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Castilla y León Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Castilla y León Cup Copa Castilla y León
Founded1924
RegionCastile and León Castilla y León
(Spain)
Number of teams16 (since 2012)
Current championsCD Numancia (2013)
WebsiteFCyLF.es

The Castilla y León Cup (from the Spanish expression Copa Castilla y León) is a football championship usually played on summer and autumn between the most important teams in the region of Castilla y León. It was created in 1924 as a regional championship parallel to La Liga, and was played between that year and 1931. The Spanish Civil War and the undisputed leadership of La Liga wiped out the tournament, being forgotten. In 1985, the Football Federation of Castile and León revived it as a summer tournament, being played in just that year. It was in 2009 when it returned to be played[1] on an annual basis.

The tournament is not expected to be played in 2014.[2]

Tournament editions

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1924–25 Edition

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Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
CD Español 4 3 0 1 10 10 0 6
Cultural Leonesa 5 3 0 2 15 14 +1 6
Real Unión Deportiva 5 2 0 3 10 6 +4 4
UD Española 2 0 0 2 2 7 −5 0

Note: UD Española disqualified because of an improper starting 11. The remaining matches are considered defeats, so CD Español scored 4 extra points and Cultural Leonesa scored only 2, breaking the tie between those teams.

1925–26 Edition

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Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Cultural Leonesa 8 5 2 1 18 6 +12 12
Real Unión Deportiva 8 3 5 0 21 11 +10 11
CD Español 8 2 3 3 19 15 +4 7
UD Española 8 2 3 3 12 17 −5 7
UD Ferroviaria 8 1 1 6 7 28 −21 3

1926–27 Edition

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Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Real Unión Deportiva 10 8 2 0 35 8 +27 18
CD Español 10 8 1 1 46 13 +33 17
Cultural Leonesa 10 2 3 5 25 25 0 7
UD Ferroviaria 10 2 2 6 12 29 −17 6
UD Española 9 3 0 6 18 39 −21 6
Stadium Luises 9 1 2 6 11 33 −22 4

Note: The match between UD Española and Stadium Luises, both teams from Salamanca, was suspended because of a fight between players and spectators.

1927–28 Edition

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Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Cultural Leonesa 10 9 0 1 43 7 +36 18
Real Unión Deportiva 10 8 1 1 41 14 +27 17
CD Español 10 5 1 4 37 18 +19 11
UD Española 10 3 1 6 26 34 −8 7
UD Ferroviaria 10 3 1 6 10 32 −22 7
Stadium Luises 10 0 0 10 4 56 −52 0

1928–29 Edition

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Background

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In 1928, Real Unión Deportiva and CD Español were merged into Real Valladolid. In Salamanca, UD Española became UD Salamanca, disappearing Stadium Luises. The new name, "UD Salamanca" was formalized during the Second Republic of Spain in 1932, but the team used that name for the Castilla y León Cup.

Results

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Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Cultural Leonesa 8 7 0 1 48 4 +44 14
Real Valladolid 8 7 0 1 50 6 +44 14
UD Ferroviaria 8 4 0 4 12 23 −11 8
Burgos 8 1 0 7 7 45 −38 2
UD Salamanca 8 1 0 7 5 44 −39 2

Tie-break match

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1929–30 Edition

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Qualifying match

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Real Valladolid qualified after 11–0 victory

Results

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Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Cultural Leonesa 4 4 0 0 20 2 +18 8
Real Valladolid 4 2 0 2 4 5 −1 4
UD Ferroviaria 4 0 0 4 1 18 −17 0

1930–31 Edition

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Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Real Valladolid 8 5 3 0 29 9 +20 13
Cultural Leonesa 8 4 2 2 17 14 +3 10
CD Palencia 8 0 1 7 4 27 −23 1

Note: played two rounds of 4 matches.

1985 Summer Edition

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Qualifying match

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Gimnástica Segoviana1 – 3Real Valladolid
La Albuera Stadium, Segovia

Real Valladolid qualified[3] after 3–1 victory

Quarterfinals

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Real Ávila1 – 1Zamora
Adolfo Suárez Stadium, Ávila
Zamora1 – 2Real Ávila
Ramiro Ledesma Stadium, Zamora

Real Ávila won 3–2 on aggregate


Numancia0 – 4Real Valladolid[3]
Antiguo Los Pajaritos, Soria

Real Valladolid qualified after 4–0 victory


Real Burgos2 – 0Palencia
Palencia6 – 1Real Burgos
Antigua Balastera, Palencia

Palencia won 6–3 on aggregate


Cultural Leonesa1 – 0UD Salamanca
La Puentecilla, León

UD Salamanca won 3–2 on aggregate

Semifinals

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Real Ávila0 – 3Real Valladolid
Adolfo Suárez Stadium, Ávila

Real Valladolid advanced to final after 3–0 victory


Palencia1 – 1 (a.e.t.)Cultural Leonesa
Antigua Balastera, Palencia
Replay match
UD Salamanca1 – 0 (a.e.t.)Palencia

UD Salamanca advanced to final. Won 2–1 on aggregate

Final

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Real Valladolid4 – 1UD Salamanca
Eusebio 26'
Duque 45'
Jorge 47', 60'
2' Marcelino

2009–13 trophy

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Ed. Final host Champion Runner-up Score
2009–10 Salamanca UD Salamanca Real Valladolid 2–1
2010–11 Ponferrada SD Ponferradina UD Salamanca 1–1
2011 Villaralbo CD Mirandés Villaralbo CF 1–0
2012 Miranda de Ebro CD Mirandés Real Valladolid 4–1
2013 Palencia CD Numancia SD Ponferradina 1–0

Titles by team

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Winners of the tournament:[4]

Team Titles Years
Cultural Leonesa 4 1926, 1928, 1929, 1930
Real Valladolid[5] 2 1931, 1985
CD Mirandés 2 2011, 2012
UD Salamanca (†) 1 2009–10
SD Ponferradina 1 2010–11
CD Numancia 1 2013
Real Unión Deportiva (†) 1 1927
CD Español (†) 1 1925

Modern trophy

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Team Titles Runners-up Years winning
CD Mirandés 2 0 2011, 2012
UD Salamanca (†) 1 1 2009–10
SD Ponferradina 1 1 2010–11
CD Numancia 1 0 2013
Real Valladolid 0 2
Villaralbo CF 0 1

References

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  1. ^ Vuelve a disputarse la Copa de Castilla y León (English: Castilla y León Cup returns) Archived 2010-03-29 at the Wayback Machine, FCyLF.es, on June 12, 2009
  2. ^ La Copa Castilla y León no se celebrará en el curso 2014-2015 (English: Castilla y León Cup will not be played in the 2014–15 season); Diario de León, 26 June 2014
  3. ^ a b At the 1985 edition, the qualified in the previous qualifying round only plays one-leg quarterfinal match.
  4. ^ RSSSF Data about Castilla y León Cup, RSSSF.com, viewed on August 11, 2010
  5. ^ Not included titles won by its former teams: Real Unión Deportiva and CD Español.