Jump to content

2011–12 Primera División (women)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Primera División
Season2011–12
Champions LeagueBarcelona
Matches played306
Goals scored1,131 (3.7 per match)

The 2011–12 Primera División (women) season will be the 24th since its establishment. Rayo Vallecano are the defending champions, having won their 3rd title in the previous season. The campaign will begin on 4 September 2011, and end on 27 May 2012.

A total of 18 teams will contest the league, 16 of which already contested in the 2010–11 season and two of which were promoted from the Liga Nacional.

With ten wins in a row at the start of the season, Barcelona broke the Spanish women's starting record of Levante's nine wins in 2008/09.[1] This streak was broken on matchday 15, when Barcelona drew Espanyol 3–3.[2]

On the last match day, Barcelona secured their very first Spanish championship title.[3]

Changes from 2010–11

[edit]
  • For this season, the league will use a double round-robin format, contrary to previous seasons were teams were divided in three regional groups of which the best placed teams progressed to a national group stage.[4]
  • The league was also reduced to 18 teams. Now, the bottom four placed teams will be relegated.[4]
  • The tie-breakers in place are with two teams tied: points in direct matches, goal difference in direct matches, goals scored in direct matches, goal difference in all matches, goals scored in all matches. If the tie can't be broken down, one or more play-off games are held at a neutral venue.[4]

Teams

[edit]

Stadia and locations

[edit]
Team Home city Stadium Stadium capacity
Athletic Bilbao Bilbao Instalaciones Lezama 1,500
Atlético Madrid Majadahonda Cerro del Espino 3,500
Atlético Málaga Málaga José Gallardo 1,000
Barcelona Barcelona Ciutat Esportiva Joan Gamper 1,000
Collerense Palma de Mallorca Can Caimari 1,000
Espanyol Cornellà de Llobregat Ciudad Deportiva RCD Espanyol 1,500
Llanos de Olivenza Olivenza Ciudad Deportiva de Olivenza 1,000
El Olivo Vigo Monte da Mina 1,000
Levante Valencia Polideportiu Natzaret 1,000
Lagunak Barañáin Municipal Lagunak 1,000
L'Estartit Torroella de Montgrí Municipal de L'Estartit 1,500
Reocín Puente San Miguel Municipal Pepín Cadelo 1,000
Rayo Vallecano Madrid Ciudad Deportiva Rayo Vallecano 2,500
Prainsa Zaragoza Zaragoza Pedro Sancho 1,000
Real Sociedad San Sebastián Instalaciones Zubieta 2,500
Sant Gabriel Sant Adrià de Besòs Municipal José Luis Ruiz Casado 1,000
Sporting de Huelva Huelva Ciudad Deportiva El Conquero 1,000
Valencia Valencia Municipal de Beniferri 1,000

Personnel and sponsorship

[edit]
Team Chairman Head Coach Captain Kitmaker Shirt sponsor
Athletic Bilbao Spain Josu Urrutia Spain Juan Luis Fuentes Spain Iraia Iturregi Umbro Bizkaia
Atlético Madrid Spain Lola Romero Spain Juanjo Carretero Spain Marta Docando Nike Qatar Foundation
Barcelona Spain Sandro Rosell Spain Xavier Llorens Spain Ana Escribano Nike None
Levante Spain Quico Catalán Spain Antonio Contreras Spain Maider Castillo Luanvi Valencia Terra i Mar
Valencia Spain Manuel Llorente Argentina Cristian Toro Spain María Martí Joma Burger King

League table

[edit]
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Barcelona (C) 34 31 1 2 119 19 +100 94 Qualification for UEFA Champions League and Copa de la Reina
2 Athletic Bilbao 34 29 4 1 118 25 +93 91 Qualification Copa de la Reina
3 Espanyol 34 23 7 4 117 38 +79 76
4 Rayo Vallecano 34 22 4 8 90 44 +46 70
5 Levante 34 19 11 4 63 27 +36 68
6 Atlético Madrid 34 20 5 9 83 41 +42 65
7 Real Sociedad 34 19 5 10 58 35 +23 62
8 Sporting Huelva 34 17 5 12 51 48 +3 56
9 Prainsa Zaragoza 34 14 5 15 72 75 −3 47
10 Sant Gabriel 34 11 4 19 55 67 −12 37
11 Llanos de Olivenza 34 10 5 19 39 65 −26 35
12 Collerense 34 9 6 19 54 91 −37 33
13 Valencia 34 10 1 23 37 83 −46 31
14 Lagunak 34 9 4 21 32 70 −38 31
15 L'Estartit (R) 34 8 5 21 35 74 −39 29 Relegation to Segunda División
16 Atlético Málaga (R) 34 6 5 23 35 91 −56 23
17 El Olivo (R) 34 5 4 25 43 112 −69 19
18 Reocín (R) 34 2 3 29 30 126 −96 9
Source: women.soccerway.com
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) head-to-head goal difference; 4) head-to-head goals scored; 5) goal difference; 6) number of goals scored; 7) Fair-play points
(C) Champions; (R) Relegated

Results

[edit]
Home \ Away ATH ATM MLG FCB CLL EOV ESP LES LAG LEV OLI PRA RAY RSC REO SGB SPH VAL
Athletic Bilbao 4–1 9–0 3–1 3–1 2–0 4–1 5–1 3–0 3–1 6–0 4–1 3–1 7–2 6–0 2–0 1–1 2–1
Atlético Madrid 0–0 2–0 0–1 8–0 7–1 4–1 4–1 3–1 1–1 1–0 1–1 4–0 0–1 4–0 2–1 3–0 5–0
Atlético Málaga 0–7 1–2 0–3 2–2 5–2 0–5 4–1 3–0 0–3 0–1 1–2 1–3 1–1 1–1 3–2 1–4 0–1
Barcelona 1–0 4–0 8–0 3–1 6–2 6–0 1–0 7–0 3–2 2–0 5–1 3–2 2–0 6–0 3–0 1–0 8–0
Collerense 1–2 2–3 1–0 1–4 3–2 2–2 6–3 1–2 1–2 0–2 2–1 1–1 1–0 4–1 2–2 4–2 2–1
El Olivo 1–6 1–2 1–3 1–4 2–1 0–4 1–1 3–2 1–1 2–2 1–2 2–4 2–2 2–0 0–1 0–2 4–1
Espanyol 0–0 2–2 3–1 3–3 9–0 10–0 5–0 7–0 0–0 2–0 4–0 4–0 2–1 10–1 4–1 3–1 3–1
L'Estartit 1–2 0–5 2–0 0–3 0–1 2–1 1–3 0–0 0–4 1–0 1–1 2–1 0–1 2–0 1–1 0–3 3–1
Lagunak 0–3 1–2 1–0 0–2 3–1 3–1 2–5 2–1 2–2 1–0 0–1 0–3 0–1 2–1 2–1 0–2 0–1
Levante 1–1 1–0 2–1 0–2 5–0 3–1 0–1 2–2 1–0 1–1 2–1 1–1 2–0 4–0 3–0 2–0 3–1
Llanos Olivenza 2–8 0–3 3–1 0–4 3–2 3–1 1–1 3–1 4–0 0–0 1–2 1–3 0–2 2–0 1–3 0–2 1–0
Prainsa Zaragoza 1–2 2–6 4–0 0–4 7–1 3–1 1–1 4–0 2–2 2–2 3–1 2–3 1–3 8–4 2–1 3–1 4–0
Rayo Vallecano 2–3 4–3 1–0 3–2 1–1 10–1 1–3 2–0 2–1 0–1 3–1 6–1 2–0 3–0 5–1 5–0 5–0
Real Sociedad 1–3 2–1 5–0 0–4 2–1 4–0 2–1 0–1 1–0 1–1 2–1 5–0 0–1 3–0 3–0 0–0 5–0
Reocín 0–4 1–2 1–3 0–7 2–2 0–3 2–8 3–5 0–3 1–4 1–1 3–1 0–4 0–4 3–5 1–2 3–1
San Gabriel 1–3 1–1 5–0 0–1 3–1 7–1 0–3 3–2 0–0 0–2 3–0 3–7 0–3 0–1 4–0 2–0 0–3
Sporting Huelva 0–4 2–0 2–2 0–3 4–3 3–1 1–3 1–0 3–2 0–1 4–2 2–0 1–1 0–0 2–0 3–0 2–0
Valencia 1–3 4–1 1–1 0–2 4–2 3–1 0–4 1–0 3–0 0–3 0–2 2–1 1–4 1–3 4–1 0–4 0–1
Source: women.soccerway.com
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Top scorers

[edit]

Sonia of Barcelona won the top-scorer award with 38 goals.[5]

Rank Player Team Goals
1 Spain Sonia Bermúdez Barcelona 38
2 Spain María Paz Vilas Espanyol 36
3 Spain Natalia Pablos Rayo Vallecano 26
4 Spain Adriana Martín Atlético Madrid 25
5 Spain Erika Vázquez Athletic Bilbao 24
5 Spain Patricia Mascaró Collerense 24
7 Spain Olga García Barcelona 23
7 Spain Ana Romero Espanyol 23
9 Equatorial Guinea Jade Boho Rayo Vallecano 19

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Barcelona leads and tries for a new Spanish record". Sport (in Spanish). Spain. 11 November 2011. Retrieved 14 November 2011.
  2. ^ "Espanyol v Barcelona match report". mundodelfutbolfemenino.blogspot.com. 18 December 2011. Retrieved 5 January 2012.
  3. ^ "El Barça femenino, campeón de Liga" (in Spanish). mundodeportivo.com. 27 May 2012. Retrieved 27 May 2012.
  4. ^ a b c "2011/12 regulations" (PDF). rfef.es. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 September 2011. Retrieved 12 October 2011.
  5. ^ "Goal scorer list". futbolme.com. Archived from the original on 17 June 2012. Retrieved 27 May 2012.
[edit]