Iraq Super League

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ISL
Founded
1974
Current member clubs
24
Current Champions
Al Zawraa
System
3 Groups, playoff system

The Iraq Super League (Arabic: دوري "السوبر" العراقي أو الدوري العراقي الأول) is the highest league in the league system of Iraqi football and currently contains the top 24 Iraqi football clubs. It was founded in 1974 and is controlled by the Iraq Football Federation.

Contents

[edit] Before the Expansion of beyond Baghdad

Prior to 1974, the league contained only Baghdad based teams. The league was named "Baghdad Super League" and began its first season in 1962. During its 11 years, the Baghdad league was dominated by the Al Shurta club as it won almost half of the championships.

[edit] The Current Competition

Since the toppling of the Saddma Hussein regime, the Iraqi league has made some dramatic changes. The league now starts in October and ends in July. Unlike the upper division of most countries' football leagues, Iraq's first league are split into 3 groups. This is due to present difficulty in travel. In the first postwar year, the league split 28 teams into 4 groups of seven, based on region: North, South, and 2 Baghdad groups. The North and South groups also had one Baghdad team each as well. In the 2006 - 2007 season, the league shrunk to 3 groups, with 8 teams in each group.

The top 4 teams from each group moves on to the next round, while the last team of each group is relegated to the Iraq's 2nd division league (in the 2004-05 season, each group was forced to relegate 3 teams because the league had too many teams (35)). The 12 advancing teams are then split into 4 groups of 3, where each team plays the other twice, once home and once away. The first team in each of the 4 groups advances to the next round (the semi-finals.) Each of the 4 remaining teams is then paired with another team, where they will play a home and away match. The 2 winners advance to the championship for a single Baghdad venue match, while the two losing teams play for 3rd place.

The two finalist teams also advance to play in the Asian Club Championship, while the third place team qualifies to the Arab Champions League.

[edit] 2006 - 2007 League

[edit] Previous Winners

Baghdad Super League

Year Team Top Score
1962-63 Al Shurta
1963-64 Al Quwa Al Jawiya
1964-65 Al Muwasalat -Al Zawraa
1965-66 Al Muwasalat -Al Zawraa
1966-67 cancelled
1967-68 Al Shurta
1968-69 Al Shurta
1969-70 Al Shurta
1970-71 Al Muwasalat -Al Zawraa
1971-72 Al Shurta
1972-73 Al Shurta

Iraq Super League

Year Team Top Goal Scorer
1974-75 Al Quwa Al Jawiya - Al Tayran Thamir Yosif (13)
1975-76 Al Zawraa Thamir Yosif (13)
1976-77 Al Zawraa Zahrawi Jabir (6)
1977-78 Al Minaa Jalil Hanoon (11)
1978-79 Al Zawraa Falah Hassan (7)
1979-80 Al Shurta Ali Husain Mahmud (18)
1980-81 Al Talaba Husain Saeed (11)
1981-82 Al Talaba Thamir Yosif (14)
1982-83 Salah Al-Deen Husain Saeed (17)
1983-84 Al Jaish Raheem Hameed (11)
1984-85 Abandoned due to Iran-Iraq War
1985-86 Al Talaba Husain Saeed, Ahmed Radhi and Raheem Hameed (9)
1986-87 Al Rasheed -Al Karkh Raheem Hameed (14)
1987-88 Al Rasheed -Al Karkh Raheem Hameed (14)
1988-89 Al Rasheed -Al Karkh Kareem Saddam (22)
1989-90 Al Quwa Al Jawiya Kareem Saddam and Majeed Abdul Rida (13)
1990-91 Al Zawraa Kareem Saddam (20)
1991-92 Al Quwa Al Jawiya Laith Husain
1992-93 Al Talaba Kareem Saddam (33)
1993-94 Al Zawraa Younis Abid-Ali (36)
1994-95 Al Zawraa Muyad Joodi (30)
1995-96 Al Zawraa Ali Hassan, Hussam Fawzi (11)
1996-97 Al Quwa Al Jawiya Ali Hashim (19)
1997-98 Al Shurta Mahmoud Majid (22)
1998-99 Al Zawra Hashim Ridha (19)
1999-00 Al Zawraa Haidar Ayad (28)
2000-01 Al Zawraa Hussein Abdullah (22)
2001-02 Al Talaba Hashim Ridha (32)
2002-03 Abandoned due to War
2003-04 Abandoned due to War
2004-05 Al Quwa Al Jawiya Moustafa Karim (16)
2005-06 Al Zawra Sahib Abbas (17)

[edit] External link

Iraq Super League 2006–07
v  d  e

South div.: Al-Forat | Ash Shatra | Karbalaa | Maysan | Naft Al Junoob | Najaf | Port | Al Talaba
North div.: Arbil | Duhok | Kirkuk | Mousel | Al Shurta | Samarra | Sirwan | Sulaymaniyah
Baghdad div.: Air Force | Al-Adala | Al Kahraba | Al Naft | Al Ramadi | Al Sinaa | Al Zawraa | Al Jaish

Top level football leagues of Asia (AFC)
v  d  e

Australia | Bahrain | Bangladesh | Bhutan | Brunei | Cambodia | China PR | Chinese Taipei | East Timor | Guam | Hong Kong | India | Indonesia | Iran | Iraq | Japan | Jordan | Korea DPR | Korea Republic | Kuwait | Kyrgyzstan | Laos | Lebanon | Macau | Malaysia | Maldives | Mongolia | Myanmar | Nepal | Oman | Pakistan | Palestine: Gaza Strip West Bank | Philippines | Qatar | Saudi Arabia | Singapore | Sri Lanka | Syria | Tajikistan | Thailand: Thai League & Pro League | Turkmenistan | United Arab Emirates | Uzbekistan | Vietnam | Yemen 

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