2011–12 Copa del Rey

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2011–12 Copa del Rey

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2011–12 Copa del Rey
Country  Spain
Teams 84
Champions Barcelona
Runners-up Athletic Bilbao
Matches played 107
Goals scored 317 (2.96 per match)
Top goal scorer(s) Spain Pablo Infante (7)

The 2011–12 Copa del Rey is the 108th staging of the Copa del Rey. The competition began on August 31, 2011 and will end on May 25, 2012 with the final, which will be held at the Estadio Vicente Calderón in Madrid. Going into the competition, the winners were assured of a place in the group stage of the 2012–13 UEFA Europa League.[1] Real Madrid were the defending champions, but were defeated by eventual champions Barcelona in the quarter-finals.

Contents

Calendar

Round Date Fixtures Clubs Notes
First round 31 August 2011 18 84 → 66 Clubs participating in Tercera and Segunda División B gain entry.
Second Round 6–8 September 2011 23 66 → 43 Clubs participating in Segunda División gain entry.
Third Round 12 October 2011 11 43 → 32
Round of 32 9 November
8; 13 December 2011
16 32 → 16 Clubs participating in La Liga gain entry.
Europa League teams brought forward their first leg matches to 8 December.
20–22 December 2011
Round of 16 3–5 January 2012 8 16 → 8
10–12 January 2012
Quarterfinals 17–19 January 2012 4 8 → 4
24–26 January 2012
Semifinals 31 January
1 February 2012
2 4 → 2
7–8 February 2012
Final 25 May 2012 1 2 → 1

Qualified teams

The following teams compete in the Copa del Rey 2011–12:

20 teams of 2010–11 La Liga:

20 teams of 2010–11 Segunda División (Barcelona B and Villarreal B are excluded for being reserve teams):

26 teams of 2010–11 Segunda División B. Teams that qualified are the top five teams of each of the 4 groups (excluding reserve teams) and the six with the highest number of points out of the remaining non-reserve teams (*):

18 teams of 2010–11 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):

Teams in bold are still active in the competition

First round

The matches were played on 31 August 2011.

Alcalá, Cádiz, Sant Andreu, San Roque, Albacete, Roquetas, Orihuela and Alavés received a bye.

Second round

The matches were played on 6, 7 and 8 September 2011.

Third round

The draw for the third round was held on 15 September 2011 at 13:00 CEST at the Ciudad del Fútbol de Las Rozas in Madrid.[3]

The matches were played on 12 October 2011.

Real Oviedo received a bye.

Final phase

The draw for the Round of 32 was held on 14 October 2011 at 13:00 CEST in La Ciudad del Fútbol in Las Rozas, Madrid.[4]

Like previous years, Segunda División B teams played against the La Liga teams which qualified for European competitions, this is: four teams from Pot 1 (Segunda B) were drawn against four teams from pot 2a (Champions) and the three remaining teams in pot 1 were drawn in the same way with the pot 2b teams (Europa League). The five teams in Pot 3 (Segunda División) were drawn against five teams of the thirteen remaining teams of La Liga (Pot 4). The remaining eight teams of La Liga faced each other. The lowest ranked teams from each match played at home on the first leg and if two teams from a match played in the same division then the first one to come out of the draw played at home first.[4]

The first leg was played on 13 December 2011 except for matches involving teams from Pot 2b, which were played on 8 December 2011 (due to Europa League – Round 6, except for Sevilla which were eliminated from the competition) and the match involving Barcelona which was played on 9 November 2011 (due to Barcelona's pariticipation at the FIFA Club World Cup). The second leg was played on 22 December 2011.[4]

Pot 1
(Segunda División B)
Pot 2a
(Champions League)
Pot 2b
(Europa League)
Pot 3
(Segunda División)
Pot 4
(rest of Primera División)
Albacete
Cádiz
L'Hospitalet
Mirandés
Real Oviedo
Ponferradina
San Roque
Real Madrid (holders)
Barcelona
Valencia
Villarreal
Athletic Bilbao
Atlético Madrid
Sevilla
Alcorcón
Almería
Celta
Córdoba
Deportivo La Coruña
Betis
Espanyol
Getafe
Granada
Levante
Málaga
Mallorca
Osasuna
Racing Santander
Rayo Vallecano
Real Sociedad
Sporting de Gijón
Zaragoza

Bracket

Round of 32
November 9, 2011
December 8/13, 2011
December 20/21/22, 2011
  Round of 16
January 3/4/5, 2012
January 10/11/12, 2012
  Quarter-finals
January 17/18/19, 2012
January 24/25/26, 2012
  Semi-finals
January 31, February 1, 2012
February 7/8, 2012
  Final
May 25, 2012
 Córdoba (a) 1 1 2  
 Betis 0 2 2      Córdoba 2 2 4  
 Celta 0 2 2    Espanyol 1 4 5  
 Espanyol 0 4 4        Espanyol 3 1 4  
 Mirandés 1 2 3        Mirandés (a) 2 2 4  
 Villarreal 1 0 1      Mirandés 2 1 3
 Racing Santander (a) 3 3 6    Racing Santander 0 1 1  
 Rayo Vallecano 2 4 6        Mirandés 1 2 3  
 Albacete 2 1 3        Athletic Bilbao 2 6 8  
 Atlético Madrid 1 0 1      Albacete 0 0 0  
 Real Oviedo 0 0 0    Athletic Bilbao 0 4 4  
 Athletic Bilbao 1 1 2        Athletic Bilbao 2 1 3
 Real Sociedad 4 1 5        Mallorca 0 0 0  
 Granada 1 2 3      Real Sociedad 2 1 3
 Mallorca 0 2 2    Mallorca 0 6 6  
 Sporting de Gijón 1 0 1        Athletic Bilbao 0
 Cádiz 0 0 0        Barcelona 3
 Valencia 0 4 4      Valencia (a) 1 1 2  
 San Roque 0 1 1    Sevilla 0 2 2  
 Sevilla 1 2 3        Valencia 4 3 7  
 Alcorcón 1 2 3        Levante 1 0 1  
 Zaragoza 1 0 1      Alcorcón 2 0 2
 Deportivo La Coruña 3 1 4    Levante 1 4 5  
 Levante (aet) 1 4 5        Valencia 1 0 1
 Ponferradina 0 1 1        Barcelona 1 2 3  
 Real Madrid 2 5 7      Real Madrid 3 1 4  
 Getafe 0 2 2    Málaga 2 0 2  
 Málaga 1 2 3        Real Madrid 1 2 3
 L'Hospitalet 0 0 0        Barcelona 2 2 4  
 Barcelona 1 9 10      Barcelona 4 2 6
 Almería 1 1 2    Osasuna 0 1 1  
 Osasuna 3 1 4  


Round of 32

The first leg matches were played on 9 November, 8 and 13 December while the second legs were played on 20, 21 and 22 December 2011.

Team 1   Agg.   Team 2   1st leg     2nd leg  
Ponferradina 1–7 Real Madrid 0–2 1–5
Celta 2–4 Espanyol 0–0 2–4
Mallorca 2–1 Sporting de Gijón 0–1 2–0
San Roque 1–3 Sevilla 0–1 1–2
Albacete 3–1 Atlético Madrid 2–1 1–0
Mirandés 3–1 Villarreal 1–1 2–0
Almería 2–4 Osasuna 1–3 1–1
Alcorcón 3–1 Zaragoza 1–1 2–0
Córdoba 2–2(a) Betis 1–0 1–2
Deportivo La Coruña 4–5(aet) Levante 3–1 1–4
Racing Santander 6–6(a) Rayo Vallecano 3–2 3–4
Getafe 2–3 Málaga 0–1 2–2
Real Sociedad 5–3 Granada 4–1 1–2
Real Oviedo 0–2 Athletic Bilbao 0–1 0–1
Cádiz 0–4 Valencia 0–0 0–4
L'Hospitalet 0–10 Barcelona 0–1 0–9

First leg

Second leg

Round of 16

The draw for Round of 16, Quarterfinals and Semifinals was held on 23 December 2011 at 10:00 CET in the Ciudad del Fútbol de Las Rozas in Madrid.[5][6]

The first leg matches were played on 3, 4 and 5 January while the second legs were played on 10, 11 and 12 January 2012.

Team 1   Agg.   Team 2   1st leg     2nd leg  
Real Sociedad 3–6 Mallorca 2–0 1–6
Mirandés 3–1 Racing Santander 2–0 1–1
Real Madrid 4–2 Málaga 3–2 1–0
Alcorcón 2–5 Levante 2–1 0–4
Córdoba 4–5 Espanyol 2–1 2–4
Valencia 2–2(a) Sevilla 1–0 1–2
Albacete 0–4 Athletic Bilbao 0–0 0–4
Barcelona 6–1 Osasuna 4–0 2–1

First leg

Second leg

Quarter-finals

The first leg matches were played on 17, 18 and 19 January while the second legs were played on 24, 25 and 26 January 2012.

Team 1   Agg.   Team 2   1st leg     2nd leg  
Espanyol 4–4(a) Mirandés 3−2 1−2
Athletic Bilbao 3−0 Mallorca 2−0 1−0
Real Madrid 3–4 Barcelona 1−2 2–2
Valencia 7−1 Levante 4−1 3−0

First leg

Second leg

Semi-finals

The first leg matches were played on 31 January and 1 February while the second legs were played on 7 and 8 February 2012.

Team 1   Agg.   Team 2   1st leg     2nd leg  
Mirandés 3–8 Athletic Bilbao 1–2 2–6
Valencia 1–3 Barcelona 1–1 0–2

First leg

Second leg

Final

Top goalscorers

Goalscorers Goals Team
Spain Pablo Infante
7
Mirandés
Spain Fernando Llorente
5
Athletic Bilbao
Spain Álvaro Vázquez
4
Espanyol
Spain Pedro Rodríguez
4
Barcelona
Uruguay Christian Stuani
4
Racing Santander
Tunisia Lassad Nouioui
4
Deportivo La Coruña
Spain Nauzet Alemán
4
Valladolid
Spain Alain Arroyo
3
Mirandés
Spain Alberto Morales
3
Andorra
Spain Cesc Fàbregas
3
Barcelona
Mali Frédéric Kanouté
3
Sevilla
Argentina Lionel Messi
3
Barcelona
Spain Jesús Rubio
3
San Roque
Brazil Jonas
3
Valencia
Spain José Callejón
3
Real Madrid
Nigeria Kabiru Akinsola
3
Cádiz
Spain Oriol Riera
3
Alcorcón
Spain Pablo Álvarez
3
Deportivo La Coruña
Argentina Pablo Piatti
3
Valencia
Spain Roberto Soldado
3
Valencia
Brazil Yuri de Souza
3
Ponferradina
France Karim Benzema
3
Real Madrid
Portugal Cristiano Ronaldo
3
Real Madrid

See also

References

External links


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