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List of Swedish football champions









List of Swedish football champions


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Players of the 1896 Örgryte IS Swedish Championship winning team

Örgryte IS in 1896, the first Swedish football champions


Swedish football champions (Swedish: Svenska mästare i fotboll) is a title held by the winners of the highest Swedish football league played each year, Allsvenskan.[1]Malmö FF are the holders of the record of most titles with 20 Swedish championships. After winning the 2017 Allsvenskan, Malmö FF are also the reigning Swedish football champions. The title has been contested since 1896 in varying forms of competition.[2] The first Swedish Champions, Örgryte IS, were declared in 1896 when the club won the cup tournament Svenska Mästerskapet. This happened before there existed any Swedish national association, which was not created until 1904. The winners of Svenska Mästerskapet between 1896 and 1904 have retroactively been declared holders of the title by the Swedish Football Association (SvFF)[citation needed]. After the creation of the SvFF, the title continued to be held by the winners of Svenska Mästerskapet until 1925, even though a Swedish first national league, Svenska Serien, started in 1910.[3] Svenska Mästerskapet was discontinued in 1925.


In 1924–25, a new Swedish national league was created, Allsvenskan, but the Swedish Champions title wasn't awarded to the winners of that league until 1930–31.[4] Since then, the winners of Allsvenskan are considered Swedish Champions, with a few exceptions. Between 1982 and 1990, the title was given to the winners of a play-off held after Allsvenskan was finished, and the following two years, 1991 and 1992, the title was given to the winners of Mästerskapsserien, a continuation league with the best teams from Allsvenskan.[5]


The current trophy, Lennart Johanssons Pokal, has been awarded since 2001 with Hammarby IF being the first winners. Johansson himself handed out the trophy in Sundsvall on 27 October 2001. The first trophy which was in use from 1904 to 2000 was named von Rosen's Pokal after the first chairman of the Swedish FA Clarence von Rosen. However, in November 2000 it was discovered that von Rosen had been active in the Swedish national socialist movement during World War II which prompted the FA to give up using the old trophy.[6]




Contents






  • 1 Champions


    • 1.1 Svenska Mästerskapet (1896–1925)


    • 1.2 Allsvenskan (1931–1981)


    • 1.3 Allsvenskan Play-offs (1982–1990)


    • 1.4 Mästerskapsserien (1991–1992)


    • 1.5 Allsvenskan (1993–present)




  • 2 Performances


    • 2.1 Total titles won by club


    • 2.2 Total titles won by city


    • 2.3 Total titles won by county




  • 3 See also


  • 4 Notes


  • 5 References


  • 6 Bibliography


  • 7 External links





Champions[edit]














Key
dagger Winners also won Svenska Cupen during the same season
(number of championship titles)
A running tally of the total number of championship titles won by each club is kept in brackets.


Svenska Mästerskapet (1896–1925)[edit]






























































































































































Year
Winner
Runners-up
1896
Örgryte IS (1)

IS Idrottens Vänner
1897
Örgryte IS (2)

Örgryte IS 2[nb 1]
1898
Örgryte IS (3)

AIK
1899
Örgryte IS (4)

Göteborgs FF
1900
AIK (1)

Örgryte IS
1901
AIK (2)[nb 2]

Örgryte IS 2
1902
Örgryte IS (5)

Jönköpings AIF
1903
Göteborgs IF (1)

Göteborgs FF
1904
Örgryte IS (6)

Djurgårdens IF
1905
Örgryte IS (7)

IFK Stockholm
1906
Örgryte IS (8)

Djurgårdens IF
1907
Örgryte IS (9)

IFK Uppsala
1908
IFK Göteborg (1)

IFK Uppsala
1909
Örgryte IS (10)

Djurgårdens IF
1910
IFK Göteborg (2)

Djurgårdens IF
1911
AIK (3)

IFK Uppsala
1912
Djurgårdens IF (1)[nb 3]

Örgryte IS
1913
Örgryte IS (11)

Djurgårdens IF
1914
AIK (4)

Hälsingborgs IF
1915
Djurgårdens IF (2)

Örgryte IS
1916
AIK (5)

Djurgårdens IF
1917
Djurgårdens IF (3)

AIK
1918
IFK Göteborg (3)

Hälsingborgs IF
1919
GAIS (1)

Djurgårdens IF
1920
Djurgårdens IF (4)

IK Sleipner
1921
IFK Eskilstuna (1)

IK Sleipner
1922
GAIS (2)

Hammarby IF
1923
AIK (6)

IFK Eskilstuna
1924
Fässbergs IF (1)[nb 4]

IK Sirius
1925
Brynäs IF (1)

BK Derby


Allsvenskan (1931–1981)[edit]















































































































































































































































































































































































Year
Winner
Runners-up
Top scorer (club)
Goals
1930–31
GAIS (3)
AIK
John Nilsson (GAIS)
26
1931–32
AIK (7)
Örgryte IS
Carl-Erik Holmberg (Örgryte IS)
29
1932–33
Hälsingborgs IF (1)
GAIS
Torsten Bunke (Hälsingborgs IF)
21
1933–34
Hälsingborgs IF (2)
GAIS
Sven Jonasson (IF Elfsborg)
20
1934–35
IFK Göteborg (4)
AIK
Harry Andersson (IK Sleipner)
23
1935–36
IF Elfsborg (1)
AIK
Sven Jonasson (IF Elfsborg)
24
1936–37
AIK (8)
IK Sleipner
Olle Zethlerlund (AIK)
23
1937–38
IK Sleipner (1)
Landskrona BoIS
Curt Hjelm (IK Sleipner)
13
1938–39
IF Elfsborg (2)
AIK
Erik Persson (AIK)
Ove Andersson (Malmö FF)
Yngve Lindgren (Örgryte IS)
16
1939–40
IF Elfsborg (3)
IFK Göteborg
Anders Pålsson (Hälsingborgs IF)
17
1940–41
Hälsingborgs IF (3)dagger
Degerfors IF
Stig Nyström (IK Brage)
17
1941–42
IFK Göteborg (5)
GAIS
Sven Jacobsson (GAIS)
20
1942–43
IFK Norrköping (1)dagger
IF Elfsborg
Gunnar Nordahl (Degerfors IF)
16
1943–44
Malmö FF (1)dagger
IF Elfsborg
Leif Larsson (IFK Göteborg)
19
1944–45
IFK Norrköping (2)dagger
IF Elfsborg
Gunnar Nordahl (IFK Norrköping)
27
1945–46
IFK Norrköping (3)
Malmö FF
Gunnar Nordahl (IFK Norrköping)
25
1946–47
IFK Norrköping (4)
AIK
Gunnar Gren (IFK Göteborg)
18
1947–48
IFK Norrköping (5)
Malmö FF
Gunnar Nordahl (IFK Norrköping)
18
1948–49
Malmö FF (2)
Hälsingborgs IF
Carl-Johan Franck (Hälsingborgs IF)
19
1949–50
Malmö FF (3)
Jönköpings Södra IF
Ingvar Rydell (Malmö FF)
22
1950–51
Malmö FF (4)dagger
Råå IF
Hasse Jeppson (Djurgårdens IF)
17
1951–52
IFK Norrköping (6)
Malmö FF
Karl-Alfred Jacobsson (GAIS)
17
1952–53
Malmö FF (5)dagger
IFK Norrköping
Karl-Alfred Jacobsson (GAIS)
24
1953–54
GAIS (4)
Hälsingborgs IF
Karl-Alfred Jacobsson (GAIS)
21
1954–55
Djurgårdens IF (5)
Halmstads BK
Kurt Hamrin (AIK)
22
1955–56
IFK Norrköping (7)
Malmö FF
Sylve Bengtsson (Halmstads BK)
22
1956–57
IFK Norrköping (8)
Malmö FF
Harry Bild (IFK Norrköping)
19
1957–58
IFK Göteborg (6)
IFK Norrköping
Bertil Johansson (IFK Göteborg)
Henry Källgren (IFK Norrköping)
27
1959
Djurgårdens IF (6)
IFK Norrköping
Rune Börjesson (Örgryte IS)
21
1960
IFK Norrköping (9)
IFK Malmö
Rune Börjesson (Örgryte IS)
24
1961
IF Elfsborg (4)
IFK Norrköping
Bertil Johansson (IFK Göteborg)
20
1962
IFK Norrköping (10)
Djurgårdens IF
Leif Skiöld (Djurgårdens IF)
21
1963
IFK Norrköping (11)
Degerfors IF
Lars Heinermann (Degerfors IF)
Bo Larsson (Malmö FF)
17
1964
Djurgårdens IF (7)
Malmö FF
Krister Granbom (Hälsingborgs IF)
22
1965
Malmö FF (6)
IF Elfsborg
Bo Larsson (Malmö FF)
28
1966
Djurgårdens IF (8)
IFK Norrköping
Ove Kindvall (IFK Norrköping)
20
1967
Malmö FF (7)dagger
Djurgårdens IF
Dag Szepanski (Malmö FF)
22
1968
Östers IF (1)
Malmö FF
Ove Eklund (Åtvidabergs FF)
16
1969
IFK Göteborg (7)
Malmö FF
Reine Almqvist (IFK Göteborg)
16
1970
Malmö FF (8)
Åtvidabergs FF
Bo Larsson (Malmö FF)
16
1971
Malmö FF (9)
Åtvidabergs FF
Roland Sandberg (Åtvidabergs FF)
17
1972
Åtvidabergs FF (1)
AIK
Ralf Edström (Åtvidabergs FF)
Roland Sandberg (Åtvidabergs FF)
16
1973
Åtvidabergs FF (2)
Östers IF
Jan Mattsson (Östers IF)
20
1974
Malmö FF (10)dagger
AIK
Jan Mattsson (Östers IF)
22
1975
Malmö FF (11)dagger
Östers IF
Jan Mattsson (Östers IF)
31
1976
Halmstads BK (1)
Malmö FF
Rutger Backe (Halmstads BK)
21
1977
Malmö FF (12)
IF Elfsborg
Reine Almqvist (IFK Göteborg)
Mats Aronsson (Landskrona BoIS)
15
1978
Östers IF (2)
Malmö FF
Tommy Berggren (Djurgårdens IF)
19
1979
Halmstads BK (2)
IFK Göteborg
Mats Werner (Hammarby IF)
14
1980
Östers IF (3)
Malmö FF
Billy Ohlsson (Hammarby IF)
19
1981
Östers IF (4)
IFK Göteborg
Torbjörn Nilsson (IFK Göteborg)
20


Allsvenskan Play-offs (1982–1990)[edit]









































































Year
Winner
Runners-up
Top scorer (club)
Goals
1982
IFK Göteborg (8)dagger
League Winner: IFK Göteborg
Hammarby IF
Dan Corneliusson (IFK Göteborg)
12
1983
IFK Göteborg (9)dagger
League Winner: AIK
Östers IF
Thomas Ahlström (IF Elfsborg)
16
1984
IFK Göteborg (10)
League Winner: IFK Göteborg
IFK Norrköping
Billy Ohlsson (Hammarby IF)
14
1985
Örgryte IS (12)
League Winner: Malmö FF
IFK Göteborg
Sören Börjesson (Örgryte IS)
Peter Karlsson (Kalmar FF)
Billy Lansdowne (Kalmar FF)
10
1986
Malmö FF (13)dagger
League Winner: Malmö FF
AIK
Johnny Ekström (IFK Göteborg)
13
1987
IFK Göteborg (11)
League Winner: Malmö FF
Malmö FF
Lasse Larsson (Malmö FF)
19
1988
Malmö FF (14)
League Winner: Malmö FF
Djurgårdens IF
Martin Dahlin (Malmö FF)
17
1989
IFK Norrköping (12)
League Winner: Malmö FF
Malmö FF
Jan Hellström (IFK Norrköping)
16
1990
IFK Göteborg (12)
League Winner: IFK Göteborg
IFK Norrköping
Kaj Eskelinen (IFK Göteborg)
10


Mästerskapsserien (1991–1992)[edit]
























Year
Winner
Runners-up
Top scorer (club)
Goals
1991
IFK Göteborg (13)dagger
League Winner: IFK Göteborg
IFK Norrköping
Kennet Andersson (IFK Göteborg)
13
1992
AIK (9)
League Winner: IFK Norrköping
IFK Norrköping
Hans Eklund (Östers IF)
16


Allsvenskan (1993–present)[edit]































































































































































































































Allsvenskan champions since 1993
Season
Winner
Runners-up
Third place
Player
Goals
(Top scorer)

1993

IFK Göteborg (14)

IFK Norrköping

AIK

Henrik Bertilsson (Halmstads BK)
Mats Lilienberg (Trelleborgs FF)
18

1994

IFK Göteborg (15)

Örebro SK

Malmö FF

Niclas Kindvall (IFK Norrköping)
23

1995

IFK Göteborg (16)

Helsingborgs IF

Halmstads BK

Niklas Skoog (Västra Frölunda IF)
17

1996

IFK Göteborg (17)

Malmö FF

Helsingborgs IF

Andreas Andersson (IFK Göteborg)
19

1997

Halmstads BK (3)

IFK Göteborg

Malmö FF

Mats Lilienberg (Halmstads BK)
Christer Mattiasson (IF Elfsborg)
Dan Sahlin (Örebro SK)
14

1998

AIK (10)

Helsingborgs IF

Hammarby IF

Arild Stavrum (Helsingborgs IF)
18

1999

Helsingborgs IF (4)

AIK

Halmstads BK

Marcus Allbäck (Örgryte IS)
15

2000

Halmstads BK (4)

Helsingborgs IF

AIK

Fredrik Berglund (IF Elfsborg)
18

2001

Hammarby IF (1)

Djurgårdens IF

AIK

Stefan Selaković (Halmstads BK)
15

2002

Djurgårdens IF (9)dagger

Malmö FF

Örgryte IS

Peter Ijeh (Malmö FF)
24

2003

Djurgårdens IF (10)

Hammarby IF

Malmö FF

Niklas Skoog (Malmö FF)
22

2004

Malmö FF (15)

Halmstads BK

IFK Göteborg

Markus Rosenberg (Halmstads BK)
14

2005

Djurgårdens IF (11)dagger

IFK Göteborg

Kalmar FF

Gunnar Heiðar Þorvaldsson (Halmstads BK)
16

2006

IF Elfsborg (5)

AIK

Hammarby IF

Ari (Kalmar FF)
15

2007

IFK Göteborg (18)

Kalmar FF

Djurgårdens IF

Marcus Berg (IFK Göteborg)
Razak Omotoyossi (Helsingborgs IF)
14

2008

Kalmar FF (1)

IF Elfsborg

IFK Göteborg

Patrik Ingelsten (Kalmar FF)
19

2009

AIK (11)dagger

IFK Göteborg

IF Elfsborg

Tobias Hysén (IFK Göteborg)
Wánderson (GAIS)
18

2010

Malmö FF (16)

Helsingborgs IF

Örebro SK

Alexander Gerndt (Gefle IF / Helsingborgs IF)
20

2011

Helsingborgs IF (5)dagger

AIK

IF Elfsborg

Mathias Ranégie (BK Häcken / Malmö FF)
21

2012

Elfsborg (6)

BK Häcken

Malmö FF

Majeed Waris (BK Häcken)
23

2013

Malmö FF (17)

AIK

IFK Göteborg

Imad Khalili (IFK Norrköping / Helsingborgs IF)
15

2014

Malmö FF (18)

IFK Göteborg

AIK

Lasse Vibe (IFK Göteborg)
23

2015

IFK Norrköping (13)

IFK Göteborg

AIK

Emir Kujović (IFK Norrköping)
21

2016

Malmö FF (19)

AIK

IFK Norrköping

John Owoeri (BK Häcken)
17

2017

Malmö FF (20)

AIK

Djurgårdens IF

Karl Holmberg (IFK Norrköping)
Magnus Eriksson (Djurgårdens IF)
14

2018

AIK (12)

IFK Norrköping

Malmö FF

Paulinho (BK Häcken)
20


Performances[edit]



Total titles won by club[edit]


















Titles won by club (%)



  Malmö FF – 20 (17%)


  IFK Göteborg – 18 (16%)


  IFK Norrköping – 13 (12%)


  Örgryte IS – 12 (10%)


  AIK – 12 (9%)


  Djurgårdens IF – 11 (9%)


  Other clubs (28%)



A total of 19 clubs have been crowned Swedish champions from Örgryte IS in 1896 until Malmö FF in 2017.
A total of 117 Swedish championships have been awarded. Malmö FF is the most successful club with 20 Swedish championships.






























































































































Total titles won by club
Club
Winners
Runners-up
Winning seasons

Malmö FF
20
15

1943–44, 1948–49, 1949–50, 1950–51, 1952–53, 1965, 1967, 1970, 1971, 1974, 1975, 1977, 1986, 1988, 2004, 2010, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017

IFK Göteborg
18
9

1908, 1910, 1918, 1934–35, 1941–42, 1957–58, 1969, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1987, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2007

IFK Norrköping
13
11

1942–43, 1944–45, 1945–46, 1946–47, 1947–48, 1951–52, 1955–56, 1956–57, 1960, 1962, 1963, 1989, 2015

AIK
12
16

1900, 1901, 1911, 1914, 1916, 1923, 1931–1932, 1936–1937, 1992, 1998, 2009, 2018

Örgryte IS
12
6

1896, 1897, 1898, 1899, 1902, 1904, 1905, 1906, 1907, 1909, 1913, 1985

Djurgårdens IF
11
11

1912, 1915, 1917, 1920, 1954–55, 1959, 1964, 1966, 2002, 2003, 2005

IF Elfsborg
6
5

1935–36, 1938–39, 1939–40, 1961, 2006, 2012

Helsingborgs IF
5
8

1932–33, 1933–34, 1940–41, 1999, 2011

GAIS
4
3

1919, 1922, 1930–31, 1953–54

Östers IF
4
3

1968, 1978, 1980, 1981

Halmstads BK
4
2

1976, 1979, 1997, 2000

Åtvidabergs FF
2
2

1972, 1973

IK Sleipner
1
3

1937–38

Hammarby IF
1
3

2001

IFK Eskilstuna
1
1

1921

Kalmar FF
1
1

2008

Göteborgs IF
1


1903

Fässbergs IF
1


1924

Brynäs IF
1


1925


Total titles won by city[edit]


The 19 title-winning clubs have come from a total of 13 cities. The most successful city is Gothenburg.












































































Total titles won by city
City
Titles
Winning clubs

Gothenburg
35

IFK Göteborg (18), Örgryte IS (12), GAIS (4), Göteborgs IF (1)

Stockholm
24

AIK (12), Djurgårdens IF (11), Hammarby IF (1)

Malmö
20

Malmö FF (20)

Norrköping
14

IFK Norrköping (13), IK Sleipner (1)

Borås
6

IF Elfsborg (6)

Helsingborg
5

Helsingborgs IF (5)

Växjö
4

Östers IF (4)

Halmstad
4

Halmstads BK (4)

Åtvidaberg
2

Åtvidabergs FF (2)

Eskilstuna
1

IFK Eskilstuna (1)

Kalmar
1

Kalmar FF (1)

Mölndal
1

Fässbergs IF (1)

Gävle
1

Brynäs IF (1)


Total titles won by county[edit]


The Swedish championship has been won by 19 clubs from nine counties. The most successful county is Västra Götaland.
























































Total titles won by county
County
Titles
Winning clubs

Västra Götaland[nb 5]
42

IFK Göteborg (18), Örgryte IS (12), IF Elfsborg (6), GAIS (4), Göteborgs IF (1), Fässbergs IF (1)

Skåne[nb 6]
25

Malmö FF (20), Helsingborgs IF (5)

Stockholm
24

AIK (12), Djurgårdens IF (11), Hammarby IF (1)

Östergötland
16

IFK Norrköping (13), Åtvidabergs FF (2), IK Sleipner (1)

Kronoberg
4

Östers IF (4)

Halland
4

Halmstads BK (4)

Södermanland
1

IFK Eskilstuna (1)

Gävleborg
1

Brynäs IF (1)

Kalmar
1

Kalmar FF (1)


See also[edit]



  • Svenska Mästerskapet

  • Allsvenskan

  • Allsvenskan play-offs

  • Mästerskapsserien

  • Football in Sweden

  • Swedish football league system

  • List of Allsvenskan top scorers

  • List of Swedish youth football champions



Notes[edit]





  1. ^ Örgryte IS 2 was the reserve team of Örgryte IS.


  2. ^ AIK won the final on walkover as the match could not be played due to darkness. AIK was considered to be the better team and were thus given the title.


  3. ^ Decided in the third match after draws in the previous two.


  4. ^ Not decided until the spring 1925 due to heavy rain the autumn 1924.


  5. ^ Including the former counties Gothenburg and Bohus County and Älvsborg County.


  6. ^ Including the former county Malmöhus County.




References[edit]





  1. ^ "Svenska mästare 1896-1925, 1931-". svenskfotboll.se (in Swedish). Retrieved 2011-03-13..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ Hedlundh, Kent. "Sweden - List of Champions". RSSSF.com. Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 19 September 2015.


  3. ^ Glenning, Clas. "Early Swedish Football tables and Championship deciding cup finals". Archived from the original on November 15, 2004. Retrieved 19 September 2015.


  4. ^ Nylin, 2004, p. 134.


  5. ^ Nylin, 2004, p. 135.


  6. ^ Thorén, Petra. "SM-pokalen ska skrotas". aftonbladet.se (in Swedish). Retrieved 2011-01-03.




Bibliography[edit]



  • Nylin, Lars (2004). Den nödvändiga boken om Allsvenskan: svensk fotboll från 1896 till idag, statistik, höjdpunkter lag för lag, klassiska bilder. Sundbyberg: Semic. ISBN 91-552-3168-3.


External links[edit]




  • (in English) Swedish Football Association


  • (in English) Sweden - List of Champions, RSSSF.com












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