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  • Statto question. Have reigning premiership, or its antecedent leagues', champions ever been relegated?

  • Getting the champions relegated in the next season seems a Scandinavian specialty. It happened 4 times in Sweden, and 3 times in Finland, Norway and Denmark, who caught up in 2000/01. The Faroes also boast a case...

    Algeria (2):
    EP Sétif (champions 1987, relegated 1988)
    USM El Harrach (champions 1998, relegated 1999)

    Andorra (1):
    Constel-lació Esportiva (champions 2000, relegated 2000) [1>

    Austria (1):
    FC Tirol Innsbruck (champions 2002, relegated 2002) [2>

    Bolivia (1):
    Universitario (La Paz) (champions 1969, relegated 1970)

    Cameroon (1):
    Aigle Nkongsamba (champions 1994, relegated 1995)

    Chile (1):
    Universidad Católica (champions 1954, relegated 1955) [3>

    Denmark (3):
    KB (champions 1950, relegated 1951)
    Hvidovre (champions 1973, relegated 1974)
    Herfølge BK (champions 2000, relegated 2001)

    Dominican Republic (2):
    Deportivo Pantoja (champions 2001, relegated 2002)
    Baninter/Jarabacoa (champions 2003, relegated 2005) [no competition 2004>

    Ecuador (1):
    LDU (Quito) (champions 1999, relegated 2000)

    England (1):
    Manchester City (champions 1937, relegated 1938)

    Faroe Islands (1):
    B 71 (champions 1989, relegated 1990)

    Finland (3):
    Ilves-Kissat (champions 1950, relegated 1951)
    TPV (champions 1994, relegated 1995)
    Haka Valkeakoski (champions 1995, relegated 1996)

    France (1):
    Olympique Marseille (champions 1992, relegated 1994) [4>

    Germany (1):
    1.FC Nürnberg (champions 1968, relegated 1969)

    Guinea Bissau (1):
    UDIB (champions 2003, relegated 2004) [5>

    Indonesia (2):
    PSIS (Semarang) (champions 1999, relegated 2000)
    Petrokimia Putra (Gresik) (champions 2002, relegated 2003)

    Israel (2):
    Hapoel Kfar-Saba (champions 1982, relegated 1983)
    Hapoel Tel-Aviv (champions 1988, relegated 1989)

    Italy (1):
    Milan AC (champions 1979, relegated 1980) [6>

    Jamaica (1):
    Violet Kickers (champions 1996, relegated 1997)

    Luxembourg (1):
    Union Luxembourg (champions 1927, relegated 1928)

    Malta (1):
    Rabat Ajax (champions 1986, relegated 1987)

    Mexico (1):
    Marte (champions 1954, relegated 1955)

    Netherlands (1):
    RCH (champions 1953, relegated 1954)

    Nigeria (2):
    Stationery Stores (champions 1992, relegated 1993) [7>
    Shooting Stars (champions 1998, relegated 1999)

    Norway (3):
    Freidig (Trondheim) (champions 1948, relegated 1949)
    Fram (Larvik) (champions 1950, relegated 1951)
    SK Brann (champions 1963, relegated 1964)

    Poland (1):
    Ogniwo Bytom (champions 1954, relegated 1955) [8>

    San Marino (1):
    La Fiorita (champions 1990, relegated 1991)

    Sweden (4):
    Helsingborgs IF (champions 1934, relegated 1935)
    GAIS (champions 1954, relegated 1955)
    Djurgårdens IF (champions 1959, relegated 1960)
    IFK Göteborg (champions 1969, relegated 1970)

    Uzbekistan (1):
    MHSK Tashkent (champions 1997, relegated 1998)

    Vietnam (1):
    Cang Saigon (champions 2002, relegated 2003)

    Wales (1):
    Barry Town (champions 2003, relegated 2004)

    [1> Constel-lació were relegated (and suspended for seven years) for
    alleged bribe attempts and financial irregularities, not because
    they finished on a relegation spot.
    [2> FC Tirol Innsbruck were refused a professional license and
    relegated two levels because of financial problems and not because
    they finished on a relegation spot; at the moment of their relegation
    they had won the Austrian league championship three times in succession.
    [3> After the shock relegation of Universidad Católica, the rules were
    adapted and relegation was decided on performances over more than
    just the last season. Universidad Católica profited from this in
    1960, when they finished last but Magallanes was relegated instead of
    them. They then proved to really belong in the top division in the
    most convincing manner, winning the title in 1961 (and reaching the
    title playoff in 1962).
    [4> Marseille were stripped of the 1992/93 championship following a bribery
    scandal (the title was not awarded at all) and were relegated as a
    punishment in 1993/94 at a time they were the last team to have won
    the championship (legally) in 1991/92.
    [5> UDIB were relegated after failing to show for their first two matches
    in the 2004 season.
    [6> Milan were relegated because of a bribery scandal involving their
    championship season and not because they finished on a relegation
    spot.
    [7> Stationery Stores were relegated because of failing to complete
    their fixtures, not because they finished on a relegation spot.
    [8> Ogniwo was the temporary name of Polonia Bytom, who later merged
    with Szombierki Bytom.

    EP Sétif's relegation was all the more shocking because they went on to win the African Champions' Cup (for which they had qualified as Algerian champions 1986/87) at the end of 1988, becoming continental champions as a second division club!

    KB were Danish champions in 1948, 1949 and 1950, were relegated in 1951, won promotion in 1952, and won the championship again in 1953 - six eventful seasons...

    Haka had an eventful six-year sequence in Finland: champions 1995, relegated 1996, promoted 1997 (and winning the cup as a second division team!), and champions 1998, 1999 and 2000, but they failed to emulate ÍA's feat of five consecutive titles after promotion.

    SK Brann were Norwegian champions twice before going down in 1964: they won the Norwegian league both in 1961/62 and 1963 - and since they were relegated in 1959/60 and promoted in 1960/61, they had a series of 5 very eventful seasons. They also had a remarkable 8-season series from 1979 to 1986: going down, going up, going down...

    Another team who had been champions twice before getting relegated is Helsingborgs IF: Swedish champions in 1932/33 and 1933/34, they went down in 1934/35 and needed two seasons to bounce back.

    Moreover, LDU from Quito were champions of Ecuador in 1998 and 1999 before suffering relegation on the final day of the Clausura 2000.

    Finally, Jarabacoa had been champions of the Dominican Republic (as Baninter) in 2001 and 2002/03 (the first two editions of the Liga Mayor) before being relegated in 2004/05 (the third edition). Apart from KB, Brann and Haka, the only other team to have both been crowned champions immediately following promotion and relegated as champions is Fram (Larvik).

    Whereas 1964, 1998 and 2003 saw 4 promoted teams winning their domestic league, in 1951 three Nordic champions went down (KB, Ilves-Kissat and Fram (Larvik)), while 1955 (Marte, Universidad Católica, Polonia Bytom and GAIS) saw four reigning champions relegated.

    Finland is the only country which had reigning champions relegated in consecutive years.

    Nigeria had both its champions relegated and a newly promoted team crowned champions in 1999! The same happened in Vietnam and in Indonesia in 2003, before the Dominican Republic joined their company in 2005.

    Manchester City's relegation was all the weirder because they scored more goals in 1937/38 than any other English first division club and had a positive goal difference.

    All from http://www.rsssf.com

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