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National Football Championship (Bangladesh)

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National Football Championship
Founded1973 (1973)
RegionBangladesh
TeamsVarious
Current championsBangladesh Army (5th title)
Most championshipsBangladesh Army
Dhaka University
(5 titles each)
BroadcasterBangladesh Football Federation TV
Websitebff.com.bd
2025 National Football Championship

The National Football Championship (Bengali: জাতীয় ফুটবল চ্যাম্পিয়নশিপ), previously known as the Sher-e-Bangla National Football Championship or the Sher-e-Bangla Cup or the Bangabandhu National Football Championship, is a district-level national football tournament in Bangladesh, contested by districts and government institutions of the country. The tournament is run under the supervision of the Bangladesh Football Federation (BFF).[1]

History

Following the independence of Bangladesh, the tournament was reintroduced in 1973 as an inter-district national football competition contested by the district teams and government institutions under the Bangladesh Football Federation (BFF). On 10 January 2020, the BFF decided to revive the National Championship after a gap of 13 years, celebrating the 100th birth anniversary of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. Upon its resumption, it was renamed the Bangabandhu National Football Championship.[1]

Format

Along with 64 districts football teams, three service teams, six public universities, five education boards, and Bangladesh Krira Shikkha Protishthan participate in the tournament. The participant districts have been divided into eight zones named Padma, Meghna, Jamuna, Shitalakshya, Brahmaputra, Surma, Chitra and Buriganga. Each zone consists of eight teams, except Surma, which contains seven teams.[2] Knockout matches in every zone are played on a home and away basis. In the first round, a pair of teams from every zone play each other to decide four winners. In the second round, the four winners play the zonal semifinal. In the third round, the semi-final winners face each other in the zonal final. The champion from each zone qualify for the final round.[3]

Teams representing education boards, universities, and the services teams—a total of 15 teams—are divided in four groups in Sheba zone.[4] The teams of this zone play on a round-robin basis. Top two join eight zonal winners in the final round.[5]

Results

Season Winner[6] Runner-up Top scorer Goals
1973Dhaka DistrictKushtia District
1974Dhaka DistrictBarisal District
1975Dhaka DistrictChittagong District
1976Jessore DistrictRajshahi District
1977Kushtia DistrictChittagong District
1978Barisal DistrictRangpur District
1979Barisal DistrictDhaka District
1980Bangladesh Army and Dhaka University (joint winners)
1981Bangladesh Army and Dhaka University (joint winners)
1982Khulna DistrictBangladesh Army
1983Sylhet DistrictDhaka District
1984Feni DistrictDhaka District
1985Comilla DistrictDhaka University
1986Dhaka DistrictComilla District
1987–1988Not Held
1989Bangladesh ArmyDhaka University
1990Dhaka UniversityBangladesh Army
1991Not Held
1992Dhaka UniversityKhulna District
1993Khulna DistrictFeni District
1994Bhola DistrictDhaka University
1995Not Held
1996Dhaka UniversityNarayanganj District
1997–1999Not Held
2000Noakhali DistrictBangladesh Army
2001–2003Not Held
2004Narayanganj DistrictBangladesh ArmyBangladesh Nasiruddin Chowdhury5[7]
2005Not Held
2006Narayanganj DistrictDhaka District
2007–2019Not Held
2020Bangladesh ArmyBangladesh Navy
2021–22Bangladesh ArmyChittagong DistrictBangladesh Emtiyaz Raihan6[8]

References