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| Royal League |
|---|
| Founded |
| 2004 |
| Continent |
| Europe (UEFA) |
| Number of Teams |
| 12 |
| Current Champions (2006-07) |
| Most successful club |
| Website |
| www.royalleague.com |
The Royal League is an annual Scandinavian football tournament between teams from the three Scandinavian monarchies (Denmark, Sweden, and Norway), starting after the end of the regular domestic seasons of Norway and Sweden. Denmark, however, are in mid-season when the tournament starts. The four best-placed teams in the football leagues of Denmark, Norway and Sweden participate in the tournament.
There have been discussion of expanding the league, and include, the winners of Veikkausliiga and Landsbankadeild, which is the Finnish and the Icelandic premier division.citation needed
The 2007-2008 edition has been cancelled for financial reasons, but the board is planning to resurrect the tournament for the 2008-2009 season.1 On 11 October 2008 it was announced that the 2008-09 season would not be held either, as the TV rights for the tournament had not been sold.2
Contents |
History
For the Royal League 2004-05 tournament, the twelve participating teams were initially placed into three groups. The two best-placed teams from each country were placed in the same group, while the two other teams were placed in the two other groups. In each group, each team played against the other three teams, home and away. The two best-placed teams of each group were randomly placed into two new groups. The three teams of each new group played each other, home and away. The 2005 Royal League Final was contested on 26 May 2005, by Swedish team IFK Göteborg and F.C. Copenhagen from Denmark. F.C. Copenhagen won the title following a penalty shootout.
In the second season of the tournament, the twelve participating teams were also divided into three preliminary groups. The two best-placed teams of each group, and the two best third-placed teams went on to play quarterfinals. The rest of the tournament was played in a knockout-system. The quarterfinals and semifinals were played both at home and away, while there was only a single final game to decide the winner. The 2006 Royal League Final was contested on 6 April 2006, by F.C. Copenhagen and Lillestrøm S.K. from Norway. F.C. Copenhagen won their second title, when Razak Pimpong scored to 1-0 in the last minutes of the game.
For the Royal League 2006-07 tournament, the structure of initial group stage and subsequent knockout-stage was kept. As opposed to the previous edition of the tournament, the knock-out stages were played as single games, with the team having the best group stage record earning home field advantage. The 2007 Royal League Final was contested on 15 March 2007, by Danish team Brøndby IF and F.C. Copenhagen. Brøndby won 1-0, on a penalty kick converted by Martin Ericsson.
The league has received quite a lot of criticism since the first season. The teams rarely bother to play with their best side, and this leads to a lack of interest. Raising the award money and/or giving direct place in the UEFA Champions League have been suggested as ways to improve the situation.
Finals
| Season | Winner | Score | Runner-up | Venue | Attendance | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006-07 | Brøndby IF |
1–0 | FC Copenhagen |
Brøndby Stadion, Brøndby, Denmark |
17,914 | Thu, 15 March 2007 |
| 2005-06 | FC Copenhagen |
1–0 | Lillestrøm SK |
Parken, Copenhagen, Denmark |
13,617 | Thu, 6 April 2006 |
| 2004-05 | FC Copenhagen |
1–1 12–11 (pen) |
IFK Göteborg |
Ullevi, Gothenburg, Sweden |
10,216 | Thu, 26 May 2005 |
All-time table by country
See also: All-time Royal League statistics
| Country | Titles | Runners-up |
|---|---|---|
| 3 | 1 | |
| 0 | 1 | |
| 0 | 1 |
References
- ^ "Royal league ställs in" (Svenska Dagbladet, 11 December 2007)
- ^ "Ny time-out til Royal League" ([[Danish Football Association, 11 October 2008)
See also
- Allsvenskan
- Danish Superliga
- Norwegian Premier League
- Nordic Football Championship
- Baltic League
- CIS Cup
External links
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Royal League 2006–07
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Royal League seasons
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Royal League finals
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Wikipedia content modification information:
- This page was last modified on 21 November 2008, at 13:23.
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