Piala Indonesia
Football tournament
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Piala Indonesia (lit. 'Indonesia Cup') is the professional annual cup competition for football clubs in Indonesia. Its origins date back to the semi-professional football era in 1985 as Piala Liga, which ran until 1989 under Galatama competition. The Football Association of Indonesia (PSSI) organized the full professional cup competition from 2005 until the most recent in 2018–2019. Traditionally, the tournament involves clubs from the whole layers of Indonesian football competitions, which are Super League, Championship, Liga Nusantara and Liga 4
- 1985 as Piala Liga
- 1992 as Piala Galatama
- 2005 as Copa Indonesia
- 2010 as Piala Indonesia
- 62 (2005)
- 62 (2006)
- 92 (2007–08)
- 52 (2008–09)
- 32 (2010)
- 40 (2012)
- 128 (2018–19)
| Organiser(s) | PSSI |
|---|---|
| Founded |
|
| Region | Indonesia |
| Teams |
|
| Qualifier for | AFC Challenge League |
| Current champions | PSM Makassar |
| Most championships | Krama Yudha Tiga Berlian Sriwijaya (3 titles) |
Piala Indonesia winners qualify for the AFC Challenge League the following season. Since the start of the professional era in 2005, Sriwijaya is the most successful club in the competition, with three titles.[1]
The tournament has not been held on several occasions: 2011,[2] 2013–2017 (partially due to the PSSI's ban on handling all of the football competitions by FIFA in 2015–16[3]), and since 2020 (partially due to the COVID-19 pandemic,[4][5] the lack of sponsor,[6][7] the election,[8] and geographical factors[9])
History
The competition had its origins from the semi-professional football era in 1985 as Piala Liga (lit. 'League Cup'), which ran until 1989 under Galatama competition. It started again in 1992 and 1994 as Piala Galatama.[10]
PSSI started the professional cup competition in 2005, under the name of Copa Dji Sam Soe Indonesia until 2009 for sponsorship reasons,[11] after which the name of the tournament was changed to the Piala Indonesia.[12] In 2012, after a one-year hiatus, the Indonesian football "dualism" meant only Indonesian Premier League (IPL) clubs competed; Persibo Bojonegoro won that year's Indonesia Cup.[13]
The competition returned for the 2018–19 edition after six years,[14] where Kratingdaeng was the title sponsor of Piala Indonesia.[15]
The competition will return for the 2027–28 season after eight years of hiatus.[16]
Finals
One-off
Two-legged
| Season | Competition name | City/Regency | Home | Score | Away | Location |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018–19[24] | Piala Indonesia | Jakarta | Persija Jakarta | 1–0 | PSM Makassar | Gelora Bung Karno Stadium |
| Makassar | PSM Makassar | 2–0 | Persija Jakarta | Andi Mattalata Stadium | ||
| PSM Makassar won 2–1 on aggregate | ||||||
Competition Record
| * | Current Holder |
| ‡ | Record Champions |
| Club | Titles | Runners-up | Years Won |
|---|---|---|---|
| Krama Yudha Tiga Berlian‡ | 3 | — | 1987, 1988, 1989 |
| Sriwijaya | 3 | — | 2008, 2009, 2010 |
| Arema | 2 | 2 | 2005, 2006 |
| Semen Padang | 1 | 1 | 1992 |
| Arseto Solo | 1 | — | 1985 |
| Gelora Dewata | 1 | — | 1994 |
| Makassar Utama | 1 | — | 1986 |
| Persibo Bojonegoro | 1 | — | 2012 |
| PSM Makassar* | 1 | — | 2018–19 |
| Pelita Jaya | — | 3 | — |
| Persipura Jayapura | — | 3 | — |
| NIAC Mitra | — | 2 | — |
| Persija Jakarta | — | 2 | — |
| Mercu Buana | — | 1 | — |
Awards
Top goal-scorers
Best players
Title sponsor
| Year | Name | Brand | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1985–1988 | Milo | Piala Liga Milo | [31] |
| 1989 | Bank Summa | Piala Liga Bank Summa | [31] |
| 2005–2009 | Dji Sam Soe | Copa Dji Sam Soe | [11] |
| 2010–2018 | No Sponsor | Piala Indonesia | [32] |
| 2018–2019 | Krating Daeng | Kratingdaeng Piala Indonesia | [15] |