Baltic League

Football club tournament held between the top clubs from Baltic states


title: "Baltic League" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["baltic-league", "sports-leagues-established-in-2007", "sports-leagues-disestablished-in-2011", "football-leagues-in-estonia", "football-leagues-in-latvia", "football-leagues-in-lithuania", "defunct-football-competitions-in-latvia", "multi-national-association-football-leagues-in-europe", "multi-national-sports-leagues"] description: "Football club tournament held between the top clubs from Baltic states" topic_path: "sports" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baltic_League" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Football club tournament held between the top clubs from Baltic states ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox football league"]

FieldValue
nameBaltic League
logoBaltic League logo.svg
countryEstonia
Latvia
Lithuania
founded2007
folded2011
championsLAT Skonto
season2010–11
most successful clubLAT Metalurgs
LIT Kaunas
LAT Ventspils
LAT Skonto (1 title)
teams12 (2007–2008)
16 (2009–2011)
tvViasat Sport Baltic
::

| name = Baltic League | logo = Baltic League logo.svg | pixels = | country = Estonia Latvia Lithuania | founded = 2007 | folded = 2011 | champions = LAT Skonto | season = 2010–11 | most successful club = LAT Metalurgs LIT Kaunas LAT Ventspils LAT Skonto (1 title) | teams = 12 (2007–2008) 16 (2009–2011) | tv = Viasat Sport Baltic | website =

The Baltic League (officially known as the Triobet Baltic League) was a Baltic men's football club tournament held four times between the top club sides from Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. Launched in 2007 inspired by the now defunct Scandinavian tournament Royal League and by the Baltic Basketball League.

History

The first two tournaments were held between top four club sides from each country. For 2009–10 the competition was expanded to 16 teams, with five sides from every Baltic state taking part. One additional slot was allocated to the sixth best team from the country of the previous winner.

A similar competition was the Baltic Champions Cup which featured the league champions of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.

The inaugural tournament in 2007 finished as a two legged final. This format was abandoned for the second tournament and subsequent finals were played as a single match at the home of one of the finalists. After this format was introduced, the team hosting the match did not win despite the added home advantage.

The first two tournaments were played from Spring to Summer with 12 entrants but this changed to a longer Winter to Summer tournament with four more clubs taking part.

Finals

::data[format=table]

SeasonWinnerScoreRunner-upVenue(s)Referee
2007Latvia Metalurgs8 – 2 (aggregate)
3 – 1, 5 – 1Latvia VentspilsVentspils Olimpiskais Stadions, Ventspils
Daugava Stadium, LiepājaEstonia Kristo Tohver
Lithuania Audrius Žuta
2008Lithuania Kaunas2 – 1
Latvia SkontoSkonto Stadions, RigaEstonia Hannes Kaasik
2009–10Latvia Ventspils3 – 3 (a.e.t.)
5 – 3 (pen.)Lithuania SūduvaSūduva Stadium, MarijampolėEstonia Sten Kaldma
2010–11Latvia Skonto1 – 1 (a.e.t.)
5 – 4 (pen.)Latvia VentspilsVentspils Olimpiskais Stadions, VentspilsLithuania Nerijus Dunauskas
::

Statistics

Performances by club

::data[format=table]

Club1st2ndSeasonsSeasons Won
LAT Ventspils1242009–10
LAT Skonto1142010–11
LAT Metalurgs1042007
LTU Kaunas1022008
LTU Sūduva013
LTU Ekranas004
EST Flora004
EST Levadia004
EST Trans004
LAT Dinaburg002
LTU Žalgiris002
EST TVMK002
LTU Vėtra002
LTU Banga002
LAT Jūrmala002
EST Kalju002
EST Sillamäe Kalev002
LTU Šiauliai002
LTU Tauras002
LAT Rīga001
LAT Olimps001
LAT Blāzma001
::

By country

::data[format=table]

Country1st2ndSeasons Won
Latvia332007, 2009–10, 2010–11
Lithuania112008
Estonia00
::

All-time top goalscorers

::data[format=table]

#PlayerGoals
1LAT Aleksandrs Cauņa10
LAT Ģirts Karlsons10
3LTU Ričardas Beniušis8
4BRA Rafael Gaúcho7
5LAT Genādijs Soloņicins6
LTU Egidijus Varnas6
7LTU Mindaugas Kalonas5
LAT Mihails Miholaps5
LAT Andrejs Perepļotkins5
10LAT Viktors Dobrecovs4
EST Aleksandr Dubõkin4
GEO Vladimir Dvalishvili4
LAT Oļegs Laizāns4
LAT Vīts Rimkus4
UKR Serhij Sernecki4
EST Vjatšeslav Zahovaiko4
LAT Aleksejs Višņakovs4
::

References

References

  1. "Baltic Club Competitions – Overview".

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

baltic-leaguesports-leagues-established-in-2007sports-leagues-disestablished-in-2011football-leagues-in-estoniafootball-leagues-in-latviafootball-leagues-in-lithuaniadefunct-football-competitions-in-latviamulti-national-association-football-leagues-in-europemulti-national-sports-leagues