Date | R | Home v Away | - |
---|---|---|---|
05/14 12:30 | 6 | [3] Home United FC v Kaya FC [2] | 2-0 |
05/13 18:00 | 6 | [1] Al Ahed v Malkiya [2] | 2-1 |
05/13 18:00 | 6 | [4] Al-Suwaiq v Al Qadsia SC [3] | 2-1 |
05/06 18:00 | 4 | [4] Al Nejmeh v Hilal Al Quds [3] | 1-2 |
05/03 16:25 | 3 | [3] Hilal Al Quds v Al Nejmeh [4] | 2-1 |
05/01 14:00 | 3 | [1] FK Istiqlol Dushanbe v FC Dordoi Bishkek [4] | 4-1 |
05/01 13:00 | 3 | [3] Minerva Punjab v Manang Marshyangdi Club [4] | 2-2 |
05/01 12:00 | 3 | [3] Kitchee v Hang Yuen [4] | 3-0 |
05/01 11:30 | 5 | [1] Tampines Rovers FC v Yangon United FC [4] | 4-3 |
05/01 10:00 | 5 | [3] Naga World FC v Ha Noi FC [2] | 1-5 |
05/01 10:00 | 5 | [2] Binh Duong v Persija Jakarta [3] | 3-1 |
05/01 09:00 | 5 | [4] Shan Utd v Ceres FC [1] | 0-5 |
04/30 16:25 | 5 | [3] Hilal Al Quds v Al-Jaish Damascus [1] | 0-0 |
04/30 16:00 | 5 | [4] Al Nejmeh v Al-Wehdat [2] | 0-2 |
04/30 15:30 | 5 | [4] Al Ittihad Aleppo v Al Kuwait SC [2] | 0-2 |
04/30 14:30 | 5 | [1] Al-Jazeera v Al-Najma Manama [3] | 3-0 |
04/30 14:00 | 3 | [1] Chennaiyin FC v Dhaka Abahani [2] | 1-0 |
04/30 12:00 | 3 | [2] Wofoo Tai Po FC v April 25 [1] | 1-3 |
04/30 11:00 | 3 | [2] FK Khujand v Altyn Asyr FK [3] | 0-0 |
04/30 08:00 | 5 | [1] PSM Makassar v Home United FC [2] | 3-2 |
04/30 07:00 | 5 | [3] Kaya FC v Lao Toyota [4] | 5-1 |
04/29 17:15 | 5 | [2] Al Qadsia SC v Al-Ahed [1] | 0-1 |
04/29 16:00 | 5 | [3] Malkiya v Al-Suwaiq [4] | 2-2 |
04/23 08:30 | 4 | [3] Persija Jakarta v Ceres FC [1] | 2-3 |
04/17 14:00 | 2 | [2] Chennaiyin FC v Manang Marshyangdi Club [4] | 2-0 |
04/17 12:00 | 2 | [2] Wofoo Tai Po FC v Hang Yuen [4] | 4-2 |
04/17 12:00 | 2 | [2] Altyn Asyr FK v FK Istiqlol Dushanbe [1] | 1-1 |
04/17 11:45 | 2 | [1] Dhaka Abahani v Minerva Punjab [2] | 2-2 |
04/17 11:30 | 4 | [1] Tampines Rovers FC v Naga World FC [3] | 4-2 |
04/17 11:30 | 4 | [4] Lao Toyota v Home United FC [3] | 2-3 |
The AFC Champions League Two (previously known as the AFC Cup, abbreviated as the ACL Two) is an annual continental club football competition organised by the Asian Football Confederation. It is the second-tier competition of Asian club football, ranked below the AFC Champions League Elite and above the AFC Challenge League.
The tournament was founded in 2004 as the AFC Cup, which was played primarily among clubs from nations that did not receive direct qualifying slots to the top-tier AFC Champions League. In 2024, the AFC introduced a revamped second-tier club competition under the name AFC Champions League Two, with the records and statistics of the AFC Cup transferring to the new competition.
Clubs qualify for the competition based on their performance in national leagues and cup competitions. Participation in the competition is open to clubs from the top 12 nations in the East and the West region based on the AFC club competitions ranking. The participant from each nation ranked 1–6 in each region is the highest-placed club in that nation that did not qualify for the AFC Champions League Elite. The nations ranked 7–12 in each region enter their top club(s) directly to the AFC Champions League Two.
The current champions are Central Coast Mariners, who defeated Al-Ahed in the 2024 final. Al-Kuwait and Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya are the most successful clubs in the competition's history, having won three titles each. Clubs from Kuwait have won four titles, making them the most successful nation in the competition.
The winner of the AFC Champions League Two will be allocated an indirect preliminary stage slot for the next AFC Champions League Elite season, if they have not qualified through domestic competition.
Season | Winners |
---|---|
AFC Cup | |
2004 | Al-Jaish |
2005 | Al-Faisaly |
2006 | Al-Faisaly (2) |
2007 | Shabab Al-Ordon |
2008 | Al-Muharraq |
2009 | Kuwait SC |
2010 | Al-Ittihad Aleppo |
2011 | Nasaf Qarshi |
2012 | Kuwait SC (2) |
2013 | Kuwait SC (3) |
2014 | Qadsia |
2015 | Johor Darul Ta'zim |
2016 | Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya |
2017 | Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya (2) |
2018 | Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya (3) |
2019 | Al-Ahed |
2020 | Cancelled |
2021 | Al-Muharraq (2) |
2022 | Al-Seeb |
2023–24 | Central Coast Mariners |
AFC Champions League Two | |
2024–25 |
The AFC Cup began in 2004 as a second-tier competition to relate back to the AFC Champions League, as 14 countries that had developing status competed in the first competition, with 18 teams being nominated. The winners and three runners-up would then head to the knock-out stage. Al-Jaish took the first AFC Cup after they defeated fellow Syrian opponents Al-Wahda on away goals.
In 2005, 18 teams competed from nine nations with the nations still being allowed to choose from one or two teams entering. After Syrian teams left the AFC Cup to try at the AFC Champions League for four years, Al-Faisaly defeated Nejmeh in the final. With it, Jordanian teams would win the next two AFC Cup seasons with Bahrain joining the league while Bangladesh was relegated to the AFC President's Cup until the tournament's abolition in 2014.
Al-Muharraq would break the trend in 2008 as they competed in the last two-legged final before it headed back into a one-leg system, a rule that was never changed till the termination of this tournament.
On 23 December 2022, it was announced that the AFC competition structure would change from the established formats from the 2024–25 season. A new second-tier tournament called the AFC Champions League Two would be introduced. Meanwhile, a new third-tier competition was also launched under the name AFC Challenge League.
On 24 May 2024, AFC announced that the records and statistics of the preceding AFC club competitions will be recognised and integrated within the revamped club competitions, with the data from the AFC Cup transferring to the AFC Champions League Two.