- Supercopa de España
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Supercopa de España
The championship trophy won by Zaragoza in 2004.Founded 1982 Region Spain Number of teams 2 Current champions Barcelona Most successful club Barcelona (10 titles) The Supercopa de España (English: Spanish Supercup) is a Spanish football championship contested by the winners of La Liga and the Copa del Rey. It is the Spanish equivalent to the English FA Community Shield, where the winners of the Premier League and FA Cup compete for the trophy.
The current competition has only existed since 1982, but between 1940 and 1953, several other tournaments between the Spanish league champions and the cup winners (then Copa del Generalísimo) were played.
In 1940, it had the name of Copa de Campeones.
It was not played again until 1945, when the Ambassador of Argentina, due to the good relations with the Spanish military government, offered a trophy called Copa de Oro Argentina.
In 1947, the Copa Eva Duarte de Perón was established as an annual tournament, as a tribute to the President of Argentina and his wife, the popular Evita. They were played between September and December, usually as one-match finals.
The most recent edition was a two-legged match, played on 14 August and 17 August 2011. It was contested by Real Madrid, the 2010–11 Copa del Rey winners, and Barcelona, the 2010–11 La Liga winners. Barcelona won the cup 5–4 on aggregate.
Contents
Finals by years
Copa Eva Duarte
Year Champion Winner of Runner-up Winner of Score Notes 1953 Barcelona Liga & Copa - - - Copa Eva Duarte 1952 Barcelona Liga & Copa - - - Copa Eva Duarte 1951 Atlético Madrid Liga Barcelona Copa 2–0 Copa Eva Duarte 1950 Athletic Bilbao Copa Atlético Madrid Liga 5–5 / 2–0 Copa Eva Duarte 1949 Valencia Copa Barcelona Liga 7–4 Copa Eva Duarte 1948 Barcelona Liga Sevilla Copa 1–0 Copa Eva Duarte 1947 Real Madrid Copa Valencia Liga 3–1 Copa Eva Duarte Others predecessors of Supercopa
Year Champion Winner of Runner-up Winner of Score Notes 1945 Barcelona Copa Athletic Bilbao Liga 5-4 Copa de Oro Argentina 1940 Atlético Madrid Liga RCD Español Copa 3-3, 7-1 Copa de Campeones de España Titles by team in Supercopa
Team Champion Runner-Up Years Won Years Lost Barcelona 10 7 1983, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1996, 2005, 2006, 2009, 2010, 2011 1985, 1988, 1990, 1993, 1997, 1998, 1999 Real Madrid 8 4 1988, 1989, 1990, 1993, 1997, 2001, 2003, 2008 1982, 1995, 2007, 2011 Deportivo 3 - 1995, 2000, 2002 – Atlético Madrid 1 3 1985 1991, 1992, 1996 Valencia 1 3 1999 2002, 2004, 2008 Zaragoza 1 2 2004 1994, 2001 Athletic Bilbao 1 2 1984 1983, 2009 Mallorca 1 1 1998 2003 Sevilla 1 1 2007 2010 Real Sociedad 1 - 1982 – Espanyol - 2 – 2000, 2006 Real Betis - 1 – 2005 Titles by team in Copa Eva Duarte and predecessors of Supercopa
Team Champion Runner-Up Years Won Years Lost Barcelona 4 2 1945, 1948, 1952, 1953 1949, 1951 Atlético Madrid 2 1 1940, 1951 1950 Athletic Bilbao 1 1 1950 1945 Valencia 1 1 1949 1947 Real Madrid 1 - 1947 - Espanyol - 1 - 1940 Sevilla - 1 - 1948 Total titles by team
Team Total Titles Supercopa de España Predecessors of Supercopa Barcelona 14 10 4 Real Madrid 9 8 1 Atlético Madrid 3 1 2 Deportivo 3 3 – Athletic Bilbao 2 1 1 Valencia 2 1 1 Real Sociedad 1 1 – Mallorca 1 1 – Zaragoza 1 1 – Sevilla 1 1 – References
See also
- Football in Spain
- Copa Eva Duarte
- The Trophy [1]
Football in Spain National teams League system Primera División · Segunda División · Segunda División B (4 groups) · Tercera División (18 groups 1–9, 10–18) · Divisiones RegionalesWomen's league system Primera División · Segunda División (7 groups)Youth league system Domestic cups Copa del Rey · Copa de la Liga (defunct) · Copa Eva Duarte (replaced) · Supercopa de España · Copa FederaciónWomen's domestic cups Youth domestic cups Clubs: 1/2 · List of venues · (by capacity) · Records · All-time La Liga table · Foreign players · ChampionsNational football super cups of Europe (UEFA) Albania · Andorra · Armenia · Belarus · Belgium · Bulgaria · Croatia · Cyprus · Czech Republic · England · Estonia · France · Georgia · Germany · Greece · Hungary · Iceland · Italy · Kazakhstan · Lithuania · Rep. of Macedonia · Moldova · Netherlands · Poland · Portugal · Romania · Russia · San Marino · Slovakia · Slovenia · Spain · Sweden · Turkey · UkraineFormer: Austria · Azerbaijan · Bosnia and Herzegovina · Denmark · East Germany · Israel · Northern Ireland · Norway · Republic of Ireland · Soviet UnionSupercopa de España Categories:- Supercopa de España
- National association football supercups
- Football cup competitions in Spain
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