2010–11 Copa del Rey

2010–11 Copa del Rey
Country Spain
Teams 83
Champions Real Madrid
Runners-up Barcelona
Matches played 112
Goals scored 324 (2.89 per match)
Top goal scorer(s) Lionel Messi
Cristiano Ronaldo
(7 goals each)

The 2010–11 Copa del Rey was the 109th staging of the Copa del Rey. The competition began on 21 August 2010 and ended on 20 April 2011 with the final, held at the Estadio Mestalla in Valencia, in which Real Madrid lifted the trophy for the eighteenth time in their history with a 1–0 victory over Barcelona in extra time. Sevilla were the defending champions, but they were defeated by Real Madrid in the semifinals.

Calendar

Round Date Fixtures Clubs Notes
First round 2125 August 2010 18 83 → 65 Clubs participating in Tercera and Segunda División B gain entry.
Second Round 1 September 2010 22 65 → 43 Clubs participating in Segunda División gain entry.
Third Round 8 & 15 September 2010 11 43 → 32
Round of 32 2628 October 2010 16 32 → 16 Clubs participating in La Liga gain entry.
911 November 2010
Round of 16 2122 December 2010 8 16 → 8
56 January 2011
Quarterfinals 1213 January 2011 4 8 → 4
1820 January 2011
Semifinals 26 January 2011 2 4 → 2
2 February 2011
Final 20 April 2011 1 2 → 1

Qualified teams

The following teams competed in the Copa del Rey 2010–11:

20 teams of 2009–10 La Liga:

21 teams of 2009–10 Segunda División (Villarreal B are excluded for being a reserve team of Villarreal):

24 teams of 2009–10 Segunda División B. Teams that qualified are the top five teams of each of the 4 groups (excluding reserve teams) and the four with the highest number of points out of the remaining non-reserve teams (*):

18 teams of 2009–10 Tercera División. Teams that qualified are the champions of each of the 18 groups (or at least the ones with the highest number of points within their group since reserve teams are excluded):

First round

The matches were played on 21, 22, 24 and 25 August 2010.

Team 1  Score  Team 2
La Roda 1–2 Alcalá
Gandía 1–2 Sant Andreu
Oyonesa 0–3 Tudelano
L'Hospitalet 2–1 Dénia
Ceuta 4–1 Atl. Mancha Real
Portugalete 3–2 Noja
Universidad Las Palmas 1–0 (aet) Leganés
Caudal 4–3 (aet) Palencia
Real Unión 1–0 Burgos
Pontevedra 0–1 Guadalajara
Alavés 0–1 UD Logroñés
Real Oviedo 1–0 (aet) Eibar
Benidorm 0–0 (3–5 p) Orihuela
Ontinyent 0–2 Castellón
Teruel 0–0 (5–4 p) Atl. Baleares
Badajoz 4–0 Corralejo
Puertollano 0–0 (0–3 p) Murcia
Parla 1–5 Cádiz

Alcoyano, Cerceda, Jumilla, Lucena, Melilla, Poli Ejido and Real Jaén received a bye.

Second round

The matches were played on 1 September 2010.

Orihuela received a bye.

Third round

The matches were played on 8 and 15 September 2010.

Portugalete received a bye.

Final phase

Draw

The draw for the Round of 32 was held on 22 September 2010 at 13:00 CET in the Ciudad del Fútbol de Las Rozas in Madrid.[1]

Pot 1 teams (Segunda B and Tercera divisions) were drawn against four teams from pot 2 with the first leg at pot 1 team's home. The three remaining teams in pot 1 were paired in the same way with the pot 3 teams. The teams in the special pot 1 (Segunda A) were drawn against five teams in the special pot 2, with the first leg at the home ground of the special pot 1 teams. The remaining teams in the special pot 2 faced each other[2]

Pot 1 Pot 2
(Champions League)
Pot 3
(Europa League)
Special pot 1
(Segunda División)
Special pot 2
Portugalete
Real Unión
Poli Ejido
Murcia
Universidad LPGC
Logroñés
Ceuta
Sevilla (holders)
Barcelona
Real Madrid
Valencia
Atlético Madrid
Getafe
Villarreal
Betis
Valladolid
Córdoba
Xerez
Alcorcón
Athletic Bilbao
Espanyol
Osasuna
Real Sociedad
Sporting de Gijón
Mallorca[3]
Hércules
Deportivo
Málaga
Racing Santander
Almería
Zaragoza
Levante

Bracket

Round of 32
October 26/27/28, 2010
November 9/10/11, 2010
  Round of 16
21/22 December 2010
5/6 January 2011
  Quarterfinals
12/13 January 2011
January 18/19/20, 2011
  Semifinals
26 January 2011
2 February 2011
  Final
20 April 2011
 Logroñés 0 1 1  
 Valencia 3 4 7      Valencia 0 2 2  
 Poli Ejido 1 0 1    Villarreal 0 4 4  
 Villarreal 1 2 3        Villarreal 3 0 3  
 Real Unión 0 1 1        Sevilla 3 3 6  
 Sevilla 4 6 10      Sevilla 5 3 8
 Hércules 0 2 2    Málaga 3 0 3  
 Málaga 0 3 3        Sevilla 0 0 0  
 Murcia 0 1 1        Real Madrid 1 2 3  
 Real Madrid 0 5 5      Real Madrid 8 0 8  
 Xerez 2 2 4    Levante 0 2 2  
 Levante (a) 3 1 4        Real Madrid 3 1 4
 Universidad LPGC 0 1 1        Atlético Madrid 1 0 1  
 Atlético Madrid 5 1 6      Atlético Madrid 1 1 2
 Valladolid 0 1 1    Espanyol 0 1 1  
 Espanyol 2 1 3        Real Madrid (aet) 1
 Ceuta 0 1 1        Barcelona 0
 Barcelona 2 5 7      Barcelona (a) 0 1 1  
 Alcorcón 0 0 0    Athletic Bilbao 0 1 1  
 Athletic Bilbao 1 2 3        Barcelona 5 1 6  
 Betis (a) 0 2 2        Betis 0 3 3  
 Zaragoza 1 1 2      Betis 1 3 4
 Portugalete 1 0 1    Getafe 2 1 3  
 Getafe (a) 1 0 1        Barcelona 5 3 8
 Real Sociedad 2 1 3        Almería 0 0 0  
 Almería 3 2 5      Almería 4 4 8  
 Mallorca 3 2 5    Mallorca 3 3 6  
 Sporting de Gijón 1 2 3        Almería 1 3 4
 Córdoba (aet) 2 1 3        Deportivo 0 2 2  
 Racing Santander 0 3 3      Córdoba 1 1 2
 Osasuna 1 1 2    Deportivo (aet) 1 3 4  
 Deportivo 1 2 3  

Round of 32

The first leg matches were played on 26, 27 and 28 October while the second legs were played on 9, 10 and 11 November 2010.

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Murcia 1−5 Real Madrid 0−0 1−5
Real Unión 1−10 Sevilla 0−4 1−6
UD Logroñés 1−7 Valencia 0−3 1−4
Ceuta 1−7 Barcelona 0−2 1−5
Poli Ejido 1−3 Villarreal 1−1 0−2
Universidad LPGC 1−6 Atlético Madrid 0−5 1−1
Portugalete 1−1 (a) Getafe 1−1 0−0
Valladolid 1−3 Espanyol 0−2 1−1
Betis 2−2 (a) Zaragoza 0−1 2−1
Xerez 4−4 (a) Levante 2−3 2−1
Córdoba 3−3 (aet) (a) Racing Santander 2−0 1−3
Alcorcón 0−3 Athletic Bilbao 0−1 0−2
Osasuna 2−3 Deportivo 1−1 1−2
Real Sociedad 3−5 Almería 2−3 1−2
Mallorca 5−3 Sporting de Gijón 3−1 2−2
Hércules 2−3 Málaga 0−0 2−3

First leg

Second leg

Round of 16

The draw for the Round of 16, Quarterfinals and Semifinals was held on 18 November 2010 at 13:00 CET in the Ciudad del Fútbol de Las Rozas in Madrid.[4]

The first leg matches were played on 21 and 22 December while the second legs were played on 5 and 6 January 2011.

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Sevilla 8–3 Málaga 5–3 3–0
Córdoba 2–4(aet) Deportivo 1–1 1–3
Barcelona 1–1(a) Athletic Bilbao 0–0 1–1
Betis 4–3 Getafe 1–2 3–1
Almería 8–6 Mallorca 4–3 4–3
Valencia 2–4 Villarreal 0–0 2–4
Atlético Madrid 2–1 Espanyol 1–0 1–1
Real Madrid 8–2 Levante 8–0 0–2

First leg

Second leg

Quarter-finals

The first leg matches were played on 12 and 13 January while the second legs were played on 18, 19 and 20 January 2011.

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Villarreal 3–6 Sevilla 3–3 0–3
Almería 4–2 Deportivo 1–0 3–2
Barcelona 6–3 Betis 5–0 1–3
Real Madrid 4–1 Atlético Madrid 3–1 1–0

First leg

Second leg

Semi-finals

The first leg matches were played on 26 January while the second legs were played on 2 February 2011.

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Barcelona 8–0 Almería 5–0 3–0
Sevilla 0–3 Real Madrid 0–1 0–2

First leg

Second leg

Final

20 April 2011
21:30 CEST
Barcelona 0 – 1 (a.e.t.) Real Madrid
Report (Spanish) Ronaldo  103'
Copa del Rey
2010–11 Winners
Real Madrid
18th Title

Top goalscorers

Rank Player[6] Club Goals
1 Argentina Lionel Messi Barcelona 7
Portugal Cristiano Ronaldo Real Madrid
3 Argentina Leonardo Ulloa Almería 6
4 France Karim Benzema Real Madrid 5
Spain Álvaro Negredo Sevilla
6 Argentina Fernando Cavenaghi Mallorca 4
Spain Adrián Deportivo
Spain Jorge Molina Betis
Spain Pedro Barcelona
10 8 players 3

References

  1. "Round of 32 Draw". Marca.com. 16 September 2010. Archived from the original on 19 September 2010. Retrieved 20 September 2010.
  2. Los equipos de Primera entran en el bombo, MARCA.com (Spanish), 21 September 2010
  3. Note: Mallorca, the fifth-placed team of the 2009–10 La Liga, were not admitted to the UEFA Europa League (initially qualified) due to their high debts. Because of that, RCD Mallorca are in the special pot 2 and it's not on pot 3.
  4. "Final phase Draw". RFEF. 12 November 2010. Archived from the original on 27 November 2010. Retrieved 12 November 2010.
  5. "Madrid clinch Copa del Rey". Sky Sports. 21 April 2011. Archived from the original on 23 April 2011. Retrieved 23 April 2011.
  6. "Copa del Rey 2010/2011: Top Scorer". World Football. Retrieved 23 May 2016.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/21/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.