2010–11 SAFA Second Division
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2010–11 SAFA Second Division
The 2010–11 SAFA Second Division season, also known as Vodacom League due to a sponsoring deal, took place in South Africa between the months of September and May. The league is the third tier of South African football, and is divided geographically into 5 divisions in the Coastal Stream and 4 divisions in the Inland Stream. Coastal Stream Eastern Cape Province Leaving for 2011-12: Young Stars (relegated), Royals (relegated). Joining for 2011-12: Two promoted teams from SAB Regional League. Free State Province Leaving for 2011-12: Mangaung City (relegated), Harrismith United (relegated). Joining for 2011-12: Two promoted teams from SAB Regional League. KwaZulu-Natal Province Leaving for 2011-12: Abaqulusi (relegated), Bright Stars (relegated). Joining for 2011-12: Two promoted teams from SAB Regional League. Northern Cape Province Leaving for 2011-12: Kakamas Cosmos (relegated), Amalawus (relegated). Joining for 2011-12: Two promoted teams from SAB Reg ...
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SAFA Second Division
The SAFA Second Division (known as the ABC Motsepe League for sponsorship reasons, and previously the Vodacom League between 1998 and 2012, was founded in 1998 as the overall third tier of South African association football, football. The competition is regulated by South African Football Association, SAFA, and until 2012 had been sponsored by mobile telecommunications company Vodacom. It features 144 teams in total, divided into 9 divisions, borders decided by the 9 geo-political provinces of South Africa: Eastern Cape, Free State (South African province), Free State, KwaZulu Natal, Northern Cape, Western Cape, Gauteng, Limpopo, Mpumalanga and North West (South African province), North West. Each provincial division contains 16 teams. The winner of each provincial division qualifies for the annual promotional playoffs, where the winners of two streams are promoted to the National First Division. In each province, the two lowest-ranked teams by the end of the season, are relegate ...
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