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List of FC Barcelona records and statistics

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buck-teethed football player
Ronaldinho is the only Barcelona player to win the FIFA World Player award twice.[1]

FC Barcelona is a football club based in Barcelona that competes in La Liga, the top football league in Spain. The club was formed in 1899 by a group of Swiss, English and Spanish men led by Joan Gamper, and played its first friendly match on 8 December 1899. Initially, Barcelona played against other local clubs in various Catalan tournaments. In 1929 the club became one of the founding members of La Liga, Spain's first truly national league. As of 2010, Barcelona is one of three clubs never to have been relegated from the top level of Spanish football, the others being Athletic Bilbao and Real Madrid.[2]

Barcelona has amassed various records since the foundation. Regionally, domestically and continentally they have set several records in winning various official and unofficial competitions. Since they began playing in regional competitions to the end of the Catalan championship in 1940, they won a record 23 titles from a possible 38. Domestically, the club has a record number of titles in the still-running competitions, namely the Copa del Rey and the Spanish Supercup.

The club has signed several high-profile players, paying large transfer fees for some of the most decorated players. The club paid a record £5 million for Diego Maradona in 1982 and sold him two years later for another record £7 million to Napoli. The club's players have received a record seven FIFA World Player awards.

Honours

File:The six Barça cups .jpg
The sextuple Barça won in 2009 (back left to front right); La Liga, Champions League, Copa del Rey, Club World Cup, Spanish Supercup and European Supercup.[3]

Barcelona won their first trophy in 1902 when they won the Copa Macaya, which was the predecessor to the Catalan Championship. The club won the Catalan Championship a record 23 times during the 40-year span of the tournament.[4]

When national league was established in 1929, the importance of the regional league declined, and it was abandoned in 1940. From then on Barcelona did not participate in regional competitions until the establishment of the Copa Catalunya in 1993, a cup they have won a record six times. Barcelona has participated every year and won six times. [4] Barcelona was one of the founding members of La Liga, and is one of three clubs never to have been relegated, the two others being Real Madrid and Athletic Bilbao.[5] It is the most successful club in Spain with Real Madrid, having won a total of 55 titles: 20 La Liga titles, a record 25 Copa del Reys, eight Spanish Super Cups, and two League Cups.

The club is also one of the most successful clubs in European football, having won 13 official trophies in total, 10 of which were official UEFA competitions.[6] They have won three UEFA Champions League titles, a record four UEFA Cup Winners' Cups, a record three Inter-Cities Fairs Cups (the forerunner to the UEFA Europa League), three UEFA Super Cups and one FIFA Club World Cup. In December 2009, Barcelona won the Club World Cup for the first time.

Figures in italics indicate Barcelona's score in a two-legged final.

Regional titles

  • Winners (23) (record):
  • Copa Macaya (1): 1902.
  • Copa Barcelona (1): 1903.
  • Campionat de Catalunya (21): 1904–05, 1908–09, 1909–10, 1910–11, 1912–13, 1915–16, 1918–19, 1919–20, 1920–21, 1921–22, 1923–24, 1924–25, 1925–26, 1926–27, 1927–28, 1929–30, 1930–31, 1931–32, 1933–34, 1935–36, 1937–38.
  • Runners up (5):
  • Copa Macaya (1): 1901.
  • Campionat de Catalunya (4) : 1907–08, 1911–12, 1932–33, 1936–37.
  • Winners (1) (record): 1937–38.
  • Winners (6) (record): 1991, 1993, 2000, 2004, 2005, 2007.
  • Runners up (7): 1996, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2002, 2006, 2008.

National titles

File:Liga de Primera División 2005-06.jpg
The La Liga trophy
File:Copa del Rey de Fútbol - 1978.jpg
The Copa del Rey cup
File:Supercopa de España Real Zaragoza.jpg
The Supercopa de España
File:Copa Eva Duarte.jpg
The Copa Eva Duarte
  • Winners (25) (record):
1909–10 3–2 vs. Club Español de Madrid
1911–12 2–0 vs. Gimnástica Madrid
1912–13 2–1 vs. Real Sociedad
1919–20 2–0 vs. Athletic Bilbao
1921–22 5–1 vs. Real Unión
1924–25 2–0 vs. Getxo
1925–26 3–2 vs. Atlético Madrid
1927–28 3–1 vs. Real Sociedad
1941–42 4–3 vs. Athletic Bilbao
1950–51 3–0 vs. Real Sociedad
1951–52 4–2 vs. Valencia
1952–53 2–1 vs. Atlético Bilbao
1956–57 1–0 vs. Espanyol
1958–59 4–1 vs. Granada
1962–63 3–1 vs. Real Zaragoza
1967–68 1–0 vs. Real Madrid
1970–71 4–3 vs. Valencia
1977–78 3–1 vs. UD Las Palmas
1980–81 3–1 vs. Sporting de Gijón
1982–83 2–1 vs. Real Madrid
1987–88 1–0 vs. Real Sociedad
1989–90 2–0 vs. Real Madrid
1996–97 3–2 vs. Betis
1997–98 1–1 vs. Mallorca (5–4 pen.)
2008–09 4–1 vs. Athletic Bilbao
  • Runners up (9):
1901–02 1–2 vs. Athletic Bilbao
1918–19 2–5 vs. Getxo
1931–32 0–1 vs. Athletic Bilbao
1935–36 1–2 vs. Real Madrid
1953–54 0–3 vs. Valencia
1973–74 0–4 vs. Real Madrid
1983–84 0–1 vs. Athletic Bilbao
1985–86 0–1 vs. Real Zaragoza
1995–96 0–1 vs. Atlético Madrid
  • Winners (2) (record):
1982–83 4–3 (2–2 / 2–1) vs. Real Madrid
1985–86 2–1 (1–0 / 2–0) vs. Real Betis
  • Winners (8) (joint record with Real Madrid):
1983 4–1 (3–1 / 0–1) vs. Athletic Bilbao
1991 2–1 (0–1 / 1–1) vs. Atlético Madrid
1992 5–2 (3–1 / 1–2) vs. Atlético Madrid
1994 6–5 (0–2 / 4–5) vs. Real Zaragoza
1996 6–5 (5–2 / 3–1) vs. Atlético Madrid
2005 4–2 (0–3 / 1–2) vs. Real Betis
2006 4–0 (0–1 / 3–0) vs. Espanyol
2009 5–1 (1–2 / 3–0) vs. Athletic Bilbao
  • Runners up (7):
1985 2–3 (3–1 / 0–1) vs. Atlético Madrid
1988 2–3 (2–0 / 2–1) vs. Real Madrid
1990 1–5 (0–1 / 4–1) vs. Real Madrid
1993 2–4 (3–1 / 1–1) vs. Real Madrid
1997 3–5 (2–1 / 4–1) vs. Real Madrid
1998 1–3 (2–1 / 0–1) vs. Mallorca
1999 3–5 (1–0 / 3–3) vs. Valencia
  • Winners (4) (record):
1945 5–4 vs. Athletic Bilbao
1948 1–0 vs. Sevilla FC
1952 Was given without a play–off match as Barcelona won both the Spanish Cup and La Liga
1953 Was given without a play–off match as Barcelona won both the Spanish Cup and La Liga
  • Runners up (2):
1949 4–7 vs. Valencia
1951 0–2 vs. Atlético Madrid

European titles

File:Cupvinnercupen.JPG
The UEFA Cup Winners' Cup
  • Winners (3):
1991–92 1–0 vs. Sampdoria
2005–06 2–1 vs. Arsenal
2008–09 2–0 vs. Manchester United
  • Runners up (3):
1960–61 2–3 vs. Benfica
1985–86 0–0 vs. Steaua Bucharest (0–2 on penalties)
1993–94 0–4 vs. AC Milan
  • Winnners (4) (record):
1978–79 4–3 vs. Fortuna Düsseldorf
1981–82 2–1 vs. Standard Liège
1988–89 2–0 vs. Sampdoria
1996–97 1–0 vs. Paris Saint-Germain
  • Runners up (2):
1968–69 2–3 vs. Slovan Bratislava
1990–91 1–2 vs. Manchester United
  • Winnners (3) (record):
1955–58 8–2 (2–2 / 6–0) vs. London XI
1958–60 4–1 (0–0 / 4–1) vs. Birmingham City
1965–66 4–3 (0–1 / 2–4) vs. Real Zaragoza
  • Runners up (1):
1961–62 3-7 (6-2 / 1-1) vs. Valencia CF
  • Winners (3):
1992 3–2 (1–1 / 2–1) vs. Werder Bremen
1997 3–1 (2–0 / 1–1) vs. Borussia Dortmund
2009 1–0 vs. Shakhtar Donetsk
  • Runners up (4):
1979 1–2 (1–0 / 1–1) vs. Nottingham Forest
1982 1–3 (1–0 / 3–0) vs. Aston Villa
1989 1–2 (1–1 / 1–0) vs. AC Milan
2006 0–3 vs. Sevilla

1910, 1911, 1912, 1913.
1949 2–1 vs. Sporting Lisbon
1952 1–0 vs. OGC Nice

Worldwide titles

File:Trofeu SPFC - Mundial2005 01.jpg
The FIFA Club World Cup
  • Winners (1):
2009 2–1 vs. Estudiantes de la Plata
  • Runners up (2):
1992 1–2 vs. São Paulo
2006 0–1 vs. Internacional
1957.

Doubles and trebles

  • La Liga and Copa Del Rey doubles: (5)
1951–52, 1952–53, 1958–59, 1997–98 and 2008–09 (as part of treble)
  • La Liga and European Cup doubles: (3)
1992–93, 2005–06 and 2008–09 (as part of treble)
  • La Liga and World Club Cup doubles: (1)
2009–10
  • La Liga, Copa Del Rey and Champions League: (1)
2008–09

Unofficial titles

1937

(Barça is considering application to the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RSFF) to make this equivalent to a La Liga title, after learning that the RSFF considered to recognize Levante FC's Copa de la España Libre of the same year as equivalent to Copa del Rey. The RSFF later denied Levante their request.).[23][24]

Players

FC Barcelona's founder, Joan Gamper, was one of the club's first football players and holds the record for most goals in one match, with nine goals scored.[25] Thirteen years after the foundation of Barcelona, Paulino Alcántara joined the club and went on to become one of the player legends in the club, with a record 357 goals in 357 matches, making him the player with most goals scored for Barcelona in all competitions.[26] In the years since Alcántara joined, Barcelona has employed some of the world's most accoladed players, with seven FIFA World Player and Ballon d'Or winners among the previous and current Barcelona players. This makes it the club with the most FIFA World Player awards received by the players.

Most official appearances

  • This is a list of the highest number of officials appearances for the club. All current players are in italics. In the column "Europe" are included all matches in UEFA competitions. In the column "Others" are included all matches in Intercontinental Cup, FIFA Club World Cup, League Cup, Latin Cup and Spanish Supercup. Statistics correct as of the end of the 2009–10 La Liga season.[27]
Ranking Nationality Name Years Liga Cup Europe Others Total
1  Spain Migueli 1973–1989 391 59 85 13 548
2  Spain Xavi 1998– 352 44 121 10 527
3  Spain Carles Puyol 1999– 331 38 107 12 488
4  Spain Carles Rexach 1965–1981 328 61 63 0 452
5  Spain Guillermo Amor 1988–1998 311 35 60 15 421
6  Spain Andoni Zubizarreta 1986–1994 301 32 68 9 410
7  Spain Joan Segarra 1949–1964 299 69 34 0 402
8  Spain Joaquim Rifé 1964–1976 290 62 49 0 401
9  Spain José Ramón Alexanko 1980–1993 274 49 53 23 399
10  Spain Juan Manuel Asensi 1970–1980 299 40 57 0 396

All-time most appearances

Below is listed the top five players with the most appearances for Barcelona, including friendlies.[28]

Ranking Nationality Name Games Years Ref
1  Spain Migueli 664 1973–1989 [29]
2  Spain Carles Rexach 656 1965–1981 [30]
3  Spain Guillermo Amor 550 1988–1998 [31]
4  Spain Joaquim Rifé 535 1964–1976 [32]
5  Spain Joan Segarra 528 1949–1964 [28]

Goalscorers

  • Most goals scored in one season for the club, including friendlies: 50 – Clemente Gràcia, in 50 games, 1921–22. (35 goals in friendlies, 19 in the Catalan Championship, 5 in the Spanish Championship).[35]
  • Highest scorer in a single game: 9 – Joan Gamper, on three occasions, 1901–1903.[35]
  • FC Barcelona players that have won the Pichichi trophy for top-scorer in La Liga:[37]
    • Mariano Martín (1942–43, 32 goals in 23 games), César Rodríguez (1948–49, 28 goals in 24 games), Cayetano Re (1964–65, 25 goals in 30 games), Carles Rexach (1970–71, 17 goals in 28 games), Hans Krankl (1978/79, 29 goals in 30 games), Quini (1980/81, 20 goals in 30 games), Quini (1981–82, 26 goals in 32 games), Romario (1993–94, 30 goals in 33 games), Ronaldo (1996–97, 34 goals in 37 games), Samuel Eto'o (2005–06, 26 goals in 35 games), and Lionel Messi (2009–10, 34 goals in 35 games)

Top scorers in all competitions

This lists all topscorers in competitive matches. Names in italics indicate players currently playing in the first team.[38][39][40] Statistics correct as of the end of the 2009–10 La Liga season.[41]

Ranking Nationality Name Years Goals
1  Spain César Rodríguez 1942–1955 235
2  Hungary Ladislao Kubala 1950–1961 196
3  Cameroon Samuel Eto'o 2004–2009 130
3  Brazil Rivaldo 1997–2002 130
5  Argentina Lionel Messi 2004– 127
6  Spain Mariano Martín 1940–1948 124
7  Netherlands Patrick Kluivert 1998–2004 122
7  Spain Carles Rexach 1965–1981 122
9  Spain Josep Escolà 1934–1949 118
10  Bulgaria Hristo Stoichkov 1990–1998 117

Top scorers in international competitions

Below is given the top 10 top-scorers in all international competitions. Names that appear in italics indicate players currently playing in the first team. Statistics correct as of the end of the 2009–10 La Liga season.[42]


Ranking Nationality Name Years CL CWC EL LC SC FCWC Total
1  Brazil Rivaldo 1997–2002 25 0 5 0 1 0 31
2  Argentina Lionel Messi 2004– 25 0 0 0 0 2 27
2  Spain Luis Enrique 1996–2004 20 0 6 0 1 0 27
2  Brazil Evaristo de Macedo 1957–1962 10 0 17 0 0 0 27
5  Netherlands Patrick Kluivert 1998–2004 21 0 0 0 5 0 26
6  Spain Carles Rexach 1965–1981 4 6 15 0 0 0 25
7  Bulgaria Hristo Stoichkov 1990–1995
1996–1998
15 6 0 0 1 1 23
8  Spain José Zaldúa 1961–1971 0 4 18 0 0 0 22
9  Hungary Sándor Kocsis 1958–1965 7 3 11 0 0 0 21
10  Brazil Ronaldinho 2003–2008 14 0 4 0 0 1 19

Key: CL = Champions League / European Cup. CWC = Cup Winners Cup. EL = Europa League / Inter-Cities Fairs Cup. LC = Latin Cup. SC = European Supercup. FCWC = FIFA Club World Cup / Intercontinental Cup.

All-time overall scorers

Below is listed the top five players who scored the most goals for Barcelona, including friendlies.[43]

Ranking Nationality Name Goals Years Ref
1  Philippines Paulino Alcántara 357 1912–1927 [44][35]
2  Spain Josep Samitier 326 1918–1933 [45]
3  Spain César Rodríguez 294 1942–1955 [46]
4  Hungary Ladislao Kubala 274 1950–1961 [47]
5  Spain Josep Escolà 223 1934–1949 [48]

Transfer fee received

This lists transfer fees received by Barcelona. To compare across years, the 'adjusted fee' column compensates for inflation.[49] References which list figures in other denominations are converted using historical conversion rates.[50][51]

Ranking Nationality Name Fee Adjusted fee To Year Refs
1  Portugal Luis Figo £37m £79m Real Madrid 2000 [52]
2  Ivory Coast Yaya Touré £20m £32m Manchester City 2010 [53]
3  Brazil Ronaldo £19m £44m Inter Milan 1997 [54]
4  Brazil Ronaldinho £17m £29m AC Milan 2008 [55]
5  Portugal Simão Sabrosa £10m £21m Benfica 2001 [56]
6  Argentina Maradona £7m £28m Napoli 1984 [57]

Transfer fee paid

This lists transfer fees paid by Barcelona. To compare across years, the 'adjusted fee' column compensates for inflation.[49] References which list figures in other denominations are converted using historical conversion rates.[50][51]

Ranking Nationality Name Fee Adjusted fee From Year Refs
1  Sweden Zlatan Ibrahimovic £56m £95m Inter Milan 2009 [58]
2  Spain David Villa £33m £53m Valencia 2010 [59]
3  Brazil Dani Alves £23m £39m Sevilla 2008 [60]
4  Ukraine Dmytro Chygrynskiy £20m £34m Shaktar Donetsk 2009 [61]
5  Argentina Javier Saviola £18m £38m River Plate 2001 [62]
6  Argentina Diego Maradona £5m £22m Boca Juniors 1982 [57]
7  Netherlands Johann Cruyff £1m £13m Ajax 1974 [63]

Other individual records for the club

Victor Valdes has won the Zamora Trophy 3 times.
Johan Cruyff is the only Barcelona player to win the Ballon d'Or twice.
Pedro Rodríguez became the first player in history to score in six different competitions in one season.
  • Longest period without conceding a goal:
    • Miguel Reina went 824 minutes without conceding a goal in the Spanish League in the 1972–73 season (from the 53rd minute of the 14th game to the 67th minute of the 23rd game).[35]
  • FC Barcelona players that have won the FIFA World Player award for best player:[1]
    • Romário in 1994.
    • Ronaldo in 1996.
    • Rivaldo in 1999.
    • Ronaldinho in 2004 and 2005.
    • Lionel Messi in 2009.
  • FC Barcelona players that have won the European Golden Shoe award for highest goalscorer in Europe:
    • Ronaldo in the 1996–97 season (34 goals in 37 games).[65]
    • Lionel Messi in the 2009–10 season (34 goals in 35 games).[66]
  • Player with most La Liga (Spanish League) appearances:
  • Player to have scored in six different official competitions in one season:

Managerial records

  • Most seasons as coach: Jack Greenwell, 9 years in two spells from 1917 to 1924 and from 1931 to 1933.[35]
  • Most consecutive seasons as coach: Johan Cruyff, managed the club for 8 years between 1988 and 1996.[35]

Team records

FC Barcelona's team records include the following:[69]

La Liga

Points

  • Most points in a season
    • Three points for a win:
      • 99 points, becoming the Spanish team with most points in a 38 game season in the 2009–10 season.[70][71]
    • Two points for a win:
      • 58 points in the 1992–93 season.[72]
  • Fewest points in a season
    • Three points for a win:
      • 56 points in the 2002–2003 season.[73]
    • Two points for a win:
      • 19 in the 22 game 1939–40 season.[74]
  • The team with most points at the end of the first half of the league:
    • 50 points during the 2008–09 season.[69][75]
  • The team with most points at the end of the second half of the league:

Goals

A chart showing the progress of Barcelona's cumulative goal difference in La Liga.
  • Team with most away goals in a League:
    • The club scored a total number of 44 goals in the 2008–09 season.[69][78]
  • Team with best goal difference in a League season:
  • Season with most goals scored in League matches:
    • In 2008–09 season, the club scored a total number of 105 goals in 38 games.[69][78]
  • Season with fewest goals scored in League matches:
    • The club scored a total number of 32 goals in 22 games in the 1939–40 season.[69][79]
  • Season with fewest goals conceded in League matches:
    • The club conceded a total number of 18 goals in 30 games in the 1968–69 season.[69][80]
  • Season with most goals conceded:
    • The club conceded a total number of 66 goals in 26 games in the 1941–42 season.[69][81]

Streaks

  • Consecutive La Liga (Spanish League) titles:
    • Won 4 championship titles from the 1990–91 season to the 1993–94 season.[69][82]
  • Longest unbeaten run in League matches:
    • 26 games in the 1973–74 season.[69][83]
  • Longest unbeaten run at home in League matches:
  • Longest winning run in the League:
    • 14 games in the 2005–06 season.[69][87]
  • Longest winning run at home in League matches:
  • Longest scoring run in the League:
  • Longest scoring run at home in League matches:
    • 88 games in 1951–52 to 1957–58.[69]
  • Record run of away wins in the League:
    • 9 victories in the 2008–09 season.[69][75]

International

  • Only team to have appeared in every year of the Continental competition:
    • Barcelona has participated since the inception in 1955.[69]
  • Season with most titles:
  • Highest win in European competitions at home games:
    • 8–0, FC Barcelona 8 – 0 Apollon Limassol (Cyprus) in 1982 and FC Barcelona 8–0 FK Púchov (Slovakia) in 2003.[69]
  • Highest win in European competition at away games:
  • Most consecutive wins in the UEFA Champions League:
    • 11 wins during the 2002–2003 season.[69]

All competitions

  • Highest win in any competition:
  • Highest win in a Friendly match:
    • 20–1, Smilde (Netherlands) 1–20 FC Barcelona in 1992.[69]
  • Heaviest defeat in any competition:
    • 12–1, Athletic Club Bilbao 12–1 FC Barcelona in 1930–31, in La Liga.[69][96]
  • Longest unbeaten run in all competitive matches:
    • 27 games in the 1973–1974 season. 26 in La Liga and 1 in the UEFA Cup.[69]
  • Highest win in home matches:
    • 10–1, FC Barcelona 10–1 Gimnàstic Tarragona in 1949, in La Liga.[97]
  • Highest win at away matches:
    • 0–8, Las Palmas 0–8 FC Barcelona in 1959, in La Liga.[69][90]
  • Longest winning run in competitive matches:
    • 19 games in both Domestic and International matches during the 2005–2006 season. 13 in the league, three in the Champions League, two in the Copa del Rey and one in the Catalan Cup.[69]
  • Most consecutive away wins:
    • 13 games during the 2008–09 season. Eight came in the league, three in the Champions League and two in the Copa del Rey.[69][98]

See also

References

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