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East of Scotland Football League

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromEast of Scotland League)
Association football league in Scotland

Football league
East of Scotland Football League
Founded1923
Country Scotland (57 teams)
Other club(s) from England (1 team)
ConfederationUEFA
Divisions4
Number of clubs58
Level onpyramid6–9
Promotion toLowland Football League
Domestic cup(s)Scottish Cup (SFA licensed clubs and Premier Division winners)
South Region Challenge Cup
League cup(s)East of Scotland League Cup
King Cup (non-Premier Division clubs only)
Current championsBroxburn Athletic (1st title)
(2023–24)
Most championshipsWhitehill Welfare (16 titles)
Websiteeosfl.com
Current:2024–25 East of Scotland Football League

TheEast of Scotland Football League (EoSFL) is a seniorfootball league based in the east and south-east ofScotland. The league sits at levels 6–9 on theScottish football league system, acting as a feeder to theLowland Football League.

Founded in 1923, it is currently composed of 58 member clubs competing in four divisions. Traditionally clubs were located inEdinburgh,Lothians and theScottish Borders however the league has now expanded and also includes clubs fromClackmannanshire,Falkirk,Fife,Stirling, andPerth.

Since 2014–15 it has featured in the seniorpyramid system. The winners take part in an end of season promotion play-off with theSouth of Scotland Football League andWest of Scotland Football League champions, subject to clubs meeting the required licensing criteria.

History

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Original EoSFL

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An earlier East of Scotland League existed between 1896 and 1906, when thesupplementaryEdinburgh Football League changed its name, after acceptingDundee as a member. There is no connection between the two incarnations of the league.

Eastern League, 1921-22

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The forerunner of the EOSL was the amateur Eastern League, one of two such leagues this season that had the name, the other being professional and based in the North-East of Scotland. The membership would include subsequent EOSL members; Gala Fairydean, Peebles Rovers, Vale of Leithen, Edinburgh Civil Service, Selkirk and Civil Service Strollers. Gala were league champions with 17 points from their 10 matches.

21st century

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The EoSFL was traditionally one of Scotland's three "senior" non-leagues which sat outside theScottish Football League (SFL), the other two being theHighland Football League and theSouth of Scotland Football League (SoSFL). It was generally viewed as being weaker than the Highland League (with fewer of their club sides defeating SFL sides in the Scottish Cup competition as opposed to the HFL), but was still regarded as being stronger than the South of Scotland League.

Some SoSFL clubs opted to join the EoSFL, includingAnnan Athletic before they were elected to theSFL in 2008.Dalbeattie Star andThreave Rovers also joined however both subsequently left to rejoin the SoSFL and then later the Lowland League.

A number of the sides in the EoSFL have applied to join theSFL in the past, withAnnan Athletic applying in (2000, successfully in 2008),Edinburgh City (2002, 2008),Gala Fairydean (1994, 2000, 2002),Preston Athletic (2000, 2002, 2008) andThe Spartans (2008).

In 2004,Threave Rovers pulled out of the league to concentrate their efforts on theSouth of Scotland Football League. This left the league with an uneven number of clubs, and they were expected to fill the vacancy in the summer of 2005, withGala Rovers widely touted as likely candidates. However, this did not happen. The only change that happened at that year'sAGM of the league, was thatTollcross United announced that they would be competing asTynecastle from the2005–06 season.

In 2006,Peebles Rovers merged with several local amateur sides to becomePeebles, who took Rovers' place in the league. At the 2007 AGM, agreement was reached to admit the reserve side ofBerwick Rangers as the twelfth member of the First Division. They also entered the League Cup, but no other cups during the2007–08 season. However, the reserves lasted only one season following Berwick Rangers' relegation to thefourth tier ofScottish football. They were replaced byStirling University, but returned for the2010–11 season.

Gretna 2008 entered the league in 2008, formed in the wake of the financial disaster that befellGretna's former club,Gretna F.C. They initially had to play home matches in the nearby town ofAnnan, the club that took their place in the SFL.

The admission ofDuns prior to the 2011–12 season, and thenBurntisland Shipyard in 2012–13 brought the number of sides in the EoSFL to 26, the highest it had ever been up to that point.

Lowland League and decline

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In 2013, theLowland Football League was formed to act as a direct feeder to theScottish Professional Football League (SPFL), covering an area of Scotland south of theTay Road Bridge. Nine EoSFL clubs gained entry to the Lowland League, reducing the EoSFL to 20 teams.Hibernian entered a reserve team into the league at the start of the2013–14 season, but withdrew after one season due to their first team being relegated.[1] Further departures saw the league merged into a single division of 16 teams in2015–16, which was then reduced to just 11 teams during2016–17 as more clubs moved to the Lowland League, back to theJuniors or resigned.

Influx of Junior clubs

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Beginning in 2017 the league experienced a resurgence withSJFA East Superleague championsKelty Hearts joining from the Juniors. In April 2018, thirteen clubs—most of them from the East Juniors—were accepted into the league for the2018–19 season, doubling the league's membership. When the window for applications was extended to the league's AGM in June, even more clubs quit the Junior grade, bringing the total membership up to 39 clubs, split over three conferences.[2] The following seasonGlenrothes made the same switch. In 2020 a further ten clubs, including the return ofEyemouth United after a year out, boosted the league's membership to 49 clubs ahead of the 2020–21 season.[3] The remainingEast Region junior clubs south of Tayport (most fromWest Lothian) joined the league for 2021–22, giving the league a total of 59 members.

East of Scotland Football Association

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While the EoSFL oversees the leagues and League Cup competitions; the East of Scotland Football Association (EoSFA) is a technically independent body, which organises all of the other cups. It was founded in 1875 as the "Eastern Branch of the Scottish FA", a title that was vetoed by the Scottish FA. Taking the title Edinburgh FA, it was renamed the East of Scotland FA in 1889. Most of the officials sit on both bodies, and the Executive Committee is a joint organisation. The current President of the EoSFA is Andy McDonald (ofEdinburgh City), while the President of the EoSFL is John Greenhorn (ofOrmiston).

There are 71 members of the East of Scotland Football Association (EoSFA).[4]

The first teams of the members in the SPFL have little involvement in EoSFA competitions. Youth teams of Hearts and Hibernian formerly contested theEast of Scotland Shield, while Bonnyrigg Rose, Edinburgh City, Kelty Hearts and The Spartans participate in the East of Scotland (City) Cup. Berwick Rangers, Hibernian,[5][1] and The Spartans have all previously fieldedreserve teams in the EoSFL.[6]

The EoSFL and EoSFA are full members of theScottish Football Association.

Member clubs

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East of Scotland Football League is located in Scotland Southeast
Linton Hotspur
Linton Hotspur
Edinburgh College
Edinburgh College
Bo'ness Athletic
Bo'ness Athletic
Location of teams in2024–25 East of Scotland Football League
– Premier Division
– First Division
– Second Division
– Third Division
Main article:2024–25 East of Scotland Football League

The EoSFL's two-tier format, which began in 1987–88, was abolished for the2015–16 season due to dwindling numbers and replaced with a single division. To cope with the influx of new members in2018–19, the league consisted of three conferences running in parallel. For 2019–20, the EoSFL was reorganised back into a two-tier setup, with a 16-team Premier Division and two First Division conferences. Due to theCOVID-19 pandemic, no relegation took place in 2020 meaning the Premier Division was temporarily increased to 18 clubs. It reverted back to 16 clubs following the2021–22 season while the top 7 in the two First Division conferences formed a First and Second Division, with Conference X being renamed the Third Division below.

Listed below are the 58 clubs in the EoSFL for the2024–25 season. Since2022–23 the EoSFL setup has featured Premier, First, Second, and Third Divisions, with three clubs promoted and relegated between each division.

Premier Division

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First Division

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Second Division

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Third Division

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Cup competitions

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Current

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  • Scottish Cup (sponsored byScottish Gas): For clubs with an SFA licence and the Premier Division winners, who all enter at the preliminary round stage. Knock-out tournament without no replays.
  • SFA South Region Challenge Cup: Introduced in 2007–08 as a replacement for theScottish Qualifying Cup (South) which was abolished under the new Scottish Cup format. It is for all seniornon-league clubs in the south of Scotland and has 163 entrants for the 2023–24 season – 16 from the Lowland League, 56 from the EoSFL, 11 from the SoSFL, and 80 from the WoSFL. Reserve teams do not take part. The first and second rounds are regionalised, otherwise it is a straight knock-out tournament, without replays.
  • East of Scotland League Cup: All 58 EoSFL teams enter this competition. Straight knock-out tournament without replays. Between 2011–12 and 2018–19, only the group winners and runners-up from the Qualifying Leagues competed in this tournament.
  • King Cup: Open to the 42 clubs below the Premier Division but originally for all members of the EOSFA. Straight knock-out tournament without replays. The King Cup final is traditionally the last game of the season.
  • Alex Jack Cup (also formerly known as the East of Scotland Consolation Cup): Competition for the 28 EoSFL clubs who are not already competing in the Scottish Cup orScottish Junior Cup, usually played on the same weekends as Scottish Cup matches. Straight knock-out tournament, without replays. The winner goes on to play in theEast, South and West of Scotland Cup-Winners Shield against the Southern Counties FA's Alba Cup winner and the West's Strathclyde Cup winner for a place in the following season's Scottish Cup.
  • East of Scotland Qualifying Cup: Competition for the 65 EoSFA members outwith theSPFL. Straight knock-out tournament without replays. The competition was originally the preliminary phase of the EOS Shield.
  • East of Scotland (City) Cup: The winner of the East of Scotland Qualifying Cup joins the EoSFA members playing inSPFL in the semi-finals. The four EoSFA members in the national leagues (Hearts, Hibernian, Livingston, and formerly Berwick Rangers) used to all enter, but now the Hearts and Hibernian reserve teams contest theEast of Scotland Shield – albeit intermittently.

Inactive

[edit]
  • East of Scotland Shield: since the mid-1980s, this tournament has become a one-off match for youth/reserve teams of Hearts and Hibernian, however it was last held in 2015–16.
  • East of Scotland Qualifying Leagues: Removed for 2019–20 due to the increase in league fixtures. Added in 2011–12, this was a pre-season warm-up competition where clubs were split into ten groups and each played the others within their group once, with the group winners and runners-up progressing to the League Cup.

Holders

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2023–24 winners unless stated.

Seasons

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SeasonEast of Scotland League
1923–24Coldstream
1924–25Vale of Leithen
1925–26Civil Service Strollers
1926–27Civil Service Strollers (2)
1927–28EnglandBerwick Rangers
1928–29Peebles Rovers
1929–30Bathgate
1930–31Bathgate (2)
1931–32Penicuik Athletic
1932–33Peebles Rovers (2)
1933–34Peebles Rovers (3)
1934–35Peebles Rovers (4)
1935–36Peebles Rovers (5)
1936–37Jed Arts
1937–38Penicuik Athletic (2)
1938–39Bo'ness
1939–40

to 1944–45

No league championship duringWorld War II
1945–46Peebles Rovers (6)
NOTE this edition of was known as the Emergency Trophy
1946–47England Berwick Rangers (2)
1947–48Hibernian 'B'
1948–49Hibernian 'B' (2)
1949–50Heart of Midlothian 'B'
1950–51Hibernian 'B' (3)
1951–52Hibernian 'B' (4)
1952–53Hibernian 'B' (5)
1953–54unfinished
1954–55Eyemouth United
1955–56Eyemouth United (2)
1956–57Eyemouth United (3)
1957–58unfinished
1958–59unfinished
1959–60unfinished
1960–61unfinished
1961–62Gala Fairydean (1)
1962–63unfinished
1963–64Gala Fairydean (2)
1964–65Gala Fairydean (3)
1965–66Gala Fairydean (4)
1966–67Hawick Royal Albert
1967–68Hawick Royal Albert (2)
1968–69Gala Fairydean (5)
1969–70Cowdenbeath 'A'
1970–71Eyemouth United (4)
1971–72The Spartans
1972–73Civil Service Strollers (3)
1973–74Hawick Royal Albert (3)
1974–75Selkirk
1975–76Selkirk (2)
1976–77Selkirk (3)
1977–78Vale of Leithen (2)
1978–79Vale of Leithen (3)
1979–80Whitehill Welfare
1980–81Whitehill Welfare (2)
1981–82Whitehill Welfare (3)
1982–83Whitehill Welfare (4)
1983–84The Spartans (2)
1984–85Whitehill Welfare (5)
1985–86Whitehill Welfare (6)
1986–87Vale of Leithen (4)
SeasonPremier DivisionFirst DivisionLeague Cup
1987–88Whitehill Welfare (7)Annan AthleticWhitehill Welfare (1)
1988–89Gala Fairydean (6)Peebles RoversWhitehill Welfare (2)
1989–90Annan AthleticColdstreamBerwick Rangers 'A'
1990–91Gala Fairydean (7)Easthouses Lily Miners WelfareWhitehill Welfare (3)
1991–92Easthouses Lily Miners WelfareManor ThistleWhitehill Welfare (4)
1992–93Whitehill Welfare (8)Civil Service StrollersEdinburgh City
1993–94Whitehill Welfare (9)Tollcross UnitedGala Fairydean
1994–95Whitehill Welfare (10)PencaitlandWhitehill Welfare (5)
1995–96Whitehill Welfare (11)Edinburgh CityWhitehill Welfare (6)
1996–97The Spartans (3)Lothian ThistleWhitehill Welfare (7)
1997–98Whitehill Welfare (12)Peebles Rovers (2)Whitehill Welfare (8)
1998–99Whitehill Welfare (13)Easthouses Lily Miners Welfare (2)Whitehill Welfare (9)
1999–00Annan Athletic (2)Threave RoversAnnan Athletic
2000–01Annan Athletic (3)Pencaitland & OrmistonCivil Service Strollers
2001–02The Spartans (4)Preston AthleticEdinburgh City (2)
2002–03Whitehill Welfare (14)Edinburgh UniversityWhitehill Welfare (10)
2003–04The Spartans (5)Kelso UnitedThe Spartans
2004–05The Spartans (6)Easthouses Lily Miners Welfare (3)The Spartans (2)
2005–06Edinburgh CityCraigroystonHeriot-Watt University
2006–07Annan Athletic (4)Dalbeattie StarWhitehill Welfare (11)
2007–08Whitehill Welfare (15)Heriot-Watt UniversityWhitehill Welfare (12)
2008–09The Spartans (7)TynecastleDalbeattie Star
2009–10The Spartans (8)Stirling UniversityThe Spartans (3)
2010–11The Spartans (9)Gretna 2008The Spartans (4)
2011–12Stirling UniversityHeriot-Watt University (2)Whitehill Welfare (13)
2012–13Whitehill Welfare (16)Craigroyston (2)Edinburgh City (3)
2013–14Lothian Thistle Hutchison ValeHibernian reservesHibernian reserves
2014–15Lothian Thistle Hutchison Vale (2)Peebles Rovers (3)Leith Athletic
SeasonEast of Scotland LeagueLeague Cup
2015–16Leith AthleticThe Spartans reserves
2016–17Lothian Thistle Hutchison Vale (3)Leith Athletic (2)
2017–18Kelty Hearts *Lothian Thistle Hutchison Vale
SeasonConferencesLeague Cup
2018–19Championship play-off:Bonnyrigg Rose Athletic *

Conference A: Penicuik Athletic
Conference B: Bonnyrigg Rose Athletic
Conference C:Broxburn Athletic

Bo'ness United
SeasonPremier DivisionFirst DivisionLeague Cup
2019–20Bo'ness United *Conference A: Tynecastle

Conference B: Lothian Thistle Hutchison Vale

Unfinished
2020–21Null and voidConference A: Null and void

Conference B: Null and void

No competition
SeasonPremier DivisionFirst DivisionConference XLeague Cup
2021–22Tranent Juniors *Conference A:Haddington Athletic

Conference B:Oakley United

WhitburnLinlithgow Rose
SeasonPremier DivisionFirst DivisionSecond DivisionThird DivisionLeague Cup
2022–23Linlithgow Rose *Dunbar UnitedWhitburnBo'ness AthleticBo'ness Athletic
2023–24Broxburn Athletic *DunipaceBo'ness AthleticWest Calder UnitedSauchie Juniors

* Team promoted to theLowland League

Total titles won

[edit]

Clubs currently playing in the league are shown inbold. Clubs no longer active are shown initalics.

RankClubEast of Scotland
League
(pre 1987–88)
East of Scotland
Premier Division
(1987–88–present)
Total Titles
1Whitehill Welfare61016
2The Spartans2911
3Gala Fairydean527
4Peebles Rovers606
5Hibernian 'B'505
6=Annan Athletic044
6=Eyemouth United404
6=Vale of Leithen404
9=Civil Service Strollers303
9=Hawick Royal Albert303
9=Lothian Thistle Hutchison Vale033
9=Selkirk303
13=Bathgate202
13=Berwick Rangers202
13=Penicuik Athletic202
16=Bonnyrigg Rose Athletic011
16=Bo'ness101
16=Bo'ness United011
16=Broxburn Athletic011
16=Coldstream101
16=Cowdenbeath 'A'101
16=Easthouses Lily Miners Welfare011
16=Edinburgh City011
16=Heart of Midlothian 'B'101
16=Jed Arts101
16=Kelty Hearts011
16=Leith Athletic011
16=Linlithgow Rose011
16=University of Stirling011
16=Tranent Juniors011

References

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  1. ^abBrown, Anthony (6 June 2014)."Hibs quit East of Scotland League set-up".Edinburgh Evening News. Johnston Publishing. Retrieved6 June 2014.
  2. ^McLauchlin, Brian (8 June 2018)."East of Scotland League vote signals exodus of 24 junior clubs".BBC Sport. BBC. Retrieved8 June 2018.
  3. ^"Nine newcomers to East of Scotland League are approved".www.fifetoday.co.uk. Retrieved1 May 2020.
  4. ^"Club directory – East of Scotland Football Association & League".www.eosfl.com. Retrieved31 July 2021.
  5. ^"Hibs secure berth in East of Scotland League".Edinburgh Evening News. Johnston Publishing. 7 June 2013. Retrieved7 June 2013.
  6. ^"East Seniors agree on a new setup".Edinburgh Evening News. Johnston Publishing. 28 June 2013. Retrieved28 June 2013.

External links

[edit]
Premier Division
First Division
Second Division
Third Division
Seasons
Overview
National teams
League system
Cup competitions
Junior football
Amateur football
Welfare football
Sixth-levelfootball leagues of Europe (UEFA)
Current
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