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词条 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina
释义

  1. History

     War period 1992–1996  Post-war period 1996–2000  Premier League creation 2000–01  Premier League as Liga 12 2016–17 till 2017–18  Old format since 2018–19 

  2. Sponsorship

  3. 2018–19 Member Clubs

  4. Rankings

     Country  Team 

  5. Bosnia and Herzegovina Champions

     Champions of Bosnia and Herzegovina  Premier League Champions  Times finished in first three  Cities 

  6. Notable performances in Europe

  7. All time table of Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina

  8. See also

  9. References

  10. External links

{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2012}}{{Infobox football league
|logo = BH Telecom Premier League BIH logo.jpg
|pixels = 110
|country = Bosnia and Herzegovina
|confed = UEFA
|founded = 2000
|first = 2000–01
|teams = 12
|relegation =First League of FBiH
First League of RS
|levels = 1
|domest_cup = Bosnian-Herzegovinian Cup
|confed_cup =Champions League
Europa League
|champions = Zrinjski Mostar (6th title)
|season = 2017–18
|most successful club =Zrinjski Mostar (6 titles)
|tv =BHRT (BHT 1)
Arena Sport
Moja TV
|website = http://www.nfsbih.ba
|current = 2018–19 season
}}

The BH Telecom Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina ({{lang-bs|BH Telecom Premijer liga Bosne i Hercegovine / БХ Телеком Премијер лига Босне и Херцеговине}}), also known as Liga 12, is the top tier football league in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and is operated by the Football Association of Bosnia and Herzegovina. As the country's most prestigious level of football competition, the league changed format in 2016–17 season and is contested by 12 clubs with last two teams relegated at the end of every season.

The League is, as of season 2018–19, represented by four clubs in European competition. The winner of the Premier League starts from the Champions League first qualifying round. The winner of the Football Cup of Bosnia and Herzegovina as well as the runner up and third placed team on table starts from the first qualifying round of Europa League.

At the end of the season bottom two teams are relegated while winners of First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and First League of the Republika Srpska are promoted to the Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

History

War period 1992–1996

After the breakup of Yugoslavia, Bosnia and Herzegovina proclaimed independence in late winter 1992, and already in April the same year N/FSBiH applied for membership with FIFA and UEFA.[1] Meanwhile, due to the outbreak of Bosnian War in April 1992 no games were played in the 1992–93 season. In late 1993 some parts of the country re-launched football competitions with reduced scope. But just as the country was divided along ethnic lines, so was football.

In 1993 Bosnian Croats launched the Football Federation of Herzeg Bosnia and its First League of Herzeg-Bosnia, in which only Croatian clubs competed on parochial scale within the limits of West Herzegovina and few other enclaves. In the same year Bosnian Serbs also organized their own First League of the Republika Srpska, on a territory held by Republika Srpska regime at the time.

Only football on a territory under the control of then Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina institutions and auspices of N/FSBiH, at the time consequently with Bosniak majority, apart from a brief competition for the season 1994–95 (won by Čelik Zenica), came to a standstill.

Competition under auspices of N/FSBiH did not resume until 1995–96 season when the First League of Bosnia and Herzegovina was launched.[1]

Post-war period 1996–2000

These three separate football leagues were operating in Bosnia and Herzegovina until 1998, and 2000. Since FIFA and UEFA showed support only for the association operating under patronage of the official and internationally recognized state institutions, during the war and prior to Dayton Peace Agreement as well as after its signage, they endorsed unification of all three organizations as N/FSBiH. This also came as a consequence of FIFA decision to recognize N/FSBiH already in July 1996, while in the same year UEFA admitted N/FSBiH as an adjacent member until 1998 when they recognized its full membership. This meant that only N/FSBiH clubs and its national team could compete at the international and official level.[1]

Final unification has been preceded by several stages. At first was created a playoff where clubs were playing for the champion under N/FSBiH auspices. Idea was that playoff under unified N/FSBiH auspices should bring together clubs competing under three separate organizations for the first time but was rejected by Serb association, leaving clubs from Croat football association and N/FSBiH participating playoff for the seasons 1997–98 and 1999–00, while 1998–99 playoff was canceled due to Croat's association hesitation on the decision on which stadiums games should be played. Next season playoff was resumed for the last time prior to full and final agreement on unified N/FSBiH and its competition, Premier League BiH (Premijer Liga), in the fall 2000.

Premier League creation 2000–01

Full and final agreement on unified N/FSBiH and its competition, Premier League BiH (Premijer Liga), happened in the fall 2000. However, the first 2000–01 season seen clubs from Federation of BiH only, while clubs from Republic of Srpska entity continue to compete in their own separate league as their entity association still refused to join agreed unified N/FSBiH and its new competition. However, UEFA and FIFA never intended to recognize this separate organization nor its competition, which meant clubs couldn't compete outside territory of the entity and wouldn't see any international football. This situation forced clubs to insist that their organization also join N/FSBiH, and two years later they became part of the competition for the season 2002–03. Ever since the year 2000 Premier League is the top tier of Bosnia and Herzegovina football, with two entity-based leagues, First League of Republika Srpska and First League of the Federation of BiH, being pushed to the second tier of the football pyramid and serve as feeder leagues to Premier League.[1]

Premier League as Liga 12 2016–17 till 2017–18

During the 2016–17 season and the 2017–18 season BH Telecom Premier League had changed its format entirely, reducing a number of clubs from 16 to 12, thus sometimes referred to as "Liga 12" (League 12), with the calendar also modified accordingly, and introducing playoffs (also known as the "title playoffs") and play out.

Number of matches were played by each club during regular season after which, according to their position, they entered to play-offs or play out. Playoffs were contested by the top 6 clubs in the regular season, with each club playing each other twice for the title, which guarantees Champions League qualifications, second and third place, guaranteeing Europa League qualifications berths. Play out was contested by six clubs to avoid relegation with last two teams being relegated.

Old format since 2018–19

Since the 2018–19 season the league is not played as the last two seasons before. Actually very simple, after all the 12 clubs have played each other two times, once home and once away, they will play each other three times, also playing home or away depending on how the schedule is made. With that the league season will have 33 full rounds instead of 22 rounds and an additional 10 rounds in the relegation and championship games.[2]

Sponsorship

On 31 July 2012, Football Association of Bosnia and Herzegovina signed a two-year deal with BH Telecom regarding the sponsorship of the league, effectively renaming the league BH Telecom Premier League.[3] The deal was extended once more before the start of 2014–15 season.

2018–19 Member Clubs

{{Location map+|Bosnia and Herzegovina|float=right |width=450 |caption=Location of the 2018–19 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina clubs|places={{Location map~|Bosnia and Herzegovina|lat=44.205727 |long=17.907178 |label=Čelik|position=top}}{{Location map~|Bosnia and Herzegovina|lat=43.061975 |long=17.682930 |label=GOŠK|position=right}}{{Location map~|Bosnia and Herzegovina|lat=44.617570 |long=17.147421 |label=Krupa|position=bottom}}{{Location map~|Bosnia and Herzegovina|lat=44.113660 |long=18.117724 |label=Mladost|position=right}}{{Location map~|Bosnia and Herzegovina|lat=44.754353 |long=19.225034 |label=Radnik|position=top}}{{Location map~|Bosnia and Herzegovina|lat=43.873697 |long=18.408633 |label=Sarajevo|position=top}}{{Location map~|Bosnia and Herzegovina|lat=44.508807 |long=18.752773 |label=Sloboda|position=left}}{{Location map~|Bosnia and Herzegovina|lat=44.527417 |long=18.742111 |label=Tuzla City|position=bottom}}{{Location map~|Bosnia and Herzegovina|lat=43.378688 |long=17.597962 |label=Široki Brijeg|position=left}}{{Location map~|Bosnia and Herzegovina|lat=43.345560 |long=17.795308 |label=Zrinjski|position=right}}{{Location map~|Bosnia and Herzegovina|lat=44.754353 |long=19.225034 |label=Zvijezda 09|position=bottom}}{{Location map~|Bosnia and Herzegovina|lat=43.846521 |long=18.387336 |label=Željezničar|position=bottom}}
}}
Team Location Stadium Capacity[4]
Čelik|NK Čelik Zenica}} Zenica Bilino Polje13,862
NK GOŠK Gabela Gabela Perica-Pero Pavlović3,000
FK Krupa Krupa na Vrbasu Gradski stadion Krupa3,500
FK Mladost Doboj Kakanj Doboj (Kakanj) MGM Farm Arena3,000
FK Radnik Bijeljina Bijeljina Gradski stadion Bijeljina6,000
Sarajevo|FK Sarajevo}} Sarajevo Asim Ferhatović Hase34,500
FK Sloboda Tuzla Tuzla Tušanj7,200
Široki Brijeg|NK Široki Brijeg}}Široki Brijeg|Široki Brijeg}} Pecara5,628
FK Tuzla City Simin Han, Tuzla Tušanj7,200
HŠK Zrinjski Mostar Mostar Bijeli Brijeg9,000
FK Zvijezda 09 Ugljevik Gradski stadion Ugljevik5000
Željezničar|FK Željezničar Sarajevo}} Sarajevo Grbavica13,449

Rankings

Source: Bert Kassies' website (country rankings; team rankings)

{{col-begin}}{{col-2}}

Country

UEFA Country Ranking as of end-season of 2016–17 season.

Current RankingLast Season
Ranking
MovementLeagueCoefficient
3637{{increase}}{{flagicon|FIN}} Finland7.650
3741{{increase}}{{flagicon|IRL}} Ireland6.575
3839{{increase}}{{flagicon|ALB}} Albania6.500
3938{{decrease}}{{flagicon|BIH}} Bosnia and Herzegovina6.500
4036{{decrease}}{{flagicon|GEO}} Georgia6.375
4142{{increase}}{{flagicon|LAT}} Latvia6.125
4240{{decrease}}{{flagicon|MKD}} Macedonia5.625
{{col-2}}

Team

As of 29 May 2017
RankTeamPoints
250Sarajevo5.300
267Željezničar{{0}}4.800
299Zrinjski{{0}}4.050
317Široki Brijeg{{0}}3.550
409Sloboda{{0}}1.550
409Radnik{{0}}1.550
409Olimpic{{0}}1.550
409Borac{{0}}1.550
{{col-end}}

Bosnia and Herzegovina Champions

Champions of First League of Bosnia and Herzegovina

  • 1994–95 - Čelik - "Champion of BiH"
  • 1995–96 - Čelik - "Champion of BiH"
  • 1996–97 - Čelik - "Champion of BiH"
  • 1997–98 - Bosna Visoko - "Champion of First League of Bosnia and Herzegovina" (First Round)
  • 1997–98 - FK Željezničar Sarajevo - "Champion of First League of Bosnia and Herzegovina" (Play-Offs) - Official champions
  • 1998–99 - FK Sarajevo - "Champion of BiH"
  • 1999–00 - Jedinstvo Bihać - "Champion of First League of Bosnia and Herzegovina" (First Round)
  • 1999–00 - NK Brotnjo - "Champion of First League of Bosnia and Herzegovina" (Play-Offs) - Official champions

Champions of First League of Herzeg-Bosnia

  • 1993–94 - Široki Brijeg[5] – Mario Prskalo (10 goals, Široki Brijeg)
  • 1994–95 - Široki Brijeg – Anđelko Marušić (15, Široki Brijeg)
  • 1995–96 - Široki Brijeg – Mario Marušić (15, Grude), Dejan Džepina (15, Novi Travnik)
  • 1996–97 - Široki Brijeg – Anđelko Marušić (21, Široki Brijeg)
  • 1997–98 - Široki Brijeg – Stanko Bubalo (31, Široki Brijeg)
  • 1998–99 - Posušje – Slađan Filipović (19, Široki Brijeg)
  • 1999–00 - Posušje – Robert Ristovski (18, Kiseljak)

Champions of First League of the Republika Srpska

Season Champion Runners Up Top Goalscorer Club Goals
1995–96 Boksit Milići Rudar PrijedorBIH}} Siniša Đurić
{{flagicon|BIH}} Zoran Majstorović
Kozara Gradiška
Boksit Milići
16 Goals
16 Goals
1996–97 Rudar Ugljevik Sloga TrnBIH}} Mladen Zgonjanin
Marić
Sloga Trn
Glasinac Sokolac
14 Goals
14 Goals
1997–98 Rudar Ugljevik Borac Banja Luka Nikola Bala Rudar Ugljevik 31 Goals
1998–99 Radnik Bijeljina Rudar UgljevikBIH}} Mladen Zgonjanin Sloga Trn 23 Goals
1999–00 Boksit Milići Rudar Ugljevik Nedo Zdjelar Sloboda Novi Grad 29 Goals
2000–01 Borac Banja Luka Sloboda Novi GradBIH}} Milanko Đerić Boksit Milići 26 Goals
2001–02 Leotar Trebinje Kozara Gradiška SRB}} Pavle Delibašić
Siniša Jovanović
Leotar Trebinje
Glasinac Sokolac
21 Goals
21 Goals

Champions of Bosnia and Herzegovina

Listing seasons (aside of 1998–99 season) before the creation of Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina where the champion was decided via a play-off played between best placed clubs who played in First League of Bosnia and Herzegovina and First League of Herzeg-Bosnia (without clubs from First League of the Republika Srpska).

SeasonWinner of play-offRunners-up of play-offTop scorer(s) of play-off
Player(s) (Club)Goals
1997–981Željezničar (1)SarajevoCRO}} Stanko Bubalo (Široki Brijeg)
{{flagicon|BIH|1992}} Hadis Zubanović (Željezničar)
3
1998–992
Three regional winners (Sarajevo, Posušje and Radnik)
1999–003Brotnjo (1)BudućnostBIH}} Z. Kuljaninović (Budućnost)
{{flagicon|BIH}} Alen Škoro (Sarajevo)
{{flagicon|BIH}} Halim Stupac (Jedinstvo)
5
1 A play-off between the best placed teams of First League of Bosnia and Herzegovina and First League of Herzeg-Bosnia was played; without clubs from First League of Republika Srpska. The best two clubs got the right to play in 1998–99 UEFA Cup.
2 Play-off was scheduled but was later canceled because of stadium issues. Three different leagues played, no play-off contested, therefor no club got the right to play in European competition.
3 A play-off between the best placed teams of First League of Bosnia and Herzegovina and First League of Herzeg-Bosnia was played without clubs from First League of Republika Srpska. Three clubs got the right to play in European competition.

Premier League Champions

Since 2000/2001 season the first tier of Bosnia and Herzegovina football competition became Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

SeasonChampions
(Premier League titles)
Runners-upThird placeTop scorer(s)
Player(s) (Club)Goals
2000–011Željezničar (2)BrotnjoSarajevoBIH}} Dž. Muharemović (Željezničar)
31
2001–021Željezničar (3)Široki BrijegBrotnjoBIH}} Ivica Huljev (Željezničar)
15
2002–03Leotar (1)ŽeljezničarSarajevoBIH}} Emir Obuća (Sarajevo)
24
2003–04Široki Brijeg (1)ŽeljezničarSarajevoBIH}} Alen Škoro (Sarajevo)
20
2004–05Zrinjski (1)ŽeljezničarŠiroki BrijegSCG}} Zoran Rajović (Zrinjski)
17
2005–06Široki Brijeg (2)SarajevoZrinjskiBIH}} Petar Jelić (Modriča)
19
2006–07Sarajevo (1)ZrinjskiSlavijaBIH}} Stevo Nikolić (Modriča)
{{flagicon|BIH}} Dragan Benić (Borac)
19
2007–08Modriča (1)Široki BrijegČelik ZenicaSRB}} Darko Spalević (Slavija)
18
2008–09Zrinjski (2)SlavijaSloboda TuzlaSRB}} Darko Spalević (Slavija)
17
2009–10Željezničar (4)Široki BrijegBoracBIH}} Feđa Dudić (Travnik)
16
2010–11Borac (1)SarajevoŽeljezničarCRO}} Ivan Lendrić (Zrinjski)
16
2011–12Željezničar (5)Široki BrijegBoracBIH}} Eldin Adilović (Željezničar)
19
2012–13Željezničar (6)SarajevoBoracBIH}} Emir Hadžić (Sarajevo)
20
2013–14Zrinjski (3)Široki BrijegSarajevoBRA}} Wagner Lago (Široki Brijeg)
18
2014–15Sarajevo (2)ŽeljezničarZrinjskiBIH}} Riad Bajić (Željezničar)
15
2015–16Zrinjski (4)Sloboda TuzlaŠiroki BrijegCRO}} Leon Benko (Sarajevo)
17
2016–17Zrinjski (5)ŽeljezničarSarajevoCRO}} Ivan Lendrić (Željezničar)
19
2017–18Zrinjski (6)ŽeljezničarSarajevoSRB}} Miloš Filipović (Zrinjski)
16
{{0}}League champions also won the Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup, i.e. the domestic Double.{{0}}

1 Played without clubs from Republika Srpska entity of BiH which only joined the league since 2002.

Times finished in first three

Counting since when the Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina is played and recognized by UEFA, season 2000-01

Club Winners Runner-up Third place Times finished in first three
Zrinjski
6
1
2
9
Željezničar
5
6
1
12
Sarajevo
2
3
6
11
Široki Brijeg
2
5
2
9
Borac
1
0
3
4
Leotar
1
0
0
1
Modriča
1
0
0
1
Brotnjo
0
1
1
2
Slavija
0
1
1
2
Sloboda
0
1
1
2
Čelik
0
0
1
1

Cities

The following table lists the champions by cities; Counting since when the Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina is played and recognized by UEFA, season 2000-01

CityTitles Winning Clubs
Sarajevo
8
Željezničar (6), Sarajevo (2)
Mostar
6
Zrinjski (6)
Široki Brijeg
2
Široki Brijeg (2)
Trebinje
1
Leotar (1)
Modriča
1
Modriča (1)
Banja Luka
1
Borac (1)

Notable performances in Europe

{{main|Bosnian football clubs in European competitions}}

In the qualifiers for the UEFA Champions League season 2002–03, Željezničar gained the greatest success in Bosnian post-war club-football so far, going all the way to the last qualifying round for the most important club competition in Europe. After big wins over ÍA Akraness and Lillestrøm, however they were held by Newcastle United. In the first match, held in Sarajevo, Newcastle won 0–1 with English team defeating Željezničar 4–0 in England.

The second time a Bosnian club moved into the last qualifying round of the UEFA Champions League was FK Sarajevo in 2007–08, when they lost to Dynamo Kyiv 0–4 on aggregate, after going over Maltese Marsaxlokk and Belgian side Genk.

Another remarkable season for Bosnian clubs in Europe was 2009–10. The most memorable performances were marked by FK Sarajevo and Slavija. While Slavija surprisingly beat Aalborg in the Second Qualifying round but couldn't overcome MFK Košice in the third round, FK Sarajevo was able to reach the Play-offs for the Group Stage of the newly formed UEFA Europa League after beating Spartak Trnava and Helsingborg. However, they lost there unhappily 3–2 on aggregate to CFR Cluj. FK Sarajevo made it again in 2014–15 UEFA Europa League playing all the way to the play-off round where they lost from Borussia Mönchengladbach.

All time table of Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina

Counting only since 2002–03 season, the season the league became a unified country-wide league.
As of the end of 2016–17 season.Ssn = Number of seasons; Pld = Matches played; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; GD = Goal difference; Pts = Points; HF = Highest finish
Rank
Club
Town
Ssn
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
HF
1 ŽeljezničarSarajevo1546025395112728401+3278541
2 SarajevoSarajevo15460245110105757401+3568451
3 Široki BrijegŠiroki Brijeg1546023796127740450+2908071
4 ZrinjskiMostar1546023883139715506+209796 (-1)1
5 ČelikZenica15460171115174531525+66283
6 SlobodaTuzla1340016971160459455+45782
7 BoracBanja Luka1236817259137468389+79574 (-1)1
8 LeotarTrebinje1236814951168450525-754981
9 SlavijaIstočno Sarajevo1236013765158416493-774762
10 TravnikTravnik1236012264174422538-1164305
11 VeležMostar11338 117 65 156 385 448 -63 416 5
12 OlimpicSarajevo8242 93 63 86 287 275 +12 342 5
13 ModričaModriča7210 87 34 89 298 290 +8 295 1
14 OrašjeOrašje7218 85 33 100 307 325 -18 288 7
15 PosušjePosušje7218 82 34 102 264 347 -83 280 9
16 ZvijezdaGradačac7210 70 49 91 248 304 -56 259 7
17 RadnikBijeljina7212 67 49 96 214 290 -76 250 6
18 ŽepčeŽepče6188 62 32 94 192 274 -82 218 8
19 Rudar (P)Prijedor6180 52 45 83 179 238 -59 201 10
20 JedinstvoBihać4128 53 14 61 171 203 -32 173 7
21 BudućnostBanovići4128 39 21 68 139 199 -60 138 8
22 VitezVitez4122 36 28 58 111 153 -42 136 9
23 LaktašiLaktaši390 35 14 41 122 125 -3 119 8
24 Rudar (U)Ugljevik398 34 14 50 118 143 -25 116 9
25 GlasinacSokolac268 25 10 33 71 103 -32 85 14
26 Mladost (DK)Doboj, Kakanj262 18 22 22 71 84 -13 76 8
27 DrinaZvornik390 20 12 58 68 159 -91 72 13
28 BrotnjoČitluk268 19 14 35 76 114 -38 71 13
29 KozaraGradiška268 19 13 36 74 107 -33 70 15
30 GOŠKGabela260 15 18 27 55 85 -30 63 13
31 Mladost (VO)Velika Obarska260 14 17 29 42 82 -40 59 11
32 KrupaBanja Luka132 12 10 10 40 34 +6 46 4
33 Mladost (G)Gacko138 11 6 21 40 65 -25 39 18
34 MetallegheJajce132 7 11 14 25 34 -9 32 11
35 BosnaVisoko138 4 1 33 28 107 -79 13 20
36 GradinaSrebrenik130 1 6 23 17 57 -40 9 16
1 In the 2004–05 season, Borac Banja Luka was deducted 1 point (Slavija was awarded 3–0 vs Borac Banja Luka in week 11).
2 In the 2006–07 season, Zrinjski was deducted 1 point (Orašje was awarded 3–0 vs Zrinjski).

See also

  • Bosnian-Herzegovinian Cup

References

1. ^{{cite web|title=N/FSBiH History|url=http://www.nfsbih.ba/en/tekst.php?id=7|website=www.nfsbih.ba|publisher=N/FSBiH|accessdate=27 December 2016|language=en|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20161130213742/http://www.nfsbih.ba/en/tekst.php?id=7|archivedate=30 November 2016|df=dmy-all}}
2. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.klix.ba/sport/nogomet/premijer-liga-bih-se-igra-u-trokruznom-formatu-broj-stranih-igraca-smanjen-na-cetiri/180619057|title=Premijer liga BiH se igra u trokružnom formatu, broj stranih igrača smanjen na četiri|website=Klix.ba|accessdate=18 December 2018}}
3. ^{{cite web|title=BH Telecom the first ever sponsor of the Premier League, signing a two year deal!|url=http://sportsport.ba/bh_fudbal/bh-telecom-sponzor-premijer-lige/85135|publisher=SportSport.ba|accessdate=31 July 2012|language=Bosnian}}
4. ^{{cite web|title=Capacity of stadiums of the Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina|accessdate=29 May 2017|publisher=Soccerway|url=https://int.soccerway.com/national/bosnia-herzegovina/premier-liga/20162017/regular-season/r36005/venues/?ICID=PL_3N_05}}
5. ^{{cite web|url=http://nk-sirokibrijeg.com/docs/press_zlatne_godine.pdf|format=PDF|title=Zlatne godine|page=138|website=Nk-sirokibrijeg.com\\accessdate=18 December 2018}}

External links

{{col-start}}{{col-3}}
  • N/FS BiH {{bs icon}}
  • N/FS BiH {{en icon}}
{{col-3}}
  • League at UEFA
{{col-3}}
  • Stadiums at World Stadiums
{{col-end}}{{Football in BiH}}{{Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina}}{{UEFA leagues}}{{Bosnia and Herzegovina Premier League top scorers}}

3 : Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina|Football leagues in Bosnia and Herzegovina|Top level football leagues in Europe

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