Myanmar National League#Top scorers

{{Outdated|date=June 2025|reason=lead is anticipating events in 2014}}{{Infobox football league

| logo = Myanmar National League logo.png

| pixels = 200

| country = Myanmar

| organiser = MFF

| confed = AFC

| founded = {{start date and age|16 May 2009}}

| first = 2009

| teams = 12

| relegation = MNL-2

| levels = 1

| domest_cup = MNL League Cup
General Aung San Shield

| confed_cup = AFC Challenge League
ASEAN Club Championship

| champions = Shan United (6th title)

| most successful club = Shan United
(6 titles)

| most_appearances = David Htan (336)

| top_goalscorer = Cézar Augusto (118)

| tv = MRTV-4
Channel 7
Readers Channel
Pyone Play YouTube

| season = 2024-25

| website = {{URL|www.themnl.com}}

| current = 2025–26 Myanmar National League

}}

The Myanmar National League (abbreviated MNL) is the premier national professional football league of Myanmar. In 2009, the league replaced the Myanmar Premier League, which consisted only of 14 Yangon-based football clubs, with eight professional clubs representing different regions across the nation.{{cite journal|url=http://www.mmtimes.com/no461/sport01.htm |title=New era for football |author=Han Oo Khin |date=March 9–15, 2009 |journal=The Myanmar Times |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120215122240/http://www.mmtimes.com/no461/sport01.htm |archive-date=February 15, 2012 }} On 16 May 2009, the league launched its inaugural two-month tournament, the Myanmar National League Cup 2009, in preparation for the first full season in 2010.{{cite journal|url=http://mmtimes.com/no464/sport02.htm |title=MFF announces May domestic cup competition |author=Han Oo Khin |date=March 30 – April 5, 2009 |journal=The Myanmar Times |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120214145357/http://mmtimes.com/no464/sport02.htm |archive-date=February 14, 2012 }} Despite its national ambitions, the league held the MNL Cup 2009 matches in the country's two main stadiums in Yangon due to the lack of adequate facilities elsewhere. On 5 July 2009, Yadanabon FC defeated Yangon United FC in the MNL Cup final to become the first-ever MNL Champions.

The league added three clubs for the 2010 season,{{cite web|title=MNL season opens in style|url=http://www.mmtimes.com/2010/sport/515/s51501.html|publisher=Myanmar Times|access-date=9 June 2011|year=2010|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101005110331/http://mmtimes.com/2010/sport/515/s51501.html|archive-date=5 October 2010}} and one more club joined for the 2011 season, bringing the total to twelve clubs.{{cite web|title=MNL expands ahead of 2011 season launch|url=http://www.mmtimes.com/2010/sport/555/sport55501.html|publisher=Myanmar Times|access-date=9 June 2011|date=January 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120607161025/http://www.mmtimes.com/2010/sport/555/sport55501.html|archive-date=7 June 2012|url-status=dead}}

Two more clubs representing the Chin and Shan States participated in the MNL season starting in January 2012.{{cite web|title=၂၀၁၂ ပြိုင်ပွဲတွင် ချင်းကိုယ်စားပြု အသင်းတစ်သင်း ပါဝင် ယှဉ်ပြိုင်မည်|url=http://www.soccermyanmar.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=12674:2011-10-02-17-46-03&catid=54:myanmar-national-league&Itemid=104|publisher=Soccer Myanmar|access-date=2 October 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111004023533/http://www.soccermyanmar.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=12674:2011-10-02-17-46-03&catid=54:myanmar-national-league&Itemid=104|archive-date=4 October 2011|url-status=dead}}

Promotion and relegation will be added by the 2014 season as the MNL looks to expand once again.{{cite web|title=MNL TO INTRODUCE PROMOTION-RELEGATION SYSTEM BY 2014|date=7 May 2011|url=http://www.aseanfootball.org/?p=7347|publisher=ASEAN Football|access-date=9 January 2012|archive-date=12 January 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120112043200/http://www.aseanfootball.org/?p=7347|url-status=live}}

History

= Origins =

In the past, professional football competition in Myanmar has only existed in a limited form. All premier leagues up to this point have been made up of Yangon-based football clubs, most of which were affiliated with government ministries. It was only after 1996, when the Premier League ({{langx|my|ပထမတန်း}}) was relaunched as the Myanmar Premier League that non-government clubs were invited to join the league. Still, the league was based only in Yangon, and never caught the imagination of Burmese football fans, who follow European football with near religious fervor.

The Myanmar Football Federation sought approval from the government to launch a nationwide league in February 2008, and finally received permission to set up private clubs in December 2008. Each club was permitted to sign at most five foreign players and one foreign coach. The government granted each club tax exemptions for an initial three-year period, while each club owner must provide a minimum initial investment of Ks.200 million (approximately US$200,000). It was expected that the annual operating cost for each club would be about Ks.500 million (US$500,000). The investment apparently covers costs such as salaries, transportation, and equipment, but does not include the club stadiums, which are all nationalized.{{cite news | url=http://www.irrawaddy.org/article.php?art_id=15502 | title=Burmese Soccer League an Election Ploy? | author=Min Lwin | date=2009-04-20 | publisher=The Irrawaddy | access-date=2009-04-26 | archive-date=2012-03-14 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120314141919/http://www.irrawaddy.org/article.php?art_id=15502 | url-status=live }}

= Myanmar Derby =

{{Tone|date=June 2025}}

The Myanmar Derby, or the Classic Match of Myanmar, is the matchup between Yangon United and Yadanarbon. It is the matchup that presents Myanmar football in the modern era. The name was given to the encounter of two teams due to the hype and massive atmosphere around the match. The first encounter between them happened in the 2009 MNL Cup season. On 18 June 2009, Yadanarbon and Yangon United met at Thuwunna Stadium, Yangon. Before the match, Yadanarbon was the leader in the table after 3 matches of the season, while Yangon followed in second with one less point. Yadanarbon made the lead by 2–1 in the first forty-five minutes but Yangon bounced back to draw by the 2–2 result at the end. The match was full of the exciting and dramatic moments. As a result, it was considered one of the most classic matches in Myanmar League history. The Yangon United versus Yadanarbon matchup was dubbed as "Myanmar Derby" ever since then.

= Yangon United dominance =

The Yangon United Dominance refers to the 2011 to 2013 season, in which Yangon United won the Myanmar National League in three consecutive seasons, a first in the league's history.

= The first undefeated team and consecutive titles =

In 2019 season, Shan United, under U Aung Naing, head coach of Myanmar, had become the first club in the league's history that completed the season with an undefeated record. Shan United finished at the top of the final standing with 12 wins and 10 draws. They have had another undefeated season, this time with U Han Win Aung. They have won 15 matches and drew three times. Between these two seasons, they had secured the 2020 Myanmar National League as well.

= Shan United dominance =

The Shan United dominance refers to the 2019, 2020, and 2022 seasons, in which Shan United won the Myanmar National League in three consecutive seasons as the second club in the league.

Champions

(For Burmese Champions before 2009, see Myanmar Premier League)

class="wikitable" style="text-align:left"

! #

!Year

!Winners

!Runners-up

1

|2009

|Yadanarbon

|Delta United (now Ayeyawady United)

2

|2010

|Yadanarbon

|Zeyar Shwe Myay

3

|2011

|Yangon United

|Ayeyawady United

4

|2012

|Yangon United

| Kanbawza FC(now Shan United)

5

|2013

|Yangon United

|Nay Pyi Taw

6

|2014

|Yadanarbon

|Yangon United

7

|2015

|Yangon United

|Yadanarbon

8

|2016

|Yadanarbon

|Yangon United

9

|2017

|Shan United

|Yangon United

10

|2018

|Yangon United

| Shan United

11

|2019

|Shan United

|Ayeyawady United

12

|2020

|Shan United{{cite web|title=2020 MNL Title won|url=https://themnl.com/standings/|publisher=themnl.com|access-date=1 October 2020|year=2020|archive-date=7 October 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201007181009/https://themnl.com/standings/|url-status=live}}

|Hanthawaddy United

13

|2021

|colspan=2|Season cancelled due to 21 coup d'état

14

|2022

|Shan United

|Yangon United

15

|2023

|Shan United

|Yangon United

16

|2024-25

|Shan United

|Yangon United

= Wins by club =

class="wikitable"

! Club !! Champions !! Runners-up !! Winning Seasons !! Runners-up Seasons

Shan United

|{{center| 6 }}

|{{center| 2 }}

| 2017, 2019, 2020, 2022, 2023, 2024-25

| 2012, 2018

Yangon United

|{{center| 5 }}

|{{center| 5 }}

| 2011, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2018

| 2014, 2016, 2017, 2022, 2023

Yadanarbon

|{{center| 4 }}

|{{center| 1 }}

| [[2009-10 Myanmar National League|2009-10

]], 2010, 2014, 2016

| 2015

Ayeyawady United

|{{center| 0 }}

|{{center| 3 }}

|

| 2009, 2011, 2019

Nay Pyi Taw

|{{center| 0 }}

|{{center| 1 }}

|

| 2013

Zeyar Shwe Myay

|{{center| 0 }}

|{{center| 1 }}

|

| 2010

Hantharwady United

|{{center| 0 }}

|{{center| 1 }}

|

|2020

==The Invincibles==

Undefeated champions:

Clubs

= Name changes =

Personnel and sponsoring

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align: left;"

! Team

! Head coach

! Captain

! Kit manufacturer

! Shirt sponsor

Ayeyawady United

| {{flagicon|MYA}} U Chit Naing

| {{flagicon|MYA}}

| {{flagicon|THA}} Pro Sport

| {{flagicon|MYA}} AYA Bank

Dagon Port

| {{flagicon|MYA}} U Htet Aung

| {{flagicon|MYA}} Naung Naung Soe

| {{flagicon|MYA}} APE

| {{flagicon|MYA}} MK Fuel

Dagon Star

| {{flagicon|MYA}} U Min Tun Lin

| {{flagicon|MYA}} Maung Maung Win

| {{flagicon|MYA}} M21

|

Hanthawaddy United

| {{flagicon|MYA}} U Myo Min Tun

| {{flagicon|MYA}} Lar Din Maw Yar

| {{flagicon|MYA}} SCM

| {{flagicon|MYA}} Grand Royal

I.S.P.E

| {{flagicon|MYA}} U Kyaw Lwin

| {{flagicon|MYA}} Khaing Ye Win

| {{flagicon|MYA}} SCM

|

Mahar United

| {{flagicon|MYA}} U Zaw Linn Tun

| {{flagicon|MYA}} Kyaw Swar Min

| {{flagicon|MYA}} M21

| {{flagicon|MYA}} Arku's

Chinland

|

|

|

|

Yarmanya United

|

|

|

|

Shan United

| {{flagicon|JP}} Hiroki Ono

| {{flagicon|MYA}} Hein Thiha Zaw

| {{flagicon|MYA}} Foxx Sports

| {{flagicon|PHI}} Sobotop

Thitsar Arman

| {{flagicon|MYA}} U Paw Tun Kyaw

| {{flagicon|MYA}} Saw Htoo Phe Moo

| {{flagicon|MYA}} Rhino Sports

| {{flagicon|MYA}} Sport Bar

Yadanarbon

| {{flagicon|MYA}} U

| {{flagicon|MYA}}

| {{flagicon|MYA}} M21

| {{flagicon|MYA}} Alpine

Yangon United

| {{flagicon|MYA}} U Kyaw Dun

| {{flagicon|MYA}} David Htan

| {{flagicon|MYA}} Glory Sport

| {{flagicon|MYA}} ABD Bank

Records

{{See also|Football records in Myanmar}}

= All-time top scorers =

{{Updated|31 May 2024}}

class="wikitable"

|+ Myanmar League

Rank

! Player

! Period

! Goals

! Apps

style=""

| 1

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|Brazil}} Cezar Augusto

| 2012–2015, 2017

| 118

| 111

2

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Soe Min Oo

| 2009–2019

| 109

| 267

3

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|Liberia}} Keith Nah

| 2014, 2015–2016, 2019–2021

| 93

| 127

4

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Kyaw Ko Ko

| 2010–2019

| 91

| 182

5

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|Guinea}} Sylla Sekou

| 2014–2019, 2023

| 85

| 140

6

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Win Naing Soe

| 2015–2021

| 77

| 142

7

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|CIV}} Donald Bissa

| 2016, 2017, 2019–2020

| 64

| 74

8

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|Nigeria}} Charles Obi

| 2010–2013

| 58

| 63

9

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Yan Kyaw Htwe

| 2013–

| 51

| 127

10

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|Nigeria}} Christopher Chizoba

| 2016–2018

| 42

| 72

11

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Maung Maung Lwin

| 2014–2021

| 41

| 143

12

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|Serbia}} Saša Ranković

| 2012–2013,2014

| 40

| 70

13

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Aung Kyaw Naing

| 2013–2017,2018–2021

| 36

| 103

14

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Thet Naing

| 2009–

| 35

| 220

15

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|Nigeria}} Emmanuel Uzochukwu

| 2017–2021

| 35

| 61

16

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|Brazil}} Emerson

| 2014–2015, 2017, 2020–2021

| 34

| 78

17

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Aung Thu

| 2013–2020

| 34

| 131

18

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MKD}} Riste Naumov

| 2013, 2015

| 33

| 44

19

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Kyaw Zayar Win

| 2010–2013, 2014–2016

| 32

| 146

20

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Dway Ko Ko Chit

| 2014–

| 30

| 102

Figures for active players (in bold).

=All-time appearances=

{{Updated|16 August 2024}}

class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
Rank

! Player

! Position

! Apps

! Goals

style=""

| 1

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} David Htan

| 2009–

| 336

| 11

2

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Zaw Min Tun

| 2009–2018

| 271

| 8

3

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Soe Min Oo

| 2009–2018

| 267

| 109

4

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Thiha Sithu

| 2009–2020

| 254

| 0

5

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Aung Zaw

| 2009–2021

| 252

| 0

6

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Yan Aung Kyaw

| 2009–2020

| 246

| 3

7

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Nanda Kyaw

| 2013–

| 231

| 22

8

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Lar Din Maw Yar

| 2011–

| 221

| 3

9

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Thet Naing

| 2009–

| 220

| 35

10

| style="text-align: left;" | {{flagicon|MYA}} Thein Than Win

| 2009–

| 211

| 8

Figures for active players (in bold) .

=Player statistics=

=All-time multiple hat-tricks=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"

!Rank

!Country

!Player

!Hat-tricks

1{{flagicon|MYA}}Win Naing Soe8
2{{flagicon|BRA}}Cezar Augusto6
3{{flagicon|CMR}}Patrick Edubat3
rowspan=12|4{{flagicon|GHA}}Patrick Asarerowspan=12|2
{{flagicon|CMR}}Donald Bissa
{{flagicon|NGA}}Christopher Chiboza
{{flagicon|COL}}Edison Fonseca
{{flagicon|MYA}}Kyaw Ko Ko
{{flagicon|MYA}}Yan Kyaw Htwe
{{flagicon|UGA}}Joseph Mpande
{{flagicon|MYA}}Aung Myat Thu
{{flagicon|MYA}}Win Naing Tun
{{flagicon|NGA}}Emmanuel Ozochukwu
{{flagicon|GUI}}Sekou Sylla
{{flagicon|MYA}}Aung Thu
17

|colspan=2|Several players

|1

=All-time clean sheets=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"

!Rank

!Country

!Player

!Clean sheets

1{{flagicon|MYA}}Kyaw Zin Phyo45
2{{flagicon|MYA}}Thiha Sithu38
3{{flagicon|MYA}}San Set Naing30
4{{flagicon|MYA}}Van Lal Hruaia28
5{{flagicon|MYA}}Pyae Phyo Aung27
6{{flagicon|MYA}}Ko Ko Naing26

=All-time Assists=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"

!Rank

!Country

!Player

!Assists

1{{flagicon|MYA}}David Htan+23
2{{flagicon|MYA}}Nanda Kyaw+19
3{{flagicon|MYA}}Myat Kaung Khant+18
4{{flagicon|MYA}}Zaw Win Thein+16

Prize money

  • Champion: Ks.100,000,000/-More than
  • Runner-up: Ks.75,000,000/-More than
  • Third Place: Ks.50,000,000/-More than

Awards

=Top scorers=

border="1" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="text-align:left; border-collapse:collapse;"

! style="width:60px;"| Year

! style="width:50px;"| Nation

! style="width:200px;"| Player

! style="width:200px;"| Club

! style="width:50px;"| Goal

2024-25

| {{flagicon|MYA}}

| Yan Kyaw Htwe

| Yangon United

| 13

2023

| {{flagicon|CIV}}

| Bello

| Shan United

| 13

2022

| {{flagicon|MYA}}

| Yan Kyaw Htwe

| Ayeyawady United

|14

2020

| {{flagicon|NGR}}

| Raphael Success{{cite web|title=2020 Top Scorer|url=https://themnl.com/match-center/?WHurl=%2Fcompetition%2F333%2Fleaders%3F|publisher=themnl.com|access-date=1 October 2020|year=2020|archive-date=31 October 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201031032048/https://themnl.com/match-center/?WHurl=%2Fcompetition%2F333%2Fleaders%3F|url-status=live}}

| |Ayeyawady United

|16

2019

| {{flagicon|MYA}}

| Win Naing Soe

| Yadanarbon

|18

2018

| {{flagicon|Uganda}}

| Joseph Mpande

| Hanthawaddy United

| 18

rowspan="2"|2017

| {{flagicon|Liberia}}

| Keith Martu Nah

| |Ayeyawady United

|rowspan=2| 15

{{flagicon|NGR}}

| Christopher Chizoba

| Shan United

rowspan="3"|2016

| {{flagicon|MYA}}

| Win Naing Soe

|rowspan="2"|Yadanarbon

|rowspan=3|16

{{flagicon|Liberia}}

| Keith Martu Nah

{{flagicon|NGR}}

| Christopher Chizoba

|rowspan="1"|Ayeyawady United

rowspan="1"|2015

| {{flagicon|BRA}}

| César Augusto

| Yangon United

|bgcolor=#CEECF2|28

rowspan="1"|2014

| {{flagicon|BRA}}

| César Augusto

| Yangon United

|rowspan=1|26

rowspan="1"|2013

| {{flagicon|BRA}}

| César Augusto

| Yangon United

|rowspan=1|20

rowspan="1"|2012

| {{flagicon|Serbia}}

| Saša Ranković

| Zeya Shwe Myay

|rowspan=1|20

rowspan="1"|2011

| {{flagicon|Nigeria}}

| Charles Obi

| Yangon United

|rowspan=1|18

rowspan="1"|2010

| {{flagicon|Cameroon}}

| Jean-Roger Lappé-Lappé

| Hantharwady United

|rowspan=1|20

rowspan="1"|2009-10

| {{flagicon|MYA}}

| Soe Min Oo

| Shan United

|rowspan=1|12

rowspan="1"|2009

| {{flagicon|MYA}}

| Yan Paing

| Yadanarbon

|bgcolor=#F2CECE|8

= Coach of the Year =

border="1" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="text-align:left; border-collapse:collapse;"
style="background:#efefef;"

!Season

!Coach

!Club

2024-25

|{{flagicon|JPN}} Ono Hiriki

| Shan United

2023

|{{flagicon|MYA}} Han Win Aung

| Shan United

2022

|{{flagicon|MYA}} Han Win Aung

| Shan United

2020

|{{flagicon|MYA}} Aung Naing

|Shan United

2019

| {{flagicon|MYA}}Aung Naing

|Shan United

2018

| {{flagicon|MYA}}Myo Min Tun

|Yangon United

2017

| {{flagicon|MYA}}Soe Myat Min

|Shan United

2016

| {{flagicon|BEL}}René Desaeyere

|Yadanarbon

2015

|{{flagicon|Serbia}} Saric

|Yangon United

2014

|{{flagicon|MYA}} U Khin Maung Tint

|Yadanarbon

2013

|{{flagicon|AUS}} Eric Williams

|Yangon United

2012

|{{flagicon|BUL}} Ivan Venkov Kolev

|Yangon United

2011

|{{flagicon|AUS}} Eric Williams

|Yangon United

2010

|{{flagicon|France}} Yoan Girard

|Yadanarbon

2009

|{{flagicon|France}} Yoan Girard

|Yadanarbon

= Player of the Year =

border="1" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="text-align:left; border-collapse:collapse;"
style="background:#efefef;"

!Season

!Player

!Club

2024-25{{flagicon|MYA}}Ye Yint Aung

|Shan United

2023{{flagicon|GHA}} Mark Sekyi

|Shan United

2022{{flagicon|MYA}}Nanda kyaw

|Shan United

2020

|{{flagicon|MYA}}David Htan

|Shan United

2019

|{{flagicon|MYA}}David Htan

|Shan United

2018

|{{flagicon|MYA}}Maung Maung Lwin

|Yangon United

2017

|{{flagicon|MYA}}Aung Thu

|Yadanarbon

2016

|{{flagicon|MYA}}Aung Thu

|Yadanarbon

2015

|{{flagicon|MYA}}Aung Thu

|Yadanarbon

2014

|{{flagicon|MYA}} Thiha Sithu

|Yadanarbon

2013

|{{flagicon|BRA}} César Augusto

|Yangon United

2012

|{{flagicon|MYA}} Kyi Lin

|Yangon United

2011

|{{flagicon|MYA}} Kyaw Ko Ko

|Zayar Shwe Myay

2010

|{{flagicon|CIV}} Assalé Molo Hilaire

Yadanarbon
2009

|{{flagicon|MYA}} Yan Paing

|Yadanarbon

=Titles won=

class="wikitable"
style="width:30px;"| No

! style="width:200px;"| Player

! style="width:200px;"| Club

! style="width:30px;"| Times

1

| David Htan

| | Yangon United, Shan United

| 8

2

| Hein Thiha Zaw

| Shan United

| 6

rowspan="5"|3

| Yan Aung Kyaw

| Yangon United

|rowspan="5"| 5

Kyi Lin

| Yangon United

Pyae Phyo Aung

| Yangon United

Nanda Kyaw

| Shan United

Sithu Aung

| Yangon United, Yadanarbon, Shan United

rowspan="2"| 4

| Khin Maung Lwin

| Yangon United

|rowspan="2"| 4

Ye Min Thu

| Shan United

rowspan="5"| 5

| Thiha Sithu

| Yadanarbon, Shan United

|rowspan="5"| 3

Yan Aung Win

| Yangon United, Yadanarbon

Myo Min Tun

| Yangon United

Hein Phyo Win

| Shan United

Kyaw Zin Phyo

| Shan United

Managers

= Winning managers =

class="wikitable"
Manager

!Club(s)

!Wins

!Winning years

{{flagicon|FRA}} Yoan

|style="text-align:center"|Yadanarbon

|rowspan="4" style="text-align:center;"|2

|2009, 2010

{{flagicon|AUS}} Eric Williams

|style="text-align:center"|Yangon United

|2011, 2013

{{flagicon|MYA}} Aung Naing

|style="text-align:center"|Shan United

|2019, 2020,

{{flagicon|MYA}} Han Win Aung

|style="text-align:center"|Shan United

|2022, 2023

{{flagicon|Bulgaria}} Ivan Kolev

|style="text-align:center"|Yangon United

|rowspan="6" style="text-align:center;"|1

|2012

{{flagicon|Serbia}} Sarić /
{{flagicon|MYA}} Tin Maung Tun

|style="text-align:center"|Yangon United

|2015

{{flagicon|BEL}} René Desaeyere

|style="text-align:center"|Yadanarbon

|2016

{{flagicon|MYA}} Soe Myat Min

|style="text-align:center"|Shan United

|2017

{{flagicon|MYA}} Myo Min Tun

|style="text-align:center"|Yangon United

|2018

{{flagicon|JPN}} Hiroki Ono

|style="text-align:center"|Shan United

|2024-25

Competition format and sponsorship

= Competition =

There are 12 clubs in the Myanmar League. During the course of a season, which lasts from January to October, each club plays the others twice, once at their home stadium and once at that of their opponents, for a total of 22 games. Teams receive three points for a win and one point for a draw. No points are awarded for a loss. Teams are ranked by total points, then head-to-head, then goal difference, and then goals scored. At the end of each season, the club with the most points is crowned champion. If points are equal, the head-to-head, the goal difference and then goals scored determine the winner. If still equal, teams are deemed to occupy the same position. If there is a tie for the championship, for relegation, or for qualification to other competitions, a play-off match at a neutral venue decides rank. The two lowest placed teams are relegated into the MNL-2 and the top two teams from the MNL-2 are promoted in their place.

== Qualification for Asian competitions ==

{{See also|Myanmar clubs in the Asian Club Championship|Myanmar clubs in the AFC Champions League|Myanmar clubs in the AFC Cup}}

In the past the champions will play in AFC Champions League playoffs and AFC Cup for the champions of General Aung San Shield.

= Sponsorship =

The Myanmar League has been sponsored since 2009 until 2010 and has been sponsored again since 2015. The sponsor has been able to determine the league's sponsorship name. The list below details who the sponsors have been and what they called the competition:

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;margin-left:1em;float:center"

!Period

!Sponsor

!Name

2009–2010Grand RoyalGrand Royal Myanmar National League
2010–2014MyanmarMyanmar National League
2015–2016OoredooOoredoo Myanmar National League
2017Max CementMax Cement Myanmar National League
2018–2022MPTMPT Myanmar National League
2023–2024No sponsorMyanmar National League Youtube Channel
2024–2025--

Since 2013, 100PLUS has been the sponsor of Myanmar Football Federation and MNL. The sponsorship is extended to 2020 to support major football events in the country, the various football teams within the national setup, football tournaments for youth development and the local professional competitions.{{Cite web|url=https://www.mmbiztoday.com/articles/100plus-renews-hydration-partnership-mff-and-mnl-till-2020|title=100PLUS Renews Hydration Partnership with MFF and MNL till 2020|website=Myanmar Business Today|language=en|access-date=2019-02-06|archive-date=2019-02-07|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190207015124/https://www.mmbiztoday.com/articles/100plus-renews-hydration-partnership-mff-and-mnl-till-2020|url-status=dead}}

Match balls

  • 2009–2018: Nike.
  • 2019–2020: Molten
  • 2021–2023: Warrix
  • 2023-present: Dong Luc.

Youth League

Like the reserve league, the youth league is open to all the youth teams of all professional clubs in Myanmar.

Other tournaments

;Domestic tournaments

  • As a Domestic Cup

MNL Cup (2009,2013,2024-present)

MFF Cup (2010-2014)

General Aung San Shield (2015–2019)

  • As a Super Cup

MFF Charity Cup (as MFF Opening Cup 2012–2015), (2016–present)

;International tournaments

AFC club ranking

{{updated|15. 3. 2023.}}{{cite web|title=AFC Football / Soccer Clubs Ranking|url=http://globalfootballranks.com/en/Continent-Teams-Ranking/3|access-date=2017-12-20|archive-date=2019-04-02|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190402194419/http://globalfootballranks.com/en/Continent-Teams-Ranking/3|url-status=live}}

class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
style="background:blue;color:white;"| Current Rankstyle="background:blue;color:white;"| Pointsstyle="background:blue;color:white;"| Team
70/14515.581Yangon United
96/1458.914Shan United
124/1455.247Yadanarbon

Broadcasters

TV broadcasters: Sky Net, Channel 9 Myanmar, MNTV Myanmar, Sky Net Sports channels numbered 1 to 6.

Online streaming: MNL YouTube Channel, MNL-2 YouTube Channel, Genius Sports, Eleven Sports, MyCujoo, AI Soccer, Be Soccer, Sky Net DTH YouTube Channel

References

{{Reflist}}