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List of Indonesian football champions

The Indonesian football champions are the winners of the highest league of Indonesian men's football, which since 2017 is the Liga 1.

List of Indonesian football champions
Founded1930
CountryIndonesia
ConfederationAFC
Number of teams18
Current championsPersib Bandung
(8th title)
(2023–24)
Most championshipsPersija Jakarta
(11 titles)
Current: 2023–24 Liga 1

Perserikatan, an amateur inter-cities competition, was first established under auspices of the Football Association of Indonesia (PSSI) in 1930. From Indonesia's independence in August 1945 until the establishment of the semi-professional Galatama, Perserikatan was the premier club football competition in the country. Perserikatan and Galatama ran in parallel until 1994, when it was merged to form Liga Indonesia, the first professional football league in Indonesia. The structure remained until 2008, when the Indonesia Super League was established.[1]

A PSSI internal dispute led into the creation of Indonesian Premier League in 2011,[2] and it ran in parallel with the Super League for two seasons.[3] The Super League became the top-flight league once again in 2013,[4] but was prematurely ended in May 2015 following Indonesian government's ban on PSSI activities,[5] which subsequently led to the suspension of PSSI from FIFA membership.[6] The current top-flight league, Liga 1, was launched in 2017.[7]

This list does not include the champion of Liga Primer Indonesia, a short-lived, not officially recognized independent football league that existed between September 2010 and April 2011, which was subsequently merged into the Premier League.

List of champions

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Inlandsche Stedenwedstrijden (1930–1943)

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Source:[8]

Season Champions Runners-up
1930[a] VIJ Batavia[VIJ] SIVB Surabaya
1931 VIJ Batavia[VIJ] PSIM Yogyakarta
1932 PSIM Yogyakarta VIJ Batavia[VIJ]
1933 VIJ Batavia[VIJ] Persib Bandung
1934[b] VIJ Batavia[VIJ] Persib Bandung
1935 Persis Solo[SOL] PPVIM Meester Cornelis
1936 Persis Solo[SOL] Persib Bandung
1937 Persib Bandung Persis Solo[SOL]
1938 VIJ Batavia[VIJ] Persebaya Surabaya
1939 Persis Solo[SOL] PSIM Yogyakarta
1940 Persis Solo[SOL] PSIM Yogyakarta
1941 Persis Solo[SOL] Persebaya Surabaya
1942 Persis Solo[SOL] PSIM Yogyakarta
1943 Persis Solo[SOL] PSIM Yogyakarta

Perserikatan (1950–1994)

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Source:[9][10][11]

Season Champions Runner-up Top scorer (club, goals) Winning manager
1950[c] Persib Bandung Persebaya Surabaya
1951 Persebaya Surabaya PSM Makassar
1952 Persebaya Surabaya Persija Jakarta
1953–54 Persija Jakarta PSMS Medan
1955–57 PSM Makassar PSMS Medan Indonesia  Andi Ramang (PSM Makassar, 14)
1957–59 PSM Makassar Persib Bandung Indonesia  Suwardi Arland (PSM Makassar, 11)
1959–61 Persib Bandung PSM Makassar Indonesia  Wowo Sunaryo (Persib Bandung) Indonesia  Cornellis Tomasowa
1962–64 Persija Jakarta PSM Makassar Indonesia  Soetjipto Soentoro (Persija Jakarta, 16) Indonesia  Endang Witarsa
1964–65 PSM Makassar Persebaya Surabaya Indonesia  Suwardi Arland
1965–66 PSM Makassar Persib Bandung Indonesia  Ernest Mangindaan
1966–67 PSMS Medan Persib Bandung Indonesia  Jusuf Siregar
1968–69[d] PSMS Medan Persija Jakarta Indonesia  Ramli Yatim
1969–71 PSMS Medan Persebaya Surabaya Indonesia  Abdul Kadir (Persebaya Surabaya) Indonesia  Zulkarnaen Nasution
1971–73 Persija Jakarta Persebaya Surabaya Indonesia  Iswadi Idris (Persija Jakarta) Indonesia  Sinyo Aliandoe
1973–75 Persija Jakarta and PSMS Medan Indonesia  Kainun Waskito (Persebaya Surabaya) Indonesia  Sinyo Aliandoe
Indonesia  Zulkarnaen Nasution
1975–78 Persebaya Surabaya Persija Jakarta Indonesia  Anwar Ramang (PSM Makassar, 14) Indonesia  J.A. Hattu
1978–79 Persija Jakarta PSMS Medan Indonesia  Suwarno (PSMS Medan, 7) Poland  Marek Janota
1980 Persiraja Banda Aceh Persipura Jayapura Indonesia  Leo Kapisa (Persipura Jayapura) Singapore  Andrew Yap
Indonesia  Yusuf Ohorella
1983 PSMS Medan Persib Bandung Indonesia  Bustaman Ibrahim (Persiraja Banda Aceh) Indonesia  Parlin Siagian
1985 PSMS Medan Persib Bandung Indonesia  Ajat Sudrajat (Persib Bandung, 15) Indonesia  Parlin Siagian
1986 Persib Bandung Perseman Manokwari Indonesia  Adityo Dharmadi (Persija Jakarta, 10) Indonesia  Nandar Iskandar
1986–87 PSIS Semarang Persebaya Surabaya Indonesia  Sartono Anwar
1987–88 Persebaya Surabaya Persija Jakarta Indonesia  Syamsul Arifin (Persebaya Surabaya, 18) Indonesia  Kusmanhadi
Indonesia  Misbach
1989–90 Persib Bandung Persebaya Surabaya Indonesia  Ade Dana
1991–92 PSM Makassar PSMS Medan Indonesia  Suharto (PSMS Medan) Indonesia  Syamsuddin Umar
1993–94 Persib Bandung PSM Makassar Indonesia  Agus Winarno (Persebaya Surabaya) Indonesia  Indra Thohir

Galatama (1979–1994)

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Season Champions Runners-up Top scorer (club, goals) Winning manager
1979–80 Warna Agung Jayakarta Indonesia  Hadi Ismanto (Indonesia Muda, 22) Indonesia  Endang Witarsa
1980–82 Niac Mitra Jayakarta Indonesia  Syamsul Arifin (Niac Mitra, 30) Indonesia  Muhammad Basri
1982–83 Niac Mitra UMS 80 Indonesia  Dede Sulaeman (Indonesia Muda, 17) Indonesia  Muhammad Basri
1983–84 Yanita Utama[Kramayudha] Mercu Buana Indonesia  Bambang Nurdiansyah (Mercu Buana, 16) Indonesia  Jacob Sihasale
1984 Yanita Utama[Kramayudha] UMS 80 Indonesia  Bambang Nurdiansyah (Yanita Utama, 13) Indonesia  Abdul Kadir
1985 Krama Yudha Tiga Berlian Arseto Indonesia  Bambang Nurdiansyah (Tiga Berlian, 9) Indonesia  Abdul Kadir
1986–87 Krama Yudha Tiga Berlian Pelita Jaya Indonesia  Ricky Yacobi (Arseto, 9) Indonesia  Abdul Kadir
1987–88 Niac Mitra Pelita Jaya Indonesia  Nasrul Koto (Arseto, 16) Indonesia  Suharno
1988–89 Pelita Jaya Niac Mitra Indonesia  Mecky Tata (Arema, 18)
Indonesia  Dadang Kurnia (Bandung Raya, 18)
Indonesia  Benny Dollo
1990 Pelita Jaya Krama Yudha Tiga Berlian Indonesia  Ricky Yacobi (Arseto, ?) Indonesia  Benny Dollo
1990–92 Arseto Pupuk Kaltim[PKT] Indonesia  Singgih Pitono (Arema, 21) Indonesia  Dananjaya
1992–93 Arema Pupuk Kaltim[PKT] Indonesia  Singgih Pitono (Arema, 16) Indonesia  Gusnul Yakin
1993–94 Pelita Jaya Gelora Dewata Indonesia  Ansyari Lubis (Pelita Jaya, 19) Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia  Selimir Milošević

Before 2008 the highest level of professional football competition in Indonesia was the Premier Division. It used the combination format of double round-robin first round and single-elimination second round.

Season Champions Runners-up Top scorer (club, goals) Winning manager
1994–95 Persib Bandung Petrokimia Putra Indonesia  Peri Sandria (Bandung Raya, 34) Indonesia  Indra Thohir
1995–96 Mastrans Bandung Raya PSM Makassar Serbia  Dejan Gluscevic (Bandung Raya, 30) Netherlands  Henk Wullems
1996–97 Persebaya Surabaya Bandung Raya Brazil  Jacksen F. Tiago (Persebaya Surabaya, 26) Indonesia  Rusdy Bahalwan
1997–98 Competition abandoned due to political and economic turmoil in Indonesia[12] Indonesia  Kurniawan Dwi Yulianto (Pelita Jakarta, 20)
1998–99 PSIS Semarang Persebaya Surabaya Gabon  Alain Mabenda (PSDS Deliserdang, 11) Indonesia  Edy Paryono
1999–2000 PSM Makassar PKT Bontang[PKT] Indonesia  Bambang Pamungkas (Persija Jakarta, 24) Indonesia  Syamsuddin Umar
2001 Persija Jakarta PSM Makassar Cameroon  Sadissou Bako (Barito Putera, 22) Indonesia  Sofyan Hadi
2002 Petrokimia Putra Persita Tangerang Indonesia  Ilham Jaya Kesuma (Persita Tangerang, 26) Moldova  Serghei Dubrovin
2003 Persik Kediri PSM Makassar Chile  Oscar Aravena (PSM Makassar, 31) Indonesia  Jaya Hartono
2004 Persebaya Surabaya PSM Makassar Indonesia  Ilham Jaya Kesuma (Persita Tangerang, 22) Brazil  Jacksen F. Tiago
2005 Persipura Jayapura Persija Jakarta Uruguay  Cristian Gonzáles[N] (Persik Kediri, 25) Indonesia  Rahmad Darmawan
2006 Persik Kediri PSIS Semarang Uruguay  Cristian Gonzáles[N] (Persik Kediri, 29) Indonesia  Daniel Roekito
2007–08 Sriwijaya PSMS Medan Uruguay  Cristian Gonzáles[N] (Persik Kediri, 32) Indonesia  Rahmad Darmawan

Super League (2008–2015)

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Season Champions Runners-up Top scorer (club, goals) Winning manager
2008–09 Persipura Jayapura Persiwa Wamena Indonesia  Boaz Solossa (Persipura Jayapura, 28)
Uruguay  Cristian Gonzáles[N] (Persik/Persib, 28)
Brazil  Jacksen F. Tiago
2009–10 Arema Indonesia Persipura Jayapura Paraguay  Aldo Barreto (Bontang FC, 19) Netherlands  Robert Alberts
2010–11 Persipura Jayapura Arema Indonesia Indonesia  Boaz Solossa (Persipura Jayapura, 22) Brazil  Jacksen F. Tiago
2011–12 Sriwijaya Persipura Jayapura Brazil  Alberto Gonçalves[N] (Persipura Jayapura, 25) Indonesia  Kas Hartadi
2013 Persipura Jayapura Arema Cronus Indonesia  Boaz Solossa (Persipura Jayapura, 25) Brazil  Jacksen F. Tiago
2014 Persib Bandung Persipura Jayapura Cameroon  Emmanuel Kenmogne (Bhayangkara, 25) Indonesia  Djadjang Nurdjaman
2015
Competition abandoned due to conflict between PSSI and the Ministry of Youth and Sports, leading to PSSI's suspension by FIFA[13][14]

Premier League (2011–2013)

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Season Champions Runners-up Top scorer (club, goals) Winning manager
2011–12 Semen Padang Persebaya 1927 Indonesia  Ferdinand Sinaga (Semen Padang, 15) Indonesia  Suhatman Imam
2013
Competition abandoned and merged with the Super League[15][16]
Liberia  Edward Wilson (Semen Padang, 17)

Liga 1 (2017–present)

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Season Champions Runners-up Top scorer (club, goals) Winning manager
2017 Bhayangkara Bali United Netherlands  Sylvano Comvalius (Bali United, 37) Scotland  Simon McMenemy
2018 Persija Jakarta PSM Makassar Serbia  Aleksandar Rakić (PS TIRA, 21) Brazil  Stefano Cugurra
2019 Bali United Persebaya Surabaya Croatia  Marko Šimić (Persija Jakarta, 28) Brazil  Stefano Cugurra
2020
Competition declared void due to the COVID-19 pandemic[17]
2021–22 Bali United Persib Bandung Indonesia  Ilija Spasojević (Bali United, 23) Brazil  Stefano Cugurra
2022–23 PSM Makassar Persija Jakarta Brazil  Matheus Pato (Borneo Samarinda, 25) Portugal  Bernardo Tavares
2023–24 Persib Bandung Madura United Brazil  David da Silva (Persib Bandung, 30) Croatia  Bojan Hodak

Other tournaments

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Several tournaments were organized in the place of a top-flight football league during Indonesia's suspension from FIFA between December 2015 and May 2016. The winners are not officially recognized as Indonesian champion.

Competition Champions Runners-up Top scorer (club, goals) Winning manager
ISC A 2016 Persipura Jayapura Arema Cronus Brazil  Alberto Gonçalves[N] (Sriwijaya, 25) Argentina  Angel Alfredo Vera

Total titles won

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Team Inlandsche Stedenwedstrijden Perserikatan Galatama Premier Division Super League Premier League Liga 1 Total
Persija Jakarta 4 5 1 1 11
Persib Bandung 1 4 1 1 1 8
Persis Solo 7 7
PSM Makassar 5 1 1 7
Persebaya Surabaya 4 2 6
PSMS Medan 5[e] 5[e]
Persipura Jayapura 1 3 4
Niac Mitra 3 3
Pelita Jaya 3 3
Yanita Utama 2 2
Krama Yudha Tiga Berlian 2 2
PSIS Semarang 1 1 2
Persik Kediri 2 2
Arema 1 1 2
Sriwijaya 1 1 2
Bali United 2 2
PSIM Yogyakarta 1 1
Persiraja Banda Aceh 1 1
Warna Agung 1 1
Arseto 1 1
Bandung Raya 1 1
Petrokimia Putra 1 1
Semen Padang 1 1
Bhayangkara 1 1

See also

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Notes

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Content notes

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  1. ^
    Persija Jakarta were known as VIJ until 1942.
  2. ^
    formerly named Vorstenlandsche Voetbal Bond (VVB).
  3. ^
    Yanita Utama also collapsed in 1985. The club was continued by Krama Yudha Tiga Berlian Palembang which finally disbanded in 1991.
  4. ^
    Once name Pupuk Kaltim and PKT Bontang, in 2009 the club changed its name to Bontang F.C.
  5. ^
    They were not naturalized as an Indonesian citizens at that time.

Explanatory notes

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  1. ^ The 1930 season was an unofficial tournament.
  2. ^ The PSSI 50th anniversary book erroneously lists the venue of the tournament as Bandung and its runners-up as Persib.
  3. ^ The 1950 season was an unofficial tournament.
  4. ^ RSSSF claims the 1968–69 season was not held.[9]
  5. ^ a b Six titles if some sources claim PSMS won an additional competition in 1969 but it is not listed in the PSSI 50th anniversary book.[11]

References

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  1. ^ Gerry Putra (29 September 2016). "Sejarah Kompetisi Sepakbola di Indonesia: Dari Masa Pra-Kemerdekaan Hingga (Menuju) Liga Profesional". FourFourTwo (in Indonesian). p. 4. Archived from the original on 14 December 2018.
  2. ^ Abdullah Sammy (13 October 2011). Chairul Akhmad (ed.). "Liga Indonesia Musim Depan Bernama Indonesia Premier League". Republika (in Indonesian).
  3. ^ Djibril Muhammad, ed. (22 December 2011). "FIFA: PSSI Bisa Tindak ISL". Republika (in Indonesian).
  4. ^ Afroni, Donny (17 March 2013). "Liga tetap bernama Indonesia Super League" (in Indonesian). Goal. Archived from the original on 20 March 2013. Retrieved 17 March 2013.
  5. ^ Kardi, Dika Dania. "Kronologi Keputusan Final Pembekuan PSSI". olahraga (in Indonesian). Jakarta: CNN Indonesia.
  6. ^ Salusi, Novitasari Dewi. "PSSI Disanksi FIFA". sepakbola (in Indonesian). Jakarta: detikcom.
  7. ^ "PSSI Ubah ISL Jadi Liga 1" (in Indonesian). Bola.net. 20 January 2017. Archived from the original on 22 January 2017. Retrieved 20 January 2017.
  8. ^ "Dutch East Indies – Football History". RSSSF. Retrieved 2021-11-19.
  9. ^ a b "List of Perserikatan champions in RSSSF".
  10. ^ "P.S.S.I. (inlandsche) Stedenwedstrijden 1930–1950". Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  11. ^ a b Aldi Aulia Anwar (10 May 2020). Ivan Reinhard Manurung (ed.). "1969–1970, Era 'Los Galaticos' di PSMS Medan". Indosport.com (in Indonesian).
  12. ^ Faizal Rizki Pratama (21 May 2020). Nungki Nugroho (ed.). "Kilas Balik Liga Indonesia 1997/1998 Berhenti Akibat Kekacauan Politik". Bolasport.com (in Indonesian).
  13. ^ AF Yanda (2 May 2015). "Resmi Dihentikan PSSI, Liga Indonesia Musim 2015 dianggap Tidak Ada". Kompasiana (in Indonesian). Retrieved 30 August 2019.
  14. ^ C37 (31 May 2015). Julkifli Marbun (ed.). "PSSI suspended by FIFA". Republika. Retrieved 30 August 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ Muchamad Syuhada (26 October 2013). "Laga Semen Padang Kontra Juara Playoff Batal". VIVA.co.id (in Indonesian). Archived from the original on 28 October 2013.
  16. ^ Haris Dasril (28 October 2013). "Pro Duta juara playoff IPL tanpa mahkota". SindoNews (in Indonesian). Archived from the original on 25 August 2019. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
  17. ^ "Kompetisi Liga 1 dan 2 Musim 2020–2021 Resmi Dibatalkan". PSSI – Football Association of Indonesia (in Indonesian). Archived from the original on 27 January 2021. Retrieved 20 January 2021.
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