Jump to content

Supercopa de España Femenina

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Supercopa de España Femenina
Organising bodyRoyal Spanish Football Federation
Founded1997 (original format)
2019 (new format)
RegionSpain
Number of teams2 (until 2000)
4 (2019–present)
Current championsBarcelona
(4th title)
Most successful club(s)Barcelona
(4th titles)
Websiterfef.es
2023–24 Supercopa de España Femenina

The Supercopa de España Femenina or the Spanish Women's Super Cup is a super cup tournament in Spanish football, contested by the winners and runners up of the Copa de la Reina and the remaining highest ranked teams from the Primera División that had not already qualified through the cup final.

History

[edit]

From 1997 to 2000, four editions of the Supercopa were played between the winners of the League and the Copa de la Reina, with San Vicente CFF winning its first edition,[1] Atlético Málaga the second,[2][3][4] Eibartarrak FT achieving the third edition[5] and Levante (after absorbing San Vicente) winning the last.[1]

The competition was re-instated in December 2019 by the Royal Spanish Football Federation.[6] It was announced the Supercopa would expand to four teams, the winners and runners-up of the Copa de la Reina and Primera División.

Finals by year

[edit]

Two-team format

[edit]
Year Winners Runners-up Scores
1997 San Vicente Espanyol 2–5, 2–1
1998 Atlético Málaga Lagunak 4–3, 1–0
1999 Eibartarrak Oroquieta Villaverde 3–0, 0–5
2000 Levante Puebla 5–1, 1–2

Four-team format

[edit]
Season Host Winners Runners-up Score Semi-finalists
2019–20 Helmántico, Villares de la Reina Barcelona Real Sociedad 10–1 Atlético Madrid and Levante
2020–21 Juegos Mediterráneos, Almería Atlético Madrid Levante 3–0 Barcelona and Logroño
2021–22 La Ciudad del Fútbol, Las Rozas de Madrid Barcelona Atlético Madrid 7–0 Real Madrid and Levante
2022–23 Estadio Romano, Mérida Barcelona Real Sociedad 3–0 Real Madrid and Sporting Huelva
2023–24 Estadio Municipal de Butarque, Leganés Barcelona Levante 7–0 Atlético Madrid and Real Madrid

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "El Levante tiene en sus vitrinas las dos primeras Supercopas de España" (in Spanish). Plaza Deportiva. 14 December 2019.
  2. ^ "La primera Supercopa la ganó el Málaga" (in Spanish). Mundo Deportivo. 10 February 2020.
  3. ^ "Atlético Málaga: 20 años del inicio de una gesta" (in Spanish). Málaga CF. 10 May 2018.
  4. ^ Malaga women's 1998 treble winners angry at Supercup snub, Sur in English, 2 March 2020
  5. ^ "El Eibar femenino jugará en Ipurua para conmemorar el 20º Aniversario de la Supercopa del Eibartarrak" (in Spanish). SD Eibar. 28 November 2019.
  6. ^ "La primera Supercopa de España femenina en formato Final Four se celebrará en febrero" (in Spanish). Royal Spanish Football Federation. 13 December 2019.