2024–25 Lebanese Premier League

Lebanese Premier League
Season2024–25
Dates20 September 2024 – 19 July 2025
ChampionsAnsar (15th title)
RelegatedShabab Baalbek
Chabab Ghazieh
AFC Challenge LeagueAnsar
Safa
Matches156
Goals430 (2.76 per match)
Top goalscorerHassan Maatouk (17 goals)
Biggest winShabab Sahel 1–8 Ahed
(30 March 2025)
Highest scoringShabab Sahel 1–8 Ahed
(30 March 2025)

The 2024–25 Lebanese Premier League was the 63rd season of the Lebanese Premier League, the top Lebanese league for football clubs since its establishment in 1934.

It was the fifth season to feature a "split" format, following its introduction in the 2020–21 season, in which the season was divided into two phases. Ansar won their 15th title, after defeating Tadamon Sour 2–0 in the penultimate matchday.[1] Chabab Ghazieh and Shabab Baalbek were relegated to the Lebanese Second Division.

On 26 September 2024, the Lebanese Football Association (LFA) suspended the season due to the escalation of the conflict in the south with Israel.[2] Following the ceasefire agreement with Israel on 27 November 2024, the LFA announced that the season would resume on 25 January 2025.[3]

Summary

Regulations

Each club had to involve one player under the age of 21 for at least 750 minutes, and two players for 1,200 combined minutes.[4] In case a club was not able to meet the required number of minutes at the end of the season, they would have had three points deducted from their total in the league.[4]

Since the 2023–24 season, each club was able to have four foreign players under contract, an increase from the previous limit of three.[5] Furthermore, video assistant referee (VAR), was introduced to the Lebanese Premier League in the second half of the 2023–24 season. It used technology and officials to assist the referee in making decisions on the pitch.[6]

Format

Following its introduction in the 2020–21 season, the 2024–25 season consisted of two phases: in the first phase, each team played against one another once.[7] In the second phase, the 12 teams were divided into two groups based on their position in the first phase. As introduced in the 2022–23 season, teams only carried over half of their point tally from the first phase.[8] After the first phase was completed, clubs could not move out of their own half in the league, even if they had achieved more or fewer points than a higher or lower ranked team, respectively.[9]

The top six teams played against each other three times,[7] with the champion automatically qualifying to the AFC Challenge League.[10] The bottom six teams also played against each other three times, with the bottom two teams being relegated to the Lebanese Second Division.[7]

Teams

Twelve teams competed in the league – the top ten teams from the previous season and the two teams promoted from the Lebanese Second Division. The promoted teams were Riyadi Abbasiyah, who played their first season in the Lebanese Premier League, and Shabab Baalbek, who returned to the top flight after an absence of five years. They replaced Tripoli and Ahly Nabatieh, who were relegated to the Lebanese Second Division after respective spells of 12 and one years in the top flight.

Stadiums and locations

2km
1.2miles
Shabab Sahel
Sagesse
Safa
Racing
Nejmeh
Bourj
Ansar
Ahed
Beirut Lebanese Premier League clubs
Note: Table lists in alphabetical order.
Team Location Stadium Capacity
Ahed Beirut (Ouzai) Al Ahed Stadium[note 1] 2,000
Ansar Beirut (Tariq El Jdideh) Ansar Stadium[note 1]
Bourj Beirut (Bourj el-Barajneh) Bourj el-Barajneh Stadium[note 1] 1,500
Chabab Ghazieh Ghazieh Kfarjoz Municipal Stadium 2,000
Nejmeh Beirut (Ras Beirut) Rafic Hariri Stadium[note 1] 5,000
Racing Beirut Beirut (Achrafieh) Fouad Chehab Stadium 5,000
Riyadi Abbasiyah Aabbassiyeh Abbass Kazem Nasser Stadium
Safa Beirut (Wata El Msaytbeh) Safa Stadium 4,000
Sagesse Beirut (Achrafieh) Sin El Fil Stadium[note 1]
Shabab Baalbek Baalbek Baalbek Municipal Stadium 8,500
Shabab Sahel Beirut (Haret Hreik) Shabab Al Sahel Stadium[note 1]
Tadamon Sour Tyre Sour Municipal Stadium 6,500

Personnel and kits

Team Head coach Captain Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
Ahed Jamal Al Haj Hussein Dakik Kelme
Ansar Youssef Al Jawhari Nassar Nassar Kelme Green Glory
Bourj Fouad Hijazi Youssef Anbar Kelme Royal
Chabab Ghazieh Rami Fakih Imad Ghaddar Nike Energizer
Nejmeh Mahmoud Fathalla Kassem El Zein Kelme BetArabia
Racing Beirut Osama Sakr Ali Ayoub Joma Libano-Suisse Insurance
Riyadi Abbasiyah Mohamad Zheir Fadel Ajami Kelme La Fabrica
Safa Bassem Marmar Khalil Khamis Kelme Tawfeer
Shabab Sahel Fadi El Kakhi Haytham Faour Jako Xglobal Group
Sagesse Paul Rustom Hatem Eid Capelli Sport OMT Pay
Shabab Baalbek Hussein Mashour Hussein Outa Jako La Vie
Tadamon Sour Hussein Hassoun Hussein Mhaydle Jako GCB Exchange

Foreign players

Lebanese clubs were permitted to have up to four foreign players registered in their squad at any given time.[5] In addition, clubs were allowed to include an unlimited number of Palestinian players on their matchday squad; however, only one Palestinian player could be fielded among the eleven starting players during a match.[4] For clubs participating in Asian Football Confederation (AFC) competitions, two additional foreign players could be registered exclusively for continental fixtures. This was in accordance with AFC regulations, which allow a maximum of six foreign players in a starting lineup – one of whom must hold citizenship from an AFC member nation.[11]

  • Players in bold were registered during the mid-season transfer window.
  • Players in italics left the club during the mid-season transfer window.
Team Player 1 Player 2 Player 3 Player 4 Palestinian player(s) AFC player(s) Former player(s)
Ahed Ito Ibrahim Abu El Yazeed Seyi Olawoyin Yann Makombo Mohammad Ayoub Andrew Ikefe
Mamadou Niass
Samer Zubaida
Ansar Rafik Mednini Hichem Houssam Eddine Ayoub Nanah Daniel Kamy Mohamad Hebous Elhadji Malick Tall
Hamza Hussein
Bourj Ibrahim Abdulai Abdoulaye Fall Francis Yaghr Ibrahima Sene Qossay Battat Chris Calvin Nawatta
Abbas Shahine
Chabab Ghazieh Philip Larbi Aboubacar Bemba Sangaré Abiodun Ayinde Adama Diaw Ayman Abou Sahyoun
Nejmeh Aboubacar Sidiki Touré Gozie Ugwu Ciel Ebengo Franklin Kuete Talla Mounas Abo Amsha Collins Opare
Nyanteh Kwabena Darko
Baba Abdulai Musah
Racing Beirut Cheikh Tidiane Coly Eze Okeuhie Raphael Onwrebe Emmanuel Okorie Jehad Abou El Aynein Carter Ahiro
David Molinga
Julfin Ondongo
Riyadi Abbasiyah Ezra Amelinsa Edward Atadana Kwame Samuel Konney Shaibu Taufiq Zaher Al Samahi Masoabi Synous Nkoto
Francis Amos Anointed
Ali Issah
Safa Rodney Michael Boban Đorđević Yasin Al Samya Inters Gui Islam Batran Guy Claude Eke
Houssem Louati
Jerome Etame
Benson Omala
Sagesse Papa Sidibe Papa Laye Dieng Alioune Faye Baffa Diop Hamza Zaak
Shabab Baalbek Isaac Mitima Kamel Koaeh Mohamad Asaad Manoumbé Wade Yazan Iwaiwi Sulaiman Abdulai Keita
Ibrahima Sauma
Ibrahim Sorie Kamara
Collins Anigbo
Shabab Sahel Samad Kadiri Reuben Gabriel Abbey Agbodzie Hadi Dakwar
Tadamon Sour Baye Daour Badji Amissah Anfoh Assan Godfred Yeboah Mohammad Ismail
Jihad Hallak
Amin Idriss
Guilherme

League table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation[a]
1 Ansar (C) 26 20 3 3 58 15 +43 48 Qualification for the AFC Challenge League group stage
2 Safa 26 18 6 2 59 19 +40 46
3 Ahed 26 14 5 7 55 34 +21 33
4 Nejmeh 26 11 7 8 41 30 +11 32
5 Sagesse 26 8 6 12 28 37 −9 22
6 Tadamon Sour 26 5 5 16 23 52 −29 13
7 Bourj 26 13 3 10 30 32 −2 39
8 Shabab Sahel 26 12 3 11 44 41 +3 33
9 Racing Beirut 26 8 7 11 24 39 −15 27[b]
10 Riyadi Abbasiyah 26 7 10 9 32 27 +5 27[b]
11 Shabab Baalbek (R) 26 4 6 16 17 55 −38 16 Relegation to Lebanese Second Division
12 Chabab Ghazieh (R) 26 2 7 17 19 49 −30 10
Source: Global Sports Archive (Regular Season, Championship Round, Relegation Round)
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Head-to-head points; 3) Head-to-head goal difference; 4) Goal difference; 5) Goals scored; 6) Disciplinary points.
(C) Champions; (R) Relegated
Notes:
  1. ^ Teams played each other once (11 matches), before the league was split into two groups (the top six and the bottom six) where each team played the other teams in their group three times (15 matches). Teams carried over half their point tally from the first phase into the second phase.
  2. ^ a b Racing Beirut finished ahead of Riyadi Abbasiyah on head-to-head points: Racing Beirut 0–0 Riyadi Abbasiyah, Riyadi Abbasiyah 0–2 Racing Beirut, Racing Beirut 2–1 Riyadi Abbasiyah, Racing Beirut 1–4 Riyadi Abbasiyah.

Season statistics

Goalscorers

Rank Player Club Goals[12]
1 Hassan Maatouk Ansar 17
2 Islam Batran Safa 14
3 Samuel Konney Riyadi Abbasiyah 11
Hichem Houssam Eddine Ansar
Hassan Bazzi Tadamon Sour
6 Samod Kadiri Shabab Sahel 10
Zein Farran Ahed
8 Papa Laye Dieng Sagesse 9
Mohammad Nasser Ahed

Hat-tricks

Player For Against Result Date
Papa Laye Dieng Sagesse Bourj 3–1[13] 25 January 2025
Hichem Houssam Eddine Ansar Riyadi Abbasiyah 5–0[14] 1 February 2025
Islam Batran Safa Bourj 4–0[15] 6 February 2025
Hassan Salami Shabab Sahel Shabab Baalbek 5–0[16] 12 February 2025
Mohammad Nasser Ahed Tadamon Sour 4–0[17] 13 February 2025
Hassan Maatouk Ansar Ahed 4–2[18] 25 February 2025
Mohammad Nasser4 Ahed Shabab Sahel 8–1[19] 30 March 2025
Ali Al Haj Ahed Tadamon Sour 3–0[20] 24 May 2025
Hichem Houssam Eddine Ansar Nejmeh 6–1[21] 8 July 2025
Notes

4 Player scored 4 goals

See also

  • 2024 Lebanese Super Cup

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f Only used as a training ground

References

  1. ^ اللواء, جريدة. "الانصار يتوج بطلاً للبنان لكرة القدم للمرة الـ15 بتاريخه بأجواء جماهيرية حاشدة.. | رياضة". جريدة اللواء (in Arabic). Retrieved 13 July 2025.
  2. ^ "Lebanon indefinitely postpones all football matches amid Israel's attacks". Aljazeera. 26 September 2024.
  3. ^ "Lebanon FA to resume football tournaments after ceasefire". Reuters. 29 November 2024.
  4. ^ a b c الاتحاد اللبناني يقر النظام الفني لبطولة الدوري: 4 أجانب و4 مراحل وحسم نصف النقاط [The Lebanese Federation approves the technical system for the league championship: 4 foreigners, 4 stages, and a half-point decision]. Lebanon Football Guide (in Arabic). 29 May 2023. Archived from the original on 29 May 2023. Retrieved 3 May 2024.
  5. ^ a b 84 ألف دولار دخل جديد للاتحاد اللبناني لكرة القدم [USD84,000: new income for the Lebanese Football Association]. Lebanon Football Guide (in Arabic). 19 June 2023. Retrieved 21 June 2023.
  6. ^ Khaled, Nasser (26 July 2023). تقنية الفيديو حاضرة في لقاء العهد والراسينغ [Video technology will be present in the match between Ahed and Racing]. Kooora (in Arabic). Retrieved 27 July 2023.
  7. ^ a b c Abou Diab, Rami (25 June 2020). "The new regulations for the Lebanese Premier League". FA Lebanon. Retrieved 25 June 2020.
  8. ^ "بالصور: الاتحاد اللبناني يعلن تعديلات بالجملة". كووورة. 3 June 2022. Retrieved 12 June 2022.
  9. ^ "هل يُمكن أن يُحسم اللقب قبل الدورة السداسية؟". lebanonfg.com. Retrieved 28 October 2020.
  10. ^ "AFC Club Competitions 2024/25 Slot Allocation" (PDF). Asian Football Confederation. Retrieved 7 August 2023.
  11. ^ "AFC Competitions Committee recommends strategic reforms to elevate Asian club football". the-AFC. Retrieved 1 August 2023.
  12. ^ "Lebanese First Division 2024/2025". Global Sports Archive. Retrieved 12 April 2025.
  13. ^ "Bourj SC 1:3 SC Sagesse". Global Sports Archive. 25 January 2025. Retrieved 12 April 2025.
  14. ^ "Al Ansar SC 5:0 Al Riyadi Al Abbasiyah Club". Global Sports Archive. 1 February 2025. Retrieved 12 April 2025.
  15. ^ "Bourj SC 0:4 Safa SC". Global Sports Archive. 6 February 2025. Retrieved 12 April 2025.
  16. ^ "Shabab Al Sahel SC 0:4 Tajamo' Shabab Baalbek SC". Global Sports Archive. 12 February 2025. Retrieved 12 April 2025.
  17. ^ "Al Ahed SC 4:0 Tadamon SC Sour". Global Sports Archive. 13 February 2025. Retrieved 12 April 2025.
  18. ^ "Al Ahed SC 2:4 Al Ansar SC". Global Sports Archive. 25 February 2025. Retrieved 12 April 2025.
  19. ^ "Shabab Al Sahel SC 1:8 Al Ahed SC". Global Sports Archive. 30 March 2025. Retrieved 12 April 2025.
  20. ^ "Al Ahed SC 3:0 Tadamon SC Sour". Global Sports Archive. 24 May 2025. Retrieved 19 July 2025.
  21. ^ "Nejmeh SC 1:6 Al Ansar SC". Global Sports Archive. 8 July 2025. Retrieved 19 July 2025.