Indian Super League Golden Boot

The Indian Super League Golden Boot is an annual association football award presented to the leading goalscorer in the Indian Super League.

Indian Super League Golden Boot
Coro won the most Golden Boot awards with two.
Awarded forThe leading goalscorer in a given Indian Super League season
CountryIndia
Presented byIndian Super League
First awarded2014
Currently held byDimitrios Diamantakos (1st title)
Most awardsCoro (2)

For sponsorship purposes, it was known as the Alto K10 Golden Boot from 2014 to 2015,[1] the Swift Golden Boot from 2016 to 2019 and the Maruti Suzuki Golden Boot in 2020.

The Indian Super League was founded in 2013, eight teams competed in the 2014 inaugural season. It became the joint top-tier of Indian football league system by 2017–18 season and is the top-tier since 2022–23 season. Elano of Chennaiyin won the inaugural award in 2014.[2] Coro won the Golden Boot award twice with Goa, more than any other player.

Bartholomew Ogbeche, Roy Krishna and Nerijus Valskis were the top scorers in the 2019–20 season with 15 goals each. In the assist count tiebreaker, both Krishna and Valskis were tied on six assists. Valskis was awarded the Golden Boot for a better goals-to-minutes ratio.[3] Igor Angulo and Roy Krishna were the top scorers in the 2020–21 season with 14 goals each. Angulo won the award for a better goals-to-minutes ratio.[4] Diego Maurício, Cleiton Silva and Dimitri Petratos were the top scorers in the 2022–23 season with 12 goals each. Maurício won the award for a better goals-to-minutes ratio.[5]

Winners edit

 
Elano won the inaugural Indian Super League Golden Boot in 2014.
Key
Player (X) Name of the player and number of times they had won the award at that point (if more than one)
Matches The number of Indian Super League matches played by the winner that season[A]
Rate The winner's goals-to-matches ratio that season
Denotes the club were Indian Super League champions or ISL Cup winners in the same season
# Indian Super League record
Indian Super League Golden Boot Winners
Season Player Nationality Club Goals Matches Rate Assists
2014 Elano   Brazil Chennaiyin 8 11 0.73 1
2015 Stiven Mendoza   Colombia Chennaiyin 13 16 0.81 3
2016 Marcelinho   Brazil Odisha 10 15 0.67 5
2017–18 Coro   Spain Goa 18# 20 0.9 5
2018–19 Coro (2)   Spain Goa 16 20 0.8 7
2019–20 Nerijus Valskis   Lithuania Chennaiyin 15 20 0.75 6
2020–21 Igor Angulo   Spain Goa 14 21 0.67 0
2021–22 Bartholomew Ogbeche   Nigeria Hyderabad 18# 20 0.9 1
2022–23 Diego Maurício   Brazil Odisha 12 21 0.57 4
2023–24 Dimitrios Diamantakos   Greece Kerala Blasters 13 17 0.76 3

Awards won by nationality edit

Country Players Total
  Brazil 3 3
  Spain 2 3
  Colombia 1 1
  Lithuania 1 1
  Nigeria 1 1
  Greece 1 1

Awards won by club edit

Club Total
Chennaiyin 3
Goa 3
Odisha 2
Hyderabad 1
Kerala Blasters 1

Joint top scorers edit

Season Player Nationality Club Goals Matches Rate
2019–20 Bartholomew Ogbeche   Nigeria Kerala Blasters 15 16 0.94
Roy Krishna   Fiji ATK 15 21 0.71
2020–21 Roy Krishna   Fiji ATK Mohun Bagan 14 23 0.61
2022–23 Cleiton Silva   Brazil East Bengal 12 20 0.6
Dimitri Petratos   Australia Mohun Bagan SG 12 23 0.52
2023–24 Roy Krishna   Fiji Odisha 13 25 0.52

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Closing Ceremony of Hero Indian Super League to celebrate Indian Football in style". sports keeda.com. 20 December 2014. Archived from the original on 23 November 2022. Retrieved 23 November 2022.
  2. ^ Aprameya (20 December 2014). "ISL 2014: Full list of award winners". oneindia.com. OneIndia. Archived from the original on 27 July 2015. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  3. ^ "ISL final: Valskis wins Golden Boot, Gurpreet takes Golden Glove". Sportstar. The Hindu. 14 March 2020. Archived from the original on 16 March 2020. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  4. ^ "ISL 2021: Igor Angulo wins Golden Boot". Sportstar. The Hindu. 13 March 2021. Archived from the original on 14 April 2021.
  5. ^ "ISL 2022-23: Odisha FC's Diego Mauricio wins golden boot". Sportstar. The Hindu. 18 March 2022. Archived from the original on 25 March 2023.
  1. ^ This does not necessarily match the total number of matches in a season.

External links edit