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2011–12 Indonesia Super League

The 2011–12 Indonesia Super League was the fourth season of the Indonesia Super League (ISL), a fully professional football competition as the top tier of the football league pyramid in Indonesia. The season began on 1 December 2011. Persipura Jayapura were the defending champions, having won their 3rd league title the previous season.

Indonesia Super League
Season2011–12
Dates1 December 2011 – 11 July 2012
ChampionsSriwijaya[1]
1st ISL title
2nd Indonesian title
RelegatedPSMS Medan
Deltras
PSAP Sigli
Matches played306
Goals scored918 (3 per match)
Top goalscorerAlberto Gonçalves
(25 goals)
Biggest home winPersidafon 6–0 Persiram
(8 May 2012)
Persipura 7–1 PSAP
(7 June 2012)
Biggest away winPersiram 0–6 Persija
(11 December 2011)
Highest scoringPersidafon 4–5 Persela
(18 January 2012)
Longest winning runSriwijaya
(8 matches)
Longest unbeaten runSriwijaya
(20 matches)
Longest winless runPersiram Raja Ampat
PSAP Sigli
(9 matches)
Longest losing runDeltras
(6 matches)
Highest attendance50,000
Persija 2–2 Persib
(27 May 2012)
Lowest attendance0
Persiram 5–2 Persidafon
(9 February 2012)
Persib 0–1 Persipura
(29 April 2012)
Persidafon 0–3 Persiwa (WO)
(12 June 2012)
Persija 4–0 PSPS
(19 June 2012)
Persija 1–2 Persiram
(30 June 2012)
Total attendance3,129,700
Average attendance10,228
2013

This season was also the first season of ISL organized without authorization from PSSI due to internal conflict. PSSI under chairman Johar Arifin officially decided to replace ISL as a top level with the Indonesian Premier League. It was then recognized by other faction of PSSI under chairman La Nyalla Matalatti.

After the signing of the MoU between Djohar Arifin Husein (PSSI) and La Nyalla Matalitti (KPSI-PSSI) that was initiated by FIFA and the AFC through the AFC force task, Indonesia Super League was under the control of the joint committee to remain manageable by PT Liga Indonesia until the establishment of a new professional competition by the committee.[2]

Teams

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Persibo Bojonegoro, Persema Malang, Bontang and PSM Makassar were joined to 2011–12 Indonesian Premier League. They were replaced by the best three teams from the 2010–11 Liga Indonesia Premier Division, Persiba Bantul, Mitra Kukar and Persiraja Banda Aceh.

Fourth-placed Premier Division sides Persidafon Dafonsoro were promoted to Indonesia Super League after winning the relegation/promotion play-off against 15th placed 2010–11 Indonesia Super League sides Bontang by score 3–2.

2010–11 Liga Indonesia Premier Division best-eight teams sides PSAP Sigli, Persiram Raja Ampat, Gresik United and PSMS Medan replaced Persijap Jepara, Semen Padang, Persiba Bantul and Persiraja Banda Aceh after those four teams joined to 2011–12 Indonesian Premier League.

Stadium and locations

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Club Regency or City Province Stadium Capacity 2010–11 season
Arema Indonesia Malang Regency East Java Kanjuruhan 35,000 Super League Runners-up
Deltras Sidoarjo Regency East Java Gelora Delta 35,000 13th in Super League
Gresik United Gresik Regency East Java Petrokimia 25,000 5th in Premier Division
Mitra Kukar Kutai Kartanegara East Kalimantan Aji Imbut 35,000 3rd in Premier Division
Pelita Jaya Karawang Regency West Java Singaperbangsa 25,000 12th in Super League
Persela Lamongan Lamongan
Madiun Regency
East Java Surajaya
Wilis
25,000
20,000
9th in Super League
Persib Bandung Bandung Regency
Bandung
West Java Si Jalak Harupat
Siliwangi
40,000
25,000
7th in Super League
Persiba Balikpapan Balikpapan East Kalimantan Persiba Stadium 12,500 10th in Super League
Persidafon Dafonsoro Jayapura
Jayapura Regency
Papua Mandala1
Barnabas Youwe
30,000
15,000
4th in Premier Division
Persija Jakarta Jakarta DKI Jakarta Gelora Bung Karno 88,083 3rd in Super League
Persipura Jayapura Jayapura Papua Mandala 30,000 Super League Champions
Persiram Raja Ampat2 Jakarta
Lamongan
Sorong Regency
Jakarta
East Java
West Papua
Lebak Bulus
Surajaya
Wambik KM 164
12,000
25,000
7,000
6th in Premier Division
Persisam Putra Samarinda East Kalimantan Segiri 20,000 6th in Super League
Persiwa Wamena Jayawijaya Regency Papua Pendidikan 15,000 8th in Super League
PSAP Sigli3 Banda Aceh
Sigli
Aceh Harapan Bangsa
Kuta Asan
40,000
15,000
7th in Premier Division
PSMS Medan Medan North Sumatra Teladan 20,000 8th in Premier Division
PSPS Pekanbaru Kuansing Regency Riau Sport Centre Kuansing 25,000 11th in Super League
Sriwijaya Palembang South Sumatera Gelora Sriwijaya 40,000 5th in Super League

1 = Ground share with Persipura Jayapura during Persidafon Stadium Barnabas Youwe renovation.
2 = Persiram Raja Ampat was based in Jakarta because they had no stadium representative in Raja Ampat Islands.
3 = PSAP Sigli was based in Banda Aceh for a while since Kuta Asan stadium was being renovated.
4 = The stadium was almost complete renovation,[3] Persiram could use it again on 10 March 2012 as host Persisam Putra Samarinda.

Personnel and kits

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Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players and Managers may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Team Coach Captain Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
Arema Indonesia Indonesia  Suharno Cameroon  Herman Dzumafo[a] Ultras Ijen Nirwana
Deltras Indonesia  Blitz Tarigan Indonesia  Budi Sudarsono[b] Adidas Kahuripan Nirwana
Gresik United Indonesia  Djoko Susilo Argentina  Gustavo Chena[c] PHONSKA, SADIKUN
Mitra Kukar Sweden  Stefan Hansson Indonesia  Hamka Hamzah[d] Petrona
Pelita Jaya Indonesia  Rahmad Darmawan Malaysia  Safee Sali Umbro Anker Sport
Persela Lamongan Czech Republic  Miroslav Janu Argentina  Gustavo Lopez Diadora Surabaya Post
Persib Bandung Indonesia  Robby Darwis Indonesia  Maman Abdurahman Mitre DAYA Adicipta Mustika
Persiba Balikpapan Austria  Hans-Peter Schaller Paraguay  Aldo Baretto SPECS Bankaltim, Artha Reka Satria
Persidafon Dafonsoro Moldova  Sergei Dubrovin Indonesia  Eduard Ivakdalam Bank Papua
Persija Jakarta Indonesia  Iwan Setiawan Indonesia  Bambang Pamungkas League Forum Bersama Jakarta
Persipura Jayapura Brazil  Jacksen F. Tiago Indonesia  Boaz Solossa[e] SPECS Freeport Indonesia
Persiram Raja Ampat Indonesia  Jaya Hartono Liberia  Kubay Quaiyan[f] Fourking Mandiri, Bank Papua
Persisam Putra Serbia  Misha Radovic Indonesia  Eka Ramdani[g] Lotto Elty, Bankaltim
Persiwa Wamena Brazil  Gomes de Olivera Liberia  Boakay Eddie Foday Umbro Bank Papua
PSAP Sigli Indonesia  Jessie Mustamu Indonesia  Reza Fandi
PSMS Medan Vacant Serbia  Saša Zečević[h] Eutag Bakrie Sumatera Plantations
PSPS Pekanbaru Indonesia  Mundari Karya Indonesia  Dedi Gusmawan[i]
Sriwijaya Indonesia  Kas Hartadi Indonesia  Ponaryo Astaman SPECS Bank Sumsel-Babel

Notes:

  1. ^ Charis Yulianto was previously Arema's captain, he was replaced by Seme Pattrick as captain until April. Once recruited Herman Dzumafo from PSPS Pekanbaru. Dzumafo was handed the captaincy.
  2. ^ Budi Sudarsono was Deltras captain until January, when he was injured. Mijo Dadić was handed the captaincy in Budi's absence. Budi was handed the captaincy back in May after returning from injury.
  3. ^ Agus Indra Kurniawan was previously Gresik's captain until April.Now Gustavo Chena was handed the captaincy.
  4. ^ Pierre Njanka was previously Mitra's captain. Following Njanka's transfer to Persisam Putra Samarinda, Hamka was handed the captaincy.
  5. ^ Boaz Solossa was Persipura's captain until March, when he was diagnosed with knee injury. Gerald Pangkali was handed the captaincy in Boaz's absence.
  6. ^ Oktovianus Maniani was previously Persiram's captain until May. Following Okto's fired by the management for leaving the team without permission, Kubay was handed the captaincy.
  7. ^ Muhammad Roby was previously Persisam's captain until April, when he was sentenced for committing acts of discipline. Eka Ramdani was handed the captaincy.
  8. ^ Markus Haris Maulana was previously PSMS's captain. Following Markus's transfer to PSMS IPL, Novi Hendriawan and Zulkarnain was handed the captaincy until April. After that Saša Zečević was handed the captaincy.
  9. ^ Herman Dzumafo was previously PSPS's captain. Following Dzumafo's transfer to Arema Indonesia, Dedi Gusmawan was handed the captaincy.

In addition, Nike will have a new design for their match ball (white from August to October and March to May; high-visibility yellow from November through February) called Seitiro, featuring a modified flame design.

Coach changes

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Pre-season

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Team Outgoing coach Manner of departure Date of vacancy Incoming coach Date of appointment
Persija Indonesia  Rahmad Darmawan Signed by Indonesia U-23 June 2011 Montenegro  Dejan Gluscevic August 2011
PSMS Indonesia  Freddy Mulli Signed by Gresik United July 2011 Indonesia  Abdurrahman Gurning July 2011
Persidafon Indonesia  Agus Yuwono Contract terminated July 2011 Moldova  Sergei Dubrovin August 2011
Mitra Kukar Indonesia  Benny Dollo Contract terminated July 2011 Scotland  Simon McMenemy September 2011
Persiwa Indonesia  Suharno Contract terminated July 2011 Brazil  Gomes de Olivera September 2011
PSPS Indonesia  Abdurrahman Gurning Signed by PSMS Medan July 2011 Indonesia  Mundari Karya September 2011
Sriwijaya Bulgaria  Ivan Kolev Contract terminated July 2011 Indonesia  Kas Hartadi September 2011
Persiram Malaysia  Raja Isa Contract terminated August 2011 Indonesia  Bambang Nurdiansyah August 2011
Deltras Indonesia  Nus Yadera Contract terminated August 2011 Germany  Jörg Steinebrunner September 2011
Persela Indonesia  Subangkit Contract terminated August 2011 Czech Republic  Miroslav Janu September 2011
Persija Montenegro  Dejan Gluscevic Negotiation terminated August 2011 Indonesia  Iwan Setiawan September 2011
Persib Indonesia  Daniel Roekito Contract terminated August 2011 Serbia  Drago Mamić September 2011
PSMS Indonesia  Abdurrahman Gurning Resigned August 2011 Malaysia  Raja Isa September 2011
Persisam Putra Indonesia  Hendri Susilo Mutual consent September 2011 Indonesia  Daniel Roekito September 2011
Arema Indonesia Czech Republic  Miroslav Janu Signed by Persela Lamongan September 2011 Austria  Wolfgang Pikal November 2011
Pelita Jaya Serbia  Misha Radovic Sacked 22 October 2011 Indonesia  Djajang Nurdjaman (caretaker) 22 October 2011

In season

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Team Outgoing coach Manner of departure Date of vacancy Position in table Incoming coach Date of appointment
Arema Indonesia Austria  Wolfgang Pikal Sacked 5 January 2012[4] 16th Indonesia  Joko Susilo (caretaker) 5 January 2012
Pelita Jaya Indonesia  Djajang Nurdjaman End of caretaker role 19 January 2012 9th Indonesia  Rahmad Darmawan 19 January 2012[5]
PSMS Malaysia  Raja Isa Sacked 3 February 2012[6] 15th Indonesia  Suharto A.D (caretaker) 4 February 2012
Persisam Putra Indonesia  Daniel Roekito Resigned 21 February 2012[7] 10th Indonesia  Hendri Susilo (caretaker) 21 February 2012
Persiba Indonesia  Hariyadi Mutual consent 6 March 2012 9th England  Peter Butler 7 March 2012
Mitra Kukar Scotland  Simon McMenemy Sacked 23 March 2012[8] 4th Indonesia  Sukardi Kardok (caretaker) 24 March 2012
Persib Serbia  Drago Mamić Resigned 28 March 2012[9] 7th Indonesia  Robby Darwis (caretaker) 28 March 2012
Gresik United Indonesia  Freddy Mulli Resigned 28 March 2012[10] 14th Indonesia  Abdurrahman Gurning 31 March 2012[11]
Deltras Germany  Jörg Steinebrunner Resigned 14 April 2012[12] 17th Indonesia  Blitz Tarigan 15 April 2012[13]
Mitra Kukar Indonesia  Sukardi Kardok End of caretaker role 16 April 2012 5th Sweden  Stefan Hansson 17 April 2012[14]
Persisam Putra Indonesia  Hendri Susilo End of caretaker role 22 April 2012 11th Serbia  Misha Radovic 22 April 2012[15]
PSAP Indonesia  Arman Mutual consent 30 April 2012 17th Indonesia  Jessie Mustamu 30 April 2012[16]
Persiba England  Peter Butler Resigned 8 May 2012[17] 6th Austria  Hans-Peter Schaller 10 May 2012[18]
Arema Indonesia Indonesia  Joko Susilo End of caretaker role 10 May 2012 18th Indonesia  Suharno 10 May 2012[19]
Gresik United Indonesia  Abdurrahman Gurning Sacked 10 May 2012 12th Indonesia  Djoko Susilo 11 May 2012[20]
Persiram Indonesia  Bambang Nurdiansyah Sacked 4 June 2012 18th Indonesia  Jaya Hartono 6 June 2012[21]

Foreign players

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Club Visa 1 Visa 2 Visa 3 Asian-Visa 1 Asian-Visa 2 Non-Visa Foreign Former Player
Arema Indonesia Cameroon  Seme Patrick Cameroon  Alain N'Kong[a] Cameroon  Herman Dzumafo[a] Australia  Steve Hesketh Singapore  Muhammad Ridhuan[a] None Argentina  Rodrigo Santoni
Brazil  Márcio Souza
South Korea  Kim Yong-hee
Deltras Croatia  Mijo Dadic Ivory Coast  Lacine Kone[a] Liberia  James Koko[a] Australia  Sean Rooney Australia  Srećko Mitrović[a] None Liberia  Amos Marah
Argentina  Walter Brizuela
South Korea  Shin Hyun-joon
Gresik United Argentina  Gaston Castano Argentina  Gustavo Chena Argentina  Claudio Pronetto[a] Syria  Marwan Sayedeh Australia  Daniel Zeleny[b] None Liberia  James Koko
Mitra Kukar Argentina  Esteban Herrera[a] Brazil  Anderson da Silva[a] Netherlands  Kevin Olivieira[c] South Korea  Lee Sang-min Japan  Seiji Kaneko None Serbia  Nemanja Obrić
England  Marcus Bent
Cameroon  Pierre Njanka
Cameroon  Gustave Bahoken
Pelita Jaya North Macedonia  Aleksandar Bajevski Bulgaria  Stanislav Zhekov Liberia  John Tarkpor Malaysia  Safee Sali None Netherlands  Jhon van Beukering[d][22]
Nigeria  Victor Igbonefo[d][e]
Nigeria  Greg Nwokolo[d][e]
Serbia  Saša Radivojević
Persela Argentina  Gustavo Lopez Slovakia  Roman Golian Argentina  Mario Costas South Korea  Oh In-kyun[a] South Korea  Park Chul-hyung[b] None Philippines  Satoshi Ōtomo
Cameroon  Gustave Bahoken
Cameroon  Serge Emalue
Persib Cameroon  Abanda Herman Montenegro  Miljan Radović Brazil  Marcio Souza[a] Australia  Robert Gaspar Singapore  Noh Alam Shah[b] None Montenegro  Zdravko Dragićević
Ghana  Moses Sakyi
Persiba Paraguay  Aldo Baretto Croatia  Tomislav Labudović Uruguay  Esteban Guillén[a] Japan  Kenji Adachihara Japan  Shohei Matsunaga None Paraguay  Richard Caceres
Persidafon Argentina  Marcelo Cirelli Cameroon  Eric Bayemi Cameroon  Ngon A Djam Singapore  Itimi Dickson None None None
Persija Brazil  Fabiano Beltrame Argentina  Robertino Pugliara Paraguay  Pedro Velázquez Singapore  Precious Emuejeraye South Korea  Jeong Kwang-sik[b][23] None None
Persipura Cameroon  Bio Paulin Liberia  Zah Rahan Krangar Brazil  Alberto Gonçalves South Korea  Yoo Jae-hoon South Korea  Choi Dong-soo[b] None None
Persiram Liberia  Kubay Quaiyan Cameroon  J.P. Boumsong Brazil  Anderson[a] Japan  Tomoyuki Sakai South Korea  Yoo Wook-jin[a] None Liberia  Pello Benson
South Korea  Jeon Sung-ha
Persisam Putra Cameroon  Luc Zoa Montenegro  Srđan Lopičić Cameroon  Pierre Njanka[a] Liberia  Boima Karpeh South Korea  Kim Dong-chan[b] Uruguay  Cristian Gonzáles[d][e] Uruguay  Ronald Fagundez[c]
Persiwa Liberia  Boakay Foday Liberia  Erick Weeks Nigeria  O.K. John Japan  Yuichi Shibakoya South Korea  Kim Kang-hyun[b] None None
PSAP South Africa  Sthembiso Ntombela Mali  Camara Sekou Sierra Leone  Abu Bakar[a] South Korea  Lee Soung-yong South Korea  Jeon Sung-ha[a] None South Africa  Mfundo Cecil
South Korea  Yoo Wook-jin
PSMS Serbia  Saša Zečević Nigeria  Osas Saha Slovenia  Nastja Čeh[a] South Korea  Shin Hyun-joon[a] None Netherlands  Ruben Wuarbanaran[d][e] Chile  Luis Peña
South Korea  Oh In-kyun
South Korea  Choi Dong-soo
PSPS Cameroon  Patrice Nzekou Togo  Ali Khadaffi Nigeria  Kabir Bello[a] South Korea  Joo Ki-hwan[a] South Korea  Ko Jae-hyo[b] None Cameroon  Herman Dzumafo
South Korea  Park Chul-hyung
Paraguay  Roberto Acosta
Sriwijaya Saint Kitts and Nevis  Keith Gumbs Cameroon  Thierry Gathuessi Brazil  Hilton Moreira South Korea  Lim Joon-sik Australia  Jamie Coyne[b] None None

Notes:

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Replacement of foreign players in the second phase of the Transfer Windows
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i New players in the second phase of the Transfer Windows
  3. ^ a b Injury Replacement Players
  4. ^ a b c d e Those players who were born and started their professional career abroad but have since gained Indonesia Residency
  5. ^ a b c d Foreign residents or foreign residents of Indonesian descent who have chosen to represent the Indonesia national team

League table

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Sriwijaya (C) 34 25 4 5 71 31 +40 79
2 Persipura Jayapura 34 20 8 6 65 35 +30 68
3 Persiwa Wamena 34 19 4 11 60 42 +18 61
4 Persela Lamongan 34 15 11 8 58 43 +15 56
5 Persija Jakarta 34 14 10 10 53 36 +17 52
6 Pelita Jaya 34 15 6 13 68 51 +17 51
7 Persiba Balikpapan 34 14 9 11 60 55 +5 51
8 Persib Bandung 34 14 7 13 49 49 0 49
9 Mitra Kukar 34 14 5 15 57 56 +1 47
10 Persidafon Dafonsoro 34 13 7 14 57 65 −8 46
11 Persisam Putra Samarinda 34 12 7 15 44 42 +2 43
12 Arema Indonesia 34 10 8 16 45 51 −6 38
13 PSPS Pekanbaru 34 11 5 18 40 54 −14 38
14 Persiram Raja Ampat[a] 34 10 8 16 45 63 −18 38
15 Gresik United[a] 34 11 5 18 36 69 −33 38 Qualification for the relegation play-off
16 PSMS Medan[a] (R) 34 9 9 16 43 62 −19 36 Relegation to Premier Division
17 Deltras (R) 34 9 8 17 34 48 −14 35
18 PSAP Sigli[a] (R) 34 6 9 19 33 66 −33 27
Updated to match(es) played on 11 July 2012. Source: 2011–12 Super League table
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champions; (R) Relegated
Notes:
  1. ^ a b c d Persijap Jepara, Persiraja Banda Aceh, Semen Padang, and Persiba Bantul withdrew from 2011–12 Indonesia Super League and moved to 2011–12 Indonesian Premier League, they were replaced by Persiram Raja Ampat, PSAP Sigli, PSMS Medan and Gresik United[24]

Results

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The fixtures for the Super League were released on 25 November 2011. The season kicked off on 1 December 2011 and concluded on 11 July 2012.[25]

Home \ Away ARE DEL GRE MKU PEL PSL PSB PBA PSDF PSJ PPR PSRM PPSA PWA PSAP MED RIA SRI
Arema Indonesia 3–1 0–0 5–3 3–2 0–1 2–1 3–1 4–0 1–1 1–2 2–2 1–0 2–1 0–0 2–1 2–0 1–5
Deltras 3–3 1–1 0–0 2–0 1–0 0–0 2–0 0–1 1–0 1–1 2–2 1–3 1–2 2–1 0–1 1–0 0–1
Gresik United 2–0 2–1 1–2 1–6 3–2 2–0 0–2 3–2 2–0 2–1 1–0 1–1 1–0 1–0 2–2 0–1 1–5
Mitra Kukar 2–2 1–0 4–1 1–0 2–0 3–0 0–0 0–1 3–0 1–2 2–1 0–1 6–1 3–1 3–1 3–1 0–1
Pelita Jaya 2–1 3–0 4–0 4–0 1–0 1–3 1–3 1–1 0–2 3–2 2–1 3–0 2–1 5–2 2–2 4–1 1–3
Persela Lamongan 3–1 1–1 6–2 2–1 2–2 3–1 2–1 2–1 2–2 0–0 5–1 1–0 2–2 2–0 2–1 3–1 1–1
Persib Bandung 2–0 3–1 1–0 5–0 3–2 1–1 2–3 3–2 1–0 0–1 3–2 0–0 3–0 1–1 3–1 2–1 1–0
Persiba Balikpapan 2–1 4–1 4–2 3–1 1–1 0–0 2–1 1–2 2–2 1–2 5–1 3–2 3–1 1–1 3–1 4–1 2–3
Persidafon Dafonsoro 2–1 2–1 3–0 2–1 1–1 4–5 2–2 2–2 3–1 1–1 6–0 2–1 0–3[a] 4–2 4–1 2–1 2–2
Persija Jakarta 1–0 1–0 2–0 1–1 2–1 1–1 2–2 4–0 0–0 1–0 1–2 0–0 1–2 5–1 1–0 4–0 3–0
Persipura Jayapura 2–1 2–1 3–1 4–2 2–1 2–1 4–0 3–3 3–1 0–1 3–1 3–1 1–1 7–1 5–0 2–1 2–1
Persiram Raja Ampat 1–0 3–1 1–1 2–1 2–1 2–2 1–2 1–0 5–2 0–6 0–0 0–0 2–1 4–1 3–0[b] 1–2 1–2
Persisam Putra Samarinda 2–0 1–1 4–0 1–2 1–4 0–1 2–1 0–1 3–0 1–1 3–1 2–2 2–0 3–1 4–2 2–1 0–1
Persiwa Wamena 1–0 2–1 4–2 3–1 4–2 1–0 3–0 2–0 3–0 4–1 0–1 3–0 1–0 4–1 3–1 3–0 1–0
PSAP Sigli 1–1 0–1 1–0 2–3 0–2 0–0 3–0 1–1 2–1 1–0 0–1 0–0 1–2 0–0 2–1 3–2 1–1
PSMS Medan 1–1 1–3 0–1 1–1 1–2 4–3 3–2 4–1 1–0 3–3 0–0 1–0 1–0 1–1 2–1 3–1 0–0
PSPS Pekanbaru 1–0 0–1 3–0 3–1 1–1 0–2 0–0 0–0 4–1 0–2 2–2 2–1 2–1 2–0 3–0 1–1 1–0
Sriwijaya 2–1 3–1 3–0 4–3 2–1 3–0 1–0 5–1 5–0 2–1 1–0 1–0 3–1 3–2 3–1 2–0 2–1
Updated to match(es) played on 11 July 2012. Source: 2011–12 Super League Schedule · 2011–12 Super League result
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.
Notes:
  1. ^ Persidafon Dafonsoro loses 0–3 against Persiwa Wamena after failing to hold the match on 12 June 2012 at Barnabas Youwe Stadium[26]
  2. ^ PSMS Medan loses 0–3 against Persiram Raja Ampat after not attending the match on 30 May 2012 at Wombik Stadium[27]

Promotion/relegation play-off

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Gresik United (O)
Indonesia Super League
3–1PSIM Yogyakarta
Liga Indonesia Premier Division
Castano   27'
Chena   56', 74'
Report   80' Lukman
Attendance: 523
Referee: Dodi Setia Purnama (Indonesia)

NB: (O) = Play-off winner; (P) = Promoted to 2012–13 Indonesia Super League; (R) = Relegated to 2012–13 Liga Indonesia Premier Division.

Season statistics

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Top scorers

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Rank Player Club Goals
1 Brazil  Alberto Gonçalves Persipura Jayapura 25
2 Argentina  Mario Costas Persela Lamongan 22
Saint Kitts and Nevis  Keith Gumbs Sriwijaya
4 Nigeria Indonesia  Greg Nwokolo Pelita Jaya 20
Malaysia  Safee Sali Pelita Jaya
6 Liberia  Boakay Eddie Foday Persiwa Wamena 19
Nigeria  Osas Saha PSMS Medan
8 Indonesia  Cristian Gonzáles Persisam Putra 18
Brazil  Hilton Moreira Sriwijaya
10 Paraguay  Aldo Barreto Persiba Balikpapan 17

Own goals

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Player For Club
Indonesia  Dedi Gusmawan Persela Lamongan PSPS Pekanbaru
Indonesia  Hamka Hamzah Persisam Putra Samarinda Mitra Kukar
Indonesia  Jajang Sukmara Persipura Jayapura Persib Bandung
Liberia  Kubay Quaiyan Persib Bandung Persiram Raja Ampat
Cameroon  Luc Zoa Deltras Persisam Putra
Singapore  Precious Emuejeraye Arema Indonesia Persija Jakarta
Indonesia  Rahmad Arema Indonesia PSMS Medan

Hat-tricks

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Player For Against Result Date
Brazil  Hilton Moreira Sriwijaya Arema Indonesia 5–1 8 January 2012
Indonesia  Patrich Wanggai Persidafon Dafonsoro Persela Lamongan 4–5 18 January 2012
Argentina  Mario Costas Persela Lamongan Persidafon Dafonsoro 5–4 18 January 2012
Brazil  Marcio Souza Arema Indonesia Deltras 3–3 18 January 2012
Argentina  Gaston Castano Gresik United Persidafon Dafonsoro 3–2 18 February 2012
Indonesia  Zaenal Arif PSPS Pekanbaru Gresik United 3–0 6 March 2012
Malaysia  Safee Sali4 Pelita Jaya Gresik United 6–1 24 March 2012
Indonesia  Bambang Pamungkas Persija Jakarta PSMS Medan 3–3 30 March 2012
Indonesia  Cristian Gonzáles4 Persisam Putra Gresik United 4–0 29 May 2012
Liberia  Eddie Foday Persiwa Wamena PSAP Sigli 4–1 3 June 2012
Brazil  Alberto Gonçalves Persipura Jayapura PSAP Sigli 7–1 7 June 2012
Paraguay  Pedro Velázquez Persija Jakarta PSPS Pekanbaru 4–0 19 June 2012
Argentina  Mario Costas Persela Lamongan Gresik United 6–2 25 June 2012
Brazil  Alberto Gonçalves Persipura Jayapura Mitra Kukar 4–2 27 June 2012
  • 4 Player scored 4 goals

Scoring

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Clean sheets

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  • Most Clean Sheets: 14
  • Fewest clean sheets: 5
    • Arema Indonesia
    • Persiba Balikpapan
    • Persidafon Dafonsoro

Attendance

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Pos Team Total High Low Average Change
1 Sriwijaya 362,079 43,103 11,356 21,299 +105.4%
2 Persib Bandung 293,571 30,000 0 17,269 +1.9%
3 Arema Indonesia 269,795 34,126 2,818 15,870 −21.5%
4 Persipura Jayapura 261,345 23,825 1,100 15,373 −22.5%
5 Gresik United 257,294 23,400 2,285 15,135 n/a
6 Persija Jakarta 244,435 50,000 0 14,379 −22.5%
7 Persisam Putra Samarinda 202,352 14,680 7,175 11,903 −0.3%
8 PSMS Medan 195,383 22,234 4,675 11,493 n/a
9 Persela Lamongan 179,380 12,159 6,500 10,552 +28.4%
10 Deltras 143,045 15,850 1,435 8,414 +24.4%
11 Persiwa Wamena 121,591 12,732 453 7,152 −38.6%
12 Pelita Jaya 101,670 15,887 2,549 5,981 −5.4%
13 Mitra Kukar 97,835 15,953 592 5,755 n/a
14 PSPS Pekanbaru 96,503 15,763 875 5,677 −50.1%
15 Persidafon Dafonsoro 83,899 13,650 0 4,935 n/a
16 PSAP Sigli 83,096 15,300 545 4,888 n/a
17 Persiba Balikpapan 75,037 6,471 2,314 4,414 −1.8%
18 Persiram Raja Ampat 61,390 15,230 0 3,611 n/a
League total 3,129,700 50,000 0 10,228 −7.9%

Updated to games played on 11 July 2012
Source: Indonesia Super League
Notes:
Team played previous season in Premier Division.

Top 10
Attendance Date Home Score Away Venue Weekday Time of Day
50,000 27 May 2012 Persija Jakarta 2–2 Persib Bandung Gelora Bung Karno Stadium Sunday Afternoon
43,103 27 May 2012 Sriwijaya 1–0 Persipura Jayapura Gelora Sriwijaya Stadium Sunday Evening
34,126 30 June 2012 Arema Indonesia 0–0 Gresik United Kanjuruhan Stadium Saturday Evening
33,725 17 May 2012 Arema Indonesia 5–3 Mitra Kukar Kanjuruhan Stadium Thursday Afternoon
31,830 12 June 2012 Arema Indonesia 3–1 Deltras Kanjuruhan Stadium Tuesday Afternoon
30,000 29 January 2012 Persib Bandung 1–0 Persija Jakarta Si Jalak Harupat Stadium Sunday Evening
29,753 3 March 2012 Sriwijaya 3–1 Persisam Putra Samarinda Gelora Sriwijaya Stadium Saturday Afternoon
29,734 17 March 2012 Sriwijaya 1–0 Persiram Raja Ampat Gelora Sriwijaya Stadium Saturday Evening
29,271 24 June 2012 Arema Indonesia 3–1 Persiba Balikpapan Kanjuruhan Stadium Sunday Evening
25,553 20 June 2012 Sriwijaya 3–0 Persela Lamongan Gelora Sriwijaya Stadium Wednesday Afternoon

References

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