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B. C. Roy Trophy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Junior Boys' National Football Championship
Founded1962; 64 years ago (1962)
RegionIndia
Teams36
Current championsManipur (3rd title)
Most championshipsWest Bengal
(18 titles)
BroadcasterSportsKPI (YouTube)
WebsiteJunior NFC
2025–26

The Junior Boys' National Football Championship,[1] also known as BC Roy Trophy, is an Indian football tournament held for players under-15 years of age representing the states of India. It was formerly held for the U-19 age group before being converted into an U-15 tournament from the 2023-24 edition. The participants in the annual competition are teams representing state associations of India under the All India Football Federation (AIFF). The tournament was instituted by the AIFF in 1962, with the Indian Football Association presenting the trophy in memory of former West Bengal Chief Minister Bidhan Chandra Roy.[2]

Championship structure

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The NFC structure was converted into a two tiered championship format from the 2023–24 season. The state associations are eligible to participate in the championship through the two tiers of the competition played across the country.

Junior Boys' National Football Championship
Tier Division
I Junior Boys' NFC Tier 1
II Junior Boys' NFC Tier 2

Results

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The following is the list of winners and runners-up of the championship:[2]

Tier 1

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Season Host Winner Score Runner-up
1962 Burnpur Bengal 5–0 Orissa
1963 Allahabad Delhi and Mysore (joint winners), 2–2
1964 Ajmer Rajasthan 3–1 Assam
1965 Cuttack Delhi 1–0 Andhra Pradesh
1966 Bengaluru Andhra Pradesh 2–0 Mysore
1967 Kozhikode Bengal 1–1, 2–0 Maharashtra
1968 Jabalpur 2–0 Andhra Pradesh
1969 Cuttack Orissa and Kerala (joint winners), 0–0
1970 Jorhat Bengal 2–0 Assam
1972 Kollam Kerala 4–0 Karnataka
1973 Krishnanagar 2–0 Andhra Pradesh
1974 Coimbatore Bengal 1–0 Kerala
1975 Imphal 1–0
1976 Srinagar Andhra Pradesh 1–0 Bengal
1977 Cuttack Bengal 1–0 Orissa
1978 Agartala 2–1 Andhra Pradesh
1979 Cuttack Karnataka 1–0
1980 Ernakulam Goa 2–0 Kerala
1981 Agartala Bengal and Railways (joint winners), 0–0
1982 Pondicherry Bengal 1–0 Kerala
1983 Goa Goa 2–0 Punjab
1984 Jorhat Bengal (4–3 p) Goa
1985 Agartala 3–1 Assam
1986 Coimbatore Punjab (5–4 p) Kerala
1987 Dibrugarh Bengal 2–0 Railways
1988 Palghat Railways 1–0 Bengal
1989 Shillong Railways and Meghalaya (joint winners), 0–0
1990 Sambalpur Bengal 2–1 Goa
1992 Aizawl Karnataka 0–0 (5–3 p) Manipur
1993 Jammu Punjab (4–2 p) Andhra Pradesh
1994–95 Shillong Bengal 2–0 Punjab
1995–96 Midnapore 4–0 Mizoram
1996–97 Mandi Bihar 0–0 (5–4 p) Assam
1998–99 Imphal Manipur 4–1 Sikkim
1999–00 Bengaluru 1–0 (a.s.d.e.t.) Bengal
2000–01 Thiruvananthapuram Bihar 3–1 Manipur
2001–02 Jaipur/Jodhpur Punjab 1–0 Goa
2002–03 Thrissur Karnataka 1–0 (a.s.d.e.t.)
2003–04 Giridih Bengal 2–0 Karnataka
2004–05 Aizawl Jharkhand 2–1 Manipur
2005–06 Varanasi 1–1 (4–2 p) Goa
2006–07 Bhilai 1–1, 1–0 (a.e.t.) West Bengal
2007–08 Gurgaon/Faridabad Haryana 1–0
2008–09 Bhilai Jharkhand 2–1 Manipur
2009–10 Kolkata Chandigarh 1–1 (6–5 p) West Bengal
2010–11 1–1 (6–5 p)
2015–16 Hoshiarpur Punjab 1–1 (4–2 p) Mizoram
2016–17 Bhilai 3–0
2017–18 Hoshiarpur Uttar Pradesh 1–0 West Bengal
2018–19 Cuttack Mizoram 1–0 Punjab
2019–20 Shillong 1–1 (5–4 p)
2020–23 Not held
2023–24 Bhubaneswar Uttar Pradesh 2–1 West Bengal
2024–25 Narayanpur West Bengal 2–0 Odisha
2025–26 Amritsar Manipur 3–0 West Bengal

Tier 2

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Season Host Winner Score Runner-up
2023–24 Jabalpur Delhi 3–2 Chandigarh
2024–25 Nagaon Telangana 1–1 (4–2 p) Manipur
2025–26 Amritsar Uttar Pradesh 3–0 Assam

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Hero Junior NFC". www.the-aiff.com. Retrieved 5 December 2021.
  2. ^ a b "List of Winners/Runners-Up of the Dr. B.C. Roy Trophy (Under-19)". Archived from the original on 23 October 2020. Retrieved 8 January 2022.
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