Template:Short description Template:Distinguish Template:Good article Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox football tournament The Scottish Professional Football League Challenge Cup,<ref name="SFL_Final_Results">The Scottish Football League Challenge Cup Final Results, scottishfootballleague.com. Scottish Football League. Retrieved 5 April 2013.</ref><ref name="DAFC_preview">Preview Forfar Athletic Template:Webarchive, dafc.co.uk. Dunfermline Athletic F.C. 25 July 2012. Retrieved 5 April 2013.</ref><ref name="SFHA_Challenge_Cup">Scottish Football League Challenge Cup, scottish-football-historical-archive.com. Scottish Football Historical Archive. Retrieved 5 April 2013.</ref> commonly known as the Scottish League Challenge Cup<ref name="Fisher_Sunday_Herald_Bells">Fisher, Stewart. "Beginner's Guide to the Bell's Cup ...". The Sunday Herald. 4 August 2002.</ref><ref name="DUFC_LCC">League Challenge Cup, dundeeunitedfc.co.uk. Dundee United F.C. Retrieved 5 April 2013.</ref> or Scottish Challenge Cup,<ref name="SFL_Final_Results" /><ref name="DAFC_preview" /> and currently known as the SPFL Trust Trophy for sponsorship reasons, is an association football knock-out cup competition run by the Scottish Professional Football League (SPFL). It is recognised as the third most prestigious knockout trophy in Scottish football, after the Scottish Cup and the Scottish League Cup.

The competition was first held during the 1990–91 season as the B&Q Centenary Cup<ref name="SFL_Final_Results" /> to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the formation of the Scottish Football League (SFL). It was intended to be a one-off competition but was continued due to its popularity. It was originally contested by SFL (SPFL since 2013) teams below the top level of the Scottish football league system; select teams from lower levels of the league system were added in 2011–12, and guest teams from outside Scotland in 2016–17. For the 2019–20 edition there were 58 teams: 30 from the SPFL; the twelve Under-21 teams of the Scottish Premiership clubs; four each from the Highland League and Lowland League; and two guest teams from each of the NIFL Premiership, Cymru Premier, English National League, and League of Ireland Premier Division up until the 2019–20 season.<ref name="SPFL Format">Template:Cite news</ref>

The first winner of the tournament was Dundee, who defeated Ayr United.<ref name="Soccer_Mistral_Challenge_Cup">Scottish League Challenge Cup, soccer.mistral.co.uk. 14 May 2001. Retrieved 5 April 2013.</ref><ref name="Sunday_Times_Centenary_Cup" /> Falkirk are the most successful team in the tournament with four wins, most recently in 2012. The current holders are Livingston, who defeated Queen's Park in the 2025 final.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

FormatEdit

The Challenge Cup is a knock-out tournament. Within a regionalised format, clubs are paired at random and the first club drawn listed as the home team.<ref name="SFL_Format" /> The winner of each match progresses to the next round and the loser is eliminated from the tournament. Every match, including the final, is a one-legged tie that lasts 90 minutes plus any additional stoppage time. If no clear winner has been determined after 90 minutes of normal time, 30 minutes of extra time is played. If the score is still level after extra time then the winner is decided by a penalty shoot-out.<ref name="SFL_Format" />

Beginning with the 2016–17 season, the competition has been expanded to 58 entrants. All Scottish Professional Football League (SPFL) clubs will participate, with the thirty clubs from the Championship, League One and League Two now joined by Under-20 teams from the twelve Premiership clubs. Also participating by invitation will be four teams each from the Highland and Lowland Leagues and eight entrants from outside Scottish football – two each from the NIFL Premiership in Northern Ireland, the National League in England, League of Ireland and the Welsh Premier League in Wales, until 2021 when the decision was made to only have the Scottish clubs participating due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. Teams are seeded to enter the competition over any of the first four rounds, after which eight teams will remain to contest the quarter-finals. The final is played at a neutral venue.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In May 2024, it was announced the Cup would return to being Scottish-only for the 2024-25 season, with more Highland and Lowland League teams taking the place of the invited Northern Irish and Welsh clubs.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

HistoryEdit

The competition was created in the 1990–91 season to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the formation of the Scottish Football League in 1890.<ref name="SFHA_Challenge_Cup" /><ref name="Evening_Times_2007">"With the Scottish Football Museum at Hampden; Now You Know". Evening Times, Glasgow. 22 December 2007.</ref> It was intended to run for only one season but continued due to its popularity. This was reflected in high attendances at matches in the later rounds of the tournament including a full capacity crowd of 11,500 at Fir Park in the first final.<ref name="DAFC_preview" /><ref name="DUFC_LCC" /><ref name="Sunday_Times_Centenary_Cup">Caught in Time: Dundee win the B&Q Centenary Cup, 1990, thesundaytimes.co.uk. The Sunday Times. 30 April 2006. Retrieved 5 April 2013.</ref> The cup was sponsored by DIY retail company B&Q and named the B&Q Centenary Cup<ref name="Daily_Record_2009_Final">Alba Cup Final: Inverness Caledonian Thistle 2 Dundee 3, dailyrecord.co.uk. Daily Record. 23 November 2009. Retrieved 5 April 2013.</ref> for the first year and continued as the B&Q Cup for four seasons afterwards. The competition was run for three seasons without a sponsor due to the league covering the tournament costs and prize money, but was unsustainable and resulted in it being cancelled for one season in 1998–99 before being re-established in 1999 with a new sponsor.<ref name="DUFC_LCC" /> Although it is not as popular as competitions like the Scottish Cup, it provides smaller clubs with a realistic opportunity of winning a trophy due to the absence of top-tier clubs from the tournament.<ref name="Fisher_Sunday_Herald_Bells" /><ref name="Times_McCarra">McCarra, Kevin. "Shootout victory for Stenhousemuir after 111 years", The Times, 6 November 1995. Retrieved 23 April 2013.</ref> When Stenhousemuir won the final in 1995 it was regarded as the club's greatest achievement in its 111-year history.<ref name="Stenhousemuir_History">A Brief History of Stenhousemuir Football Club, stenhousemuirfc.com. Stenhousemuir F.C. Retrieved 23 April 2013.</ref> Attendances at matches in the earlier rounds of the tournament are not dissimilar to average home attendances in league competition<ref name="BBC_Rangers_opponents">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Annan_v_Livingston_Round_1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> but as the competition reaches the latter stages they generally increase; Annan Athletic's record attendance of 1,575 was set in a semi-final match against Falkirk in 2011.<ref name="Annan_Attendance">"Annan Athletic 0 – 3 Falkirk" Template:Webarchive, Annan Athletic F.C.. 9 October 2011. Retrieved 23 April 2013.</ref><ref name="Record_attendance">"Record day at Annan", Scottish Football League. 12 October 2011. Retrieved 23 April 2013.</ref>

The number of competitors has varied in relation to the number of clubs with Scottish Football League membership. The first tournament featured the 28 clubs in the First and Second Divisions which reduced to 26 until 1994 when the league was expanded and restructured into three divisions; increasing the number of eligible clubs to 30. In the 2010–11 competition the two highest ranked clubs from the Highland Football League with a Scottish Football Association licence were invited to compete, in order to bring the number of competitors to 32.<ref name="Highland_clubs_enter">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Journal_Wick_Academy">Wick Academy to play Raith Rovers in Ramsdens cup, johnogroat-journal.co.uk. John O'Groat Journal. 12 June 2012. Retrieved 23 April 2013.</ref> Before the change in 2010, several clubs received a random bye in the first round in order to even out the number of fixtures.<ref name="SFL_Format" /> The Challenge Cup continued under the auspices of the Scottish Professional Football League after the Scottish Football League merged with the Scottish Premier League in 2013. One change at this time was that the two invitational places were split, with only one place filled by a Highland League club (with a valid SFA club licence) and the other place going to the winner of a preliminary round tie between clubs from the East of Scotland League and the South of Scotland League.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> This was simplified in the 2014–15 season, with the two additional places going to the Highland League champion (Brora Rangers) and the Lowland League champion (Spartans).<ref name=brora>Scottish Challenge Cup gets new sponsorship deal, BBC Sport.</ref> From 2016 to 2017 the competition has been further expanded with the addition of Scottish Premiership Under-20 teams, additional places for the Highland and Lowland Leagues, which now have four representatives each, as well as the top two teams from Northern Ireland and Wales.<ref name="SPFL Format" /> The top two teams not to qualify for European competition from the League of Ireland were included in the competition for the 2017–18 season.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

From 2018–19, the competition was further expanded with the two highest ranked teams still remaining in England's National League to take part from the second round. The first English teams to compete were Sutton United and Boreham Wood.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The age level was raised for colts teams from under-20 to under-21 in a rule change introduced by the SPFL ahead of 2018–19 competition.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The 2018–19 final also saw Connah's Quay Nomads become the first non-Scottish side to play in the final.

The COVID-19 pandemic in Scotland had a significant impact on the competition.<ref name = covid/> The 2019–20 final, between Inverness Caledonian Thistle and Raith Rovers, was originally scheduled for 28 March 2020 but was postponed and later cancelled, with the teams sharing the title.<ref name = covid/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Continuing restrictions on fans entering stadiums meant that the competition was unviable for most SPFL clubs, and the scheduled 2020–21 edition was cancelled in October 2020. It was announced in May 2021, that only Scottish clubs would participate in 2021–22 due to the coronavirus pandemic.<ref name = covid>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In 2024, it was announced that the format following the conclusion of the 2024–25 edition of the cup would change, where non-Scottish teams would no longer participate, whilst, controversially, the Premiership B Teams would still take part.

VenuesEdit

File:McDiarmid Park.jpg
McDiarmid Park in Perth has hosted the final 10 times, more times than any other venue.

In the rounds before the final, the venue of each match is determined when the fixtures are drawn; the first club drawn in a fixture is named the home team and chooses the venue for the match, usually its own home ground.<ref name="SFL_Format" /> The venue may be switched to that of the away team or changed to a neutral venue for security reasons such as being unable to host a club with a large travelling fan base or the venue being unavailable.<ref name="Glebe_Park_Rangers">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="Broadwood_unavailable">Ramsdens Cup Draw, clydefc.co.uk. Clyde F.C. 12 June 2012. Retrieved 6 April 2013.</ref>

Final venueEdit

The final match of the tournament is played at a neutral venue, usually one that is geographically close or equidistant to where the clubs contesting the match are based. As of 2024, eleven different venues have hosted the final. Fir Park in Motherwell was the first, in 1990, and has since hosted four more finals, the last in 2017.<ref name="SFHA_Challenge_Cup" /> McDiarmid Park in Perth has been the most frequent venue, staging it ten times between 1994 and 2018. Other venues to host the final more than once are Broadwood Stadium (Cumbernauld), Excelsior Stadium (Airdrie), Almondvale Stadium (Livingston) and Falkirk Stadium (Falkirk).<ref name="BBC_Livingston_final_venue">Livingston to host Ramsdens Cup final for a consecutive season. BBC Sport. 2 November 2012. Retrieved 6 April 2013.</ref> The 2016 final was held at Hampden Park, the national stadium in Glasgow, due to the large support of eventual winners Rangers;<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> that final drew the competition's record attendance of over 48,000.<ref name=final16>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Winners and finalistsEdit

A total of 28 clubs have reached the final, of whom 17 have won the competition. The first winners were Dundee in 1990.<ref name="SFL_Final_Results" /> The most successful club is Falkirk with four wins from four final appearances.<ref name="statto_honours">Scottish Challenge Cup Honours, statto.com. Retrieved 6 April 2013.</ref> Ross County, Inverness Caledonian Thistle, Queen of the South and Hamilton Academical are the only four clubs to have reached the final five times, Ross County and Hamilton Academical winning on three occasions, Inverness Caledonian Thistle winning two and sharing one and Queen of the South winning twice and losing thrice. Four clubs have reached the final in successive seasons; Ayr United did so in the first two years of the tournament but lost both, Hamilton Academical and the original Airdrieonians defending their titles in 1992 and 1993, and 2001 and 2001, respectively, and Raith Rovers,who are the only team to make three finals in a row, sharing their first with Inverness Caledonian Thistle in April 2021, due to the COVID-19 Pandemic cancelling the match, before defeating Queen of the South in the following final in 2021–22, then losing the third against Hamilton Academical in 2023. It is possible for the winner of the tournament to be unable to defend their title; if a club is promoted from the Scottish Championship (second tier) in the same season to the Scottish Premiership (first tier), the club becomes ineligible to compete in the tournament. This has happened to Falkirk twice; in 1994 and 2005, Inverness Caledonian Thistle in 2004, Livingston in 2025, St Mirren in 2006, Rangers in 2016, and Ross County in 2019.

Most winners and finalists have been from the second tier, while only four teams have won the competition from below this division. Stenhousemuir became the first team to do so in 1995, followed by Stranraer a year later in 1996 and Alloa Athletic in 1999. The most recent club to win from below the second tier was Queen of the South, in 2013.<ref name="BBC_2013_Final">Queen of the South 1-1 Partick Thistle (6-5 pens). BBC Sport. 7 April 2013. Retrieved 7 April 2013.</ref> All winners and runners-up from below the second tier have been from the third tier.

In 2019, Connah's Quay Nomads of Wales were the first non-Scottish side to reach the final of the Scottish Challenge Cup; despite taking the lead in the 21st minute, they eventually lost 3–1 to Ross County. In 2024, another Welsh side, The New Saints also made the final of the Challenge Cup, becoming the second non foreign side to achieve this feat, however, like Connah's Quay, fell to defeat after taking an early lead, eventually losing 2–1 to Airdrieonians. They would become the last foreign side to reach the final, as the format for the following seasons would not include non-Scottish sides.

FinalsEdit

The winner of the tournament is decided by a final elimination match which lasts 90 minutes plus any additional stoppage time.<ref name="SFL_Format">Format, scottishfootballleague.com. Scottish Football League. Retrieved 4 April 2013.</ref> If the score is level and a winner has not been determined after 90 minutes of normal time, 30 minutes of extra time is played, followed by a penalty shoot-out if the score is still level.<ref name="SFL_Format" /> Eight finals have gone to extra time, with two being decided in this period of play. The further six have been decided by penalty shoot-out.<ref name="SLCC_finals_RSSSF" />

Key to list of finals
* Match went to extra time
Template:Dagger Match decided by a penalty shoot-out after extra time
Template:Double dagger Winning team won the second tier of Scottish football league system
Italics Team from below the second tier of the Scottish football league system
Template:Flagicon, Template:Flagicon, Template:Flagicon, or Template:Flagicon Team from outside the Scottish football league system

ResultsEdit

Scottish Challenge Cup finals
Season Winner<ref name="SLCC_finals_RSSSF">Scottish League Challenge Cup Finals, rsssf.com. RSSSF. 2 December 2009. Retrieved 4 April 2013.</ref><ref>PREVIOUS IRN-BRU CUP FINALS, SPFL. 2 1 March 2019. Retrieved 21 May 2019.</ref> Score<ref name="SLCC_finals_RSSSF" /><ref name="SFL_Bell's_Cup" /> Runner-up<ref name="SLCC_finals_RSSSF" /><ref name="SFL_Bell's_Cup" /> Venue<ref name="SFL_Bell's_Cup">Bell's Cup, scottishfootballleague.com. Scottish Football League. 2 November 2005. Retrieved 4 April 2013.</ref> Attendance<ref name="SFL_Bell's_Cup" />
1990–91 Dundee  †3–2 * Ayr United Fir Park 11,506
1991–92 Hamilton Academical 1–0 Ayr United Fir Park 9,663
1992–93 Hamilton Academical 3–2 Morton Love Street 7,391
1993–94 Falkirk Template:Double-dagger 3–0 St Mirren Fir Park 13,763
1994–95 Airdrieonians  †3–2 * Dundee McDiarmid Park 8,844
1995–96 Stenhousemuir  †0–0 Dundee United McDiarmid Park 7,856
1996–97 Stranraer 1–0 St Johnstone Broadwood Stadium 5,222
1997–98 Falkirk 1–0 Queen of the South Fir Park 9,735
1998–99 Competition suspended due to lack of sponsorship
1999–2000 Alloa Athletic  †4–4 Inverness Caledonian Thistle Excelsior Stadium 4,043
2000–01 Airdrieonians  †2–2 Livingston Broadwood Stadium 5,623
2001–02 Airdrieonians 2–1 Alloa Athletic Broadwood Stadium 4,548
2002–03 Queen of the South 2–0 Brechin City Broadwood Stadium 6,428
2003–04 Inverness Caledonian Thistle Template:Double dagger 2–0 Airdrie United McDiarmid Park 5,428
2004–05 Falkirk Template:Double dagger 2–1 Ross County McDiarmid Park 7,471
2005–06 St Mirren Template:Double dagger 2–1 Hamilton Academical Excelsior Stadium 9,613
2006–07 Ross County  †1–1 Clyde McDiarmid Park 4,062
2007–08 St Johnstone 3–2 Dunfermline Athletic Dens Park 6,446
2008–09 Airdrie United  †2–2 Ross County McDiarmid Park 4,091
2009–10 Dundee 3–2 Inverness Caledonian Thistle McDiarmid Park 8,031
2010–11 Ross County 2–0 Queen of the South McDiarmid Park 5,124
2011–12 Falkirk 1–0 Hamilton Academical Almondvale Stadium 5,210
2012–13 Queen of the South  †1–1 Partick Thistle Almondvale Stadium 9,452
2013–14 Raith Rovers  †1–0 * Rangers Easter Road 19,983
2014–15 Livingston 4–0 Alloa Athletic McDiarmid Park 2,869
2015–16 Rangers Template:Double-dagger 4–0 Peterhead Hampden Park 48,133<ref name=final16/>
2016–17 Dundee United 2–1 St Mirren Fir Park 8,089
2017–18 Inverness Caledonian Thistle 1–0 Dumbarton McDiarmid Park 4,602
2018–19 Ross County Template:Double-dagger 3–1 Template:Flagicon Connah's Quay Nomads Caledonian Stadium 3,057
2019–20 Final match not played; trophy shared by Inverness Caledonian Thistle and Raith Rovers<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

2020–21 Tournament cancelled<ref name = covid/>
2021–22 Raith Rovers 3–1 Queen of the South Excelsior Stadium 4,452
2022–23 Hamilton Academical 1–0 Raith Rovers Falkirk Stadium 5,566
2023–24 Airdrieonians 2–1 Template:Flagicon The New Saints Falkirk Stadium 3,191
2024–25 Livingston 5–0 Queen's Park Falkirk Stadium 4,079

Performance by clubEdit

Performance by club
Club Wins Last final won Runners-up Last final lost Total final appearances
Falkirk 4 2012 0 4
Hamilton Academical 3 2023 2 2012 5
Inverness Caledonian Thistle 3 2020* 2 2009 5
Ross County 3 2019 2 2008 5
Raith Rovers 3 2022 1 2023 4
Airdrieonians (1878) 3 2001 0 3
Queen of the South 2 2013 3 2022 5
Dundee 2 2009 1 1994 3
Airdrieonians 2 2024 1 2003 3
Livingston 2 2025 1 2000 3
St Mirren 1 2005 2 2017 3
Alloa Athletic 1 1999 2 2015 3
Dundee United 1 2017 1 1995 2
Rangers 1 2016 1 2014 2
St Johnstone 1 2007 1 1996 2
Stranraer 1 1996 0 1
Stenhousemuir 1 1995 0 1
Ayr United 0 2 1991 2
Queen's Park 0 1 2025 1
Template:Flagicon The New Saints 0 1 2024 1
Template:Flagicon Connah's Quay Nomads 0 1 2019 1
Dumbarton 0 1 2018 1
Peterhead 0 1 2016 1
Partick Thistle 0 1 2013 1
Dunfermline Athletic 0 1 2007 1
Clyde 0 1 2006 1
Brechin City 0 1 2002 1
Morton 0 1 1992 1

List of winning managersEdit

List of winning managers
Season Manager<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

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Nationality Club Notes
1990–91 Template:Sortname Scotland Dundee
1991–92 Template:Sortname Scotland Hamilton Academical
1992–93 Template:Sortname Scotland Hamilton Academical
1993–94 Template:Sortname Scotland Falkirk
1994–95 Template:Sortname Scotland Airdrieonians
1995–96 Template:Sortname Scotland Stenhousemuir First manager to win the competition with a club outside of the second tier.
1996–97 Template:Sortname Scotland Stranraer
1997–98 Template:Sortname Scotland Falkirk
1999–2000 Template:Sortname (2) Scotland Alloa Athletic First manager to win the competition more than once, with two different clubs.
2000–01 Template:Sortname Scotland Airdrieonians
2001–02 Template:Sortname Scotland Airdrieonians
2002–03 Template:Sortname Scotland Queen of the South
2003–04 Template:Sortname Scotland Template:Nowrap
2004–05 Template:Sortname Scotland Falkirk
2005–06 Template:Sortname Scotland St Mirren
2006–07 Template:Sortname Scotland Ross County
2007–08 Template:Sortname Scotland St Johnstone
2008–09 Template:Sortname Scotland Airdrie United
2009–10 Template:Sortname Scotland Dundee
2010–11 Template:Sortname Scotland Ross County
2011–12 Template:Sortname Scotland Falkirk
2012–13 Template:Sortname Scotland Queen of the South
2013–14 Template:Sortname Scotland Raith Rovers
2014–15 Template:Sortname Scotland Livingston
2015–16 Template:Sortname England Rangers First non-Scottish manager to win the competition.
2016–17 Template:Sortname Scotland Dundee United
2017–18 Template:Sortname (2) Scotland Inverness Caledonian Thistle First manager to win the cup more than once with the same club.
2018–19 Steven Ferguson
Stuart Kettlewell
Scotland Ross County First co-managers to win the cup
2019–20 Template:Sortname (3) Scotland Inverness Caledonian Thistle First manager to win the cup three times
Template:Sortname Scotland Raith Rovers
2021–22 Template:Sortname (2) Scotland Raith Rovers First manager to win the cup two consecutive seasons
2022–23 Template:Sortname Scotland Hamilton Academical
2023–24 Template:Sortname Scotland Airdrieonians Youngest manager to win the Scottish Challenge Cup, being 31 at the time of the victory.
2024–25 Template:Sortname Scotland Livingston

Sponsorship and media coverageEdit

File:Petrofac.svg
Petrofac sponsored the Scottish Challenge Cup from 2014 to 2016.

The Scottish Challenge Cup has been sponsored several times since it was introduced in 1990. The sponsor has been able to determine the name of the competition. There have been four sponsors since the competition's formation as well as several name changes within the duration of each sponsorship.<ref name="SFL_Final_Results" /> The competition relies on revenue earned from sponsorship although it has been able to run without a sponsor over two periods but had to be suspended for one season in 1998–99 as a consequence.<ref name="DAFC_preview" />

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  • 2021– : SPFL Trust (SPFL Trust Trophy)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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Selected games have been broadcast live on the Scottish Gaelic language television channel BBC Alba since 2008,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> which is run jointly by former sponsor MG Alba and the BBC.<ref name="BBC_Alba_new">BBC Alba to cover Challenge Cup, news.bbc.co.uk. BBC Sport. 19 September 2008. Retrieved 11 April 2009.</ref> Every final since the 2008 final has been broadcast live on the channel<ref name="BBC_Alba_Daily_Record">SFL's delight at joy sponsorship deal for Challenge Cup dailyrecord.co.uk. Daily Record. 31 July 2008. Retrieved 7 April 2013.</ref> and the arrangement was extended for three more years in 2012 despite the end of MG Alba's sponsorship of the competition in 2011.<ref name="BBC_Alba_extend">BBC ALBA extend Ramsdens Challenge Cup TV deal, news.bbc.co.uk. BBC Sport. 25 July 2012. Retrieved 7 April 2013.</ref> With the expansion of the competition to include teams from Northern Ireland and Wales from 2016 to 2017, additional contracts for live match coverage have been agreed with Premier Sports and S4C.<ref name="SPFL Format" />

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

Template:Reflist

External linksEdit

Template:Scottish Challenge Cup seasons {{#invoke:Navbox|navbox}} Template:Scottish Football League Template:Football in Scotland