| Football in Spain | |
|---|---|
| Country | Spain |
| Governing body | RFEF |
| National team | Spain |
| First played | 1890; 136 years ago (1890) |
| Registered players | 1,063,090 |
| Clubs | 21,148 |
| National competitions | |
| Club competitions | |
| International competitions | |
Football is the most popular sport inSpain, with 61% of the population interested in it.[1] Spain has some of the most influential teams in Europe (Real Madrid,Barcelona,Atlético de Madrid,Sevilla,Valencia, and others) as well as many players (mostly unprofessional) and teams registered in all categories (1,063,090 players in 21,148 clubs).[2] Moreover, football is the sport that interests the majority of Spanish people (48%) and a total of 67% of the population said they were fans of or had a liking for a particular club.
In a survey of the sports habits of the Spanish population made in 2010, football was ranked as the second most popular recreational sport practiced by the population (17.9%). 75.9% said they had purchased tickets to a football match. In addition, 67.3% of the people said they saw all, almost all, many, or some of the football matches broadcast on television.[3] In another survey undertaken in 2014, football practice decreased to 14% of the population, being overtaken by other sports such as running,[4] cycling,[5] and swimming for recreation. However, in this survey, football was still the sport that interested most of Spain's people (48%). 67% of the population said they were fans of or sympathized with a particular club. In addition, 74.9% said they watched, whenever possible, the matches broadcast on television regarding their favourite teams, and 42.4% had flags, badges, or objects of their favourite teams. Data from this survey confirmed the widespread impression that most of Spain's people are supporters ofReal Madrid (32.4%) orFC Barcelona (24.7%), and the other teams have fewer supporters nationwide, such asAtlético de Madrid (16.1%),Valencia CF (3.5%),Athletic Bilbao (3.3%), orSevilla FC (3.2%).[6]
A relationship between football, politics, intercultural relations, identity, and attitudes toward regionalism in Spain has also been reported.[7][8][9][10][11]
TheRoyal Spanish Football Federation (Spanish: Real Federación Española de Fútbol) – the country's national football governing body – organizes two Cup competitions: theCopa del Rey and theSupercopa de España. TheLiga de Fútbol Profesional (LFP) (English: Professional Football League), integrated by a total of 42 football clubs, forms part of the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) but has autonomy in its organization and functioning. It is responsible for organising state football leagues in coordination with RFEF.[12]
TheSpain national football team once won theFIFA World Cup and succeeded in theUEFA European Championship and theOlympic tournament. The biggest success achieved by the national team was the historic treble of winning tournaments in a row: the
UEFA European Championship in 2008,[13] theFIFA World Cup in 2010, and theUEFA European Championship in 2012.[14][15][16][17] They also won the UEFA European Championship in 1964 and in 2024.[18] TheSpain women's national football team became world champions following their victory in the2023 FIFA Women's World Cup,[19] therefore making Spain only the second nation after Germany to win both the men's and women's senior World Cup.[20] In all categories, Spain's men's national teams have won 27 titles inFIFA,UEFA, andOlympic tournaments within the European continent and beyond.[21][22] In qualifying for the UEFA championships, the team ranked highest in the number of shots (227) and possession (70%) and completed with the highest pass percentage (91%) out of all qualifying teams. The team was also the first to retain theHenri Delaunay trophy.[23]
The First Division of theLiga de Fútbol Profesional – commonly known in the English-speaking world asLa Liga – is one ofthe strongest football leagues in both Europe and the world.[24][25][26] At the club level, Spanish football clubs have won a total of 66 international tournaments.[27][28][29][30] They are the most successful in different current European competitions, such asUEFA Champions League,[31]UEFA Super Cup,[32] andUEFA Europa League;[33] and were also the most successful in the extinctInter-Cities Fairs Cup.[30]
During its most successful time,Tiki-taka was the characteristic football style of play developed by theSpain national football team (and at the club level, byFC Barcelona). This football style is characterized by possessing the ball for large portions of the game and moving the ball quickly from one player to the next, with short and quick passes, keeping the ball away from the opponent, and then delivering an incisive pass to score a goal.[34][35]
Professional football in Spain is a sociocultural event that significantly contributes to the Spanish economy in terms of demand and supply. In economic terms, during 2013, professional football generated more than €7.6 billion, including direct, indirect, and induced effects, representing 0.75% of the Spanish GDP.[36] Moreover, due to the financial crisis in the last few years, many Spanish football clubs in the top two divisions have been facing severe economic troubles due to paying bank debts. In addition, the European Union authorities have warned the Spanish authorities to halt public funding of debt-ridden clubs.[37]
Spain's national futsal team is one of the strongest teams in the world, being six times champion in theUEFA Futsal Championship and two times champion in theFIFA Futsal World Championship.[22]
Modern football was introduced to Spain in the late 19th century by a combination of mostlyBritish immigrant workers, visiting sailors, and Spanish students returning from Britain.[38][39][40] In the late 1870s, various English workers scattered throughout the peninsula began to establish informal groups that were dedicated to different recreational practices, especiallycricket and football, particularly inSpanish ports ofVigo,Andalusia,Huelva,Seville, andBilbao.[38]

The first kick to afootball ball on Spanish soil occurred in 1873 in either Huelva or Vigo. The investigations about which one was the dean of football in Spain remained inconclusive and open to debate by historians.[41][42] That year, in Huelva, British workers of theRio Tinto Company Limited (RTCL) began to arrive at theMinas de Riotinto after the company won a concession to exploit the copper mines ofRio Tinto.[43] The Englishmen who worked in the mines gathered to play their favourite sports, like cricket,rugby, and football.[38] Meanwhile, in Vigo, a group of British workers for theEastern Telegraph Company arrived there fromPorthcurno, a small isolated town in the far west of England, thus earning the nickname "Exiles".[41] These two colonies gave birth to the first Spanish football teams:Exiles Foot-Ball Club (1876) andRío Tinto Foot-Ball Club (1878).[44][42] These teams were never officially established, so there is no legal record of their existence. The first legally established Spanish football club was theCricket and Football Club of Madrid, founded in October 1879 under the protection of KingAlfonso XII, who was named the Honorary President of the club. Together with Exiles FC and Rio Tinto FC, it was one of the three proto-clubs that pioneered and expanded football in Spain.[45][46][47] Even though the Madrid team disappeared a few years later, Exiles FC and Rio Tinto FC lasted decades and played a pivotal role in the amateur beginnings of football in Spain.[41]
Rio Tinto FC catalyzed theSociedad de Juego de Pelota ('Ball Game Society') in 1884, which organized football games and other typical British sports.[38][48] These meetings were initially contested between the club's members and later against crews of English ships that docked in theport of Huelva. The earliest known example of this dates to March 1888, when the club played football and cricket matches against the mariners of a merchant ship calledJane Cory.[44][48] This society developed into the oldest official football club in Spain,Recreativo de Huelva, founded in December 1889 by two Scottish doctors of the Rio Tinto Company,Alexander Mackay and Robert Russell Ross.[38][44][48][49] Exiles FC lasted until the early 1910s; the club had good relations with the first football clubs to emerge in the city, and collaborated with them by providing knowledge, players, coaches, and even sharing its field,El Relleno.[50]
After Recreativo de Huelva,Sevilla FC is the next-oldest club in Spain, having been founded on 25 January 1890, byIsaias White and the then British vice-consul ofSeville,Edward Farquharson Johnston, who became the club's first president.[51][52][53][54][55] Unlike previous clubs, Sevilla FC was solely devoted to football, leading it to be considered Spain's first football club.[44] Thefirst official football match in Spain was contested between Sevilla FC and Recreativo de Huelva in Seville on 8 March 1890, at an abandoned mine near Calle Sanz. There were two Spanish players on each team; all other players were British, mostly Scottish, including Sevilla'scaptainHugh MacColl. Sevilla FC won2–0.[38][55][54]
Football was introduced in the Basque Country by two distinct groups, both with British connections: British shipyard workers andBasque students returning from schooling in Britain.[56] The British employees of theNervión Shipyards, located inSestao (Vizcaya), organized and played the first known football match in the region, which was held on 4 April 1890, between theMachinery Department (engineers) and the Shipyard Workers.[57] This group of football pioneers were part of a multi-sports club calledClub Atleta, which had been founded in late 1889.[57] In November 1892, the president ofClub Atleta, Enrique Jones Bird, successfully asked for permission to play in theHippodrome of Lamiako, which thus became the new home of organized football in the Basque Country.[38][58] It was from Lamiako that the sport of football took off in Bilbao, with several Bilbainos swarming the field to watch the teams of British workers challenge each other every weekend,[58] and eventually, the local citizens themselves decided tochallenge a British team in 1894, which ended in a 6–0 win for the British.[58][59][60] The result, however, did not discourage the enthusiastic locals who were quick to play another match and soon the sport gained followers among the young students of the Gymnasium Zamacois, and in 1898, a group of seven students of that gym led byJuan Astorquia founded the first Basque football club: Athletic Club.[38][39] This early British influence was reflected in the use of English names such as Recreation Club, Athletic Club, and Football Club.[39] Although Athletic was founded in 1898, the club was not officially established until the historic meeting in Café García on 5 September 1901, where the club's first board was elected.[61]

In the late 19th century,Catalonia enjoyed the country's most developed industry, largely thanks toits cotton industry. For this reason,Barcelona was home to a group of British immigrants.[62][failed verification] The first known football match in the city was held on the grounds near theHippodrome of Can Tunis in late 1892.[63] Very little is known about that meeting, only that it was the work of members of theClub Regatas de Barcelona (a club ofrowing andsailing) and cricket players of the British Club de Barcelona located onRambla dels Capuchins.[63][38]James Reeves, the spokesman of the British members of Club Regatas, convinced some members of the two clubs to practice football,[64] thus forming a society known as theBarcelona Football Club.[65] This group of football pioneers in the city played several matches in the 1892–93 season, most of which were training matches between the Blue and Red teams.[65] Thelast game of the season on 12 March 1893 was the subject of the first proper chronicle of a football match in Spain, appearing inLa Dinastía. The photograph of the two sides before the game is regarded as Spain's oldest image of a football team.[66] However,Palamós FC was the first official and registered Catalan football club in 1898.[38] The SwissHans Gamper foundedFC Barcelona on 29 November 1899.[38] Other clubs founded in 1900 – such asEscocès FC (previously Sant Andreu),Hispania AC (previously Team Rojo), University SC,FC Internacional, andIrish Football Club – competed for local support in the first competitions, including the first-ever tournament held in Spain, theCopa Macaya.[38]
InMadrid, the first games were promoted byInstitución Libre de Enseñanza (ILE; 'Free Educational Institution'), an educational and cultural centre. The first official and registered football club in Madrid wasFootball Club Sky, founded in 1897. A conflict between its members caused the club to split in two in 1900. Then, several clubs also emerged in Madrid, most notablyMadrid Football Club, officially established in March 1902 by Catalan brothersJuan andCarlos Padrós.[38]
The rapid growth of football enthusiasts and entities led to the creation of the first football associations in charge of its regulation.[citation needed] The first football association founded in Spain was theCatalan Football Federation (Catalan:Federació Catalana de Futbol), established in Catalonia on 11 November 1900, as the Football Association of Catalonia (Catalan:Football Associació de Catalunya).[38][67] With the first associations also came the first competitions and tournaments, such as the Copa Macaya on 6 January 1901,[67] which was organized on the initiative of Alfonso Macaya: the then honorary president of Hispania AC, who went on to win thefirst edition of the competition, thus becoming the very first Spanish club to win an official title.[38][68] Copa Macaya was the first tournament ever played in Spain and allIberian Peninsula and was the predecessor of theCatalan football championship (Catalan:Campionat de Catalunya). The Copa Macaya is recognized as the first Catalan championship.[69] The Catalan Championship emerged just a few days after theCampeonato de Madrid, whosefirst edition was won byModerno FC.[70]
The poorly organized sport still found many detractors that hindered further expansion[71] because it was considered dangerous in its early years.[72] In 1902 the first national championship played in Spain was organized, theCopa de la Coronación, by the recently establishedMadrid Football Federation, which was the catalyst for the current Copa del Rey due to its success.[73]

TheCopa del Rey (English: King's Cup) competition was founded in 1903, one year after a previous football tournament named Coronation Cup. It was Spain's national football Championship from 1903 until the establishment of the League Championship in 1928.[74]
The Spanish Federation of Football Clubs was formed in 1909. However, there were discrepancies between the member clubs years later, and some of the clubs formed another association called the Royal Spanish Union of Clubs of Football.[75] Finally, the two associations reached an agreement, and theRoyal Spanish Football Federation was founded in 1913, which allowed Spanish football to enterFIFA.[76] In these years,Athletic was the most dominant club in the country, and the first idols in Spain began to appear, likePichichi andPaulino Alcántara.[76][77][78]
TheSpain national team was created in 1920 during the dispute of theOlympic Games in Antwerp.[39][78] The success of the Spanish national team in the Olympic Games, which won the silver medal, was huge in the development of football as a mass social event in Spain.[78] The interest in football grew, more people attended stadiums, more football information appeared in the newspapers, and football was used as an element of national prestige and political propaganda.[79]
After the Olympic triumph, football experienced a popularity boost among Spanish fans, and as a result, stadium attendance increased, and the pressure of professionalism grew.[80] Spanish football eventually turned professional in 1925.[81] An agreement between several clubs was made on November 23, 1928, officially establishing Spain's national football division and the birth of theSpanish League. The first league championship began in 1929.[39][82]
TheSpanish Civil War (1936–1939) disrupted national competitions. Although the Spanish League was suspended, the Catalan and Valencian clubs continued contesting the Mediterranean League in early 1937. Barcelona later toured Mexico and the United States, supporting the Spanish Republic.[39]
The Spanish League and the Cup were restored in the 1939–40 season after the Civil War had ended.Francisco Franco's regime, a fascist political system, began to use football as a propaganda tool for the new regime.[83] In 1941, as part of his policy of eradicating regional identities, the Franco regime banned using non-Castilian names. As a result, many clubs that had chosen English prefixes previously, such as Athletic or Football clubs, had to amend their initial names for other Castilian (such as Atlético or Club de Fútbol). TheCatalan Championship was banned, and the Catalan shield was taken from FC Barcelona's badge. Spanish football began to rebuild slowly after the War, but Spain's isolated international position meant they did not properly re-enter International football until 1950.[39] Later, Franco's regime could use football, based on the European triumphs of Real Madrid in the 1950s, for political purposes. In this manner, Real Madrid was used as a Spanish brand of success to promote Spain's image abroad and the pride of being Spanish in the country itself.[10][84]
Spain was selected as the host of the1982 FIFA World Cup, and the national team was eliminated in the second group stage.
Until the 1984–85 season, the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) organized the league tournament. Since then, the competition has been organized by theLiga de Fútbol Profesional (LFP)(English: Professional Football League), an independent body that was formed at the initiative of the clubs themselves after disagreements with the RFEF regarding the management professionalization and economic division of the League benefits.
Since the entry into force of Spanish Law 10/1990, almost all clubs competing professionally in Spain are companies under the legal status of sports companies, whose ownership is in the hands of its shareholders. Only three professional clubs (Athletic Club, Barcelona, and Real Madrid) kept their original structure, such as sports clubs directly controlled by their members.
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After the appearance of private television in Spain,[when?] clubs' revenue increased due to lucrative contracts signed to broadcast matches on television, allowing the teams to sign top players. However, as a result, most clubs also vastly increased their spending.[citation needed]
La Liga has been in significant financial turmoil in the last few years.[when?] As of 2013[update], Real Madrid and Barcelona were at the top of theForbes list of most valuable football teams, while the remaining Spanish clubs had a debt of around €4.1 billion. For this reason, most clubs had to cut their budgets drastically.[85] In 2013, the third biggest club, Atlético Madrid, had a debt of around €180 million; to relieve the debt, the club sold star playerRadamel Falcao for €60 million. Television companies also began to lose subscribers;Digital+ said it had lost 15% of subscribers since 2012, andMediapro lost 25% from 2011 to 2013, also having to shut downMARCA TV.[85]
Social interest in women's football has been growing in recent years, leading to increased economic investment.[86] A record crowd for a European women's club football match was recorded at theWanda Metropolitano stadium in Madrid on 17 March 2019, when 60,739 fans came to a game betweenAtlético Madrid andFC Barcelona; that attendance exceeded the previous record of 48,121 – also set in Spain in 2019 whenAthletic Bilbao played Atlético Madrid at theSan Mamés stadium.[87] This record has since been broken again, with the highest attendance for a Spanish women's football match being the game atCamp Nou withFC Barcelona againstVfL Wolfsburg on 22 April 2022, at 91,648 fans.[88]
There are two national competitions, theLiga F and theCopa de la Reina ('Queen's Cup').
The first teams and informal women's football competitions in Spain emerged in the 1970s. However, they were not officially recognized by the Royal Spanish Football Federation until 1980, with the founding of the National Women's Football Committee. The first official national competition was the Copa de la Reina ('Queen's Cup'), established in 1983. The Women's National League began playing in the 1988–89 season.[citation needed]
TheSpain women's national football team has qualified three times in theFIFA Women's World Cup, becomingWorld Champions in 2023 following their victory over England; and twice in theUEFA Women's Championship. Its youth division has had success in recent times. Theunder-20 team won theFIFA U-20 Women's World Cup in 2022 (runners-up in 2018). Theunder-19 team won theUEFA Women's Under-19 Championship in 2004, 2017, and 2018 (runners-up in 2012, 2014, 2015, and 2016). Theunder-17 team won theUEFA Women's Under-17 Championship in 2010, 2011, 2015, and 2018 (runners-up in 2009, 2014, 2016, and 2017), as well as theFIFA U-17 Women's World Cup in 2018 and 2022 (runners-up in 2014, and third-place in 2010 and 2016).
Within Spain, regional teams, most notably theCatalonia national football team, theBasque Country national football team, and even theGalicia national football team, began to compete against each other from 1915 onwards. Despite not being officially recognized byFIFA, these regional teams still occasionally play friendly games, with some national team players playing for both teams. Some autonomous governments and social sectors in the historical communities (especially inCatalonia andBasque Country) prefer to call their regional teams the national team while claiming to participate in international tournaments.[89]

TheSpain national team, commonly referred to asLa selección (English: The selection) orLa Roja (English: The Red one), made their international debut at the1920 Olympic Games in Belgium and came away with the silver medal.[39][78] Since then, the Spain national team has participated in fifteen of twenty-oneFIFA World Cups and nine out of fourteenUEFA European Championships. Historically, the Spain national team did not achieve important results in terms of trophies or develop an attractive playing style. Surprisingly, this fact contrasted with the huge success of the main Spanish football clubs at the European level. Nevertheless, the triumphs of the Spain national team in the2008 and2012 European Championship, and2010 FIFA World Cup, with anattractive playing style, marked a turning point that divided the history of the Spain national football team into two parts.
The Spain national football team wonFIFA Team of Year in 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, and 2013, and theLaureus World Sports Award for Team of the Year in 2011.
The Spain national football team won six trophies in FIFA andUEFA tournaments: oneFIFA World Cup in 2010,UEFA European Championships in 1964, 2008, 2012, and 2024, as well as the Nations league in 2023. In addition, it was runner-up in the UEFA European Championship in1984 and theFIFA Confederations Cup in2013.
TheSpain national under-23 team won the gold medal in the 1992Olympic tournament and the silver medal in 2000.
The Spain national football team won the gold medal atthe Mediterranean Games in 2005, 2007, and 2018, the silver medal in 1955, and the bronze medal in 1963 and 1967.
In addition, the honours list includes numerous titles at junior-level teams:
Spain has won the Maurice Burlaz Trophy, the prize awarded to the national association that has achieved the best results in UEFA's men's youth competitions (UEFA European Under-19 Championship and UEFA European Under-17 championship) over the previous two seasons, in 1994, 1996, 1998, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2007, and 2011.[90]

TheSpain national football team representsSpain in internationalwomen's football since 1980, after theban on women's football was lifted. The Spain national team made their debut on February 5, 1983, inPontevedra.
Spain achieved second place in the1997 European Championship, the first time they had ever been in this tournament. Spain first qualified for theFIFA World Cup in2015. A place in the top 10 of theFIFA World Rankings was secured for Spain in 2021, when their players won all categories of theUEFA awards, the first time this was done all from one nation.
In 2023, Spain were crownedWorld Champions, being only one of five national teams to have been so since the firstWomen's World Cup in1991. Together with theiryouth teams, Spain became the first nation ever to hold all three Women's World Cups at the same time when they won the senior 2023 World Cup,2022 U-20 World Cup, and2022 U-17 World Cup.
Junior teams of Spain have been successful, having the following victories:
Currently, the three most essential competitions between clubs in Spain are La Liga (English: League), the Copa del Rey (English: King's Cup), and the Supercopa de España (English: Spanish Supercup). Other extinct competitions were theLeague Cup, theEva Duarte Cup, and the President's Cup of the Spanish Football Federation. Up to a total of sixteen clubs have been winners of some of the official competitions in Spain at the highest level, andFC Barcelona is the most awarded club with seventy-five national titles,
TheSpanish football league system consists of several leagues bound together hierarchically by promotion and relegation. In addition,Spanish Royal Federation Cup is a football competition for teams from the Segunda División B, the Tercera División and sometimes from the Preferente Regional who have failed to qualify or have been eliminated in the first round of the Copa del Rey.

In April 1927, Álvaro Trejo, a director atArenas Club de Getxo, first proposed the idea of a national league in Spain. After much debate about the league's size and who would participate, theRFEF eventually agreed on the ten teams forming the firstPrimera División in 1928.FC Barcelona,Real Madrid,Athletic Bilbao,Real Sociedad,Arenas Club de Getxo, andReal Unión were selected as previous Copa del Rey winners.Athletic Madrid,RCD Español, andCE Europa qualified asCopa del Rey runners-up andRacing de Santander qualified through a knock-out competition againstSevilla FC. Barcelona was the first winner of the competition. Only three founding clubs, Real Madrid, Barcelona, and Athletic Bilbao, have never been relegated from thePrimera División; six other clubs have never been below the top two tiers:Sevilla, Real Sociedad,Sporting de Gijón,Valencia, Espanyol, and Atlético Madrid.
Historically, some of the best football players in the world have played in the Spanish football league, includingRicardo Zamora,Josep Samitier,Alfredo Di Stéfano,Ladislav Kubala,Ferenc Puskás,Raymond Kopa,Héctor Rial,Telmo Zarra,Francisco Gento,Luis Suárez,Johan Cruyff,Diego Maradona,Bernd Schuster,Andoni Zubizarreta,Michael Laudrup,Hristo Stoichkov,Romário,Zinedine Zidane,Rivaldo,Ronaldo,Raúl,Ronaldinho,Carles Puyol,Xavi,Andrés Iniesta,Iker Casillas,Cristiano Ronaldo, andLionel Messi, among others.
La Liga de Fútbol Profesional (LFP) is responsible for administering the two professional football leagues in Spain. Professional Spanish football is divided into thePrimera División (First Division) andSegunda División (Second Division). For sponsorship reasons, the First Division is Liga Santander, while the Second Division isLa Liga SmartBank. The First Division has 20 professional teams, and the Second Division has 22. There are also lower Spain national football divisions. Every year, the three lowest-ranked teams in the First Division pass to the Second Division, and the top three ranked teams in the Second Division pass to the First Division.
La Liga is one of the world's most popular professional sports leagues.[91] The average stadium attendance was 21,000 in the 2014–15 season, with a range of average attendance from 4,780 people with the lowest average attendance to 77,632 people with the highest average attendance.[92] In addition, La Liga is one of the wealthiest professional sports leagues in the world by revenue ($2.2 billion in 2016).[93]
In La Liga's 90-year history (except the three seasons in which the league was suspended due to the civil war), Barcelona and Real Madrid have won 60 titles. Barcelona and Real Madrid are two fierce rival clubs, and the matches between both two clubs are namedEl Clásico.[11] Those football matches are one of the most viewed sports events in the world.
Although a total of 62 teams have competed in La Liga since its inception, only nine clubs have won the title: Real Madrid (36), Barcelona (27), Atlético Madrid (11), Athletic Bilbao (8), Valencia (6), Real Sociedad (2), Sevilla (1),Deportivo La Coruña (1), andReal Betis (1).
The King's Cup is the oldest Spanish football competition organized by the Royal Spanish Football Federation. In 1902,Carlos Padrós, later president of Madrid FC (later to be Real Madrid), suggested a football competition to celebrate the coronation ofAlfonso XIII. Four other teams entered the Copa del Ayuntamiento de Madrid, later developing into the Copa del Rey (English: "King's Cup"). These included Barcelona,Club Español de Fútbol,Club Bizcaya, andNew Foot-Ball de Madrid. The competition featured the first recorded game between Barcelona and Madrid FC, with the former emerging 3–1 winners. Club Bizcaya, which consisted of players from both Basque teams, eventually beat Barcelona in the final. Alfonso XIII subsequently became the patron of many Spanish football clubs, permitting them to use "Real" (Spanish for "royal") in their names. Among the many clubs to add the prefix to their name was Madrid FC, which subsequently became Real Madrid.
The Copa del Rey was Spain's football national championship from 1903 (the first edition won by Athletic Bilbao with Juan de Astorquia as captain and president)[94] until the foundation of theCampeonato de Liga—League Championship—in 1928. It was initially known as theCopa del Ayuntamiento de Madrid (Madrid City Council's Cup). Between 1905 and 1932, it was known as theCopa de Su Majestad El Rey Alfonso XIII (His Majesty King Alfonso XIII's Cup). During theSecond Spanish Republic, it was known as theCopa del Presidente de la República (President of the Republic Cup) orCopa de España (Spanish Cup). During the years ofFrancisco Franco'sSpanish State, it was known as theCopa de Su Excelencia El Generalísimo orCopa del Generalísimo (His Excellency, The Supreme General's Cup).[94]
Fourteen clubs have won the title: Barcelona (31), Athletic Bilbao (24), Real Madrid (20), Atlético Madrid (10), Valencia (8),Real Zaragoza (6), Sevilla (5), Espanyol (4),Real Unión (4), Real Betis (3), Deportivo de La Coruña (2), Real Sociedad (2),Arenas Club de Getxo (1), andMallorca (1).
The Spanish Super Cup (Supercopa de España) is a championship organized by the Royal Spanish Football Federation and contested by the winners and runners-up of La Liga and the winners and runners-up of the Copa del Rey. The competition was founded in 1982.
Ten clubs have won the title: Barcelona (15), Real Madrid (13), Athletic Bilbao (3), Deportivo La Coruña (3), Atlético Madrid (2), Valencia (1), Zaragoza (1), Mallorca (1), Sevilla (1), and Real Sociedad (1).
The Spanish football clubs are very successful in international competitions. They are the most successful in different current European competitions, such as theUEFA Champions League,[31]UEFA Super Cup,[32] andUEFA Europa League ;[33] and they also were the most successful in the extinctInter-Cities Fairs Cup.[30]
They greatly benefit from their political and historical success as a colonial power. After the Big War (a.a. WW II), Spanish Football Clubs had their most prolific period of the century. Because of their political and economic positioning during Civil War and Cold War, they were able to win several UEFA Champions Leagues in a row. Real Madrid CF was the only club that managed to win the competition between 1956 and 1960. They were in a great position due to their economic advantage and lack of competition. Most countries were still recovering from a long and devastating World War II and could not participate in the competition due to financial or political reasons. France, Germany, England, Yugoslavia, and Russia are some of the countries that could not compete in the European Competitions for at least a decade. Real Madrid was the one who benefited and won the title five years in a row. Therefore, Real Madrid is the most successful club in international competitions, followed by Barcelona in recent years. In addition, other Spanish clubs have also won titles in international tournaments, such as Valencia,Atlético Madrid, Sevilla, Zaragoza,Villarreal, Deportivo de La Coruña,Celta Vigo, andMálaga.
Spanish football clubs hold different records in international competitions.
Real Madrid is the most successful European Cup/UEFA Champions League club.[31][95] They have won fifteen titles and were runners-up three times. Real Madrid is also the most successful club in the Intercontinental Cup (three titles, sharing the record with Milan, Peñarol, Boca Juniors, and Nacional),FIFA Club World Cup (four titles), and UEFA Super Cup (six titles).
Barcelona is the second-most successful club in the FIFA Club World Cup, with three titles, and also the second-most successful club in the UEFA Super Cup (five titles, tied withMilan). In addition, Barcelona became the first football club to win six out of six competitions in a single year (2009), completingthe sextuple, and the first European club in history to achieve thecontinental treble twice (2009 and 2015).
Sevilla is the most successful club in the UEFA Cup/UEFA Europa League, with seven titles.
In total, Spanish football clubs have won 82 international titles. Over the years, Spanish clubs have won the European Cups/Champions League twenty times, the UEFA Super Cup seventeen times, theUEFA Cup Winners' Cup seven times, the UEFA Cup/Europa League fourteen times, theUEFA Intertoto Cup seven times, and the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup six times. In addition, Spanish clubs have also won theIntercontinental Cup four times and the FIFA Club World Cup seven times.
ThePrimera División, also known as Liga F, is the highest level ofleague competition forwomen's football in Spain. It is organized by theLiga Profesional Femenina de Fútbol. Ranked among the top six national leagues byUEFA, it is considered one of the most important leagues in Europe. Since the2021–22 season, the top three teams qualify for theUEFA Champions League.
Founded in 1988, a total of twelve different clubs have been champions.Barcelona is the most successful team with nine wins.
The Copa de la Reina is an annual cup competition organized by theRoyal Spanish Football Federation. The full name isCampeonato de España - Copa de Su Majestad la Reina (Championship of Spain - Her Majesty the Queen's Cup). The tournament's first edition took place in 1983, five years before theSpanish women's league was created.
In 1981 and 1982 two editions were held under the name Copa Reina Sofía and won byKarbo. The first official recognized version of the tournament was the 1983 edition.
From 2004 to 2017, it was played in knockout style at the end of the league season, with the top eight clubs qualifying for it. Since 2018, all 16 teams of the first division join the competition, which starts to be played during league season.
The 2021–22 season featured 52 clubs; all 16 teams team of thePrimera División, all 32 teams from theSegunda División Pro, and the four promoted teams from thePrimera Nacional de Fútbol.
Barcelona is the most successful team with ten wins, often winning the double with the league.Espanyol andLevante have six wins each.
The Supercopa de España Femenina is a super cup tournament, contested by the winners and runners up of the Copa de la Reina and the remaining highest ranked teams from thePrimera División that had not already qualified through the cup final.
From 1997 to 2000, four editions of the Supercopa were played between the winners of the League and the Copa de la Reina, with San Vicente CFF winning its first edition,Atlético Málaga the second,Eibartarrak FT achieving the third edition andLevante (after absorbing San Vicente) winning the last.
The competition was re-instated in December 2019 by the Royal Spanish Football Federation. It was announced the Supercopa would expand to four teams, the winners and runners-up of theCopa de la Reina andPrimera División.
Barcelona is the most successful team with four wins.
While relatively calm today, ethnic issues in Spain have long been problematic. As for the legacy result from the totalitarian and repressiveFrancisco Franco regime, there has been a strong sense of racial segregation in Spanish football, whereas racism and previous tensions are frequently used to exploit as a sign of defiance, which has contributed to the lack of national success of Spain in international football despite its enormous talents and club powers; it is strongly reflected inBasque Country andCatalunya.[96]
The famedEl Clásico in Spain betweenReal Madrid andBarcelona has been marred with several issues in the relationship between ethnicCatalans. The majority supportedCatalan independence and Barcelona and the Spanish-based Real Madrid, which sought to preserve Spain as an entity.[97] The issue has been traced toFrancoist Spain when Barcelona and Catalan's identity was strongly suppressed. The Francoist regime usually favoured the Madrid clubs (Real and Atlético Madrid).[98] Following Franco's death, decades of political healing helped solve the country's dark past. However, hostility between the Catalan and Castilian populations remains persistent and often contributes to significant football hostility regarding Catalan identity and perceived suppression of theCatalan language.[99][100] Catalan-born players and coaches likeXavi,Carles Puyol, andPep Guardiola have strongly demonstrated the idea of an independent Catalunya, which often creates chaos several times.[101]
Alongside the tensions between Catalans and Castilians, the tensions betweenBasques to the central Spanish government also extended to football, where Basques sought to preserve their identity and, in several cases, clash against the Spanish officials and other pro-government clubs.[102][103] Basque football officials have tried unsuccessfully to gain recognition from the UEFA and FIFA several times as a separate team from Spain.[104] The nationalist issue is also influenced by Basque football's relations with Spanish football.[105]
There are also tensions between various ethnic regions in Spanish football, such asValencia,Andalusia,Asturias, andGalicia, between either themselves or the central government. However, it has never extended to the level of tensions between Catalans and Basques.[106][107]
This is a list ofSpanish football stadiums with a capacity greater than 50,000. They are all consideredUEFA Category 4.
| Image | Stadium | Capacity | City | Autonomous community | Team | Inaugurated |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Camp Nou | 99,354[108] | Barcelona | Barcelona | 1957 | ||
| Santiago Bernabéu | 83,186[109] | Madrid | Real Madrid | 1947 | ||
| Metropolitano Stadium | 70,692[110] | Atlético Madrid | 1994 | |||
| Nou Mestalla | 70,044[111] | Valencia | Valencia C.F. | 2027* | ||
| La Cartuja | 70,000[112] | Seville | None | 1999 | ||
| Benito Villamarín | 60,270[113] | Real Betis | 1929 | |||
| Lluís Companys | 55,926[114] | Barcelona | None | 1927 | ||
| San Mamés | 53,331[115] | Bilbao | Athletic Bilbao | 2013 |
The average attendance per top-flight football league season and the club with the highest average attendance:
| Season | League average | Best club | Best club average |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024–25 | 29,987 | Real Madrid CF | 72,701 |
| 2023–24 | 29,072 | Real Madrid CF | 72,061 |
| 2022–23 | 29,448 | FC Barcelona | 83,415 |
| 2021–22 | — | — | — |
| 2020–21 | — | — | — |
| 2019–20 | 28,864 | FC Barcelona | 72,472 |
| 2018–19 | 26,885 | FC Barcelona | 75,600 |
| 2017–18 | 27,068 | FC Barcelona | 66,603 |
| 2016–17 | 27,590 | FC Barcelona | 78,034 |
| 2015–16 | 28,568 | FC Barcelona | 79,724 |
| 2014–15 | 26,835 | FC Barcelona | 77,632 |
| 2013–14 | 26,955 | FC Barcelona | 72,116 |
| 2012–13 | 28,237 | FC Barcelona | 71,120 |
| 2011–12 | 28,796 | FC Barcelona | 75,844 |
| 2010–11 | 28,221 | FC Barcelona | 79,268 |
| 2009–10 | 28,286 | FC Barcelona | 78,097 |
| 2008–09 | 28,276 | Real Madrid CF | 71,947 |
| 2007–08 | 29,124 | Real Madrid CF | 76,234 |
| 2006–07 | 28,838 | FC Barcelona | 74,078 |
| 2005–06 | 29,029 | FC Barcelona | 73,225 |
| 2004–05 | 28,401 | FC Barcelona | 73,357 |
| 2003–04 | 28,823 | Real Madrid CF | 69,203 |
| 2002–03 | 28,593 | Real Madrid CF | 69,232 |
| 2001–02 | 26,193 | Real Madrid CF | 63,645 |
| 2000–01 | 24,408 | Real Madrid CF | 64,475 |
| 1999–2000 | 26,984 | FC Barcelona | 65,526 |
| 1998–99 | 26,859 | FC Barcelona | 70,263 |
| 1997–98 | 27,234 | FC Barcelona | 74,053 |
| 1996–97 | 28,423 | FC Barcelona | 86,429 |
| 1995–96 | 28,640 | FC Barcelona | 81,190 |
| 1994–95 | 30,532 | Real Madrid CF | 95,000 |
| 1993–94 | 25,388 | FC Barcelona | 79,737 |
| 1992–93 | 26,183 | FC Barcelona | 79,895 |
Source:[116]