Date | R | Home vs Away | - |
---|---|---|---|
07/10 12:00 | - |
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2-1 |
07/10 12:00 | - | Osun United vs Kun Khalifat FC | 1-2 |
07/10 09:00 | - | Doma United vs Barau FC | 0-2 |
07/10 08:00 | - |
![]() ![]() |
4-0 |
07/07 16:00 | - | Crown FC vs Osun United | 1-1 |
07/07 14:00 | - |
Kun Khalifat FC vs Warri Wolves FC
![]() |
0-3 |
07/07 10:30 | - |
Barau FC vs Wikki Tourists
![]() |
0-0 |
07/07 08:00 | - |
![]() |
2-1 |
06/15 14:00 | - | Inter Lagos vs Ijele SC | 4-0 |
06/15 14:00 | - | Dakkada FC vs Beyond Limits | 2-2 |
06/14 14:00 | - | Madiba FC vs Abakaliki FC | 1-4 |
06/14 14:00 | - | Godswill Akpabio United FC vs Gateway Utd FC | 3-0 |
The Nigeria National League (NNL) (formerly the National Division 1) is the second-highest overall in the Nigerian football league system after the Nigeria Premier Football League, and is currently contested by 46 clubs.
Each season, four teams are promoted to the Nigeria Premier Football League, via NNL Super 4/NNL Super 8. The twelve lowest-finishing teams in the Nigerian National League are relegated to Nigeria Nationwide League.
From 1997-2011, the league has been split into 1A for Northern teams and 1B for southern teams. The top two from each division are promoted to the Nigerian Premier League the next season. The exceptions were the 2005–06 and 2006-07 seasons where there were four divisions of eight teams each, with each division winner winning promotion. Up to four teams in each division are relegated each season to the Amateur First Division. The league was renamed 19 June 2008. In 2012 the league expanded from 32 to 36 teams with 2 more teams promoted. The league used the 2006 format, with four divisions of nine teams each, with division winners receiving automatic promotion. In 2012-13, it went back to two divisions of sixteen. For the 2015 season, it used four divisions of eight teams.[]