Tanzanian Premier League Explained

Tanzanian Premier League
Country: Tanzania
Confed:Confederation of African Football
Relegation:Championship
Levels:1
Teams:16
Domest Cup:
Confed Cup:
Champions:Young Africans
Season:2023–24
Most Successful Club:Young Africans S.C (30 titles)
Top Goalscorer:John Bocco
(155 goals)
Tv:Azam TV
(live matches and highlights)
Website:ligikuu.co.tz
Current:2023–24 Tanzanian Premier League

The Tanzania Mainland Premier League is a top-level Tanzanian professional football league, governed by the Tanzania Football Federation.

History

The league was first organized in Dar es Salaam in 1921[1] and by 1929 had six participants. In the 1930s, the league included street teams such as Arab Sports (Kariakoo) and New Strong Team (Kisutu), which primarily consisted of Arab and African players. The Sudanese community had a team that joined the league in 1941 although by the mid-1940s the team had split up. Other teams in the league's early history included the Khalsas, an exclusively Sikh team, and the Ilala Staff, a team of Ilalan residents.

In 1942, clubs from public institutions such as the Government School, Post Office, Railways SC, King's African Rifles SC, Police SC, and the Medical Department started to dominate the league. However, most teams disbanded in the aftermath of World War II, with many European players ceasing their participation in the league and their clubs. This included Gymkhana Club, Police Club, King's African Rifles, and Railways, who eventually withdrew from the league. Starting in the 1940s, they were replaced by African street teams such as Young Africans (Yanga) and Sunderland (known as Old Boys in 1942 and later renamed Simba in 1971), as well as the Goan's Club manned by Goans, and the Agha Khan Club by Ismaili Khojas.

From this period onwards, Yanga and Sunderland gradually became the most prominent clubs in Dar es Salaam. Yanga, founded in 1935, entered the first division and won four major cups in 1942. Sunderland joined the first division soon after Yanga and won four major trophies in 1946.

By 1955, the Dar es Salaam League had 38 registered clubs. It became the "National League" by 1965, incorporating most of the major teams in Tanzania. The name was later changed to the "First Division Soccer League" and later to the "Premier League" in 1997. Tanzania Breweries became the sponsor of the championship, after which the league was called the Tanzania Breweries League (TBL). The contract with Breweries was terminated in 2001 after a conflict with the Tanzania Football Association. In 2002, a contract was signed with the telecommunication company Vodacom, which lasted until 2009, after which they were renewed the same year.

Competition format

Competition

The Tanzanian Premier League (TPL) follows a typical double round-robin format with each team playing the other twice, home and away. Each win earns three points, a draw earns a point for both teams, and a loss earns zero points.

Promotion & Relegation

The bottom two-placed teams are automatically demoted to the Championship and are replaced by the winners and runners-up from the championship. The third and fourth worst-ranked teams enter a play-off with the 3rd and 4th placed teams from the First Division.[2]

International Competitions

Confederation of African Football (CAF) teams based in Tanzania compete in the CAF Champions League and CAF Confederation Cup.

Recent positive performances by TPL clubs in continental competitions have seen Tanzania rise in the CAF 5-year ranking. As a result, more teams from the league have had the opportunity to compete on the continental stage.

CAF Champions League

The league champion qualifies for the CAF Champions League for the following season.

Starting in the 2021-22 season, the second-placed team from the previous season also qualifies for the CAF CL.

CAF Confederation Cup

Since the 2015–16 season, the winner of the Tanzania FA Cup has qualified for the CAF Confederations Cup. This qualification place had previously been awarded only to the runner-up in the Premier League.

From the 2021-22 season onwards, the champions of the FA Cup and the third-placed team in the Premier League have also qualified for the tournament.

Clubs

Starting from the 2018–19 season, the league was composed of 20 teams, which was further lowered to 18 in 2020 and then 16 in 2021.

2023-2024 season clubs

Champions

Wins by year

Previous champions are:[3]

YearsChampions
1965Simba SC (1)
1966Simba SC (2)
1967Cosmopolitans (1)
1968Young Africans SC (4)
1969Young Africans SC (5)
1970Young Africans SC (6)
1971Young Africans SC (7)
1972Young Africans SC (8)
1973Simba SC (3)
1974Young Africans SC (9)
1975Mseto Sports (1)
1976Simba SC (4)
1977Simba SC (5)
1978Simba SC (6)
1979Simba SC (7)
1980Simba SC (8)
1981Young Africans SC (10)
1982Pan African (1)
1983Young Africans SC (11)
1984KMKM FC (1)
1985Maji Maji FC (1)
1986Maji Maji FC (2)
1987Young Africans SC (12)
1988Coastal Union (1)
1989Young Africans SC (13)
1990Pamba SC (1)
1991Young Africans SC (14)
1992Young Africans SC (15)
1993Simba SC (9)
1994Simba SC (10)
1995Simba SC (11)
1996Young Africans SC (16)
1997Young Africans SC (17)
1998Maji Maji FC (3)
1999Prisons SC (1)
2000Young Africans SC (18)
2001Simba SC (12)
2002Simba SC (13)
2003Simba SC (14)
2004Simba SC (15)
2005Young Africans SC (19)
2006Young Africans SC (20)
2007Simba SC (16)
Young Africans SC (21)
2009Young Africans SC (22)
Simba SC (17)
Young Africans SC (23)
2012Simba SC (18)
2013Young Africans SC (24)
2014Azam FC (1)
Young Africans SC (25)
2016Young Africans SC (26)
2017Young Africans SC (27)
Simba SC (19)
2019Simba SC (20)
2020Simba SC (21)
2021Simba SC (22)
2022Young Africans SC (28)
2023Young Africans SC (29)
2024Young Africans SC (30)
ClubWins[4]
Young Africans30
Simba (includes Sunderland)22
Maji Maji3
Malindi2
Prisons1
Pan African1
Azam1
Cosmopolitans1
Mseto Sports1
Coastal Union1
Pamba1
KMKM1

Top goalscorers

SeasonNat.Best scorersTeamGoals
1997Mohamed Hussein "Mmachinga"Young Africansbgcolor=mistyrose26
2004Abubakar Ally MkangwaMtibwa Sugar
2005Abdallah Juma Mtibwa Sugar 25
2006n/a n/a
2007MashikuSC United ]17
2007–08Michael KatendeKagera Sugar
2008–09 Young Africans 18
2009–10Musa Hassan MgosiSimba 18
2010–11Azam 18
2011–12Azam 19
2012–13 Azam 17
2013–14 Simba19
2014–15Young Africans 17
2014–15Ruvu Shooting 17
2015–16 Young Africans21
2016–17Young Africans14
2017–18 Simba20
2018–19 Simba 23
2019–20 Simba 22
2020–21Simba16[5]
2021–22George MpoleGeita Gold17[6]
Fiston Kalala MayeleYoung Africans
2022–23Fiston Kalala MayeleYoung Africans17[7]
Simba
2023-24Stephane Aziz KiYoung Africans21

All-time goalscorers

RankPlayerGoalsYears
1 John Bocco1552008
2 Emmanuel Okwi972009-2019

Assists

SeasonNat.PlayerTeamAssists
2021-22Pape SakhoSimba6
2022-23Clatous ChamaSimba14
2023-24Kipre JuniorAzam9

Clean sheets

SeasonNat.GoalskeeperTeamClean sheets
2022-23Djigui DiarraYanga14
2023-24Ley MatampiCoastal Union15

External links

League website at association's website
League standings & results

Notes and References

  1. Football . in Tanzania . 18 November 2008 . POPULAR MUSIC, SPORTS, AND POLITICS: A DEVELOPMENT OF URBAN CULTURAL MOVEMENTS IN DAR ES SALAAM, the 1930s-1960s . live . TSURUTA, Tadasu. POPULAR MUSIC, SPORTS, AND POLITICS: A DEVELOPMENT OF URBAN CULTURAL MOVEMENTS IN DAR ES SALAAM, the 1930s–1960s. African Study Monographs 2003, 24(3): 195–222 . 24 . 3 . 206 . 10.14989/68221 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120927145255/http://repository.kulib.kyoto-u.ac.jp/dspace/bitstream/2433/68221/1/ASM_24_195.pdf . 27 September 2012 . 18 November 2008.
  2. Web site: About the Premier League . . 26 February 2010 . 21 April 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20101028040902/http://www.tff.or.tz/index.php?option=com_content&view=category&layout=blog&id=26&Itemid=72 . 28 October 2010 .
  3. Web site: Tanzania – List of Champions . . 21 April 2011 . 20 September 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220920163745/https://www.rsssf.org/tablest/tanzchamp.html . live .
  4. Web site: Tanzania - List of Champions . 2022-02-11 . . 2022-09-20 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220920163745/https://www.rsssf.org/tablest/tanzchamp.html . live .
  5. Web site: Table of top scorers Tanzania Premier League 2021 . www.besoccer.com . 10 June 2023 . en . 10 June 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230610205135/https://www.besoccer.com/competition/rankings/ligi_kuu_bara/2021/top-scorers . live .
  6. Web site: Table of top scorers Tanzania Premier League 2022 . 2023-06-10 . www.besoccer.com . en . 2023-06-10 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230610205134/https://www.besoccer.com/competition/rankings/ligi_kuu_bara/2022/top-scorers . live .
  7. News: Wafungaji bora NBC Premier League 2022/2023 Top Scorers . 10 June 2023 . https://wasomiajira.com/ . 9 June 2023 . 10 June 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230610205135/https://wasomiajira.com/wafungaji-bora-nbc-premier-league-2022-2023-top-scorers/09/06/2023/ . live .