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・ 2009–10 Lebanese Second Division
・ 2009–10 Leeds United F.C. season
・ 2009–10 Lega Basket Serie A
・ 2009–10 Lega Pro Prima Divisione
・ 2009–10 Lega Pro Seconda Divisione
・ 2009–10 Leicester City F.C. season
・ 2009–10 Leinster Rugby season
・ 2009–10 LEN Euroleague
・ 2009–10 LEN Women's Champions' Cup
・ 2009–10 LFL season
・ 2009–10 Libyan Cup
・ 2009–10 Libyan Cup – Round of 16
・ 2009–10 Libyan Cup – Round of 32
・ 2009–10 Libyan Federation Cup
・ 2009–10 Libyan League Cup
2009–10 Libyan Premier League
・ 2009–10 Libyan Second Division
・ 2009–10 Liechtenstein Cup
・ 2009–10 Liga ABF
・ 2009–10 Liga Alef
・ 2009–10 Liga Bet
・ 2009–10 Liga de Ascenso season
・ 2009–10 Liga de Honra
・ 2009–10 Liga Femenina de Baloncesto
・ 2009–10 Liga Gimel
・ 2009–10 Liga I
・ 2009–10 Liga II
・ 2009–10 Liga III
・ 2009–10 Liga Indonesia Premier Division
・ 2009–10 Liga IV


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2009–10 Libyan Premier League : ウィキペディア英語版
2009–10 Libyan Premier League

The 2009–10 Libyan Premier League (known as the Libyana Premier League for sponsorship reasons) is the forty-second edtition of the competition since its establishment in 1963. A total of 14 clubs contested the league, with Ittihad Tripoli the defending champions.
This has been reduced from the system of 16 teams that had been in place since the 2007–08 season. The season was scheduled to begin on 1 October 2009, but was later postponed until 8 October 2009.〔(Full fixture list for the 2009-10 season ) kooora.com〕 The season was scheduled to finish on 14 May 2010. However, this was later delayed to 1 June due to CAF fixtures and national team commitments.
The fixture list was released on 4 September 2009.
The league paused for its mid-season break on 13 January 2010, and continued on 28 January 2010. There was another break after Round 16 (19 February – 22 March), due to the national team's fixtures, and CAF competition. Next season, the league will be again reduced, this time to 12 teams.
==Summary==
Ittihad secured their 16th top flight title with three games to spare after a 2–0 home win over Najma on 18 May 2010. This was their sixth league title in succession and their eighth in the last nine seasons.
Ahly Tripoli were expelled from the league and had their record for the second half of the season expunged on 17 May 2010. Having failed to show for two successive matches in protest at unfair treatment spanning a number of years from the Libyan Football Federation, which was sparked by their 1–2 home defeat to bitter rivals Ittihad, they vowed not to compete in competitions run by the LFF. As a result, they were relegated to the Libyan Second Division, meaning each side would now play only 25 games. Tahaddy became the second side to be relegated on 22 May, after Shat, Olomby, Sweahly and Najma all won their respective matches on that day. Due to their inferior head-to-head record, even a victory against Shat on the final day would not have seen them avoid the drop. Their relegation was confirmed after their 3–1 win over Hilal was awarded 2–0 to Hilal after it was discovered Tahaddy had played a suspended player.
In one of the tightest relegation battles in recent history, Sweahly, Olomby, Shat and Najma all started the final round of fixtures within two points of each other, and all facing the danger of the drop. Sweahly hosted Ittihad, Shat were at home to already relegated Tahaddy, Najma travelled to Tersanah, who had secured their safety the previous week, and Olomby faced Nasr at Zaawia Stadium. Olomby went behind early on to Salem al Rewani's spot kick, before equalising on 31 minutes through Aymen Rhifi and Najma took the lead on the half hour through Chakib Lachkhem's penalty. Sweahly went in front against a much weakened Ittihad side through ex-Ittihad defender Keba Paul Koulibaly's penalty on 43 minutes. At the break, it was Olomby who would be relegated. Shat scored two goals in the first two minutes of the second period against Tahaddy, and added a further two goals for a comfortable 4–0 victory. Najma held on against a lacklustre Tersanah side, meaning they needed Nasr to hold Olomby to face a relegation playoff. Sweahly faced a scare when Saami al Ghoula equalised on 72 minutes, but Tunisian forward Jemail Khemir put them back in front three minutes later, ensuring their survival. With time running out, Rhifi netted on 82 minutes to send the Second Division champions down. Olomby now face a two-legged playoff against Wahda for a place in next season's Premier League.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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