expand to 10 teams.[40]

A month before, on 11 May 2017, the ISL organisers started to accept bids for 2–3 new franchises for the 2017–18 season.[42] The bids would be for ten cities, namely Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Cuttack, Durgapur, Hyderabad, Jamshedpur, Kolkata, Ranchi, Siliguri and Thiruvananthapuram.[42] It was also clarified that if Kolkata were to win at least one bid that the new Kolkata side would have to play away from the city for only two seasons.[42] A month later, on 12 June, it was announced that I-League side, Bengaluru, and Tata Steel (for Jamshedpur) had won the bidding for the new teams.[43]

On 22 September 2017, the competition announced officially that it would be expanding its season by two months, thus making the league last for five months instead of three. The competition would also go from having matches played daily to being played between Wednesday and Sunday.[44]

The next year, before the 2018–19 season, it was reported that Reliance Industries had bought out IMG's shares in the Football Sports Development. IMG realising that the robust business model will soon be exposed, pulled out, thus giving Reliance Industries 65% ownership while Star Sports retains 35%.[45] In this season, Bengaluru had achieved the feat of being the first club to wint he final after topping the league standings. Following the 2018–19 season, Pune City was disbanded in 2019. The club's franchise rights were then transferred to an ownership group which founded Hyderabad FC.[46] In August 2019, Delhi Dynamos became the first ISL club to relocate when it moved from Delhi to Bhubaneswar and rebranded as Odisha FC.[47]

On 14 October 2019, the AFC held a summit in Kuala Lumpur, chaired by the AFC Secretary General Windsor John, which involved key stakeholders from the AIFF, the FSDL, the ISL and the I-League clubs, and other major stakeholders to propose a new roadmap to facilitate the football league system in India.[48] Based on the roadmap, that was prepared by the AFC and the AIFF at the summit and approved by the AFC Executive Committee on 26 October in Da Nang, in 2019–20 season Indian Super League will attain the country's top-tier league status and run parallelly with I-League, allowing the Indian Super League premiers to play in AFC Champions League and the I-League champions to play in AFC Cup.[49] In addition, starting with the 2022–23 and 2023–2024 season, I-League will lose the top-tier league status and Indian Super League will become the sole top division, wherein the champion of the I-League will stand a chance to be promoted to the Indian Super League with no participation fee, basis fulfilling sporting merit and the national club licensing criteria to be set out by the AIFF. But There won't be relegation from Indian Super League at this time. In its recommendation for 2024–25, it was agreed to fully implement promotion and relegation in between the two leagues, and abolition of two parallel leagues.[50] In accordance to the general league system, the club finishing at the top of the table was crowned as the season's premier, and Goa became the first to achieve the title in 2019–20 season.[51]

Another key recommendation by the AFC in the roadmap was to open a pathway for two I-League clubs’ entry into Indian Super League by the end of the 2020-21 season, subject to the criteria being fulfilled.[48] Therefore, efforts were taken early on by the organisers to include the two historic clubs– Mohun Bagan and East Bengal into the league, which succeeded in the following season. Before the start of the 2020–21 season, the owners of ATK merged its brand with the football section of Mohun Bagan to become ATK Mohun Bagan on 1 June 2020 and entered the league. On 27 September 2020, after securing investment from Shree Cement, East Bengal joined the league as an expansion team, thus becoming 11th team in the league.[52]

Sole top-tier league status (2022–present)

Following the Indian football roadmap, Indian Super League become the sole top-tier league in the country from 2022–23 season.[49]

Competition format

Regular season

The regular season of Indian Super League runs from October to late February or early March (since the 2017–18 season).[53] The competition consists of 22 rounds that follows a double round-robin format, with each club playing the others twice, once at their home stadium and once at their opponents' stadium, for a total of 20 matches each.[54] Teams receive three points for a win, one point for a draw, and no points for a loss. Teams are ranked by total points, with the highest-ranked club at the end of the regular season being crowned ISL Premiers and awarded the League Winners Shield (introduced during 2019–20 season).[55]

At the completion of the regular season, the team with the most points gets declared the Premiers and presented with a trophy named League Winners Shield, along with the runners-up to play in the playoffs. At the same time, the following best four clubs qualify to play qualifying playoffs to join the top two in the playoffs. The position of each team is determined by the highest number of points accumulated during the regular season. If two or more teams are level on points, the following criteria are applied in order until one of the teams can be determined as the higher ranked:[56]

  1. Highest number of points accumulated in matches between the teams concerned;
  2. Highest goal difference in matches between the teams concerned;
  3. Highest number of goals scored in matches between the teams concerned;
  4. Highest goal difference
  5. Highest number of goals scored
  6. Lowest number of red cards accumulated;
  7. Lowest number of yellow cards accumulated;
  8. Toss of a coin.[56]

The Indian Super League had approved the 3+1 rule to help local players actively participate in the league. The rule is a part of the ISL guidelines from the eighth edition 2021–22. The new rule allowed 7 Indian players to be a part of the starting XI.[57]

Playoffs

The top six clubs at the conclusion of the regular season progress to the ISL playoffs. The playoffs culminate with the ISL final, where the winner is presented with the ISL Cup. In the qualifiers, the third-through-sixth ranked teams play a single-elimination match hosted at the higher ranked team's venue, with the two winners of those matches joining the first and second ranked teams in two-legged semifinals played over two weeks (since 2022–23). The two winners of those matches eventually meet in the final hosted at a pre-decided venue.

Indian Super League final host venues
Rank Stadium City Capacity No. Year
1 Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium Margao 19,000 4 2015, 2020, 2021, 2022
2 DY Patil Stadium Mumbai 55,000 1 2014
Jawaharlal Nehru International Stadium Kochi 80,000 1 2016
Sree Kanteerava Stadium Bangalore 25,800 1 2018
Mumbai Football Arena Mumbai 18,000 1 2019

Continental qualification

Indian Super League teams can qualify for the top Asian club competitions – the AFC Champions League and AFC Cup – through their performance in the league. Before the 2017–18 season, the league was not recognised officially by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC), the governing body for football in Asia, so for the first three seasons no ISL team was eligible to participate in Asian competition.[58] However, in June 2017, it was announced that the AFC, along with FIFA, would recognise the Indian Super League and allow clubs to participate in the AFC Cup starting in 2019.[59]

Bengaluru became the first Indian Super League club to play in Asian competition when they participated in the 2018 AFC Cup.[60] The club qualified while still an I-League club and through winning the Federation Cup in 2017 but participated in the tournament as an ISL team after entering the league before the 2017–18 season.[60] In March 2018, Chennaiyin became the first ISL side to qualify for the AFC Cup directly through the league. They qualified for the 2019 edition after winning the 2018 ISL final.[61]

In October 2019, it was announced that the AFC had approved the proposed roadmap from the All India Football Federation, which includes allowing the Indian Super League champion to qualify for the AFC Champions League qualifiers.[62] A couple months later, in December 2019, it was officially announced by the AFC that they would be expanding the Champions League group stage from 32 teams to 40 and that the Indian Super League premier shall qualify directly for the group stage from the 2021 edition onwards.[63] In total 3 spots in AFC club competitions are awarded to India based on the AFC Club Competitions Ranking, including one for the winner of the Indian Super League Final in the AFC Cup qualifying play-offs and one for the champions of I-League, the other top-tier league, in the AFC Cup group stage.[64] In February 2020, Goa became the first ISL club to qualify for the Champions League after they became the ISL Premiers of 2019–20.[65] Since 2022–23 season, I-League ceased to be a top-tier league, hence the AFC Cup group stage spot is now awarded to the winners of Super Cup.

Extracted from the 2022 ranking of nations by their AFC club points[66]
Rank
2022
Rank
2021
Change Region Association 2019 2020[a] 2021 2022 Total 100% Places in AFC Champions League
(GS+PO)
Places in AFC Cup
(GS+PO)
GS PO GS PO
12 9   -3 6 (E)   Thailand 5.050 0.000 8.500 11.110 24.660 40.261 1 1 1 0
13 12   -1 7 (W)   Tajikistan 3.000 0.000 13.953 5.240 22.195 36.237 1 0 1 1
14 17   +3 8 (W)   India 3.217 0.000 6.857 10.545 20.627 33.677 1 0 1 1
15 13   -2 9 (W)   Iraq 8.300 0.000 3.250 7.450 19.000 31.020 1 0 2 0
16 7   -9 7 (E)   China 17.350 0.000 0.800 0.500 18.650 30.449 1 0 1 1

Updated on 5 October 2022
Notes:

  1. ^ The 2020 season did not award points for the ranking because of the cancellation of 2020 AFC Cup due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Other competitions

In February 2018 it was announced by the All India Football Federation that the Super Cup would be replacing the Federation Cup as Indian football's annual knockout football competition.[67] Before the Super Cup, Indian Super League clubs did not play official matches outside of ISL (exception being Bengaluru in the 2018 AFC Cup) so the Super Cup was the first time clubs in the league played in an official cup tournament.[68] The Super Cup was contested by all ten sides in the ISL and the top 10 sides from the I-League, the other top flight league in India, during its initial seasons.[68] The top six teams from both leagues qualify automatically for the tournament proper while the bottom four participate in qualifiers.[69] Till now, both the editions of the tournament has been won by ISL clubs; namely Bengaluru and Goa.

From 2019 onward, ISL clubs began to participate in Durand Cup on invitation.[70] ATK, Bengaluru, Chennaiyin, Goa and Jamshedpur were the first ones to participate in the tournament, and 2019 Durand Cup was eventually declared as the de facto domestic cup tournament for that season after Super Cup was cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic.[71] In its next edition, Goa became the first club from ISL to win the cup.[72] From 2022 onwards, AIFF and FSDL made it mandatory for all the clubs to participate in the Durand Cup, commencing at the beiginning of every football season, thereby to fulfil the minimum number of games played by top-tier clubs set by AFC.[73]

Reliance Foundation Development League

In June 2021 it was proposed by the organisers of ISL after a meeting with the CEOs of all the ISL clubs, that a new developmental league, called Reliance Foundation Development League, would be introduced in 2022.[74] This new league would consist of the youth and reserve teams of all the ISL clubs, with aim to develop young players as there has been limited number of competitions and leagues outside the ISL since the pandemic. The teams would predominantly feature U-21 players with few overage players allowed as well.[75] The inaugural season of the proposed two-month league was to be held in Goa inside a bio-secure bubble between January and March, following the same medical and safety procedures for 2021–22 ISL season, but got postponed to April 15.[76] Out of all the ISL clubs, ATK Mohun Bagan, East Bengal, NorthEast United and Odisha didn't participate due to lack of youth teams, thus only seven clubs took part in the league along with Reliance Foundation Youth Champs football team. The league concluded on 12 May with Bengaluru topping the table and becoming the inaugural champions. Along with Bengaluru, Kerala Blasters qualified for Premier League's NextGen Cup 2022 in the UK as the top two teams in the league.

Clubs

The Indian Super League is currently contested by 11 clubs. A total of 13 clubs have participated in the Indian Super League since its inception in 2014. Most of the clubs that have contested in this league were founded as franchise teams for the league. Six of these clubs have been competing in this league since its inaugural season. The league started with just 8 teams but has now expanded to 11 sides participating in it every season. The 8 original clubs included Atlético de Kolkata (renamed as ATK FC), Chennaiyin, Delhi Dynamos (rebranded as Odisha FC), Goa, Kerala Blasters, Mumbai City, NorthEast United and Pune City. In the 2017-18 Indian Super League season two new teams, Bengaluru who entered the league after having a successful spell in I-League and Jamshedpur, a newly formed franchise club, made their debut in the league, increasing the number of participating teams from 8 to 10.[77] At the end of the 2018-19 Indian Super League season, Pune City announced that it will be shutting down its operations. It was the first club in the history of the league to stop its operations. Its place was taken up by Hyderabad who took their place in the succeeding season.[78] In the same season Delhi Dynamos relocated to Bhubaneswar and rebranded itself as Odisha FC.[79] In 2020, the demand for the two Kolkata giants - East Bengal and Mohun Bagan - to be playing in Indian Super League increased. Following reports of Mohun Bagan strugling financially, the decision of merging the football devision of the club with ATK was taken and a new entity ATK Mohun Bagan was formed to take its place in the league.[80] In September 2020, East Bengal officially announced that it will be participating in the 2020-21 Indian Super League season.[81] This increased the number of teams to 11 where it sits currently.

Current clubs

The following 11 clubs are participating in the 2022–23 Indian Super League.

Club City Position in 2021–22 First season Seasons in ISL Premierships Championships Recent premiership Recent championship
ATK Mohun Bagan Kolkata, West Bengal 3rd 2020–2021 3 0 0
Bengaluru Bangalore, Karnataka 6th 2017–2018 6 0 1 2018–2019
Chennaiyin Chennai, Tamil Nadu 8th 2014 9 0 2 2017–2018
East Bengal Kolkata, West Bengal 11th 2020–2021 3 0 0
Goa Margao, Goa 9th 2014 9 1 0 2019–2020
Hyderabad Hyderabad, Telangana 2nd 2019–2020 4 0 1 2021–2022
Jamshedpur Jamshedpur, Jharkhand 1st 2017–2018 6 1 0 2021–2022
Kerala Blasters Kochi, Kerala 4th 2014 9 0 0
Mumbai City Mumbai, Maharashtra 5th 2014 9 1 1 2020–2021 2020–2021
NorthEast United Guwahati, Assam 10th 2014 9 0 0
Odisha Bhubaneswar, Odisha 7th 2014 9 0 0
class=notpageimage|
Locations of the 2022–23 Indian Super League clubs



Defunct clubs
Club City First season Last season Seasons in ISL Premierships Championships Recent premiership Recent championship
ATK Kolkata, West Bengal 2014 2019–2020 6 0 3 2019–2020
Pune City Pune, Maharashtra 2014 2018–2019 5 0

Timeline

Present clubs Former clubs Other leagues

Championships

As of the end of the 2021–22 season, 13 clubs have competed in the league, with five becoming Champions and three earning the League Winners Shield. ATK still remains as the most successful team in ISL with three championships, while no team has successfully defended their titles till now. Mumbai City is the only club to have won the double, becoming the Champions as well as the Premiers during the 2020–21 season.[82]

Championship and premiership by years

Season Regular season Playoffs Top Goalscorer(s) Goals
Premiers[a]
(Number of titles)
Second[b] Champions[c]
(Number of titles)
Score Runners–up
2014 Did not exist Atlético de Kolkata 1–0 Kerala Blasters   Elano (Chennaiyin) 8
2015 Chennaiyin 3–2 Goa   Stiven Mendoza (Chennaiyin) 13
2016 Atlético de Kolkata (2) 1–1 (a.e.t)
(4–3 p)
Kerala Blasters   Marcelinho (Delhi Dynamos) 10
2017–18 Chennaiyin (2) 3–2 Bengaluru   Coro (Goa) 18
2018–19 Bengaluru 1–0 (a.e.t) Goa   Coro (Goa) 16
2019–20 Goa ATK ATK (3) 3–1 Chennaiyin   Bartholomew Ogbeche (Kerala Blasters)
  Nerijus Valskis (Chennaiyin)
  Roy Krishna (ATK)
15
2020–21 Mumbai City ATK Mohun Bagan Mumbai City 2–1 ATK Mohun Bagan   Igor Angulo (Goa)
  Roy Krishna (ATK Mohun Bagan)
14
2021–22 Jamshedpur Hyderabad Hyderabad 1–1 (a.e.t)
(3–1 p)
Kerala Blasters   Bartholomew Ogbeche (Hyderabad) 18
  1. ^ Since 2019–20 season the regular season table toppers called as Premiers are awarded with the League Winners' Shield and are allocated a direct slot in AFC Champions League group stage.
  2. ^ Since 2019–20 season the regular season runner-ups are allocated a slot in AFC Cup qualifying stage, in case the Premiers of the regular season also becomes the Champions of the playoff.
  3. ^ Since 2017–18 season the Champions of the playoffs, are allocated a slot in AFC Cup qualifying stage.

Championships and premierships by clubs

Club Total Titles Premiers Season(s) won Champions Year(s) won
ATK 3 3 2014, 2016, 2020
Chennaiyin 2 2 2015, 2018
Mumbai City 2 1 2020–21 1 2021
Bengaluru 1 1 2019
Hyderabad 1 1 2022
Goa 1 1 2019–20
Jamshedpur 1 1 2021–22

Ownership

Just like the Indian Premier League, the Indian Super League has a similar ownership model where the teams are owned by prominent businessmen, as well as celebrity owners from Bollywood and cricket.[83] The Indian Super League owners act as the competition's "League Partners".[84] British professional services group, Ernst & Young, were hired to draw up a criterion for the team bidding process and they were required to approve the potential owners.[84] In April 2014 the owners were announced. Bollywood stars such as Ranbir Kapoor, John Abraham, and Salman Khan were bid winners, as well as cricket stars Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly.[84] Football clubs such as Atlético Madrid and Shillong Lajong were also bid winners.[84]

Despite careful selection, the Indian Super League has had trouble in the past with team ownership. In August 2014, two months before the inaugural season, Sun Group, the owners of the Bangalore franchise, dropped out of the competition after the competition rejected their potential tie-up with then I-League club Bengaluru FC.[85] Later that month, it was announced that another Bollywood star, Abhishek Bachchan, would take over the last franchise spot and move the team from Bangalore to Chennai.[86]

The competition had its first ownership switch within a team on 1 June 2016 when the Kerala Blasters announced their new ownership structure. Along with Sachin Tendulkar, the team brought in businessman Nimmagadda Prasad and film stars Allu Aravind, Chiranjeevi, and Nagarjuna after PVP Ventures withdrew their stake in the team.[87] Later in 2018 Tendulkar sold off his shares to the majority stakeholders in the club.

Sponsorship and revenues

In 2014, Hero MotoCorp became the first title sponsor of the Indian Super League in a deal that would last through 2016.[88] On 30 September 2014, a week before the first season, it was announced that Puma SE would be the official ball supplier of the Indian Super League.[89] Nivia became the official match ball sponsor for the session 2018–19 and supplied FIFA pro certified Nivia Ashtang to be played through ten clubs.[90]

The competition relies heavily on a central sponsorship pool. League stakeholders, Star Sports and IMG–Reliance, manage the central sponsorship pool and market the competition to potential investors and sponsors.[91] Twenty per cent of the money gained in the central sponsorship pool goes towards organising the competition while the rest is divided among the teams. Despite successfully gaining a lot of money through central sponsorship in 2014, 100% of the revenues were used by the competition to improve infrastructure and facilities, which meant that the teams lost money during the first season.[91] The next season saw a change, however, with the central sponsorship pool doubling to around 100 crore due to new competition–wide sponsorships with corporates such as Flipkart and DHL Express. Teams were also able to increase their intake in sponsorship in 2015 with shirt sponsorship deals worth double from the previous season and around nine advertisements allowed on team kits.[91] Teams in the league had also signed shirt manufacturing sponsorship deals with companies such as Adidas and Puma.[91]

For the 2016 season, it was projected that the competition would gain more sponsors compared to the previous season, especially since the competition would occur during the Indian festive periods.[92] For kit sponsorships, each team is allowed to have six sponsorships on the kit, with teams like ATK regularly filling those spots.[93]

On 23 July 2017 it was announced that Hero MotoCorp would extend their deal as the title sponsors of the Indian Super League for another three-years.[94] The company would spend $25 million on the competition during those three years according to Nita Ambani, the league's chairperson.[94]

Media coverage

Television ratings

Star Sports, one of the organisers of the Indian Super League, also serves as the official broadcasters of the league in India.[95] In September 2014, it was announced that Star Sports would broadcast the ISL through eight channels in five languages in an attempt to reach 85% of the Indian television audience.[96]

The first match of the Indian Super League, between Atlético de Kolkata and Mumbai City on 12 October 2014, reportedly drew a television audience of 75 million people.[97] The first week reportedly drew 170 million people in total. These numbers were 12 times more than what India drew for the 2014 FIFA World Cup and around 20–30 times more than what the I-League, India's then top-tier football league, drew on TEN Action and even the English Premier League.[97] Overall, at the end of the first season, it was reported that the ISL drew a total of 429 million viewers across India, just a bit lower than the Pro Kabaddi League, and two and a half times more than the FIFA World Cup.[98] It was also reported that 57% of the viewers were women and children and that the Star Sports website gained 32 million visits during the tournament.[98]

The league experienced a sharp growth in ratings after the 2016 season with over 216 million viewers on television throughout.[99] The 2016 final between ATK and the Kerala Blasters reportedly drew 41 million viewers which was a 41% increase on the number of viewers who saw the 2015 final between Chennaiyin and Goa.[99] Ratings in rural India meanwhile drew 101 million viewers.[99]

For the 2017–18 season, Star Sports broadcast the league on Star Sports 2 and Star Sports 2HD in English. The broadcasters also televised the matches in Bangla, Malayalam, Kannada, Tamil and other languages through various channels.[100] The league is also streamed online via Disney+ Hotstar, Star India's online streaming service, and Jio TV.[100]

ISL 2019–20 season viewership recorded a 51 percent growth. At the end of the season, the league recorded a 51 per cent jump in viewership among the urban affluent sports savvy audience of M15+AB Urban as per BARC’s report.[101]

ISL 2020–21 season saw a growth of 16% pan-India viewership from last 2019–20 season’s viewership numbers.[102]

Broadcasters

Period Territory Broadcast & live streaming partners
2021– present Indian Subcontinent

(Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Sri Lanka)

Star Sports
Brazil, Italy, Germany, Argentina, Spain, Mexico, Colombia, France, Chile, United Kingdom, Ecuador, Peru, United States, Portugal, Indonesia, Austria, Netherlands, Switzerland, Venezuela, Algeria, Bolivia, Guatemala, Belgium, Uruguay, Egypt, El Salvador, Honduras, Morocco, Costa Rica, Russia, South Africa, Canada, Panama, Poland, Paraguay, Malaysia, Ireland, Greece, Australia, Turkey, Tunisia, Singapore, Cuba, Sweden, United Arab Emirates, Nicaragua, Jamaica, Denmark, Kenya, Nigeria, Romania, Senegal, Myanmar, Ukraine, Norway, Republic of Korea, Croatia, Dominican Republic, Luxembourg, Lebanon, Ghana, Saudi Arabia, Czech Republic, Guadeloupe, Finland, New Zealand, Islamic Republic of Iran, Bulgaria, Cote D'ivoire, Hungary, Israel, Iraq, Trinidad and Tobago, Mauritius, Angola, Malta, Albania, Reunion, Serbia, Slovenia, Hong Kong, Thailand, Kazakhstan, Ethiopia, China, Uganda, Qatar, Belarus, Mozambique, VietNam, Japan, Armenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cameroon, Gabon, Cyprus, Togo, Georgia, Mali, Estonia, Macedonia, Barbados, Slovakia, Azerbaijan, Somalia, Martinique, Republic of Moldova, Jordan, Lithuania, Uzbekistan, Tanzania, Zambia, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Zimbabwe, Namibia, Oman, Cambodia, Suriname, Latvia, Iceland, Philippines, Kuwait, Andorra, Monaco, Benin, Burkina Faso, Kyrgyzstan, Bahrain, Cape Verde, French Guiana, Puerto Rico, Equatorial Guinea, Saint Lucia, Republic of the Congo, Brunei Darussalam, Sierra Leone, Guinea, Gambia, Guyana, Haiti, Botswana, Mauritania, Syrian Arab Republic, Libya, Madagascar, San Marino, Taiwan, Anguilla, Curacao, Sudan, Mayotte, Antigua and Barbuda, Aruba, Belize, Liechtenstein, Niger, Montenegro, Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Seychelles, French Polynesia, Eswatini, Malawi, Mongolia, Rwanda, Gibraltar, Liberia, Tajikistan, Djibouti, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Lao People's Democratic Republic, Grenada, São Tomé and Príncipe, Guinea-Bissau, Bermuda, South Sudan, Comoros, Bahamas, Dominica, Cayman Islands, Palestinian Territory, Yemen, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Faroe Islands, Macao, Chad, Burundi, Isle of Man, Papua New Guinea, Lesotho, Timor-Leste, Central African Republic, Greenland, Saint Martin, Turks and Caicos Islands, British Virgin Islands, Guernsey, Falkland Islands (Malvinas), Jersey, Saint Pierre and Miquelon, Aland Islands, Bonaire Sint Eustatius and Saba, Eritrea, Sint Maarten, US Virgin Islands, Saint Helena, Holy See (Vatican City), Federated States of Micronesia, Guam, Montserrat OneFootball
Fiji, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Samoa, Cook Islands, Vanuatu, American Samoa, Kiribati, Tuvalu, Niue, Tokelau, Tahiti, New Caledonia, Tonga, Nauru Digicel PNG (TVWAN Action & TVWAN Sports)
Serbia, Croatia, Montenegro, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Slovenia, North Macedonia, Kosovo Arena Sport

Source: Indian Super League

Stadiums

Since the competition began in 2014, there have been a variety of stadiums used to host matches. Two stadiums, the DY Patil Stadium in Navi Mumbai and the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in Kochi, are mainly used as cricket stadiums.[103] Three other stadiums are athletic stadiums which are primarily used to host football matches in the I-League: the Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in Goa, the Vivekananda Yuba Bharati Krirangan (VYBK) in Kolkata, and the Balewadi Stadium in Pune. Three other venues were used which don't primarily host top-tier professional football: the Indira Gandhi Athletic Stadium in Assam, the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in Chennai, and the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in Delhi.[103]

For the 2016 season, two new stadiums were used in the competition, the Mumbai Football Arena in Mumbai and the Rabindra Sarobar Stadium in Kolkata. The Mumbai Football Arena replaced the DY Patil Stadium for Mumbai City.[104] ATK moved to the Rabindra Sarobar Stadium when the VYBK was being renovated for the 2017 FIFA U-17 World Cup.[105]

For the 2017–18 season, ATK returned to the VYBK while the addition of Bengaluru and Jamshedpur added two new stadiums to the competition. Bengaluru would host matches at the Sree Kanteerava Stadium while Jamshedpur would play at the JRD Tata Sports Complex.[100] Currently Jamshedpur is the only team to play at a self-owned stadium, although ATK Mohun Bagan and East Bengal have their respective self-owned stadiums– Mohun Bagan Ground and East Bengal Ground respectively, but they both prefer to use the VYBK to host matches.

Home stadiums of current clubs
ATK Mohun Bagan Bengaluru Chennaiyin East Bengal Goa Hyderabad
Vivekananda Yuba Bharati Krirangan, Kolkata Sree Kanteerava Stadium, Bangalore Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, Chennai Vivekananda Yuba Bharati Krirangan, Kolkata Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, Margao G. M. C. Balayogi Athletic Stadium, Hyderabad
Capacity: 85,000 Capacity: 25,800 Capacity: 40,000 Capacity: 85,000 Capacity: 30,000 Capacity: 30,000
           
Jamshedpur Kerala Blasters Mumbai City NorthEast United Odisha
JRD Tata Sports Complex, Jamshedpur Jawaharlal Nehru International Stadium, Kochi Mumbai Football Arena, Mumbai Indira Gandhi Athletic Stadium, Guwahati Kalinga Stadium, Bhubaneswar
Capacity: 40,000 Capacity: 80,000 Capacity: 18,000 Capacity: 25,000 Capacity: 15,000
         

Coaches

Managers or head coaches in the ISL are involved in day-to-day running of the team, including the training, team selection and player acquisition. Their influence varies from club-to-club and is related to the ownership of the club. An AFC 'Pro' Diploma license, which is the final coaching qualification available in AFC member nation, and follows the completion of the AFC 'B' Diploma and AFC 'A' Diploma licenses, or any equivalent coaching license is required by a head coach in ISL.[106] Moreover, every head coach must have at least one Indian assistant coach who must also possess an AFC 'Pro' Diploma license, although an Indian goalkeeping coach is not considered as an assistant coach to fulfil the aforementioned criterion.[106] Unqualified caretaker manager can be appointed to fill the gap between the managerial departure and a new appointment.

Historically ISL has seen a flurry of coaches incoming and outgoing each season, with most coaches serving for a season or two at a single club. Sergio Lobera is the longest serving coach in the league (970 days) with Goa, while Habas has been a coach in the league for the longest cumulative duration (1,906 days) serving at three clubs. Based on achievements, Lobera remains the most successful coach in ISL with the League Winner's Shield with Goa in 2019–20 and another of the Shield and the ISL Championship with Mumbai City in 2020–21.

Current head coaches
Nat Head coach Club Appointed Time as head coach
  Manolo Márquez Hyderabad 31 August 2020 2 years, 138 days
  Ivan Vukomanović Kerala Blasters 17 June 2021 1 year, 213 days
  Des Buckingham Mumbai City 8 October 2021 1 year, 100 days
  Juan Ferrando ATK Mohun Bagan 20 December 2021 1 year, 27 days
  Carlos Peña Goa 16 April 2022 275 days
  Simon Grayson Bengaluru 8 June 2022 222 days
  Josep Gombau Odisha 8 June 2022 222 days
  Thomas Brdarić Chennaiyin 14 June 2022 216 days
  Aidy Boothroyd Jamshedpur 10 July 2022 190 days
  Stephen Constantine East Bengal 27 July 2022 173 days
  Marco Balbul NorthEast United 11 August 2022 158 days


Players

Appearances

As of 12 January 2023[107]
Most appearances
Rank Player Apps Years
1   Mandar Rao Dessai 134 2014–
2   Lenny Rodrigues 132 2014–
3   Pritam Kotal 131 2014–
4   Narayan Das 130 2014–
  Amrinder Singh 130 2015–
6   Sunil Chhetri 126 2015–
  Harmanjot Khabra 126 2014–
8   Rahul Bheke 123 2015–
9   Sandesh Jhingan 119 2014–
10   Tiri 110 2016–

Transfer regulations and foreign players

Player transfers may only take place within transfer windows set by the All India Football Federation and approved by the FIFA. The two transfer windows run from June 9 to August 31 and from January 1 to January 31. Player registrations cannot be exchanged outside these windows except under specific license from the AIFF, usually on an emergency basis; if a player is injured and ruled out for at least two months, the club can permanently replace him, also if the club terminates the contract of a registered player, then a replacement can be signed.[108] Although loan transfers and registrations can take place even outside the transfer windows.

During the initial seasons, the no. of foreigners in a squad varied from 7–10, which was gradually reduced as the league achieved AFC and FIFA recognition, and the organisers emphasised more on developing Indian players. As of 2021–22, a club can have a maximum squad strength of 35 men, including at most 6 foreigners (1 of them must belong to an AFC member nation) and 3 registered goalkeepers.[109] A club can also have an injury replacement for a domestic player.[109] If a club registers less than 35 players by the end of the window, they can still fill the quota post the stipulated date provided the player is a free agent. FSDL also mandated the clubs to sign at least 4 under-21 players, with minimum 2 of them being a part of the matchday squad.[109] Previously, it was also mandatory for the clubs to get the approval of the league for three of their foreign signings, wherein players who have played a minimum of 1000 minutes last season were automatically approved. But this rule was later scrapped and the clubs no longer need to approach the organisers for approval.

Top scorers

As of 12 January 2023[110]
Top goalscorers
Rank Player Goals Apps Ratio Years
1   Bartholomew Ogbeche 60 91 0.66 2018–
2   Sunil Chhetri 52 126 0.41 2015–
3   Coro 48 57 0.84 2017–2020
4   Roy Krishna 37 72 0.51 2019–
5   Marcelinho 34 87 0.39 2016–2022
6   Iain Hume 28 69 0.41 2014–2019
  Hugo Boumous 28 86 0.33 2018–
8   Nerijus Valskis 27 55 0.49 2019–2022
  Lallianzuala Chhangte 27 109 0.25 2016–
10   Igor Angulo 24 40 0.6 2020–2022
  Cleiton Silva 24 49 0.49 2020–
  Jeje Lalpekhlua 24 76 0.32 2014–2021

Bold denotes players still playing in the Indian Super League,
Italics denotes players still playing professional football.

Wages

Every club has to follow a squad salary cap of ₹16.5 crores (≈ $2.2 million), which includes individual performance bonus (exclusive of team bonus), agent/intermediary fee and other arrangements with the players, although loan wages and transfer fees are not included within the salary cap. A club has an option to sign a marquee player, through the League's approval, whose salary is excluded from the stated salary cap. Failing to follow the regulations, a club may risk deduction of points, possible fines and/or sanctions by the league.[111]

Awards

Trophy

The Indian Super League cup was unveiled on 5 October 2014, by Nita Ambani, the founder and chairperson of Football Sports Development.[112] At the trophy unveiling occasion, Mrs. Ambani said, "It's a momentous day for all of us today as I stand along with the world's footballing legends to unveil the pride of Indian Super League. As these role models have inspired hundreds of thousands of players worldwide, I am sure the ISL trophy will also stand as a symbol of aspiration for many youngsters in an emergent India".[112] On 19 February 2020 the FSDL unveiled the League Winners Shield for the ISL premiers to be awarded from 2019–20 season onwards.[113]

Designed by Frazer and Haws, the ISL cup stands 26 inches tall. The logo on the top band has the ISL colors assigned to it and the handles are ornately carved and embellished with 24 carats of gold gilt to imbue a sense of pride when held up.[112] The League Winners' Shield, weighing approx. 5 kg with a diameter of 22 inches draws inspiration from global football traditions and design tones of the ISL cup. The wreath carved around the silver football symbolises the victors of The Beautiful Game.

Individual awards

In addition to the League Winners' Shield and the ISL Cup, the organisers also issue other awards throughout the season. A Man of the Match award, referred as the Hero of the Match due to sponsorship reasons, is presented to the player who had the most impact in an individual match.

Monthly awards are also given for the Hero of the Month and Emerging Player of the Month. These are also issued at the conclusion of each season for the Hero of the League and the Emerging Player of the League[114]

The Golden Boot is awarded to the top goalscorer of each season, the Winning Pass of the League award is presented to the top assist provider of each season and the Golden Glove is awarded to the goalkeeper with the most clean sheets in a season.

Partnerships

  • The Indian Super League has a strategic partnership with the Premier League.[115][116]
  • ISL announced a landmark partnership with London-based Terra Virtua Limited to launch its exclusive Non-fungible token (NFT) as digital collectibles ahead of the 2021–22 season.[117]
  • Indian Super League and South Asia's leading esports company NODWIN Gaming on 26 October 2021 announced the launch of eISL that effectively meant that Hero Indian Super League in collaboration with EA Sports became the country's first major sports league to venture into competitive gaming.[118]

See also

Notes

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External links

  • Official website  


Preceded by
I-League (from 2022)
Division 1 Football League in India
2019–present
Succeeded by
incumbent

indian, super, league, this, article, about, division, indian, football, division, indian, women, football, indian, women, league, officially, known, hero, sponsorship, reasons, indian, professional, league, association, football, clubs, indian, football, leag. This article is about the top division in men s Indian football For top division in Indian women s football see Indian Women s League The Indian Super League ISL officially known as the Hero Indian Super League for sponsorship reasons 2 is an Indian professional league for men s association football clubs At the top of the Indian football league system it is the country s primary football competition organised by the All India Football Federation AIFF and their commercial partners Football Sports Development Limited FSDL 3 4 Indian Super LeagueOrganising bodiesAIFF and FSDLFounded21 October 2013 9 years ago 2013 10 21 CountryIndiaConfederationAFCNumber of teams11Level on pyramid1Domestic cup s Durand CupLeague cup s Super Cup 1 International cup s AFC Champions League AFC CupCurrent championsHyderabad 1st title 2021 22 Current premiersJamshedpur 1st title 2021 22 Most championshipsATK 3 titles Most premiershipsGoaMumbai CityJamshedpur 1 title Most appearancesMandar Rao Dessai 134 Top goalscorerBartholomew Ogbeche 60 TV partnersIndian Subcontinent Star Sports Hotstar JioTV JioCinema India only International BroadcastersWebsiteindiansuperleague comCurrent 2022 23 Indian Super LeagueThe league currently comprises 11 clubs Each season of the tournament generally runs from October to March During the league stage of the competition each club plays against all the other clubs in a round robin style At the end of the league stage the team with the most points gets declared the Premiers and presented with a trophy named League Winners Shield along with the runners up to play in the play offs while the next best four clubs qualify to play qualifying playoffs to join the top two in the playoffs The season then culminates with the ISL Final to determine the Champions who are presented with the ISL Trophy The competition was founded on 21 October 2013 with the aim of growing the sport of football in India and increasing its exposure in the country The league began in October 2014 with eight teams During its first three seasons the competition operated without official recognition from the Asian Football Confederation AFC the governing body for the sport in Asia The competition was also structured along the same lines as the Indian Premier League the country s premier Twenty20 franchise based cricket competition Each season lasted just 3 months from October to December and matches were held daily However before the 2017 18 season the league expanded to ten teams expanded its schedule to six months and earned recognition from the AFC The league stage winners participates directly in the AFC Champions League and the ISL Final winner participates in the AFC Cup qualifying playoffs 5 Since the league s inaugural season a total of five clubs have been crowned as the Champions ATK 3 Chennaiyin 2 Bengaluru 1 Mumbai City 1 and Hyderabad 1 Since its introduction of League Winners Shield in 2019 20 season Goa Mumbai City and Jamshedpur have won the League Winners Shield once Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Foundation 1 3 Recognition and expansion 2014 2021 1 4 Sole top tier league status 2022 present 2 Competition format 2 1 Regular season 2 2 Playoffs 2 3 Continental qualification 2 4 Other competitions 2 4 1 Reliance Foundation Development League 3 Clubs 3 1 Current clubs 3 2 Timeline 4 Championships 4 1 Championship and premiership by years 4 2 Championships and premierships by clubs 5 Ownership 6 Sponsorship and revenues 7 Media coverage 7 1 Television ratings 7 2 Broadcasters 8 Stadiums 9 Coaches 10 Players 10 1 Appearances 10 2 Transfer regulations and foreign players 10 3 Top scorers 10 4 Wages 11 Awards 11 1 Trophy 11 2 Individual awards 12 Partnerships 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 External linksHistoryOrigins Football in India has existed in many forms since the game first arrived in the country during the 19th century with the first nationwide club competition the Durand Cup beginning in 1888 6 7 Despite India s early history in the game the country s first nationwide football league did not begin until the semi professional National Football League commenced in 1996 8 Before the creation of the National Football League most clubs played in state leagues or select nationwide tournaments 8 In 2006 the All India Football Federation the governing body for the sport in India reformatted the league as the I League in an effort to professionalise the game 9 However during the following seasons the league suffered from a lack of popularity due to poor marketing 10 In September 2006 the AIFF signed a 10 year television and media contract with Zee Sports The deal would make Zee broadcast the National Football League later the I League and other tournaments organised by the AIFF and selected India s international matches 11 However in October 2010 the deal between the AIFF and Zee Sports was terminated after differences between both parties related to payment and marketing of football in India 12 On 9 December 2010 it was announced that the AIFF had signed a new 15 year 700 crore deal with Reliance Industries and the International Management Group 13 Foundation The Indian Super League was officially launched on 21 October 2013 by IMG Reliance Star Sports and the All India Football Federation 14 The competition was announced to take place from January 2014 to March 2014 but was postponed shortly thereafter to September 2014 15 At first it was announced that bidding for the eight Indian Super League teams would be completed before the end of 2013 and there were already high interest from big corporations Indian Premier League teams Bollywood stars and other consortium 16 However due to the rescheduling of the league the bidding was moved to 3 March 2014 17 It was also revealed around this time that bidders would need to comply with financial requirements as well as promotion for football developments within their area 18 Finally in early April 2014 the winning bidders were announced 19 The selected cities states were Bangalore Delhi Goa Guwahati Kochi Kolkata Mumbai and Pune 19 Former India cricket player Sachin Tendulkar along with PVP Ventures won the bidding for the Kochi franchise Another former Indian cricket player Sourav Ganguly along with a group of Indian businessmen and La Liga side Atletico Madrid won the bid for the Kolkata franchise 19 Meanwhile Bollywood stars John Abraham Ranbir Kapoor and Salman Khan won the bid for the Guwahati Mumbai and Pune franchises respectively Bangalore and Delhi were won by companies while Goa was won by a partnership between Videocon Dattaraj Salgaocar and I League side Dempo 19 The first team to be launched officially was the Kolkata franchise as Atletico de Kolkata on 7 May 2014 20 On 7 July 2014 the team announced the first head coach in league history Antonio Lopez Habas 21 The next day Kolkata also announced the first official marquee signing in the Indian Super League UEFA Champions League winner Luis Garcia 22 Eventually all eight teams were revealed as Atletico de Kolkata Bangalore Titans Delhi Dynamos Goa Kerala Blasters Mumbai City NorthEast United and Pune City 23 24 However on 21 August 2014 it was announced that due to Bangalore s owners dropping out Chennai would be given a franchise instead 25 The team was eventually named Chennaiyin FC 26 At the same time the original marquee players were Luis Garcia Elano Alessandro Del Piero Robert Pires David James Freddie Ljungberg Joan Capdevila and David Trezeguet 23 The inaugural season began on 12 October 2014 at the Salt Lake Stadium when Atletico de Kolkata defeated Mumbai City 3 0 The first goal was scored by Fikru Teferra 27 The first Indian to score in the league was Balwant Singh for Chennaiyin FC Recognition and expansion 2014 2021 The first ever ISL match being played at Vivekananda Yuba Bharati Krirangan For the first three seasons of the Indian Super League the competition operated without official recognition from the governing body for football in Asia the Asian Football Confederation AFC and FIFA the world governing body 28 In October 2014 then FIFA General Secretary Jerome Valcke stated that the world governing body only recognised the ISL as a tournament not a league The official league for football in India remained the I League 29 With no recognition from the AFC the teams also couldn t participate in Asian club competitions the AFC Champions League or the AFC Cup 29 During the first three seasons of the Indian Super League attendances across the competition had exceeded the expectations of pundits and of the domestic I League mainly due to the timings at which the matches took place especially on working days and needs no mention sheer promotion 30 Television ratings were also strong for the competition which is expected after better commentary better telecasting pre match and post match shows as well as hourly reminders in various channels and social media interaction 30 However despite the general success off the pitch the competition drew criticism in other areas Due to the need to accommodate the ISL into the Indian football calendar the I League season was shortened and went from having an October to May schedule to January to May schedule 31 Indian players would play for both an ISL team and an I League club while the I League continued to suffer from lack of visibility compared to the ISL 32 India s then head coach Stephen Constantine had called for both the ISL and I League to either run together at the same time or merge 33 2016 ISL Final at Jawaharlal Nehru International Stadium Kochi For the first three seasons Atletico de Kolkata emerged as the dominant team by finishing in the top four every year and winning the Final twice 2014 and 2016 by defeating Kerala Blasters both times 34 35 36 37 On 18 May 2016 IMG Reliance along with the AIFF and I League representatives met at a meeting in Mumbai During the meeting it was proposed that starting from the 2017 18 season the Indian Super League become the top tier football league in India while the I League be reformed as League One and be relegated to the second division The competition would also expand by two teams and continue to operate without promotion and relegation as stated earlier due to the 15 crore attraction of the FSDL each year but run for 5 7 months instead of 2 3 38 The idea was not entertained by the I League representatives 38 In June 2017 IMG Reliance the AIFF and the I League representatives met with the AFC in Kuala Lumpur in order to find a new way forward for Indian football 39 The AFC were against allowing the ISL as the main league in India while I League clubs East Bengal and Mohun Bagan wanted a complete merger of the ISL and I League 39 A couple weeks later the AIFF proposed that both Indian Super League and I League run simultaneously on a short term basis with the I League champion retaining the AFC Champions League qualifying stage spot and the AFC Cup qualifying stage spot going to the ISL champion 40 The proposal from the AIFF was officially approved by the AFC on 25 July 2017 with the ISL replacing the domestic cup competition the Federation Cup which was a true knockout cup competition 41 It was also stated that the competition would now run for five months starting with the 2017 18 season and the competition would expand to 10 teams 40 A month before on 11 May 2017 the ISL organisers started to accept bids for 2 3 new franchises for the 2017 18 season 42 The bids would be for ten cities namely Ahmedabad Bangalore Cuttack Durgapur Hyderabad Jamshedpur Kolkata Ranchi Siliguri and Thiruvananthapuram 42 It was also clarified that if Kolkata were to win at least one bid that the new Kolkata side would have to play away from the city for only two seasons 42 A month later on 12 June it was announced that I League side Bengaluru and Tata Steel for Jamshedpur had won the bidding for the new teams 43 On 22 September 2017 the competition announced officially that it would be expanding its season by two months thus making the league last for five months instead of three The competition would also go from having matches played daily to being played between Wednesday and Sunday 44 The next year before the 2018 19 season it was reported that Reliance Industries had bought out IMG s shares in the Football Sports Development IMG realising that the robust business model will soon be exposed pulled out thus giving Reliance Industries 65 ownership while Star Sports retains 35 45 In this season Bengaluru had achieved the feat of being the first club to wint he final after topping the league standings Following the 2018 19 season Pune City was disbanded in 2019 The club s franchise rights were then transferred to an ownership group which founded Hyderabad FC 46 In August 2019 Delhi Dynamos became the first ISL club to relocate when it moved from Delhi to Bhubaneswar and rebranded as Odisha FC 47 On 14 October 2019 the AFC held a summit in Kuala Lumpur chaired by the AFC Secretary General Windsor John which involved key stakeholders from the AIFF the FSDL the ISL and the I League clubs and other major stakeholders to propose a new roadmap to facilitate the football league system in India 48 Based on the roadmap that was prepared by the AFC and the AIFF at the summit and approved by the AFC Executive Committee on 26 October in Da Nang in 2019 20 season Indian Super League will attain the country s top tier league status and run parallelly with I League allowing the Indian Super League premiers to play in AFC Champions League and the I League champions to play in AFC Cup 49 In addition starting with the 2022 23 and 2023 2024 season I League will lose the top tier league status and Indian Super League will become the sole top division wherein the champion of the I League will stand a chance to be promoted to the Indian Super League with no participation fee basis fulfilling sporting merit and the national club licensing criteria to be set out by the AIFF But There won t be relegation from Indian Super League at this time In its recommendation for 2024 25 it was agreed to fully implement promotion and relegation in between the two leagues and abolition of two parallel leagues 50 In accordance to the general league system the club finishing at the top of the table was crowned as the season s premier and Goa became the first to achieve the title in 2019 20 season 51 Another key recommendation by the AFC in the roadmap was to open a pathway for two I League clubs entry into Indian Super League by the end of the 2020 21 season subject to the criteria being fulfilled 48 Therefore efforts were taken early on by the organisers to include the two historic clubs Mohun Bagan and East Bengal into the league which succeeded in the following season Before the start of the 2020 21 season the owners of ATK merged its brand with the football section of Mohun Bagan to become ATK Mohun Bagan on 1 June 2020 and entered the league On 27 September 2020 after securing investment from Shree Cement East Bengal joined the league as an expansion team thus becoming 11th team in the league 52 Sole top tier league status 2022 present Following the Indian football roadmap Indian Super League become the sole top tier league in the country from 2022 23 season 49 Competition formatRegular season The regular season of Indian Super League runs from October to late February or early March since the 2017 18 season 53 The competition consists of 22 rounds that follows a double round robin format with each club playing the others twice once at their home stadium and once at their opponents stadium for a total of 20 matches each 54 Teams receive three points for a win one point for a draw and no points for a loss Teams are ranked by total points with the highest ranked club at the end of the regular season being crowned ISL Premiers and awarded the League Winners Shield introduced during 2019 20 season 55 At the completion of the regular season the team with the most points gets declared the Premiers and presented with a trophy named League Winners Shield along with the runners up to play in the playoffs At the same time the following best four clubs qualify to play qualifying playoffs to join the top two in the playoffs The position of each team is determined by the highest number of points accumulated during the regular season If two or more teams are level on points the following criteria are applied in order until one of the teams can be determined as the higher ranked 56 Highest number of points accumulated in matches between the teams concerned Highest goal difference in matches between the teams concerned Highest number of goals scored in matches between the teams concerned Highest goal difference Highest number of goals scored Lowest number of red cards accumulated Lowest number of yellow cards accumulated Toss of a coin 56 The Indian Super League had approved the 3 1 rule to help local players actively participate in the league The rule is a part of the ISL guidelines from the eighth edition 2021 22 The new rule allowed 7 Indian players to be a part of the starting XI 57 Playoffs See also Indian Super League playoffs The top six clubs at the conclusion of the regular season progress to the ISL playoffs The playoffs culminate with the ISL final where the winner is presented with the ISL Cup In the qualifiers the third through sixth ranked teams play a single elimination match hosted at the higher ranked team s venue with the two winners of those matches joining the first and second ranked teams in two legged semifinals played over two weeks since 2022 23 The two winners of those matches eventually meet in the final hosted at a pre decided venue Indian Super League final host venues Rank Stadium City Capacity No Year1 Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium Margao 19 000 4 2015 2020 2021 20222 DY Patil Stadium Mumbai 55 000 1 2014Jawaharlal Nehru International Stadium Kochi 80 000 1 2016Sree Kanteerava Stadium Bangalore 25 800 1 2018Mumbai Football Arena Mumbai 18 000 1 2019Continental qualification See also AFC Club Competitions Ranking Indian Super League teams can qualify for the top Asian club competitions the AFC Champions League and AFC Cup through their performance in the league Before the 2017 18 season the league was not recognised officially by the Asian Football Confederation AFC the governing body for football in Asia so for the first three seasons no ISL team was eligible to participate in Asian competition 58 However in June 2017 it was announced that the AFC along with FIFA would recognise the Indian Super League and allow clubs to participate in the AFC Cup starting in 2019 59 Bengaluru became the first Indian Super League club to play in Asian competition when they participated in the 2018 AFC Cup 60 The club qualified while still an I League club and through winning the Federation Cup in 2017 but participated in the tournament as an ISL team after entering the league before the 2017 18 season 60 In March 2018 Chennaiyin became the first ISL side to qualify for the AFC Cup directly through the league They qualified for the 2019 edition after winning the 2018 ISL final 61 In October 2019 it was announced that the AFC had approved the proposed roadmap from the All India Football Federation which includes allowing the Indian Super League champion to qualify for the AFC Champions League qualifiers 62 A couple months later in December 2019 it was officially announced by the AFC that they would be expanding the Champions League group stage from 32 teams to 40 and that the Indian Super League premier shall qualify directly for the group stage from the 2021 edition onwards 63 In total 3 spots in AFC club competitions are awarded to India based on the AFC Club Competitions Ranking including one for the winner of the Indian Super League Final in the AFC Cup qualifying play offs and one for the champions of I League the other top tier league in the AFC Cup group stage 64 In February 2020 Goa became the first ISL club to qualify for the Champions League after they became the ISL Premiers of 2019 20 65 Since 2022 23 season I League ceased to be a top tier league hence the AFC Cup group stage spot is now awarded to the winners of Super Cup Extracted from the 2022 ranking of nations by their AFC club points 66 Rank2022 Rank2021 Change Region Association 2019 2020 a 2021 2022 Total 100 Places in AFC Champions League GS PO Places in AFC Cup GS PO GS PO GS PO12 9 3 6 E Thailand 5 050 0 000 8 500 11 110 24 660 40 261 1 1 1 013 12 1 7 W Tajikistan 3 000 0 000 13 953 5 240 22 195 36 237 1 0 1 114 17 3 8 W India 3 217 0 000 6 857 10 545 20 627 33 677 1 0 1 115 13 2 9 W Iraq 8 300 0 000 3 250 7 450 19 000 31 020 1 0 2 016 7 9 7 E China 17 350 0 000 0 800 0 500 18 650 30 449 1 0 1 1Updated on 5 October 2022 Notes The 2020 season did not award points for the ranking because of the cancellation of 2020 AFC Cup due to the COVID 19 pandemic Other competitions Main articles Super Cup India and Durand Cup In February 2018 it was announced by the All India Football Federation that the Super Cup would be replacing the Federation Cup as Indian football s annual knockout football competition 67 Before the Super Cup Indian Super League clubs did not play official matches outside of ISL exception being Bengaluru in the 2018 AFC Cup so the Super Cup was the first time clubs in the league played in an official cup tournament 68 The Super Cup was contested by all ten sides in the ISL and the top 10 sides from the I League the other top flight league in India during its initial seasons 68 The top six teams from both leagues qualify automatically for the tournament proper while the bottom four participate in qualifiers 69 Till now both the editions of the tournament has been won by ISL clubs namely Bengaluru and Goa From 2019 onward ISL clubs began to participate in Durand Cup on invitation 70 ATK Bengaluru Chennaiyin Goa and Jamshedpur were the first ones to participate in the tournament and 2019 Durand Cup was eventually declared as the de facto domestic cup tournament for that season after Super Cup was cancelled due to COVID 19 pandemic 71 In its next edition Goa became the first club from ISL to win the cup 72 From 2022 onwards AIFF and FSDL made it mandatory for all the clubs to participate in the Durand Cup commencing at the beiginning of every football season thereby to fulfil the minimum number of games played by top tier clubs set by AFC 73 Reliance Foundation Development League Main articles Reliance Foundation Development League and Next Gen Cup In June 2021 it was proposed by the organisers of ISL after a meeting with the CEOs of all the ISL clubs that a new developmental league called Reliance Foundation Development League would be introduced in 2022 74 This new league would consist of the youth and reserve teams of all the ISL clubs with aim to develop young players as there has been limited number of competitions and leagues outside the ISL since the pandemic The teams would predominantly feature U 21 players with few overage players allowed as well 75 The inaugural season of the proposed two month league was to be held in Goa inside a bio secure bubble between January and March following the same medical and safety procedures for 2021 22 ISL season but got postponed to April 15 76 Out of all the ISL clubs ATK Mohun Bagan East Bengal NorthEast United and Odisha didn t participate due to lack of youth teams thus only seven clubs took part in the league along with Reliance Foundation Youth Champs football team The league concluded on 12 May with Bengaluru topping the table and becoming the inaugural champions Along with Bengaluru Kerala Blasters qualified for Premier League s NextGen Cup 2022 in the UK as the top two teams in the league ClubsThe Indian Super League is currently contested by 11 clubs A total of 13 clubs have participated in the Indian Super League since its inception in 2014 Most of the clubs that have contested in this league were founded as franchise teams for the league Six of these clubs have been competing in this league since its inaugural season The league started with just 8 teams but has now expanded to 11 sides participating in it every season The 8 original clubs included Atletico de Kolkata renamed as ATK FC Chennaiyin Delhi Dynamos rebranded as Odisha FC Goa Kerala Blasters Mumbai City NorthEast United and Pune City In the 2017 18 Indian Super League season two new teams Bengaluru who entered the league after having a successful spell in I League and Jamshedpur a newly formed franchise club made their debut in the league increasing the number of participating teams from 8 to 10 77 At the end of the 2018 19 Indian Super League season Pune City announced that it will be shutting down its operations It was the first club in the history of the league to stop its operations Its place was taken up by Hyderabad who took their place in the succeeding season 78 In the same season Delhi Dynamos relocated to Bhubaneswar and rebranded itself as Odisha FC 79 In 2020 the demand for the two Kolkata giants East Bengal and Mohun Bagan to be playing in Indian Super League increased Following reports of Mohun Bagan strugling financially the decision of merging the football devision of the club with ATK was taken and a new entity ATK Mohun Bagan was formed to take its place in the league 80 In September 2020 East Bengal officially announced that it will be participating in the 2020 21 Indian Super League season 81 This increased the number of teams to 11 where it sits currently Current clubs The following 11 clubs are participating in the 2022 23 Indian Super League Club City Position in 2021 22 First season Seasons in ISL Premierships Championships Recent premiership Recent championshipATK Mohun Bagan Kolkata West Bengal 3rd 2020 2021 3 0 0 Bengaluru Bangalore Karnataka 6th 2017 2018 6 0 1 2018 2019Chennaiyin Chennai Tamil Nadu 8th 2014 9 0 2 2017 2018East Bengal Kolkata West Bengal 11th 2020 2021 3 0 0 Goa Margao Goa 9th 2014 9 1 0 2019 2020 Hyderabad Hyderabad Telangana 2nd 2019 2020 4 0 1 2021 2022Jamshedpur Jamshedpur Jharkhand 1st 2017 2018 6 1 0 2021 2022 Kerala Blasters Kochi Kerala 4th 2014 9 0 0 Mumbai City Mumbai Maharashtra 5th 2014 9 1 1 2020 2021 2020 2021NorthEast United Guwahati Assam 10th 2014 9 0 0 Odisha Bhubaneswar Odisha 7th 2014 9 0 0 Kolkata Bengaluru Chennaiyin Goa Hyderabad Jamshedpur Kerala Blasters Mumbai City NorthEast United Odisha Kolkata clubs ATK Mohun Bagan East Bengalclass notpageimage Locations of the 2022 23 Indian Super League clubs Defunct clubs Club City First season Last season Seasons in ISL Premierships Championships Recent premiership Recent championshipATK Kolkata West Bengal 2014 2019 2020 6 0 3 2019 2020Pune City Pune Maharashtra 2014 2018 2019 5 0 Timeline Present clubs Former clubs Other leaguesChampionshipsSee also List of Indian football champions As of the end of the 2021 22 season 13 clubs have competed in the league with five becoming Champions and three earning the League Winners Shield ATK still remains as the most successful team in ISL with three championships while no team has successfully defended their titles till now Mumbai City is the only club to have won the double becoming the Champions as well as the Premiers during the 2020 21 season 82 Championship and premiership by years Season Regular season Playoffs Top Goalscorer s GoalsPremiers a Number of titles Second b Champions c Number of titles Score Runners up2014 Did not exist Atletico de Kolkata 1 0 Kerala Blasters Elano Chennaiyin 82015 Chennaiyin 3 2 Goa Stiven Mendoza Chennaiyin 132016 Atletico de Kolkata 2 1 1 a e t 4 3 p Kerala Blasters Marcelinho Delhi Dynamos 102017 18 Chennaiyin 2 3 2 Bengaluru Coro Goa 182018 19 Bengaluru 1 0 a e t Goa Coro Goa 162019 20 Goa ATK ATK 3 3 1 Chennaiyin Bartholomew Ogbeche Kerala Blasters Nerijus Valskis Chennaiyin Roy Krishna ATK 152020 21 Mumbai City ATK Mohun Bagan Mumbai City 2 1 ATK Mohun Bagan Igor Angulo Goa Roy Krishna ATK Mohun Bagan 142021 22 Jamshedpur Hyderabad Hyderabad 1 1 a e t 3 1 p Kerala Blasters Bartholomew Ogbeche Hyderabad 18 Since 2019 20 season the regular season table toppers called as Premiers are awarded with the League Winners Shield and are allocated a direct slot in AFC Champions League group stage Since 2019 20 season the regular season runner ups are allocated a slot in AFC Cup qualifying stage in case the Premiers of the regular season also becomes the Champions of the playoff Since 2017 18 season the Champions of the playoffs are allocated a slot in AFC Cup qualifying stage Championships and premierships by clubs Club Total Titles Premiers Season s won Champions Year s wonATK 3 3 2014 2016 2020Chennaiyin 2 2 2015 2018Mumbai City 2 1 2020 21 1 2021Bengaluru 1 1 2019Hyderabad 1 1 2022Goa 1 1 2019 20 Jamshedpur 1 1 2021 22 OwnershipSee also List of Indian Super League club owners Just like the Indian Premier League the Indian Super League has a similar ownership model where the teams are owned by prominent businessmen as well as celebrity owners from Bollywood and cricket 83 The Indian Super League owners act as the competition s League Partners 84 British professional services group Ernst amp Young were hired to draw up a criterion for the team bidding process and they were required to approve the potential owners 84 In April 2014 the owners were announced Bollywood stars such as Ranbir Kapoor John Abraham and Salman Khan were bid winners as well as cricket stars Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly 84 Football clubs such as Atletico Madrid and Shillong Lajong were also bid winners 84 Despite careful selection the Indian Super League has had trouble in the past with team ownership In August 2014 two months before the inaugural season Sun Group the owners of the Bangalore franchise dropped out of the competition after the competition rejected their potential tie up with then I League club Bengaluru FC 85 Later that month it was announced that another Bollywood star Abhishek Bachchan would take over the last franchise spot and move the team from Bangalore to Chennai 86 The competition had its first ownership switch within a team on 1 June 2016 when the Kerala Blasters announced their new ownership structure Along with Sachin Tendulkar the team brought in businessman Nimmagadda Prasad and film stars Allu Aravind Chiranjeevi and Nagarjuna after PVP Ventures withdrew their stake in the team 87 Later in 2018 Tendulkar sold off his shares to the majority stakeholders in the club Sponsorship and revenuesIn 2014 Hero MotoCorp became the first title sponsor of the Indian Super League in a deal that would last through 2016 88 On 30 September 2014 a week before the first season it was announced that Puma SE would be the official ball supplier of the Indian Super League 89 Nivia became the official match ball sponsor for the session 2018 19 and supplied FIFA pro certified Nivia Ashtang to be played through ten clubs 90 The competition relies heavily on a central sponsorship pool League stakeholders Star Sports and IMG Reliance manage the central sponsorship pool and market the competition to potential investors and sponsors 91 Twenty per cent of the money gained in the central sponsorship pool goes towards organising the competition while the rest is divided among the teams Despite successfully gaining a lot of money through central sponsorship in 2014 100 of the revenues were used by the competition to improve infrastructure and facilities which meant that the teams lost money during the first season 91 The next season saw a change however with the central sponsorship pool doubling to around 100 crore due to new competition wide sponsorships with corporates such as Flipkart and DHL Express Teams were also able to increase their intake in sponsorship in 2015 with shirt sponsorship deals worth double from the previous season and around nine advertisements allowed on team kits 91 Teams in the league had also signed shirt manufacturing sponsorship deals with companies such as Adidas and Puma 91 For the 2016 season it was projected that the competition would gain more sponsors compared to the previous season especially since the competition would occur during the Indian festive periods 92 For kit sponsorships each team is allowed to have six sponsorships on the kit with teams like ATK regularly filling those spots 93 On 23 July 2017 it was announced that Hero MotoCorp would extend their deal as the title sponsors of the Indian Super League for another three years 94 The company would spend 25 million on the competition during those three years according to Nita Ambani the league s chairperson 94 Media coverageTelevision ratings Star Sports one of the organisers of the Indian Super League also serves as the official broadcasters of the league in India 95 In September 2014 it was announced that Star Sports would broadcast the ISL through eight channels in five languages in an attempt to reach 85 of the Indian television audience 96 The first match of the Indian Super League between Atletico de Kolkata and Mumbai City on 12 October 2014 reportedly drew a television audience of 75 million people 97 The first week reportedly drew 170 million people in total These numbers were 12 times more than what India drew for the 2014 FIFA World Cup and around 20 30 times more than what the I League India s then top tier football league drew on TEN Action and even the English Premier League 97 Overall at the end of the first season it was reported that the ISL drew a total of 429 million viewers across India just a bit lower than the Pro Kabaddi League and two and a half times more than the FIFA World Cup 98 It was also reported that 57 of the viewers were women and children and that the Star Sports website gained 32 million visits during the tournament 98 The league experienced a sharp growth in ratings after the 2016 season with over 216 million viewers on television throughout 99 The 2016 final between ATK and the Kerala Blasters reportedly drew 41 million viewers which was a 41 increase on the number of viewers who saw the 2015 final between Chennaiyin and Goa 99 Ratings in rural India meanwhile drew 101 million viewers 99 For the 2017 18 season Star Sports broadcast the league on Star Sports 2 and Star Sports 2HD in English The broadcasters also televised the matches in Bangla Malayalam Kannada Tamil and other languages through various channels 100 The league is also streamed online via Disney Hotstar Star India s online streaming service and Jio TV 100 ISL 2019 20 season viewership recorded a 51 percent growth At the end of the season the league recorded a 51 per cent jump in viewership among the urban affluent sports savvy audience of M15 AB Urban as per BARC s report 101 ISL 2020 21 season saw a growth of 16 pan India viewership from last 2019 20 season s viewership numbers 102 Broadcasters Main article List of Indian Super League broadcasters Period Territory Broadcast amp live streaming partners2021 present Indian Subcontinent Afghanistan Bangladesh Bhutan India Maldives Nepal Sri Lanka Star SportsBrazil Italy Germany Argentina Spain Mexico Colombia France Chile United Kingdom Ecuador Peru United States Portugal Indonesia Austria Netherlands Switzerland Venezuela Algeria Bolivia Guatemala Belgium Uruguay Egypt El Salvador Honduras Morocco Costa Rica Russia South Africa Canada Panama Poland Paraguay Malaysia Ireland Greece Australia Turkey Tunisia Singapore Cuba Sweden United Arab Emirates Nicaragua Jamaica Denmark Kenya Nigeria Romania Senegal Myanmar Ukraine Norway Republic of Korea Croatia Dominican Republic Luxembourg Lebanon Ghana Saudi Arabia Czech Republic Guadeloupe Finland New Zealand Islamic Republic of Iran Bulgaria Cote D ivoire Hungary Israel Iraq Trinidad and Tobago Mauritius Angola Malta Albania Reunion Serbia Slovenia Hong Kong Thailand Kazakhstan Ethiopia China Uganda Qatar Belarus Mozambique VietNam Japan Armenia Bosnia and Herzegovina Cameroon Gabon Cyprus Togo Georgia Mali Estonia Macedonia Barbados Slovakia Azerbaijan Somalia Martinique Republic of Moldova Jordan Lithuania Uzbekistan Tanzania Zambia Democratic Republic of the Congo Zimbabwe Namibia Oman Cambodia Suriname Latvia Iceland Philippines Kuwait Andorra Monaco Benin Burkina Faso Kyrgyzstan Bahrain Cape Verde French Guiana Puerto Rico Equatorial Guinea Saint Lucia Republic of the Congo Brunei Darussalam Sierra Leone Guinea Gambia Guyana Haiti Botswana Mauritania Syrian Arab Republic Libya Madagascar San Marino Taiwan Anguilla Curacao Sudan Mayotte Antigua and Barbuda Aruba Belize Liechtenstein Niger Montenegro Turkmenistan Afghanistan Seychelles French Polynesia Eswatini Malawi Mongolia Rwanda Gibraltar Liberia Tajikistan Djibouti Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Lao People s Democratic Republic Grenada Sao Tome and Principe Guinea Bissau Bermuda South Sudan Comoros Bahamas Dominica Cayman Islands Palestinian Territory Yemen Saint Kitts and Nevis Faroe Islands Macao Chad Burundi Isle of Man Papua New Guinea Lesotho Timor Leste Central African Republic Greenland Saint Martin Turks and Caicos Islands British Virgin Islands Guernsey Falkland Islands Malvinas Jersey Saint Pierre and Miquelon Aland Islands Bonaire Sint Eustatius and Saba Eritrea Sint Maarten US Virgin Islands Saint Helena Holy See Vatican City Federated States of Micronesia Guam Montserrat OneFootballFiji Papua New Guinea Solomon Islands Samoa Cook Islands Vanuatu American Samoa Kiribati Tuvalu Niue Tokelau Tahiti New Caledonia Tonga Nauru Digicel PNG TVWAN Action amp TVWAN Sports Serbia Croatia Montenegro Bosnia amp Herzegovina Slovenia North Macedonia Kosovo Arena SportSource Indian Super LeagueStadiumsSince the competition began in 2014 there have been a variety of stadiums used to host matches Two stadiums the DY Patil Stadium in Navi Mumbai and the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in Kochi are mainly used as cricket stadiums 103 Three other stadiums are athletic stadiums which are primarily used to host football matches in the I League the Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in Goa the Vivekananda Yuba Bharati Krirangan VYBK in Kolkata and the Balewadi Stadium in Pune Three other venues were used which don t primarily host top tier professional football the Indira Gandhi Athletic Stadium in Assam the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in Chennai and the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in Delhi 103 For the 2016 season two new stadiums were used in the competition the Mumbai Football Arena in Mumbai and the Rabindra Sarobar Stadium in Kolkata The Mumbai Football Arena replaced the DY Patil Stadium for Mumbai City 104 ATK moved to the Rabindra Sarobar Stadium when the VYBK was being renovated for the 2017 FIFA U 17 World Cup 105 For the 2017 18 season ATK returned to the VYBK while the addition of Bengaluru and Jamshedpur added two new stadiums to the competition Bengaluru would host matches at the Sree Kanteerava Stadium while Jamshedpur would play at the JRD Tata Sports Complex 100 Currently Jamshedpur is the only team to play at a self owned stadium although ATK Mohun Bagan and East Bengal have their respective self owned stadiums Mohun Bagan Ground and East Bengal Ground respectively but they both prefer to use the VYBK to host matches Home stadiums of current clubs ATK Mohun Bagan Bengaluru Chennaiyin East Bengal Goa HyderabadVivekananda Yuba Bharati Krirangan Kolkata Sree Kanteerava Stadium Bangalore Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium Chennai Vivekananda Yuba Bharati Krirangan Kolkata Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium Margao G M C Balayogi Athletic Stadium HyderabadCapacity 85 000 Capacity 25 800 Capacity 40 000 Capacity 85 000 Capacity 30 000 Capacity 30 000 Jamshedpur Kerala Blasters Mumbai City NorthEast United OdishaJRD Tata Sports Complex Jamshedpur Jawaharlal Nehru International Stadium Kochi Mumbai Football Arena Mumbai Indira Gandhi Athletic Stadium Guwahati Kalinga Stadium BhubaneswarCapacity 40 000 Capacity 80 000 Capacity 18 000 Capacity 25 000 Capacity 15 000 CoachesSee also List of Indian Super League coaches Managers or head coaches in the ISL are involved in day to day running of the team including the training team selection and player acquisition Their influence varies from club to club and is related to the ownership of the club An AFC Pro Diploma license which is the final coaching qualification available in AFC member nation and follows the completion of the AFC B Diploma and AFC A Diploma licenses or any equivalent coaching license is required by a head coach in ISL 106 Moreover every head coach must have at least one Indian assistant coach who must also possess an AFC Pro Diploma license although an Indian goalkeeping coach is not considered as an assistant coach to fulfil the aforementioned criterion 106 Unqualified caretaker manager can be appointed to fill the gap between the managerial departure and a new appointment Historically ISL has seen a flurry of coaches incoming and outgoing each season with most coaches serving for a season or two at a single club Sergio Lobera is the longest serving coach in the league 970 days with Goa while Habas has been a coach in the league for the longest cumulative duration 1 906 days serving at three clubs Based on achievements Lobera remains the most successful coach in ISL with the League Winner s Shield with Goa in 2019 20 and another of the Shield and the ISL Championship with Mumbai City in 2020 21 Current head coaches Nat Head coach Club Appointed Time as head coach Manolo Marquez Hyderabad 31 August 2020 2 years 138 days Ivan Vukomanovic Kerala Blasters 17 June 2021 1 year 213 days Des Buckingham Mumbai City 8 October 2021 1 year 100 days Juan Ferrando ATK Mohun Bagan 20 December 2021 1 year 27 days Carlos Pena Goa 16 April 2022 275 days Simon Grayson Bengaluru 8 June 2022 222 days Josep Gombau Odisha 8 June 2022 222 days Thomas Brdaric Chennaiyin 14 June 2022 216 days Aidy Boothroyd Jamshedpur 10 July 2022 190 days Stephen Constantine East Bengal 27 July 2022 173 days Marco Balbul NorthEast United 11 August 2022 158 daysPlayersFurther information Indian Super League records and statistics Appearances Further information List of Indian Super League players As of 12 January 2023 107 Most appearances Rank Player Apps Years1 Mandar Rao Dessai 134 2014 2 Lenny Rodrigues 132 2014 3 Pritam Kotal 131 2014 4 Narayan Das 130 2014 Amrinder Singh 130 2015 6 Sunil Chhetri 126 2015 Harmanjot Khabra 126 2014 8 Rahul Bheke 123 2015 9 Sandesh Jhingan 119 2014 10 Tiri 110 2016 Transfer regulations and foreign players See also List of foreign Indian Super League players Player transfers may only take place within transfer windows set by the All India Football Federation and approved by the FIFA The two transfer windows run from June 9 to August 31 and from January 1 to January 31 Player registrations cannot be exchanged outside these windows except under specific license from the AIFF usually on an emergency basis if a player is injured and ruled out for at least two months the club can permanently replace him also if the club terminates the contract of a registered player then a replacement can be signed 108 Although loan transfers and registrations can take place even outside the transfer windows During the initial seasons the no of foreigners in a squad varied from 7 10 which was gradually reduced as the league achieved AFC and FIFA recognition and the organisers emphasised more on developing Indian players As of 2021 22 a club can have a maximum squad strength of 35 men including at most 6 foreigners 1 of them must belong to an AFC member nation and 3 registered goalkeepers 109 A club can also have an injury replacement for a domestic player 109 If a club registers less than 35 players by the end of the window they can still fill the quota post the stipulated date provided the player is a free agent FSDL also mandated the clubs to sign at least 4 under 21 players with minimum 2 of them being a part of the matchday squad 109 Previously it was also mandatory for the clubs to get the approval of the league for three of their foreign signings wherein players who have played a minimum of 1000 minutes last season were automatically approved But this rule was later scrapped and the clubs no longer need to approach the organisers for approval Top scorers See also Indian Super League Golden Boot and List of Indian football first tier top scorers As of 12 January 2023 110 Top goalscorers Rank Player Goals Apps Ratio Years1 Bartholomew Ogbeche 60 91 0 66 2018 2 Sunil Chhetri 52 126 0 41 2015 3 Coro 48 57 0 84 2017 20204 Roy Krishna 37 72 0 51 2019 5 Marcelinho 34 87 0 39 2016 20226 Iain Hume 28 69 0 41 2014 2019 Hugo Boumous 28 86 0 33 2018 8 Nerijus Valskis 27 55 0 49 2019 2022 Lallianzuala Chhangte 27 109 0 25 2016 10 Igor Angulo 24 40 0 6 2020 2022 Cleiton Silva 24 49 0 49 2020 Jeje Lalpekhlua 24 76 0 32 2014 2021Bold denotes players still playing in the Indian Super League Italics denotes players still playing professional football Wages Every club has to follow a squad salary cap of 16 5 crores 2 2 million which includes individual performance bonus exclusive of team bonus agent intermediary fee and other arrangements with the players although loan wages and transfer fees are not included within the salary cap A club has an option to sign a marquee player through the League s approval whose salary is excluded from the stated salary cap Failing to follow the regulations a club may risk deduction of points possible fines and or sanctions by the league 111 AwardsTrophy The Indian Super League cup was unveiled on 5 October 2014 by Nita Ambani the founder and chairperson of Football Sports Development 112 At the trophy unveiling occasion Mrs Ambani said It s a momentous day for all of us today as I stand along with the world s footballing legends to unveil the pride of Indian Super League As these role models have inspired hundreds of thousands of players worldwide I am sure the ISL trophy will also stand as a symbol of aspiration for many youngsters in an emergent India 112 On 19 February 2020 the FSDL unveiled the League Winners Shield for the ISL premiers to be awarded from 2019 20 season onwards 113 Designed by Frazer and Haws the ISL cup stands 26 inches tall The logo on the top band has the ISL colors assigned to it and the handles are ornately carved and embellished with 24 carats of gold gilt to imbue a sense of pride when held up 112 The League Winners Shield weighing approx 5 kg with a diameter of 22 inches draws inspiration from global football traditions and design tones of the ISL cup The wreath carved around the silver football symbolises the victors of The Beautiful Game Individual awards In addition to the League Winners Shield and the ISL Cup the organisers also issue other awards throughout the season A Man of the Match award referred as the Hero of the Match due to sponsorship reasons is presented to the player who had the most impact in an individual match Monthly awards are also given for the Hero of the Month and Emerging Player of the Month These are also issued at the conclusion of each season for the Hero of the League and the Emerging Player of the League 114 The Golden Boot is awarded to the top goalscorer of each season the Winning Pass of the League award is presented to the top assist provider of each season and the Golden Glove is awarded to the goalkeeper with the most clean sheets in a season PartnershipsThe Indian Super League has a strategic partnership with the Premier League 115 116 ISL announced a landmark partnership with London based Terra Virtua Limited to launch its exclusive Non fungible token NFT as digital collectibles ahead of the 2021 22 season 117 Indian Super League and South Asia s leading esports company NODWIN Gaming on 26 October 2021 announced the launch of eISL that effectively meant that Hero Indian Super League in collaboration with EA Sports became the country s first major sports league to venture into competitive gaming 118 See alsoSports in India I League I League 2 Indian State Leagues Indian Women s League List of Indian football champions List of Indian Super League coaches India national football team Indian football clubs in Asian competitions 2021 23 Indian football club competition play offs for AFC History of Indian football IFA ShieldNotesReferences Nine month calendar for Indian football from next season timesofindia indiatimes com Archived from the original on 27 May 2022 Retrieved 28 May 2022 Hero MotoCorp renews ISL sponsorship deal for three years ETBrandEquity com Archived from the original on 26 July 2021 About ISL Indian Super League Archived from the original on 14 October 2022 AIFF FSDL close to take final call on ISL 2021 22 schedule khelnow com Archived from the original on 24 June 2021 Retrieved 22 June 2021 Banerjee Ritabrata 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shows 16 pan India growth from last season s viewership numbers The Bridge Home of Indian Sports Archived from the original on 23 February 2021 Retrieved 12 June 2022 a b Gupta Harsh 3 October 2014 Home stadiums of the eight franchisees in the Indian Super League SportsKeeda Archived from the original on 3 July 2021 Retrieved 31 May 2015 ISL 2016 Mumbai City FC to shift base from DY Patil Stadium to Andheri Sports Complex FirstPost 26 August 2016 Archived from the original on 16 August 2017 Retrieved 15 August 2017 Noronha Anselm 21 August 2016 Atletico de Kolkata get a new home ground for ISL 2016 Goal com Archived from the original on 30 August 2017 Retrieved 15 August 2017 a b Chatterjee Sayan 19 September 2020 ISL Player and coach guidelines for 2020 21 All you need to know The Bridge Archived from the original on 4 April 2022 Retrieved 4 April 2022 All time appearances worldfootball net Archived from the original on 2 August 2020 Retrieved 31 May 2020 Mukherjee Soham ISL 2020 21 Transfer amp Registration window When can teams sign players beyond registration window Goal Archived from the original on 4 April 2022 Retrieved 4 April 2022 a b c Hero ISL s new regulation gives push to more Indian players on field Indian Super League Archived from the original on 9 June 2021 Retrieved 4 April 2022 Player Stats indiansuperleague com Archived from the original on 24 June 2021 Retrieved 25 February 2021 Mergulhao Marcus 8 November 2021 ISL threatens clubs with points deduction for flouting salary cap The Times of India Archived from the original on 4 April 2022 Retrieved 4 April 2022 a b c Hero Indian Super League trophy unveiled The Times of India Archived from the original on 24 August 2017 Retrieved 14 May 2016 FSDL unveils Hero ISL League Winners Shield Indian Super League Archived from the original on 12 August 2022 Retrieved 12 March 2022 ISL 2020 final ATK vs Chennaiyin as it happened Hernandez s brace helps ATK secure third title Scroll in 14 March 2020 Archived from the original on 6 June 2020 Retrieved 6 June 2020 Premier League and Hero ISL demonstrate commitment to development of football in India with renewed Mutual Cooperation Agreement Indian Super League Archived from the original on 3 July 2021 Retrieved 16 February 2021 Premier League and ISL renew Mutual Cooperation Agreement www premierleague com Archived from the original on 18 March 2021 Retrieved 16 February 2021 Indian Super League partners with Terra Virtua first sports league in India to enter booming NFT market The Bridge 22 September 2021 Archived from the original on 7 October 2021 Retrieved 5 October 2021 FSDL reiterates youth appeal with revolutionary esports platform eISL Indian Super League Archived from the original on 26 October 2021 Retrieved 26 October 2021 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Indian Super League Official website Preceded byI League from 2022 Division 1 Football League in India2019 present Succeeded byincumbent Portals Association football India Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Indian Super League amp oldid 1133927653, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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