Liga 1
Season2017
Dates15 April – 12 November 2017
ChampionsBhayangkara
1st Liga 1 title
1st Indonesia title
RelegatedSemen Padang
Persiba
Persegres Gresik United
Champions LeagueBali United
AFC CupPersija
Matches played306
Goals scored882 (2.88 per match)
Top goalscorerSylvano Comvalius
(37 goals)
Biggest home winSriwijaya 10–2 Persegres Gresik United
(5 November 2017)
Biggest away winPersegres Gresik United 0–5 Bhayangkara
(26 August 2017)
Mitra Kukar 0–5 Persipura
(13 October 2017)
Highest scoringSriwijaya 10–2 Persegres Gresik United
(5 November 2017)
Longest winning run6 matches
Bhayangkara
Longest unbeaten run12 matches
Persija
Persipura
Longest winless run17 matches
Persegres Gresik United
Longest losing run10 matches
Persegres Gresik United
Highest attendance36,545
Persib 1–1 Persija
(22 July 2017)
Lowest attendance239
Perseru 0–1 PS TNI
(18 June 2017)
Total attendance2,672,509
(excluding matches played behind closed doors)
Average attendance8,908
2015
2018

The 2017 Liga 1 season (also known as the 2017 Go-Jek Traveloka Liga 1 season for sponsorship reasons)[1] was the eighth season of the Liga 1, the top Indonesian professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 2008 as Indonesia Super League. It began on 15 April and ended on 12 November 2017.[2] Persib were the defending champion. Bhayangkara won their first league title, the club's first of the Liga 1 era and first overall.

Changes from 3332–33 edit

(This section should be used only if the competition format has changed from the previous season.)

For this season, the league will used triple round-robin format. The league will also gain one additional berth to the Template Champions League for the following season.

Teams edit

Stadiums and locations edit

 
 
Arema
 
Bali United
 
Barito Putera
 
Bhayangkara
 
Borneo
 
Madura United
 
Mitra Kukar
 
Persegres GU
 
Persela
 
Perseru
 
Persib
 
Persiba
 
Persija
 
Persipura
 
PS TNI
 
PSM
 
Semen Padang
 
Sriwijaya
Home city of the 2017 Liga 1 teams
Team Home city Stadium Capacity
Arema Malang Kanjuruhan Stadium 44,965
Bali United Gianyar Kapten I Wayan Dipta Stadium 25,000
Barito Putera Banjarmasin May 17th Stadium 15,000
Bhayangkara Bekasi[3] Patriot Candrabhaga Stadium 30,000
Borneo Samarinda Segiri Stadium 16,000
Madura United Pamekasan Gelora Ratu Pamelingan Stadium 15,000
Mitra Kukar Tenggarong Aji Imbut Stadium 35,000
Persegres Gresik United Gresik Petrokimia Stadium 20,000
Persela Lamongan Surajaya Stadium 14,000
Perseru Serui Marora Stadium 5,000
Persib Bandung Gelora Bandung Lautan Api Stadium 38,000
Jalak Harupat Stadium[std 1] 27,000
Persiba Balikpapan Gajayana Stadium[std 2] (Malang) 35,000
Parikesit Stadium[std 2] 12,500
Batakan Stadium 46,000
Persija Jakarta Patriot Candrabhaga Stadium[10] (Bekasi) 30,000
Persipura Jayapura Mandala Stadium 30,000
PS TNI Cibinong Pakansari Stadium 30,000
PSM Makassar Andi Mattalatta Stadium 15,000
Semen Padang Padang Haji Agus Salim Stadium 15,000
Sriwijaya Palembang Gelora Sriwijaya Stadium 36,000
Bumi Sriwijaya Stadium[std 3] 15,000

Personnel and kits edit

Team Head coach Captain Kit manufacturer
Arema
Bali United
Barito Putera
Bhayangkara
Borneo
Madura United
Mitra Kukar
Persegres Gresik United
Persela
Perseru
Persib
Persiba
Persija
Persipura
PS TNI
PSM
Semen Padang
Sriwijaya

Coaching changes edit

Team Outgoing head coach Manner of departure Date of vacancy Replaced by Date of appointment Table

Foreign players edit

Football Association of Indonesia (PSSI) restricted the number of foreign players strictly to four per team, including one slot for a player from AFC countries and one slot for marquee player,[12] a player that was required to have played in a top European league (Premier League, La Liga, Serie A, Bundesliga, Ligue 1, Primeira Liga, Eredivisie, Süper Lig, etc.) in the last 8 years, or a player that have played in the last three editions of the FIFA World Cup. Teams can use all the foreign players at once.[13]

  • Players name in bold indicates the player was registered during the mid-season transfer window.
  • Former Player(s) were players that out of squad or left club within the season, after pre-season transfer window, or in the mid-season transfer window, and at least had one appearance.
Team[14] Player 1 Player 2 AFC player Marquee player Former player(s)[15]
Arema   Esteban Vizcarra   Arthur Cunha   Ahmet Ataýew   Juan Pablo Pino   Jad Noureddine
Bali United   Marcos Flores   Sylvano Comvalius   Ahn Byung-keon   Nick van der Velden
Barito Putera   Matías Córdoba   Willian Lira   Aaron Evans   Douglas Packer   Thiago Cunha
Bhayangkara   Otávio Dutra   Ilija Spasojević   Lee Yoo-joon   Paulo Sérgio   Thiago Furtuoso
Borneo   Flávio Beck   Matheus Lopes   Kunihiro Yamashita   Shane Smeltz   Helder Lobato
Madura United   Fabiano Beltrame   Thiago Furtuoso   Dane Milovanović   Peter Odemwingie   Cameron Watson
  Boubacar Sanogo
  Redouane Zerzouri
Mitra Kukar   Jorge Gotor   Marclei Santos   Oh In-kyun   Mohamed Sissoko
Persegres Gresik United   Patrick da Silva   Saša Zečević   Yusuke Kato   Choi Hyun-yeon
  Goran Ganchev
Persela   Ivan Carlos   Ramon Mesquita   Kosuke Uchida   José Coelho   Márcio Rozário
Perseru   Boman Aimé   Sílvio Escobar   Ryutaro Karube   Omar Zeineddine
Persib   Vladimir Vujović   Ezechiel N'Douassel   Shohei Matsunaga   Michael Essien   Carlton Cole
Persiba   Marlon da Silva   Srđan Lopičić   Anmar Almubaraki   Júnior Lopes   Masahito Noto
  Dirkir Glay
Persija   Willian Pacheco   Reinaldo   Rohit Chand   Bruno Lopes   Luiz Júnior
Persipura   Mauricio Leal   Addison Alves   Yoo Jae-hoon   Ricardinho
PS TNI   Redouane Zerzouri   Franklin Anzité   Hong Soon-hak   Élio Martins   Facundo Talín
  Leonel Núñez
  Aboubacar Camara
  Aboubacar Sylla
PSM   Steven Paulle   Marc Klok   Pavel Purishkin   Wiljan Pluim   Reinaldo
Semen Padang   Cássio de Jesus   Marcel Sacramento   Ko Jae-sung   Didier Zokora
Sriwijaya   Alberto Gonçalves   Hilton Moreira   Yoo Hyun-goo   Tijani Belaïd

League table edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Bhayangkara (C) 34 22 2 10 61 40 +21 68[a]
2 Bali United 34 21 5 8 76 38 +38 68[a] Qualification to the Champions League preliminary round 1[b]
3 PSM 34 19 8 7 67 38 +29 65
4 Persija 34 17 10 7 48 24 +24 61 Qualification to the AFC Cup group stage[c]
5 Persipura 34 17 9 8 64 37 +27 60
6 Madura United[d] 34 17 9 8 58 44 +14 57
7 Barito Putera 34 15 8 11 48 44 +4 53
8 Borneo 34 15 7 12 50 39 +11 52
9 Arema 34 13 10 11 43 44 −1 49
10 Mitra Kukar 34 13 4 17 49 74 −25 43
11 Sriwijaya 34 11 9 14 50 50 0 42[e]
12 PS TNI 34 12 6 16 46 58 −12 42[e]
13 Persib 34 9 14 11 39 36 +3 41
14 Persela 34 12 4 18 49 55 −6 40
15 Perseru 34 10 7 17 35 45 −10 37
16 Semen Padang (R) 34 9 8 17 34 52 −18 35 Relegation to the Liga 2
17 Persiba (R) 34 7 6 21 41 62 −21 27
18 Persegres Gresik United[f] (R) 34 2 4 28 26 104 −78 7
Source: Liga 1
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Head-to-head points; 3) Head-to-head goal difference; 4) Goal difference; 5) Goals scored; 6) Draw.
(C) Champions; (R) Relegated
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Bhayangkara finished ahead of Bali United on head-to-head points: Bali United 1–3 Bhayangkara, Bhayangkara 3–2 Bali United.
  2. ^ Bali United qualified for the Champions League preliminary round 1 because Bhayangkara were not granted an AFC license.[16]
  3. ^ Persija qualified for the AFC Cup group stage as the second best team granted an AFC license.[16]
  4. ^ Madura United were deducted three points due to FIFA sanction.[17]
  5. ^ a b Sriwijaya finished ahead of PS TNI on goal difference: Sriwijaya +0, PS TNI –12.
  6. ^ Persegres Gresik United were deducted three points due to FIFA sanction.[17]

Results edit

(Use this section to display the results. A fixtures table can also be displayed with the standings table if Module:Sports table is used, so long as each team faces each other team no more than twice.)

Module:Sports results should be used for the results table:

Home \ Away A B C D E
Team A 1–2 1–0 1–0 1–2
Team B 2–1 1–1 1–0 3–0
Team C 2–1 1–0 1–0 1–2
Team D 2–1 2–2 1–0 1–2
Team E 2–3 1–0 1–0 1–2
Source: Wikipedia
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Top goalscorers edit

(In terms of statistics, a table of the top goalscorers should be the minimum. Goalscorers list should be kept to the top ten and those with the same amount of goals as the tenth.)

Pos Player Club Goals
1 Alex Smith Template FC 6
2 Diego Martinez Deportivo Template 5
Edu Template United 5

Statistics edit

(NOTE: The inclusion of this section is not decided yet as it may contain stuff which should be avoided per WP:NOT#STATS and WP:TRIVIA. A possibly suitable set of facts should be discussed at the talk page. In any case, everything which should make the cut has to be sourced!)

See also edit

(List any related article that is not already previously linked.)

Notes edit

  1. ^ Persib used Gelora Bandung Lautan Api as their home stadium in the first round before they decided to move to Si Jalak Harupat in the second round.[4]
  2. ^ a b Persiba was temporarily use Gajayana Stadium as their home ground because their actual ground, Parikesit Stadium that owned by state-owned oil company Pertamina, was going to be demolished to make way for their oil refinery expansion as their newly-built replacement, Batakan Stadium, was still under construction and won't be ready until June.[5][6][7] Later, Pertamina allowed Persiba to use Parikesit Stadium in June.[8] After a round of negotiation, Persiba extended this permission and continue to use Parikesit Stadium until Batakan Stadium was ready and pass the verification.[9]
  3. ^ The original home stadium of Sriwijaya, Gelora Sriwijaya Stadium, was under renovation for the 2018 Asian Games. So Sriwijaya would play at the Bumi Sriwijaya Stadium for the rest of the season.[11]

References edit

  1. ^ "Jadi Sponsor Liga 1, Gojek-Traveloka Sumbang Rp 180 Miliar". liputan6.com.
  2. ^ "PSSI Ubah ISL Jadi Liga 1". Bola.net. 20 January 2017. Retrieved 20 January 2017.
  3. ^ "Dekat Mabes Polri, Alasan Bhayangkara FC Pindah ke Bekasi". CNN Indonesia. Retrieved 2017-07-15.
  4. ^ "Putaran Kedua Liga 1, Persib Pindah Kandang ke Si Jalak Harupat : Okezone Bola". Okezone (in Indonesian).
  5. ^ "Juli, Stadion Megah Bertaraf Internasional Ini Siap Digunakan". Tribun Kaltim. Retrieved 2017-07-15.
  6. ^ Bola.com. "Persiba Balikpapan Resmi Boyongan ke Malang". bola.com. Retrieved 2017-07-15.
  7. ^ Murtianto. "Pertamina 'Usir' Persiba dari Stadion Parikesit, Mengapa?". Bolalob - Situsnya Anak Futsal! (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2017-07-15.
  8. ^ Liputan6.com. "Pertamina Izinkan Persiba Gunakan Parikesit Selama Sebulan". liputan6.com. Retrieved 2017-07-15.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ INDOSPORT.com. "Emirates Stadium Belum Rampung, Persiba Kembali ke Parikesit". INDOSPORT.com. Retrieved 2017-07-15.
  10. ^ Abdullah-Juara.net, Segaf. "Persija Resmi Bermarkas di Stadion Patriot". Juara.net. Retrieved 2017-07-15.
  11. ^ Media, Kompas Cyber. "Sriwijaya FC Akan Pindah Markas Usai Lawan PSM Makassar". KOMPAS.com (in Indonesian).
  12. ^ "PT Lebanon Pastikan Klub Hanya Boleh Pakai Satu Marquee Player" (in Indonesian). bola.net. 5 April 2017. Retrieved 5 April 2017.
  13. ^ Glennıza, Dex (13 April 2017). "Akhirnya Definisi Marquee Player di Indonesia Sudah Jelas!".
  14. ^ "Daftar Lengkap Pemain Asing di Liga 1 Indonesia 2017 - Bolalob.com". Bolalob. Archived from the original on 29 December 2018. Retrieved 3 May 2017.
  15. ^ "Rangkuman Transfer Liga 1 Paruh Musim 2017: Bongkar Pasang Demi Perbaiki Posisi | FourFourTwo". FourFourTwo. Archived from the original on 29 December 2018. Retrieved 1 September 2017.
  16. ^ a b "Bali United dan Persija Wakili Indonesia di Kompetisi AFC". bola.com (in Indonesian).
  17. ^ a b "Bukan Enam, Inilah Lima Klub yang Buat PSSI Terkena Sanksi FIFA". Bola.net.

External links edit

(Place any relevant external links and navigational templates in this section.)

Category:Templatonian Premier League