Date | R | Home vs Away | - |
---|---|---|---|
12/09 12:00 | 1 | [1] Lion City Sailors FC vs Hougang United FC [2] | 3-1 |
12/09 09:00 | 50 | [2] Tampines Rovers FC vs DPMM FC [1] | 2-0 |
12/06 11:45 | 2 | [1] DPMM FC vs Hougang United FC [2] | 0-2 |
12/06 11:45 | 2 | [1] Lion City Sailors FC vs Tampines Rovers FC [2] | 3-0 |
12/03 10:00 | 2 | [2] Hougang United FC vs DPMM FC [1] | 1-0 |
12/03 10:00 | 2 | [2] Tampines Rovers FC vs Lion City Sailors FC [1] | 3-3 |
11/26 11:00 | 1 | [4] Geylang International vs Young Lions [5] | 2-4 |
11/26 10:00 | 1 | [3] Albirex Niigata Singapore vs Tampines Rovers FC [2] | 1-1 |
11/25 10:00 | 1 | [4] Balestier Khalsa FC vs Tanjong Pagar United [3] | 7-2 |
11/25 10:00 | 1 | [2] Hougang United FC vs Lion City Sailors FC [1] | 1-1 |
11/04 10:00 | 1 | [5] Young Lions vs DPMM FC [1] | 0-1 |
11/04 10:00 | 1 | [3] Tampines Rovers FC vs Geylang International [4] | 3-1 |
The Singapore Cup is an annual knockout football competition in men's domestic Singaporean football. Established in 1998, it is the foremost prestigious cup competition in the country. It is open to clubs in the Singapore Premier League.
Since 2005, foreign teams from other countries in Southeast Asia are occasionally invited to compete in the Singapore Cup. Thailand club, Chonburi was the first foreign club reaching the final in 2006 (they lost 3–2 in the final to local club Tampines Rovers). In 2009, Bangkok Glass became the second foreign team to reach the final, losing against local club Geylang United, but they beat Tampines Rovers in 2010 to become the first foreign winners of the Singapore Cup.
Winners of the Singapore Cup gain qualification into the Asian continental club competition, AFC Champions League Two. Lion City Sailors are the current holders, having beaten reigning champions Hougang United 3–1 at the 2023 final.