1994–95 Liga Indonesia Premier Division

The 1994–95 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (known as the Liga Dunhill for sponsorship reasons) was the inaugural season of the Liga Indonesia Premier Division, the top division of Indonesian football following the merger of Perserikatan and Galatama. The season began on 27 November 1994 and ended on 30 July 1995. The league was made up of 34 clubs. Persib won the title after beating Petrokimia Putra 1–0 in the final.[1]

Liga Indonesia Premier Division
Season1994–95
Dates27 November 1994 – 30 July 1995
ChampionsPersib
1st Premier Division title
6th Indonesian title
RelegatedPS Bengkulu
Warna Agung
PSIR
PSIM
Asian Club ChampionshipPersib
Asian Cup Winners' CupPetrokimia Putra
Matches played559
Goals scored1,417 (2.53 per match)
Top goalscorerPeri Sandria
(34 goals)
Biggest home winPelita Jaya 10–2 Persijatim
(14 June 1995)
Biggest away winPS Bengkulu 1–6 Pelita Jaya
(15 April 1995)
Persijatim 0–5 Arseto
(15 April 1995)
Warna Agung 0–5 Semen Padang
(7 May 1995)
Highest scoringPelita Jaya 10–2 Persijatim
(14 June 1995)

Overview

Background

The league started in 1994. The lack of ticket sales in Galatama and the lack of commercial aspects in Perserikatan made PSSI take a bold decision. The Indonesian football association decided to form a new fully professional league called the Liga Indonesia Premier Division as a merger of Galatama and Perserikatan.[2]

Due to the merger, there were 34 inaugural clubs in the league. Two clubs that should have been relegated to the First Division, Persiba and PS Bengkulu were allowed to compete while PS Aceh Putra chose to withdraw. To solve this issue, the league is split into two regional divisions with each division consisting 17 clubs. The top four clubs from each division then entered the second stage which is played in a group stage format consisting of two groups of four. Then, the top two clubs from each group proceed to the knockout stage (semifinals and final) where they will play for the title.[1]

The shift of the league to a more commercial form has made PSSI move to find sponsors to sustain the wheels of the league. Dunhill, a cigarette manufacturer from the UK is the first company to dive in and become the inaugural title sponsor of the league. As a result of this sponsorship, Dunhill poured funds up to Rp4.5 billion per season and provided subsidies of Rp100 million for each Premier Division club. Dunhill also gave a prize of Rp75 million for the champions, Rp50 million for the runners-up, and Rp25 million for the league's best player. The funds provided by Dunhill were pretty high for financial standards in 1994. Thus, the Liga Indonesia Premier Division was then given the name Liga Dunhill.[3]

Before the league started, PSSI also lifted the ban for foreign players to compete in the league that was active since 1982. This resulted in some high-profile signings with clubs signing seasoned veterans of the world stage.[4]

Season summary

The inaugural duel of this brand-new league brought together the champions of the last edition from each competition on 27 November 1994. Pelita Jaya were the last winners of Galatama while Persib were winners of the 1993–94 Perserikatan. The match ended 1–0 for Pelita Jaya with their Montenegrin striker Dejan Gluščević becoming the first player to score a goal in the new top-flight in the 60th minute.[2] By the end of the first stage, PS Bengkulu, Warna Agung, PSIR, and PSIM were the clubs that were relegated from the league. The first wave of foreign players coming to league proved to be ineffective in improving results, leading to clubs reshuffling the foreign players they had within their squads right before the second stage began.[5]

Persib would eventually become the inaugural champions of the league. The Maung Bandung, who only finished as runners-up in the West Division, won the title thanks to a narrow 1–0 victory over Petrokimia Putra in the final held in Gelora Senayan Main Stadium on 30 July 1995.[1] The final was not without controversy however as Petrokimia striker Jacksen F. Tiago had a goal ruled out for offside at the 30th minute. Nevertheless, Sutiono Lamso scored later in the 76th minute for Persib and they held on to lead until the end of the game.[6] Ironically, the title was won by a team consisting of local players only when most of the title challengers had at least one foreign player.[4] Meanwhile, Bandung Raya striker Peri Sandria was the league's inaugural top scorer. The 34 goals he scored was a top-flight record which stood for 22 years until Sylvano Comvalius scored 37 goals in the 2017 Liga 1.[7]

Teams

Stadiums and locations

Locations of the teams in the 1994–95 Liga Indonesia Premier Division.
Blue: West Division; Red: East Division

Kits and sponsorship

All of the teams kits are provided by Adidas and sponsored by Dunhill as part of the league's sponsorship deal.[8][9]

Foreign players

ClubVisa 1Visa 2Visa 3Visa 4Visa 5
Persiraja
PSMS
PSDS
Semen Padang Claudio Luzardi Claudio Oliveira Didier Kessack
PS Bengkulu
Persita
Warna Agung
Persija
Persijatim
Pelita Jaya Milorad Bajovic Maboang Kessack Roger Milla
Persib
Bandung Raya Dejan Gluščević Olinga Atangana Tibidi Alexis
PSIS
BPD Jateng
PSIR
Persiku
Arseto
PSIM
Mataram Putra
Persema
Arema
Persegres
Petrokimia Putra Darryl Sinerine Carlos de Mello Jacksen Tiago
Persebaya
Mitra Surabaya Gomes Oliveira Stoyan Kapuya
Assyabaab
Gelora Dewata Vata Matanu Garcia Alfonso Abel Campos Jeremie Mboh Nyetam
Persiba
Pupuk Kaltim Francisco Jose Soares Justin Imandi J.P. Mbvoum Mayoh Iulian Minea Iulian Pomuhaci
Putra Samarinda
Barito Putera
PSM
Persipura
Medan Jaya Jijie Claudio Cinca Marius Makukula Kuyangana

First stage

West Division

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification or relegation
1Pelita Jaya3224537825+5377Advance to second stage
2Persib3220935415+3969
3Bandung Raya32191036826+4267
4Medan Jaya32151164629+1756
5Semen Padang32141084525+2052
6Persiraja32141083741−452
7Arseto32146124638+848
8Persita32136134341+245
9PSMS Medan32118133736+141
10PSDS321011113845−741
11Mataram Putra32116152431−739
12Persiku32107153037−737
13Persija[a]32115164251−935
14BPD Jateng32810144250−834
15Persijatim3266202971−4224
16PS Bengkulu (R)3255222869−4120Relegation to First Division
17Warna Agung (R)3225252481−5711
Source: RSSSF
(R) Relegated
Notes:


East Division

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification or relegation
1Petrokimia Putra3217966231+3160Advance to second stage
2Pupuk Kaltim32151255827+3157
3ASGS3217695745+1257
4Barito Putera32175105131+2056
5Gelora Dewata3215985027+2354
6Arema32157104441+352
7Mitra Surabaya32155124534+1150
8Persipura32139104042−248
9Persebaya321210104540+546
10PSM321110113132−143
11Putra Samarinda32118133241−941
12Persema32116153343−1039
13PSIS32109132843−1539
14Persegres3288163349−1632
15Persiba3286182649−2330
16PSIR[a] (R)3259182652−2621Relegation to First Division
17PSIM (R)32212181448−3418
Source: RSSSF
(R) Relegated
Notes:


Second stage

The second stage was played from 19 to 26 July 1995.[1] The matches were held at Gelora Senayan Main Stadium in Jakarta.

Group A

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1Pupuk Kaltim312032+15Advance to knockout stage
2Barito Putera312032+15
3Bandung Raya311143+14
4Pelita Jaya301225−31
Source: RSSSF


Group B

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1Persib321051+47Advance to knockout stage
2Petrokimia Putra312052+35
3ASGS311146−24
4Medan Jaya300327−50
Source: RSSSF


Knockout stage

 
SemifinalsFinal
 
      
 
28 July – Jakarta
 
 
Pupuk Kaltim0
 
30 July – Jakarta
 
Petrokimia Putra1
 
Petrokimia Putra0
 
28 July – Jakarta
 
Persib1
 
Persib1
 
 
Barito Putera0
 

Semifinals

Pupuk Kaltim0–1Petrokimia Putra
ReportWidodo 54'
Attendance: 60.000
Referee: Widyanto Nugroho (Semarang)

Persib1–0Barito Putera
Kekey Zakaria 80'Report
Attendance: 70.000
Referee: Khairul Agil (DKI Jakarta)

Final

Petrokimia Putra0–1Persib
Sutiono 76'
Attendance: 90,000
Referee: Zulkifli Chaniago

Awards

Top scorers

The following is a list of the top scorers from the 1994–95 season.[1]

RankPlayerClubGoals
1 Peri SandriaBandung Raya34
2 Buyung IsmuPelita Jaya30
3 Dejan GluščevićBandung Raya22
4 Vata Matanu GarciaGelora Dewata21
Sutiono LamsoPersib21
5 Widodo C. PutroPetrokimia Putra18

Best player

References

External links