Football League of Ireland

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Football League of Ireland
Football League of Ireland
Sport Football
Founded 1921
No. of teams 21 (2006)
Country(ies) Flag of Ireland Ireland
Ceased 2006
Last champion(s) Shelbourne

The Football League of Ireland, usually known simply as the League of Ireland or later the eircom League (from the league's sponsorship by Irish telecommunications company eircom), was the old league of football clubs in Ireland that existed from 1921 until 2006. Beginning in the 2007 season, it was succeeded by the FAI League of Ireland.

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The "Football League of Ireland" should not be confused with the Irish Football League, which is the league in Northern Ireland. Though primarily based in the Republic of Ireland, the Football League of Ireland did include one club from Northern Ireland. Derry City left the Irish Football League following the 1972-73 season because of safety concerns, and joined the LoI in 1985, after a special dispensation from the Irish Football Association and UEFA. No teams from the Republic play in the northern league.

Formed in 1921, the league originally contained 8 teams, all of which were from Dublin, and was first won by St. James' Gate FC. Over the next forty years the league grew to eventually twenty-two clubs, and spread right across the country, with the introduction of 6 teams in 1985, when a first division was introduced. The new Premier Division contained 12 teams and the First Division, 10. Clubs were promoted and relegated between the Premier and First divisions at the end of each season. Also, the club which finished bottom of the First had to reapply for league membership.

League of Ireland football was well attended up to late 1960s when spectator numbers started to dwindle. The exposure to far bigger football leagues in England and Scotland saw most Irish football fans pick a British side to follow rather than their local team. Reflecting this, local media steadily started to focus more and more on the foreign leagues and it wasn't until 1997 that a League of Ireland game was shown live on television. In the late 1990s, as teams sought to become fully professional, crowds started to come back. Recent excellent European runs by Bohemians, Cork City, Shelbourne and Derry City sparked an increase in media attention and consequently, attendances are improving.

Until recently the league followed the pattern of the other leagues in the western Europe of starting their league campaigns towards the end of Summer and playing through the Winter until late Spring and playing no league games during the height of Summer. Citing a need to improve the European results and to a lesser extent the more favourable climate, the league switched to playing Summer football (like the leagues in Scandinavia, the Baltic States and Russia).

However, professionalism has cost some clubs. Former greats Shamrock Rovers, without a home ground since the sale of Glenmalure Park in 1987, were put into administration in 2005 and subsequently taken over by a fans' group, the 400 Club now known as the SRFC Members Club. Rovers suffered their first ever relegation by losing a two-legged play-off 3-2 to Dublin City at the end of the 2005 season. The Hoops went on to win the 2006 First Division Title.

However in the emergence and re-emergence of clubs such as Bohemians, Cork City, Derry City, Drogheda United and Shelbourne, among others, have helped improve the fortunes of the league in the past several seasons.

Dublin City (formerly Home Farm F.C.) resigned their league membership on 19 July 2006 after the Company which owned the club ceased trading. Games the club had played in the Premier Division during the season were expunged from the record, with the league table recalculated.

The FAI and the League of Ireland merged for the 2007 season to create a new FAI National League - a continuation of the old league. The composition of the new league's tiers was decided by an Independent Assessment Group (IAG). The selection of teams was based on the 2006 league results, the previous 5 years performance, infrastructure, strategic planning, licensing and population densities[1].

  • ^  St. Patrick's Athletic were deducted 15 points due to fielding an ineligible player. Without that deduction they would have been champions. For more on this see St Patrick's Athletic.

Rank Club # titles Last title First title
1 Shamrock Rovers 15 1994 1923
2 Shelbourne 13 2006 1926
3 Bohemians 9 2003 1924
Dundalk 9 1995 1933
5 St. Patrick's Athletic 7 1999 1952
Cork United/Cork Athletic 7 1951 1941
7 Waterford United 6 1973 1966
8 Drumcondra 5 1965 1948
9 Cork City 2 2005 1993
Derry City 2 1997 1989
Athlone Town 2 1983 1981
Limerick 2 1980 1960
Sligo Rovers 2 1977 1937
St James's Gate 2 1940 1922
10 Cork Celtic 1 1974 1974
Cork Hibernians 1 1971 1971
Dolphins 1 1935 1935

Existing clubs in bold

Rank Club # titles Last title First title
1 Drogheda United 4 2002 1989
2 Waterford United 3 2003 1990
Bray Wanderers 3 2000 1986
4 Sligo Rovers 2 2005 1994
5 Shamrock Rovers 1 2006 2006
Finn Harps 1 2004 2004
Dublin City 1 2003 2003
Dundalk 1 2001 2001
Kilkenny City 1 1997 1997
UCD 1 1995 1995
Galway United 1 1993 1993
Limerick City 1 1992 1992
Athlone Town 1 1988 1988
Derry City 1 1987 1987

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