The professional first-division league in
Trinidad and Tobago is the
TT Pro League, which consists of nine teams located on the island of
Trinidad. The Pro League was formed in 1999 as part of a need for a
professional league to strengthen the country's
national team and improve the development of domestic players. The most successful club in the league has been
Defence Force, who has won the league championship 22 times. The
National Super League is the
semi-professional second-division league in Trinidad and Tobago and contains 12 teams. The Super League was founded in 2003 to allow the best teams from association football to play in a semi-professional environment, as they prepare for life in the professional game. The amateur third and fourth divisions of six regional football associations which govern their own first and second divisions. The
Trinidad and Tobago Football Association sanctions regional tournaments that allow entry into the
FA Trophy, which is the premier knockout tournament for teams in Trinidad and Tobago. The competition is open to all those affiliated with the FA. The FA Trophy is the oldest football competition in Trinidad and Tobago, dating back to 1927 and pits teams from the top three levels of the
football pyramid against each other each year, similar to England's
FA Cup.
International competitions Trinidad and Tobago are members of
CONCACAF, which governs
association football in North America, Central America, and the Caribbean. Trinidad and Tobago are also members of the
Caribbean Football Union and compete in regional competitions staged by the governing body. At the club level, CFU organises an annual competition, called the
CFU Club Championship, open to the champions of each Caribbean's football association first-division. Presently, the
TT Pro League has two automatic qualification places given to the top 2 teams in the league standings following each season. The league champion is automatically seeded and enter the competition in the Second Round, whereas the league runner-up enter in the First Round. As of the
2012–13 CONCACAF Champions League, Caribbean qualifying teams include the top three clubs from the
2012 CFU Club Championship. In the case any Caribbean club is precluded, it is supplanted by the fourth-place finisher from the CFU Club Championship. Between 2008–09 and 2011–12, the Champions League was played as a twenty-four team tournament with a preliminary round, followed by a sixteen-team group stage (four groups of four), followed by an eight-team home-and-away single-elimination tournament. In early 2012,
CONCACAF announced a new format for the 2012–13 edition of its Champions League. Under the new format, the preliminary round would be eliminated, and group play would consist of eight groups of three teams each, with each group winner advancing to the quarterfinals. ==Trinidadians playing in foreign leagues==