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All India Football Federation
National governing body of association football in India
National governing body of association football in India
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Logo | All India Football Federation Logo.svg |
| Badge_size | 250px |
| Founded | |
| FIFA affiliation | 1948 |
| Region | AFC |
| Region affiliation | 1954 |
| Subregion2 | SAFF |
| Subregion2 affiliation | 1997 |
| Headquarters | Football House, Dwarka, Delhi |
| Location | South West Delhi, India |
| President | Kalyan Chaubey |
| Vice-President | N. A. Haris |
| General Secretary | Anilkumar Prabhakaran |
| Website |
| Vice-President = N. A. Haris All India Football Federation (AIFF) is the governing body of football, futsal and beach soccer in India. It is a member of FIFA, and is affiliated with the Asian Football Confederation and South Asian Football Federation.
It is affiliated with the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports, Government of India. India men's and women's football teams are governed by the AIFF, and represent India in various international football tournaments.
The AIFF manages, sanctions, conducts, schedules and runs all national level football tournaments and leagues in India, including Indian Super League, I-League, I-League 2, I-League 3, Indian Women's League, Indian Women's League 2, Santosh Trophy, Rajmata Jijabai Trophy, Futsal Club Championship, National Beach Soccer Championship, Super Cup, Durand Cup, Youth League and others. The federation also indirectly manages local football competitions through its member associations.
History
Before the formation of the All India Football Federation (AIFF), the de facto ruling body for association football in India was the Indian Football Association (IFA). The IFA was founded in 1893 and ran the game in the Bengal region. The federation was mainly governed by Englishmen and served as the most powerful football body in the country during the early 20th century.
The IFA stated efforts to form a countrywide football federation in 1935 when the federation, as well as seven other associations, met at a conference but consensus could not be reached. After differences of opinion and other conflicts were resolved, a meeting was conducted in March 1937 which would serve to be the beginning of the start of the AIFF. The AIFF was officially founded on 23 June 1937 after representatives from the nine regional football associations met at the Army Headquarters in Shimla. Namely, the nine regional football associations were the IFA, Army Sports Control Board, North West India Football Association, Bihar Olympic Association, WIFA, Madras Football Association, United Provinces Sports Control Board, Mysore Football Association, and Ajmer and Mewar Football Association.
After the launch of the national football federation, the idea of an India national football team did not gain much momentum until after India's independence in 1947. Select Indian teams did participate in tours of Australia, Burma, Afghanistan, and South Africa but none were officially part of the national team. In 1948, one year after independence and 11 since forming as a football association, the AIFF gained affiliation with FIFA, the governing body for football around the world. Later that year, the national team was officially formed and participated in their first official tournament, the 1948 Summer Olympics.
In 1950, the national team automatically qualified for the 1950 FIFA World Cup which was to be held in Brazil after all the teams in India's qualification group withdrew. However, prior to the tournament, India withdrew, citing the reason as due to lack of funding. Other reasons given for India's withdrawal included that the AIFF valued the Summer Olympics more than FIFA World Cup at that time and that the players playing mainly barefooted, though the later is just a tale. In 1952, during the Olympics in Finland, India was defeated in the first round by Yugoslavia 10–1. This defeat made the AIFF make it mandatory for players on the national team to wear football boots. In 1954, the AIFF played an active role in promoting football in Asia when they were one of the founding members of the Asian Football Confederation. India took part in four straight Olympic football tournaments between 1948 and 1960 but have failed to qualify since. In 1985, India started to participate in World Cup qualifiers again but have failed to make it to the tournament.
In 1977, the AIFF started the Federation Cup which was the first club based national tournament in the country. The Santosh Trophy, the national tournament for state teams, was started in 1941.
In 1996, the AIFF began the first national league in the country, the semi-professional National Football League. Before this, most clubs played in state leagues or select nationwide tournaments.
In 2006, the AIFF reformatted the league as the I-League in an effort to professionalise the game. However, during the following seasons, the league suffered from a lack of popularity due to poor marketing.
In September 2006, the AIFF signed a 10-year television and media contract with Zee Sports. The deal would make Zee broadcast the National Football League, later the I-League, and other tournaments organised by the AIFF and selected India's international matches. However, in October 2010, the deal between the AIFF and Zee Sports was terminated after differences between both parties related to payment and marketing of football in India.
On 9 December 2010, it was announced that the AIFF had signed a new 15-year, ₹700 crore deal with Reliance Industries and the International Management Group.
It received the AFC President's Recognition Award for Grassroots Football (Silver) for its unwavering commitment to football growth at the grassroots in October 2024. It did better this time compared to its bronze award it received at the last ceremony of the AFC awards.
FIFA Suspension
On 16 August 2022, the FIFA Council unanimously decided to suspend All India Football Federation with immediate effect due to undue influence from third parties, which constitutes a serious violation of the FIFA Statutes. As a result, India was temporarily excluded from next AFC Asia Cup edition until the suspension got lifted before the tournament began. In response to the ban, AIFF agreed to hold an election on 2 September to restore India's participation in FIFA once it got a new administration. On 27 August, FIFA lifted suspension on India, after the government agreed to end its interference in the AIFF, allowing the AIFF administration to resume activities.
Administration
Delegates
The following are on the board of the directors at the AIFF.
| Name | Position |
|---|---|
| IND Kalyan Chaubey | President |
| IND Nalapad Ahmed Haris | Vice-president |
| Vacant | Secretary General |
| IND Satyanarayan Muthyalu | Deputy secretary |
| IND Kipa Ajay | Treasurer |
| IND Syed Sabir Pasha | Technical director |
| IND Prashant J. Singh | Head of players' development |
| IND Ashish V. Pandey | Grassroots manager |
| IND Sarthak Mishra | State development manager |
| IND Shveta Sharma | Coaching education |
| IND Aman Dubey | Coaching education |
| IND Shubham Gurung | Technical coordinator |
| IND Khalid Jamil | Head coach (senior men's) |
| CRC Amelia Valverde | Head coach (senior women's) |
| IND Jaydeep Basu | Media director |
| IND Ravishankar J. | Referee coordinator |
Technical committee
- IM Vijayan – Chairperson
- Shabbir Ali – Deputy chairperson
- Baichung Bhutia
- Eugeneson Lyngdoh
- Climax Lawrence
- Harjinder Singh
- Arun Malhotra
- Santosh Singh
- Pinky Bompal Magar
- Victor Amalraj
- Thongam Tababi Devi
League committee
- Lalnghinglova Hmar – Chairperson
- Arif Ali – Deputy chairperson
- Santanu Pujari
- Amit Chaudhary
- Reginold Vargese
- K. P. Singh
- Kiran Chowgule
- Nizamuddin
Development committee
- Avijit Paul – Chairperson
- Mulrajsinh Chudasama – Deputy chairperson
- Vijay Bali
- Ratankumar Singh Moirangthem
- S. Dhanasegar
- Muhammed Rafeek T. K. M.
- Liaqat Ali
- Jesiah Villavarayar
- Mohd. Shahid
Beach soccer committee
- Jignesh Patil – Chairperson
- KI Nizammudin – Deputy chairperson
- Anup Patra
- Bruno Coutinho
- Md. Ikram
- Upen Patel
- Dilip Singh Shekhawat
- Sanjay Mehshack
- Santosh Kumar
- G. P. Palguna
Advisory committee
- Shabbir Ali – Chairperson
- G. P. Palguna – Deputy chairperson
- Gurdev Singh
- Atanu Bhattacharya
- Irungbam Surkumar Singh
- Victor Manjila
- RP Singh
- Arun Singh Rajput
Futsal committee
- Vijay Bali – Chairperson
- Amit Khemani – Deputy chairperson
- Kuljit Singh
- Lalrengpuia
- Syed Husnain Ali Naqvi
- Ravinder Prasad Singh
- Naresh Singh Rana
- S. Achu
- B. S. Mehra
- Chung Chung Bhutia
- Mohammad Shahid Jabbar
Referee committee
- Sankar Komaleeswaran, Chairperson
- Sundarraj Balu – Deputy chairperson
- Chaitali Paul
- Srikrishna Coimbatore Ramaswamy
- Mohd. Kamil
- Sethumadhavan Chozhakkad
- Subrata Sarkar
Finance committee
- Menla Ethanpa – Chairperson
- Maloji Raje Chhatrapati – Deputy chairperson
- L. V. Lalthantluanga
Other members
- Valanka Natasha Alemão – Chairperson, women's committee
- Monoranjan Bhattacharya
- Savio Medeira – Head of coaching education
- Kiran Kumar Kulkarni – Chairperson, medical committee
- Malojiraje Chhatrapati
- Mohan Lal
- K. Neibou Sekhose
- Deepak Sharma
- Syed Imtiaz Husain
- Syed Hasnain Ali Naqvi
Notes:
National teams
Men
- India national football team
- India national under-23 football team
- India national under-20 football team
- India national under-17 football team
- India national beach soccer team
- India national futsal team
Women
- India women's national football team
- India women's national under-20 football team
- India women's national under-17 football team
- India women's national futsal team
Affiliated associations and leagues
Main article: List of Indian state football associations
There are currently 36 state associations and 2 affiliates with the All India Football Federation.
Full members
| No. | Association | State/UT | President |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | All Manipur Football Association | Manipur | M. Ratan Kumar Singh |
| 2 | Andaman and Nicobar Football Association | Andaman and Nicobar Islands | Vidya Prakash Krishna |
| 3 | Andhra Pradesh Football Association | Andhra Pradesh | Gopalakrishna Kosaraju |
| 4 | Arunachal Pradesh Football Association | Arunachal Pradesh | Pema Khandu |
| 5 | Assam Football Association | Assam | Naba Kumar Doley |
| 6 | Bihar Football Association | Bihar | Prasenjeet Mehta |
| 7 | Chandigarh Football Association | Chandigarh | K. P. Singh |
| 8 | Chhattisgarh Football Association | Chhattisgarh | Ajay Chandrakar |
| 9 | Dadra & Nagar Haveli and Daman & Diu Football Association | Dadra & Nagar Haveli and Daman & Diu | Amit Khemani |
| 10 | Football Association of Odisha | Odisha | Samir Dey |
| 11 | Football Delhi | Delhi | Saraftullah (acting) |
| 12 | Goa Football Association | Goa | Caitano Fernandes |
| 13 | Gujarat State Football Association | Gujarat | Parimal Nathwani |
| 14 | Haryana Football Association | Haryana | Suraj Pal |
| 15 | Himachal Pradesh Football Association | Himachal Pradesh | Baldev Singh Tomar |
| 16 | Indian Football Association | West Bengal | Ajit Banerjee |
| 17 | Jammu and Kashmir Football Association | Jammu and Kashmir | Wasim Aslam |
| 18 | Jharkhand Football Association | Jharkhand | Mithlesh Kumar Thakur |
| 19 | Karnataka State Football Association | Karnataka | N. A. Haris |
| 20 | Kerala Football Association | Kerala | Tom Jose |
| 21 | Ladakh Football Association | Ladakh | Tashi Namgail |
| 22 | Lakshadweep Football Association | Lakshadweep | K. Mohammed Ali |
| 23 | Madhya Pradesh Football Association | Madhya Pradesh | Trilok Chand Kochar |
| 24 | Meghalaya Football Association | Meghalaya | Larsing Ming Sawyan |
| 25 | Mizoram Football Association | Mizoram | Lalnghinglova Hmar |
| 26 | Nagaland Football Association | Nagaland | Neibou Sekhose |
| 27 | Pondicherry Football Association | Puducherry | D. Nestor |
| 28 | Punjab Football Association | Punjab | Samir Thapar |
| 29 | Rajasthan Football Association | Rajasthan | Manvendra Singh |
| 30 | Sikkim Football Association | Sikkim | Menla Ethenpa |
| 31 | Tamil Nadu Football Association | Tamil Nadu | Jesiah Villavarayar |
| 32 | Telangana Football Association | Telangana | Mohammed Ali Rafath |
| 33 | Tripura Football Association | Tripura | Ratan Saha |
| 34 | Uttar Pradesh Football Sangh | Uttar Pradesh | Arvind Menon |
| 35 | Uttarakhand State Football Association | Uttarakhand | Amandeep Sandhu |
| 36 | Western India Football Association | Maharashtra | Praful Patel |
Affiliate members
| No. | Association | Department | President |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Railways Sports Promotion Board | Indian Railways | D. K. Gayen |
| 2 | Services Sports Control Board | Indian Armed Forces | Dinesh Suri |
State Leagues list
Main article: Indian State Leagues
Men's
- Assam State Premier League (Assam)
- Bangalore Super Division (Karnataka)
- Bihar Soccer League (Bihar)
- Calcutta Football League (West Bengal)
- Chandra Memorial League (Tripura)
- Chennai Football League (Tamil Nadu)
- Chhattisgarh State Men's Football League Championship (Chhattisgarh)
- Dadra & Nagar Haveli Senior Division League and Daman and Diu Senior Division League (Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu)
- FAO League (Odisha)
- Delhi Football League (Delhi)
- Goa Football League (Goa)
- Gujarat SFA Club Championship (Gujarat)
- Haryana Men's Football League (Haryana)
- Himachal Football League (Himachal Pradesh)
- Indrajit Namchoom Arunachal League (Arunachal Pradesh)
- Jammu & Kashmir Premier Football League (Jammu and Kashmir)
- JSA League (Jharkhand)
- Kavaratti League (Lakshadweep)
- Kerala Premier League (Kerala)
- Ladakh Super League (Ladakh)
- Lucknow Super Division (Uttar Pradesh)
- Madhya Pradesh Premier League (Madhya Pradesh)
- Manipur Premier League (Manipur)
- Meghalaya State League (Meghalaya)
- Mizoram Premier League (Mizoram)
- Mumbai Football League, Pune Football League, NDFA League, Kolhapur Senior League, Thane Super Division (Maharashtra)
- Nagaland Premier League (Nagaland)
- Punjab State Super Football League (Punjab)
- Pondicherry Men's League Championship (Pondicherry))
- Rahim League A Division (Telangana)
- Rajasthan State Men's League (Rajasthan)
- Sikkim Premier Division League (Sikkim)
- Uttarakhand Super League (Uttarakhand)
Women's
- Assam Women's League (Assam)
- Arunachal Women's League (Arunachal)
- Bihar State Women's League (Bihar)
- Calcutta Women's Football League (West Bengal)
- Chhattisgarh State Women's Football League Championship (Chhattisgarh)
- FD Women's League (Delhi)
- Goa Women's League (Goa)
- Gujarat State Women's League (Gujarat)
- Haryana Women's Football League (Haryana)
- Himachal Women's League (Himachal)
- JSA Women's League (Jharkhand)
- Karnataka Women's League (Karnataka)
- Kerala Women's League (Kerala)
- Madhya Pradesh Women's Premier League (Madhya Pradesh)
- Manipur Women's League (Manipur)
- Meghalaya Women's State League (Meghalaya)
- Mizoram Women's League (Mizoram)
- Nagaland Women's Football League (Nagaland)
- Odisha Women's League (Odisha)
- Punjab Women's League (Punjab)
- Pondicherry Women's League (Pondicherry)
- Sikkim Women's Super League (Sikkim)
- Tamil Nadu Women's League (Tamil Nadu)
- WIFA Women's Football League (Maharashtra)
Competitions
National Level
- Intercontinental Cup (senior men's)
- Tri-Nation Series (senior men's)
- Gold Cup (senior women's)
State Level
Men's Senior
- Santosh Trophy
- National Beach Soccer Championship
Men's Youth
- Swami Vivekananda NFC (U-20)
- B.C. Roy Trophy (U-15)
- Mir Iqbal Hussain Trophy (U-13)
- Subroto Cup (inter-school)
Women's Senior
- Rajmata Jijabai Trophy
Women's Youth
- Dr. Talimeren Ao Trophy (U-19)
- Sub Junior Girls' National Football Championship (U-16)
- Subroto Cup (inter-school)
Club Level
Men's Senior
- Indian Super League
- I-League
- I-League 2
- I-League 3
- Super Cup
- Durand Cup
- Futsal Club Championship
Men's Youth
- RF Development League (U-21)
- AIFF Youth League (U-17)
- Junior League (U-15)
- Sub-Junior League (U-13)
Women's Senior
- Indian Women's League
- Indian Women's League 2
Current title holders
| Competition | Year | Champions | Title | Next edition | Senior (men's) | Senior (women's) | Youth (men's) | Youth (women's) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Santosh Trophy | 2024–25 | West Bengal | National Champion | 2025–26 | ||||
| National Games | 2025 | Kerala | National Games Champion | |||||
| National Beach Soccer Championship | 2023 | Kerala | National Beach Soccer Champion | |||||
| Indian Super League | 2024–25 | Mohun Bagan SG | ISL Champion | 2025–26 | ||||
| Mohun Bagan SG | ISL Cup Winner | |||||||
| I-League | 2024–25 | Inter Kashi | I-League Champion | 2025–26 | ||||
| I-League 2 | 2024–25 | Diamond Harbour | I-League 2 Champion | 2025–26 | ||||
| I-League 3 | 2024–25 | Diamond Harbour | I-League 3 Champion | 2025–26 | ||||
| AIFF Super Cup | 2025 | Goa | Super Cup Champion | 2025–26 | ||||
| Durand Cup | 2025 | NorthEast United | Durand Cup Champion | 2026 | ||||
| Futsal Club Championship | 2024–25 | Goal Hunterz | Futsal Club Champion | 2025–26 | ||||
| Rajmata Jijabai Trophy | 2025–26 | Manipur | National Women's Champion | 2026–27 | ||||
| National Games | 2025 | Haryana | National Games Women's Champion | |||||
| Indian Women's League | 2024–25 | East Bengal | IWL Champion | 2025–26 | ||||
| Indian Women's League 2 | 2024–25 | Garhwal United | IWL 2 Champion | 2025–26 | ||||
| Swami Vivekananda NFC (U20) | 2024–25 | Delhi | National U-20 Champion | 2025–26 | ||||
| B.C. Roy Trophy | 2025–26 | Manipur | National U-15 Champion | 2026–27 | ||||
| Mir Iqbal Hussain Trophy | 2024–25 | Karnataka | National U-13 Champion | 2025–26 | ||||
| Youth League (U-17) | 2024–25 | Punjab | U-17 league Champion | 2025–26 | ||||
| Youth League (U-15) | 2024–25 | Punjab | U-15 league Champion | 2025–26 | ||||
| Youth League (U-13) | 2024–25 | Minerva Academy | U-13 league Champion | 2025–26 | ||||
| Junior Girls' National Football Championship | 2024–25 | Manipur | National U-19 Champion | 2025–26 | ||||
| Sub Junior Girls' National Football Championship | 2025–26 | Jharkhand | National U-16 Champion | 2026–27 |
Indian Football League Pyramid
Men's
| Level | National leagues | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | State leagues | State level | West Bengal | Assam | Delhi | Tamil Nadu | Maharastra | Goa | Jammu and Kashmir | Karnataka | Manipur | Meghalaya | Odisha | Jharkhand | Punjab | Sikkim | Tripura | Kerala | Ladakh | Mizoram | Arunachal Pradesh | Bihar | Chhattisgarh | Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu | Gujarat | Haryana | Himachal Pradesh | Lakshadweep | Madhya Pradesh | Nagaland | Puducherry | Rajasthan | Telangana | Uttar Pradesh | Uttarakhand | Mumbai | Pune | Nagpur | Kolhapur | Thane | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indian Super League | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 13 clubs | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| I-League | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 13 clubs – 1 promotion ↑↓ 1 relegation | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| I-League 2 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 10 clubs – 2 promotions ↑↓ 2 relegations | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| I-League 3 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 25 clubs divided into 5 zones – 3 promotions ↑↓ 20 relegations | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1 | CFL Premier Division | Assam State Premier League | Delhi Premier League | CFA Senior Division | Mumbai Premier League | PDFA Super Division League | NDFA Elite Division League | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Kolhapur Senior League | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Thane Super Division | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Goa Professional League | J&K Premier Football League | BDFA Super Division | Manipur Premier League | Meghalaya State League | FAO Diamond League | JSA League Premier Division | Punjab State Super Football League | SFA A-Division S-League | Chandra Memorial A Division League | Kerala Premier League | Ladakh Super League | Mizoram Premier League | Indrajit Namchoom Arunachal League | Bihar State Soccer League | Chhattisgarh State Men's Football League Championship | DD Senior Division League / DNH Senior Division League | Gujarat SFA Club Championship | Haryana Men's Football League | Himachal Football League | Kavaratti Football League | Madhya Pradesh Premier League | Nagaland Super League | Pondicherry Men's League Championship | Rajasthan State Men's League | Rahim League A Division | Lucknow Super Division | Uttarakhand Super League | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2 | '*CFL 1st Division''''' | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ↑promote* 2 | Assam Club Championship / Guwahati Premier Football League | FD Senior Division League | First Division | Mumbai Super League | PDFA First Division League | NDFA Super Division League | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1 division | GFA 1st Division League | J&K Super Division | BDFA A Division | AMFA Cup | Shillong Premier League | FAO Gold League | JSA League Super Division | Punjab State League Second Division | Sikkim B Division | Chandra Memorial B Division League | Kerala Premier League Second Division | Ladakh District Leagues | Mizoram 1st Division League | 1 division | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3 | CFL 2nd Division | GSA A Division Football League | FD A-Division | Second Division | MFA First Division | PDFA Second Division League | NDFA Senior Division League | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| GFA 2nd Division League | J&K A-Division | BDFA B Division | Thangjam Birchandra-Maipakpi Memorial Winners' Cup | Second Division League | FAO Silver League | JSA League A Division | Punjab State League Third Division | Sikkim C Division | Chandra Memorial C Division League | 2 divisions | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4 | CFL 3rd Division | GSA B Division Football League | FD B-Division | Third Division | MFA Second Division | PDFA Third Division League | 3 divisions | GFA 3rd Division League | J&K B-Division | BDFA C Division | Manipur District Leagues | Third Division League | FAO 2nd Division League | 3 divisions | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 5 | CFL 4th Division | GSA C Division Football League | FD C-Division | Fourth Division | MFA Third Division | 4 divisions | 4 divisions | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 6 | CFL 5th Division | 5 divisions |
Women's
| Level | League(s) / Division(s) | National leagues | 1 | 2 | State leagues | State level | Karnataka | West Bengal | Delhi | Maharastra | Tamil Nadu | Assam | Goa | Manipur | Meghalaya | Odisha | Jharkhand | Punjab | Sikkim | Mizoram | Arunachal Pradesh | Bihar | Chhattisgarh | Gujarat | Haryana | Himachal Pradesh | Kerala | Madhya Pradesh | Puducherry | 3 | 4 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indian Women's League | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 7 clubs – ↓ 0 relegations | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Indian Women's League 2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 8 clubs – 2 promotions ↑↓ relegations TBA | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1 | Karnataka Women's Super Division | CWFL Premier Division A | FD Women's Premier League | WIFA Women's Football League | Tamil Nadu Women's League | Assam Women's League | Goa Women's League | Manipur Women's League | SSA Women's Football League | Odisha Women's League | JSA Women's League | Punjab Women's League | Sikkim Women's Super League | Mizoram Women's League | Arunachal Women's Football Championship | Bihar State Women's League | Chhattisgarh State Women's Football League Championship | Gujarat State Women's League | Haryana Women's Football League | Himachal Women's League | Kerala Women's League | Madhya Pradesh Women's Premier League | Pondicherry Women's League | |||||||||
| 2 | Karnataka Women's A Division | CWFL Premier Division B | FD Women's Championship | MFA Women's League | PDFA Women's Division | Kolhapur Women's League | 1 division | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3 | Karnataka Women's B Division | 2 divisions |
Evolution
Past office bearers
Presidents
The following is a list of presidents of AIFF:
| Presidents | State FA | Tenure |
|---|---|---|
| Brigadier V.H.B. Majendie | Army | 1937 – ? |
| Brigadier Dorman Smith | Army | ? – ? |
| D. Moir | Bombay | ? – ? |
| Moin-ul-Haq | Bihar | ? – ? |
| Pankaj Gupta | West Bengal | 1950 – 1960 |
| Manindra Nath Dutta Ray | West Bengal | 1960 – 1975 |
| Nurul Amin | Assam | 1975 – 1980 |
| Khalifa Ziauddin | Maharashtra | 1980 – 1988 |
| Priya Ranjan Dasmunsi | Bihar, Women's FA | 1988 – 2008 |
| Praful Patel | Maharashtra | 2009 – 2022 |
| Kalyan Chaubey | Gujarat | 2022 – present |
Secretaries-General
The following is a list of secretaries of AIFF:
| Secretaries | State FA | Tenure |
|---|---|---|
| Major AC Wilson | Army | 1937 – ? |
| Major JB Donaldson | Army | ? – ? |
| EJ Turner | Bombay | ? – ? |
| Manindra Nath Dutta Ray | Bengal | 1942 – 1950 |
| Major Lachman Singh | Army | ? – ? |
| Khalifa Ziauddin | Maharashtra | ? – ? |
| A. T. Vijayrangam | Mysore | ? – 1980 |
| Ashok Ghosh | West Bengal | 1980 – 1988 |
| P. P. Lakshmanan | Kerala | 1988 – 1996 |
| Kedar Nath Mour | Assam | 1997 – 2000 |
| Alberto Colaco | Goa | 2000 – 2010 |
| Kushal Das | – | 2010 – 2022 |
| Sunando Dhar (interim) | – | 2022 |
| Shaji Prabhakaran | Delhi | 2022 – 2023 |
| Satyanarayan M (interim) | Karnataka | 2023 – 2024 |
| Anilkumar Prabhakaran | Kerala | 2024 – 2025 |
Controversies
Politicians are highly involved in AIFF. From 1988 to 2009, Congress party's Priya Ranjan Dasmunsi was president of AIFF. After him his fellow, then Congress and later Nationalist Congress Party's politician Praful Patel became president and run it from 2009 to 2022 in an authoritarian manner. He was removed from the position by Supreme Court of India in May 2022 and a three members' committee was appointed to run AIFF. In their decision the judge remarked that the present state of this organisation is not in the interest of proper governance. Patel remained president of the AIFF for 16 years, without any tenure limit. He held the position in 3 terms. As per AIFF, some people dictate Indian football who serve themselves in the expenses of football sport and players. According to The Telegraph newspaper's article, there is rampant and open corruption in the All India Football Federation (AIFF) and due to this, many of the sponsors do not want to sponsor AIFF or be associated with it. And Players, coaches and officials related to football feels that the AIFF's attitude and management of this organisation have to be change, otherwise football will not improve in India.
As of 6 October 2021, since 2020 AIFF avoided elections to new president and office holders. Praful Patel is president of AIFF since 2009 and held president's post even after his legal presidency period ended.
Multiple times, FIFA have accused AIFF of outside influence in it. On 15 August 2022, FIFA suspended the federation for violating its statutes on third-party interference. India was stripped off its hosting rights for international football tournaments, including the 2022 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup scheduled for October 2022. The Suspension was lifted on 27 August 2022. As a result, 2022 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup scheduled for October 2022 were held as planned.
This organisation is often accused for neglecting women's football.
The Indian men's national football team has never played in the FIFA World Cup but India did qualify for the 1950 FIFA World Cup which was held in Brazil. In 1950 FIFA World Cup qualification, the other teams in India's qualification group withdrew due to various reasons and India qualified as the remaining team. However, the Indian team did not participate and withdrew their name. A common myth is that India withdrew and didn't participate because FIFA did not allow Indians to play football barefoot. According to author and sports journalist Jaydeep Basu, this is completely wrong and India did not participate because AIFF did not believe that its then players had the calibre to compete against the top teams of the world. Furthermore, AIFF used to consider the Olympics more important than the FIFA World Cup. According to Basu, by not sending India's team to the 1950 FIFA World Cup, AIFF did huge mistake.
References
References
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- (6 October 2021). "Indian football: How AIFF has avoided fresh elections since 2020 based on mere assumptions".
- dh/kb. (15 August 2022). "FIFA suspends All India Football Federation". [[Deutsche Welle]].
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- (10 November 2022). "Why India did not compete in the 1950 football World Cup (And no, it wasn't because they didn't have boots)".
- (2011-07-19). "Did India withdraw from the 1950 World Cup because they were not allowed to play barefoot?".
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