Latvian Second League
The Latvian Seconde League (Latvian: 2. līga), currently known for sponsorship reasons as Altero.lv LIIGA, is the third tier of football in Latvia and is organised by the Latvian Football Federation.
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| Founded | 1992 |
|---|---|
| Country | |
| Number of teams | 16 |
| Level on pyramid | 3 |
| Promotion to | Optibet Nākotnes Līga |
| Relegation to | Dali Dali 3.līga |
| Domestic cup(s) | Latvian Cup |
| Website | Latvian Football Federation |
Competition format
Regional stage
There are 16 clubs in the Second League. There are 2 regions, West and East, with both divisions containing 8 teams which must play home and away games against their regional opponents. From each region, 4 teams advance to the promotion round, whereas the other 4 teams advance to the relegation round. This stage of the league is typically contested from April to August.
Promotion/relegation stage
The promotion round involves additional matches between the best 8 teams in the league, allowing two of the best teams to be promoted to the First League at the conclusion of the season. Additionally, the third-finishing team contests a two-legged playoff against the third-from-bottom-team in the First League, with the winner of the playoff securing an additional First League berth for the next season.
The relegation round, contested between the bottom 4 teams of each of the two divisions, sees the bottom 4 of those total 8 teams relegated to the Third League.
Past Second League winners
| Season | Winner | Runner-up |
|---|---|---|
| 1992 | Vārpa-SCO | Smiltene |
| 1993 | Cerība Preiļi | Lokomotīve |
| 1994 | Konvoja pulks | Dialogs Jelgava |
| 1995 | Vecrīga | Nafta Ventspils |
| 1996 | FK Ozolnieki | FK Ilūkste |
| 1997 | Valmiera-2 | Auda |
| 1998 | Zibens Zemessardze | FK Lode |
| 1999 | AS Lode | Robežsardze |
| 2000 | Akora | Viola |
| 2001 | FC Ditton | Auda-Neo |
| 2002 | FK Balvu Vilki | Nafta Ventspils |
| 2003 | Skonto/Juniors | Fortūna Ogre |
| 2004 | Eirobaltija | Saldus/Brocēni |
| 2005 | Miku/UPTK | FK Abuls |
| 2006 | Olimps | FK Ilūkste |
| 2007 | FK Spartaks | Jēkabpils SC |
| 2008 | FK Kauguri-PBLC | Preiļu BJSS |
| 2009 | RFS/Flaminko | FK Ilūkste |
| 2010 | SFK Varavīksne | OSC/FK-33 |
| 2011 | Rīnūži/Strong | SK Upesciems |
| 2012 | Kuldīgas NSS | FK Jēkabpils/JSC |
| 2013 | RTU Futbola centrs | JFK Saldus |
| 2014 | FC Caramba | FK Staiceles Bebri |
| 2015 | FC Caramba | FC Nikers |
| 2016 | Grobiņas SC | SK Cēsis |
| 2017 | LDZ Cargo/DFA | Monarhs/Flaminko |
| 2018 | FC Betlanes[1] | FK Krāslava |
| 2019 | LDZ Cargo/DFA | Ghetto FC |
| 2020 | Albatroz SC/FK Jelgava | FK Salaspils |
| 2021 | Skanstes SK[2] | SK Spēks |
| 2022 | FK Beitar[3] | FK Ventspils |
References
- "Video: FC "Betlanes" kļūst par 2.līgas čempioniem". sportacentrs.com. 4 November 2018.
- "LĪGU APSKATS: PRIEKŠLAICĪGAIS KOPSAVILKUMS". lff.lv. 26 October 2021.
- "FK BEITAR KĻŪST PAR 2. LĪGAS ČEMPIONVIENĪBU". lff.lv. 12 November 2022.
