Copa del Rey

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Copa Del Rey logo

The Copa del Rey is an annual cup competition for Spanish football teams. Its full name is Copa de S.M. El Rey Don Juan Carlos I (His Majesty The King Juan Carlos I's Cup). It was initially known as the Copa del Ayuntamiento de Madrid (Madrid's City Council's Cup). Between 1905 and 1932, it was known as the Copa de S.M. El Rey Alfonso XIII (His Majesty The King Alfonso XIII's Cup). During the Second Spanish Republic it was known as the Copa del Presidente de la República (Republic President's Cup) or Copa de España (Spanish Cup) for short and during the years of the Franco dictatorship it was known as the Copa de S.E. El Generalísimo or Copa del Generalísimo (The General's Cup). Spanish basketball teams compete for the Copa del Rey de Baloncesto.

Contents

[edit] History

The competition was first played in 1902 after Carlos Padrós, later president of Madrid FC, suggested a football competition to celebrate the coronation of Alfonso XIII. Four other teams joined Madrid FC for the first competition: FC Barcelona, Club Espanyol de Foot-Ball, Club Vizcaya and New Foot-Ball de Madrid. The competition featured the first recorded game between FC Barcelona and Madrid FC, with the former emerging 3-1 winners. Club Vizcaya eventually beat FC Barcelona in the final.

Athletic Bilbao were declared winners in 1904 after their opponents Club Español de Madrid failed to show up. In both 1910 and 1913, there was a spilt among the clubs and two rival associations, the Unión Española de Clubs de Fútbol and the Federación Española de Fútbol, organised rival competitions, the Copa UECF and the Copa FEF. In 1937, during the Spanish Civil War clubs in the Republican area of Spain entered the Copa de España Libre, with Levante UD beating their city rivals Valencia CF 1-0 in the final. This competition has never been officilly recognised by the RFEF. No competition was played in 1938.

FC Barcelona and Athletic Bilbao have each won the Copa 24 times. Throughout the history of the competition there has been 12 actual trophies. Of these four have been awarded permanently to FC Barcelona, three to Athletic Bilbao and one to Real Madrid, all for winning the competition three times in a row and/or on and five separate occasions. Club Vizcaya were awarded the first trophy as inaugural winners, Sevilla FC were awarded the Trofeo del Generalísimo in 1939 and Atlético Madrid, winners the previous year, were awarded the 11th trophy following the death of Franco.

[edit] Format

Before the formation of the first La Liga in 1928, the competition was effectively a national championship. Teams qualified to enter via their regional leagues. Over the years, various formats, including group stages have been used. Unlike the FA Cup, entry is limited. Only teams from the Primera Division, Segunda A, about twenty-three teams from the Segunda B and the Tercera Division champions or runners-up if the champion is reserve team) are invited to enter. The early rounds are one-off games with teams from the lower divisions given home advantage. The round of 32, the round of 16, the quarter finals and semi-finals are played over two legs. The final is a one-off game played at a neutral venue. The winners qualify for both the Supercopa de España and the UEFA Cup the following season.

[edit] 2006/2007 Copa del Rey

[edit] 2005/2006 Copa del Rey

[edit] Performance By Club

[edit] Winners

  • FC Barcelona/ Barcelona CF
    • 1910, 1912, 1913, 1920, 1922, 1925, 1926, 1928, 1942, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1957, 1959, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1978, 1981, 1983, 1988, 1990, 1997, 1998: 24
  • Athletic Bilbao/Atlético Bilbao/Club Vizcaya
    • 1902, 1903, 1904, 1910, 1911, 1914, 1915, 1916, 1921, 1923, 1930, 1931, 1932, 1933, 1943, 1944, 1945, 1950, 1955, 1956, 1958, 1969, 1973, 1984: 24
    • The number of Copa wins Athletic Bilbao have been credited with is disputed. The 1902 competition was won by Club Vizcaya, a team made up of players from Athletic Club and Bilbao FC. In 1903 these two clubs merged as Athletic Club Bilbao. The 1902 cup is on display in the Athletic museum [1] and the club includes it in its own honours list.[2]. However LFP and RFEF official statistics do not include this as an Athletic win.
  • Real Madrid/Madrid CF/Madrid FC
    • 1905, 1906, 1907, 1908, 1917, 1934, 1936, 1946, 1947, 1962, 1970, 1974, 1975, 1980, 1982, 1989, 1993: 17

[edit] Finals

Season Location Winner Runner-up Score
2007TBD
2006MadridRCD EspanyolReal Zaragoza4-1
2005MadridReal BetisCA Osasuna2-1 (aet)
2004BarcelonaReal ZaragozaReal Madrid3-2 (aet)
2003ElcheRCD MallorcaRecreativo de Huelva3-0
2002MadridDeportivo de La CoruñaReal Madrid2-1
2001SevillaReal ZaragozaCelta Vigo3-1
2000ValenciaRCD EspanyolAtlético Madrid2-1
1999SevillaValencia CFAtlético Madrid3-0
1998ValenciaFC BarcelonaRCD Mallorca1-1 (penalties, 5-4)
1997MadridFC BarcelonaReal Betis3-2
1996ZaragozaAtlético MadridFC Barcelona1-0
1995MadridDeportivo de La CoruñaValencia CF2-1
1994MadridReal ZaragozaCelta Vigo0-0 (penalties)
1993ValenciaReal MadridReal Zaragoza2-0
1992MadridAtlético MadridReal Madrid2-0
1991MadridAtlético MadridRCD Mallorca1-0
1990ValenciaFC BarcelonaReal Madrid2-0
1989MadridReal MadridReal Valladolid1-0
1988MadridFC BarcelonaReal Sociedad1-0
1987ZaragozaReal SociedadAtlético Madrid2-2 (penalties)
1986MadridReal ZaragozaFC Barcelona1-0
1985MadridAtlético MadridAthletic Bilbao2-1
1984MadridAthletic BilbaoFC Barcelona1-0
1983ZaragozaFC BarcelonaReal Madrid2-1
1982ValladolidReal MadridSporting de Gijón2-1
1981MadridFC BarcelonaSporting de Gijón3-1
1980MadridReal MadridCastilla CF6-1
1979MadridValencia CFReal Madrid2-0
1978MadridFC BarcelonaUD Las Palmas3-1
1977MadridReal BetisAthletic Bilbao2-2 (penalties)
1976MadridAtlético MadridReal Zaragoza1-0
1975MadridReal MadridAtlético Madrid0-0 (penalties)
1974MadridReal MadridFC Barcelona4-0
1973MadridAtlético BilbaoCD Castellón2-0
1972MadridAtlético MadridValencia CF2-1
1971MadridCF BarcelonaValencia CF4-3
1970BarcelonaReal MadridValencia CF3-1
1969MadridAtlético BilbaoElche1-0
1968MadridCF BarcelonaReal Madrid1-0
1967MadridValencia CFAtlético Bilbao2-1
1966MadridReal ZaragozaAtlético Bilbao2-0
1965MadridAtlético MadridReal Zaragoza1-0
1964MadridReal ZaragozaAtlético Madrid2-1
1963BarcelonaCF BarcelonaReal Zaragoza3-1
1962MadridReal MadridSevilla CF2-1
1961MadridAtlético MadridReal Madrid3-2
1960MadridAtlético MadridReal Madrid3-1
1959MadridCF BarcelonaGranada CF4-1
1958MadridAtlético BilbaoReal Madrid2-0
1957BarcelonaCF BarcelonaRCD Español1-0
1956MadridAtlético BilbaoAtlético Madrid2-1
1955MadridAtlético BilbaoSevilla CF1-0
1954MadridValencia CFCF Barcelona3-0
1953MadridCF BarcelonaAtlético Bilbao2-1
1952MadridCF BarcelonaValencia CF4-2
1951MadridCF BarcelonaReal Sociedad3-0
1950MadridAtlético BilbaoReal Valladolid4-1
1949MadridValencia CFAtlético Bilbao1-0
1948MadridSevilla CFCelta Vigo4-1
1947A CoruñaReal MadridRCD Español2-0
1946BarcelonaReal MadridValencia CF3-1
1945BarcelonaAtlético BilbaoValencia CF3-2
1944BarcelonaAtlético BilbaoValencia CF2-0
1943MadridAtlético BilbaoReal Madrid1-0
1942MadridCF BarcelonaAtlético Bilbao4-3
1941MadridValencia CFRCD Español 3-1
1940MadridRCD EspañolReal Madrid3-2
1939BarcelonaSevilla FCRácing Ferrol6-2
1936ValenciaMadrid FCCF Barcelona2-1
1935MadridSevilla FCCE Sabadell3-0
1934BarcelonaMadrid FCValencia CF2-1
1933BarcelonaAthletic BilbaoMadrid FC2-1
1932MadridAthletic BilbaoFC Barcelona1-0
1931MadridAthletic BilbaoReal Betis3-1
1930BarcelonaAthletic BilbaoMadrid CF3-2
1929Valencia RCD EspañolReal Madrid2-1
1928SantanderFC BarcelonaReal Sociedad3-1
1927ZaragozaReal UniónArenas Club de Getxo1-0
1926ValenciaFC BarcelonaAtlético Madrid3-2
1925SevillaFC BarcelonaArenas Club de Getxo2-0
1924San SebastiánReal UniónReal Madrid1-0
1923BarcelonaAthletic BilbaoCE Europa1-0
1922VigoFC BarcelonaReal Unión5-1
1921BilbaoAthletic BilbaoAtlético Madrid4-1
1920GijónFC BarcelonaAthletic Bilbao2-0
1919MadridArenas Club de GetxoFC Barcelona5-2
1918MadridReal UniónMadrid FC2-0
1917BarcelonaMadrid FCArenas Club de Getxo2-1
1916BarcelonaAthletic BilbaoMadrid FC4-0
1915IrúnAthletic BilbaoRCD Español5-0
1914IrúnAthletic BilbaoFC Espanya2-1
1913 *BarcelonaFC BarcelonaReal Sociedad2-1
1913MadridRácing de IrúnAthletic Bilbao1-0
1912BarcelonaFC BarcelonaGimnástica Madrid2-0
1911BilbaoAthletic BilbaoCD Español3-1
1910 *MadridFC BarcelonaEspañol de Madrid3-2
1910San SebastiánAthletic BilbaoVasconia1-0
1909MadridClub CiclistaEspañol de Madrid 3-1
1908MadridMadrid FCVigo Sporting2-1
1907MadridMadrid FCClub Vizcaya1-0
1906MadridMadrid FCAthletic Bilbao4-1
1905MadridMadrid FC Athletic Bilbao1-0
1904MadridAthletic BilbaoNo final 
1903MadridAthletic BilbaoReal Madrid3-2
1902MadridClub VizcayaFC Barcelona2-1

[edit] Note on name changes

Real Madrid were originally known as Madrid FC and did not add the Real until 1920. During the Spanish Second Republic the club dropped Real from their name. In 1941, a decree issued by Franco banned the use of non-Spanish language names. FC Barcelona and Sevilla FC became CF Barcelona and Sevilla CF and Athletic Bilbao changed the spelling of their prefix to Atlético. RCD Espanyol were known as RCD Español until 1995.

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La Liga Spain Copa del Rey
Segunda División U-21 Copa de la Liga
Segunda División B (4 groups) List of clubs Supercopa de España
Tercera División (18 groups) List of venues Copa Federación
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División de Honor Juvevil
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ar:كأس إسبانيا

bg:Купа на краля ca:Copa espanyola de futbol masculina da:Copa del Rey de:Copa del Rey es:Copa del Rey de Fútbol eo:Copa del Rey fr:Coupe d'Espagne de football it:Copa del Rey nl:Copa del Rey ja:コパ・デル・レイ pl:Puchar Króla Hiszpanii pt:Copa do Rei da Espanha ro:Cupa Spaniei la fotbal sv:Copa del Rey vi:Cúp Nhà vua Tây Ban Nha tr:İspanya Kral Kupası zh:西班牙國王盃

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