Barbados Premier League

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Barbados Premier League
Weymouth Wales (19 titles)
Top goalscorerBarbados Armando Lashley
(145 goals)
Current: 2024 Barbados Premier League

The Premier League is the top football league in Barbados. It was created in 1947 and is headed by the Barbados Football Association. Ten teams participate in this league. It is known as the Digicel Premier League for sponsorship reasons.

Despite being a league competition in

CONCACAF Champions' Cup
(the last appearance was in 2000).

The 9th- and 10th-placed teams are relegated to

Bridgetown
.

Clubs

Weymouth Wales
Locations of the 2017 Barbados Premier League teams

Champions

Ed. Season Champion
1
1947–48 Spartan
2
1949 Spartan
3
1950 Spartan
4
1951 Spartan
5
1952
Empire
1953–1959 No Tournament
6
1960 Everton
1961 No Tournament
7
1962
New South Wales1
8
1963 Everton
9
1964
New South Wales
10
1965 Everton
11
1966 Everton
12
1967
New South Wales
1968 No Tournament
13
1969
New South Wales
14
1970
New South Wales
15
1971
New South Wales
16
1972
New South Wales
17
1973
Pan-Am Wales1
18
1974
Pan-Am Wales
19
1975
Pan-Am Wales
20
1976
Pan-Am Wales
1977 No Tournament
21
1978
Weymouth Wales1
1979 No Tournament
1980 No Tournament
22
1981
Weymouth Wales
23
1982 Pinelands United
1983 No Tournament
24
1984
Weymouth Wales
25
1985 Pinelands United
26
1986
Weymouth Wales
27
1987 Everton
28
1988 Pride of Gall Hill
29
1989 Paradise
30
1990
Brittons Hill
1991 No Tournament
31
1992 Pinelands United
32
1993 Pride of Gall Hill
1994 No Tournament
33
1995 BDF
34
1996 Paradise
35
1997 Notre Dame
36
1998 Notre Dame
37
1999 Notre Dame
38
2000 Notre Dame
39
2001 Paradise
40
2002 Notre Dame
41
2003 Paradise
42
2004 Notre Dame
43
2005 Notre Dame
44
2006 Youth Milan
45
2007 BDF
46
2008 Notre Dame
47
2009
Brittons Hill
48
2010 Notre Dame
49
2011 Youth Milan
50
2012
Weymouth Wales
51
2013 BDF
52
2014 BDF
53
2015 BDF
54
2016 UWI Blackbirds
55
2017
Weymouth Wales
56
2018
Weymouth Wales
57
2018–19 BDF
58
2020 Season abandoned due to COVID-19[1]
59
2023
Weymouth Wales

Notes

  • Weymouth Wales
    . The club was called "New South Wales" from 1962 to 1972, and then "Pan-Am Wales" from 1973 to 1977.

Titles by club

Club Titles Seasons won
Weymouth Wales
19 1962, 1964, 1967, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1978, 1981, 1984, 1986, 2012, 2017, 2018, 2023
Notre Dame 9 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2008, 2010
BDF 6 1995, 2007, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2018–19
Everton 5 1960, 1963, 1965, 1966, 1987
Paradise 4 1989, 1996, 2001, 2003
Spartan 4 1947–48, 1949, 1950, 1951
Pinelands United 3 1982, 1985, 1992
Youth Milan 2 2006, 2011
Brittons Hill
2 1990, 2009
Pride of Gall Hill 2 1988, 1993
UWI Blackbirds 1 2016
Empire 1 1952

Top goalscorers

Season Topscorer(s) Club(s) Goals
1999 Barbados Llewellyn Riley Notre Dame 17
2001 Barbados Peter Stoute Paradise 20
2002 Barbados Kenroy Skinner Youth Milan 19
2003 Barbados Adrian Forde Barbados Defence Force 9
2004 Barbados Llewellyn Riley Notre Dame 16
Barbados Dwayne Stanford Beverley Hills
2005 Barbados Peter Stoute
Silver Sands
21
2006 Barbados Dwayne Stanford Beverley Hills 17
2007 Barbados Dwayne McClean Barbados Defence Force 16
2008 Barbados Norman Forde Notre Dame 13
2009 Barbados Riviere Williams Barbados Defence Force 18
2010 Barbados Kyle Gibson Notre Dame 13
2011 Barbados Armando Lashley Paradise 13
2012 Barbados Dwayne Stanford
Weymouth Wales
13
2013 Barbados Jabarry Chandler Pride of Gall Hill 14
2014 Barbados Arantees Lawrence Pinelands United 23
2015 Barbados Dwayne Stanford
Brittons Hill
15
2016 Barbados Mario Harte UWI Blackbirds 29
2017
Barbados Zeco Edmee
Barbados Arantees Lawrence
Weymouth Wales
15
2018 Barbados Jabarry Chandler Empire 19
2018-19
Barbados Armando Lashley Paradise 26
2023 Barbados Zeco Edmee Notre Dame 26
Most time topscorers
  • 4 times
    • Dwayne Stanford (2004, 2006, 2012, 2015)
Most goals in a single season
Most goals by a player in a single game

All-time topscorers

Rank Players Goals Years
1 Barbados Armando Lashley 145 2010
2 Barbados Mario Harte 142 2007

Multiple hat-tricks

Rank Country Player Hat-tricks
1 Barbados Armando Lashley 10
2 Barbados Mario Harte 8
3 Barbados Dwayne Stanford 4
Barbados Riviere Williams
5 Barbados Corey Barrow 3
Trinidad and Tobago Dario Harewood
Barbados Romario Harewood
Barbados Zeco Edmee
Barbados Ryan Lucas
Barbados Henderson Richards
Barbados Kenroy Skinner
Barbados Shaquille Stewart
13 Barbados Shaquille Boyce 2
Barbados Jabarry Chandler
Barbados Michael Forde
Barbados Dwayne Gale
Barbados Paul Lovell
Barbados Dwayne Lynch
Barbados Dwayne McClean
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Shandel Samuel
21 Barbados Quincy Atherley 1
Barbados Keon Atkins
Barbados Greg Belle
Barbados Jeremy Bradshaw
Barbados Ryan Brewster
Barbados Randy Burrowes
Barbados Walton Burrowes
Barbados Romell Bynoe
Barbados Travis Coppin
Barbados Kirk Cox
Barbados Shane Cox
Barbados Sherwin Daisley
Barbados Elijah Downey
Barbados Angus Doyle
Barbados Adrian Forde
Barbados Anthony Forde
Barbados Jarvis Forde
Barbados Kyle Forde-Blades
Barbados Norman Forde
Barbados Kyle Gibson
Barbados Roshon Gittens
Barbados Gregory Goodridge
Barbados Jamar Grazette
Barbados Ryan Griffith
Barbados Rudi Grosvenor
Barbados Rohan Hall
Barbados Kemar Heardley
Barbados Sheran Hoyte
Barbados Rohan Johnson
Barbados Maradona Lavine
Barbados Arantees Lawrence
Barbados Omari Leacock
Barbados Andre Leslie
Barbados Dwayne Mars
Barbados Tige McClean
Jamaica Omando McLeod
Barbados Carlos Nichols
Barbados Curtis Odle
Barbados Terry Odle
Barbados Ottis Ollivierre
Barbados Tristan Paris
Barbados Dario Pilgrim
Barbados Andre Pinder
Barbados Niall Reid
Barbados Llewellyn Riley
Barbados Ray Snaag
Barbados Malcom Steward
Barbados Peter Stoute
Barbados Alvin Welch
Barbados Shane Welch
Barbados Jeffrey Williams
Barbados Dario Wilson
Most hat-tricks in a single season
  • 20 hat-tricks (2016)
Most hat-tricks by a player in a single season

See also

References

  1. ^ "BFA suspends all games". Barbados Football Association. 17 March 2020. Archived from the original on 28 September 2020. Retrieved 28 September 2020.

External links