From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Copa del Rey
Spanish association football tournament
Spanish association football tournament
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Copa del Rey |
| logo | File:Copa Del Rey Official Logo.png |
| organiser | Royal Spanish Football Federation |
| founded | |
| region | Spain |
| qualifier for | UEFA Europa League |
| Supercopa de España | |
| number of teams | 125 |
| current champions | Barcelona (32nd title) |
| most successful club | Barcelona (32 titles) |
| broadcasters | List of broadcasters |
| website | |
| current | [2025–26 Copa del Rey](2025-26-copa-del-rey) |
Supercopa de España The Campeonato de España–Copa de Su Majestad el Rey, commonly known as Copa del Rey, La Copa or (in English) the Spanish Cup or King's Cup, and formerly known as Copa del Presidente de la República (1932–1936) and Copa del Generalísimo (1939–1976), is an annual knockout football competition in Spanish football, organized by the Royal Spanish Football Federation.
The competition was founded in 1903, making it the oldest Spanish football competition played at a national level. Copa del Rey winners qualify for the following season's UEFA Europa League. If they have already qualified for Europe through their league position, the Europa League spot is given to the highest-placed team in the league who has not yet qualified (until 2014 this place was awarded to the Copa runners-up, unless they too had already qualified via the league).
Barcelona is the most successful club in the competition, having won 32 titles. Athletic Bilbao has the second-most wins with 24, while Real Madrid is third with 20. Barcelona is also the most recent winner, having defeated rivals Real Madrid in the 2025 final held at the Estadio de La Cartuja.
History
In 1902, a competition under the name Copa de la Coronación was played after Juan de Astorquia, President of Bilbao Football Club, and Carlos Padrós, later president of Real Madrid, suggested a football tournament to celebrate the coronation of Spanish King Alfonso XIII. Four other teams joined Madrid FC for the competition: FC Barcelona, Club Español de Foot-Ball, New Foot-Ball de Madrid and Club Bizcaya (a team made up of players from Athletic Club and Bilbao FC), which eventually defeated Barcelona in the final. That cup is on display in the Athletic Bilbao museum and the club includes the victory as the first of its Copa del Rey wins, but the Royal Spanish Football Federation officially does not recognise it as such, only considering it to be the forerunner of the Copa del Rey.
The Copa del Rey was effectively Spain's national football championship from 1903 (the first edition won by Athletic Bilbao with Juan de Astorquia as captain and president) until the foundation of the Campeonato de Liga—League Championship (La Liga)—in 1928. It was initially known as the Copa del Ayuntamiento de Madrid (Madrid City Council's Cup). Between 1905 and 1932, it was known as the Copa de Su Majestad El Rey Alfonso XIII (His Majesty King Alfonso XIII's Cup). During the Second Spanish Republic, it was known as the Copa del Presidente de la República (President of the Republic Cup) or Copa de España (Spanish Cup) and during the years of Francisco Franco's Spanish State, it was known as the Copa de Su Excelencia El Generalísimo or Copa del Generalísimo (His Excellency, The Supreme General's Cup).
Athletic Bilbao were declared winners in 1904 after their opponents Español de Madrid failed to show up. Between 1903 and 1909 the competition was organized by Madrid FC or by the Madrid Federation. Afterwards, it was taken over by the FECF (Federación Española de Clubs de Football), a forerunner of the RFEF. However, in both 1910 and 1913 there was a split among the clubs and two parallel competitions were held, one organized by the FECF and the other by the UECF (Unión Española de Club de Football). All these editions are officially recognized by the RFEF. In 1937, during the Spanish Civil War, clubs in the Republican area of Spain entered the Copa de la España Libre, with Levante FC (forerunner of the present Levante UD) beating their city rivals Valencia 1–0 in the final. Although in 2007 the Congress of Deputies urged the Royal Spanish Football Federation to recognise it as a Copa del Rey win for Levante, for several years the governing body of Spanish football made no decision on the matter. On 25 March 2023, the tournament was officially recognized by the RFEF, but not as a Copa del Rey.
Because of the dispute regarding the 1902 competition, the statistics regarding the leading winners are also disputed. Barcelona have won the Copa 32 times; Athletic Bilbao are in second place, with either 24 or 25 titles, depending on the source.
Before the formation of La Liga in 1929, the competition was in essence a national championship. Teams qualified to enter via their regional leagues. Over the years, various formats, including group stages have been used. Reserve teams of the professional clubs, who compete in lower divisions of the league pyramid, were permitted to take part until 1990. For a number of years, only teams from the Primera División, Segunda A, about 23 teams from the Segunda B and the 17 Tercera División champions (or runners-up if the champion was a reserve team) were invited to enter, giving a total of 83. Amended rules for the 2019–20 edition led to the number of entrants increasing to 125, including winners of the regional divisions at the fifth level.
Since the format overhaul, all rounds are single-leg ties with lower division teams hosting the match and the majority of the top-level clubs entering at the first Round (four teams taking part in the Supercopa de España entering in the third round – last 32), other than the semi-final stage which is played over two legs. This is another change introduced in 2019–20, with prior editions involving two legs from the point at which the top-tier clubs entered in the fourth round (last 32). Athletic Bilbao particularly embraced the new format, winning a total of 22 single-leg ties to reach the two-legged semi-finals in each of its first five seasons before losing to Osasuna in the 2024–25 Round of 16. The final is a one-off game played at a neutral venue, with Seville becoming the regular home.
The winners qualify for both the following season's Supercopa de España and UEFA Europa League; in the past, the runners-up often played in the Supercopa if the winners had also finished as league champions (although on some earlier occasions in these circumstances, no Supercopa match was played and the double winners were awarded the title by default). From the 2019–20 Supercopa de España edition onwards, the previous Copa del Rey runners-up automatically qualify in addition to the winners with four teams taking part in the event.
Throughout the history of the competition, there have been 12 actual trophies, which were permanently awarded to clubs for winning the competition either three times in a row or on five separate occasions, and for other special reasons. Thus, five trophies have been permanently awarded to Barcelona, three to Athletic Bilbao and one to Real Madrid (the last Copa de la República in 1936). Athletic kept the first trophy as inaugural winners, Sevilla were awarded the Trofeo del Generalísimo after its first edition in 1939 and Atlético Madrid, winners the previous year, were awarded the 11th trophy following the death of Francisco Franco in 1976.
On 22 December 2010, at an extraordinary general meeting of the Royal Spanish Football Federation, Sevilla requested permission from the Federation to keep the trophy they had won in the 2010 final to commemorate the victory of the Spain national team at the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa. A new trophy was made by Madrid jeweler Federico Alegre. The trophy, made of silver, weighs 15 kg and is 75 cm tall. On 21 April 2011, Real Madrid became the first recipients. During the post-game celebrations, the trophy was accidentally dropped by Real Madrid player Sergio Ramos from the top of a double-decker bus, which then ran over it. Ten pieces were found by civil servicemen when they recovered it from the ground at Plaza de Cibeles. The club received a copy which is displayed at Santiago Bernabéu.
The new presidency of Luis Rubiales initiated profound restructuring within the Federation. These changes impacted competitions organized by the organization, specifically the Copa del Rey and the Supercopa de España. Both were reformed with new formats designed to increase competitiveness and attractiveness. In the case of the Supercopa, the changes had a reciprocal effect; the Copa champion and runner-up were included alongside the league championship's top two finishers, creating a four-team competition. Beginning with the 2019–20 edition, the cup championship introduced a significant change: the designation of a fixed venue for the final; the Estadio de La Cartuja in Seville was chosen to host the final for a four-year period.
Performances
Official winners list provided by the RFEF, as of 7 April 2024.
| Rank | Club | Winners | Runners-up | Finalists | Seasons | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 11 | 13 | 17 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barcelona | 32 | 11 | 43 | **1909–10**, **1911–12**, **1912–13**, *1918–19*, **1919–20**, **1922**, **1925**, **1926**, **1928**, *1931–32*, *1935–36*, **1942**, **1951**, **1952**, **1952–53**, *1953–54*, **1957**, **1958–59**, **1962–63**, **1967–68**, **1970–71**, *1973–74*, **1977–78**, **1980–81**, **1982–83**, *1983–84*, *1985–86*, **1987–88**, **1989–90**, *1995–96*, **1996–97**, **1997–98**, **2008–09**, *2010–11*, **2011–12**, *2013–14*, **2014–15**, **2015–16**, **2016–17**, **2017–18**, *2018–19*, **2020–21**, **2024–25** | |||||||||||||
| Athletic Bilbao | 24 | 16 | 40 | **1903**, **1904**, *1905*, *1906*, **1910**, **1911**, *1913*, **1914**, **1915**, **1916**, *1920*, **1921**, **1923**, **1930**, **1931**, **1932**, **1933**, *1942*, **1943**, **1944**, **1944–45**, *1948–49*, **1949–50**, *1952–53*, **1955**, **1956**, **1958**, *1965–66*, *1966–67*, **1969**, **1972–73**, *1976–77*, **1983–84**, *1984–85*, *2008–09*, *2011–12*, *2014–15*, *2019–20*, *2020–21*, **2023–24** | |||||||||||||
| Real Madrid | 20 | 21 | 41 | *1903*, **1905**, **1906**, **1907**, **1908**, *1916*, **1917**, *1918*, *1924*, *1928–29*, *1930*, *1933*, **1934**, **1936**, *1940*, *1943*, **1946**, **1947**, *1958*, *1959–60*, *1960–61*, **1961–62**, *1967–68*, **1969–70**, **1973–74**, **1974–75**, *1978–79*, **1979–80**, **1981–82**, *1982–83*, **1988–89**, *1989–90*, *1991–92*, **1992–93**, *2001–02*, *2003–04*, **2010–11**, *2012–13*, **2013–14**, **2022–23**, *2024–25* | |||||||||||||
| Atlético Madrid | 10 | 9 | 19 | *1920–21*, *1925–26*, *1955–1956*, **1959–60**, **1960–61**, *1963–64*, **1964–65**, **1971–72**, *1974–75*, **1975–76**. **1984–85**, *1986–87*, **1990–91**, **1991–92**, **1995–96**, *1998–99*, *1999–2000*, *2009–10*, **2012–13** | |||||||||||||
| Valencia | 8 | 10 | 18 | *1934*, **1941**, *1944*, *1944–45*, *1946*, **1948–49**, *1952*, **1954**, **1966–67**, *1969–70*, *1970–71*, *1971–72*, **1978–79**, *1994–95*, **1998–99**, **2007–08**, **2018–19**, *2021–22* | |||||||||||||
| Zaragoza | 6 | 5 | 11 | *1962–63*, **1963–64**, *1964–65*, **1965–66**, *1975–76*, **1985–86**, *1992–93*, **1993–94**, **2000–01**, **2003–04**, *2005–06* | |||||||||||||
| Sevilla | 5 | 4 | 9 | **1935**, **1939**, **1947–48**, *1955*, *1961–62*, **2006–07**, **2009–10**, *2015–16*, *2017–18* | |||||||||||||
| Espanyol | 4 | 5 | 9 | *1911*, *1915*, **1929**, **1940**, *1941*, *1947*, *1957*, **1999–2000**, **2005–06** | |||||||||||||
| Real Betis | 3 | 2 | 5 | *1931*, **1976–77**, *1996–97*, **2004–05**, **2021–22** | |||||||||||||
| Real Unión | 3 | 1 | 4 | **1918**, *1922*, **1924**, **1927** | |||||||||||||
| Real Sociedad | 2 | 4 | 6 | *1913*, *1928*, *1951*, **1986–87**, *1987–88*, **2019–20** | |||||||||||||
| Deportivo La Coruña | 2 | – | 2 | **1994–95**, **2001–02** | |||||||||||||
| Arenas | 1 | 3 | 4 | *1917*, **1919**, *1925*, *1927* | |||||||||||||
| Mallorca | 1 | 3 | 4 | *1990–91*, *1997–98*, **2002–03**, *2023–24* | |||||||||||||
| *Club Ciclista de San Sebastián* | 1 | – | 1 | **1909** | |||||||||||||
| *Racing Club de Irún* | 1 | – | 1 | **1913** | |||||||||||||
| *Español de Madrid* | – | 3 | 3 | *1904*, *1909*, *1910* | |||||||||||||
| Celta Vigo | – | 3 | 3 | *1947–48*, *1993–94*, *2000–01* | |||||||||||||
| Sporting Gijón | – | 2 | 2 | *1981*, *1982* | |||||||||||||
| Real Valladolid | – | 2 | 2 | *1949–50*, *1988–89* | |||||||||||||
| Getafe | – | 2 | 2 | *2006–07*, *2007–08* | |||||||||||||
| Osasuna | – | 2 | 2 | *2004–05*, *2022–23* | |||||||||||||
| *Bizcaya* | – | 1 | 1 | *1907* | |||||||||||||
| *Real Vigo Sporting* | – | 1 | 1 | *1908* | |||||||||||||
| *Vasconia Sporting Club* | – | 1 | 1 | *1910* | |||||||||||||
| *Gimnástica* | – | 1 | 1 | *1912* | |||||||||||||
| *Espanya de Barcelona* | – | 1 | 1 | *1914* | |||||||||||||
| CE Europa | – | 1 | 1 | *1923* | |||||||||||||
| Sabadell | – | 1 | 1 | *1935* | |||||||||||||
| Racing de Ferrol | – | 1 | 1 | *1938–39* | |||||||||||||
| Granada | – | 1 | 1 | *1958–59* | |||||||||||||
| Elche | – | 1 | 1 | *1969* | |||||||||||||
| Castellón | – | 1 | 1 | *1972–73* | |||||||||||||
| Las Palmas | – | 1 | 1 | *1977–78* | |||||||||||||
| Real Madrid Castilla ‡ | – | 1 | 1 | *1979–80* | |||||||||||||
| Recreativo | – | 1 | 1 | *2002–03* | |||||||||||||
| Alavés | – | 1 | 1 | *2016–17* |
‡ Real Madrid's reserve team. Reserve teams have been banned from this competition from 1990–91 onward.
‡‡ The number of wins Athletic Bilbao have been credited with is disputed. The 1902 version was won by Bizcaya, a team made up of players from Athletic Bilbao and Bilbao FC. In 1903 these two clubs merged as the current Athletic Bilbao. The 1902 cup is on display in the Athletic museum and the club includes it in its own honors list. However, that edition is not recognized as official by the RFEF.
Clubs in italic no longer exist. Seasons in bold indicate winners, whilst season in italic are losing finalists.
Top goalscorers
Bold indicates a player still active in Spain.
| Rank | Nat. | Player | Pos. | Years | Club(s) (goals) | Total | Ref. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ESP | FW | 1939–1957 | Athletic Bilbao (81) | **81** | ||||
| 2 | ESP | MF | 1919–1934 | Barcelona (65) | |||||
| Real Madrid (5) | **70** | ||||||||
| 3 | ESP | FW | 1928–1946 | Racing Ferrol (3) | |||||
| Athletic Bilbao (37) | |||||||||
| Valencia (24) | **64** | ||||||||
| 4 | ARG | FW | 2004–2021 | Barcelona (56) | **56** | ||||
| 5 | ESP | {{sortname | Edmundo | Suárez | Suarez, Edmundo}} | FW | 1939–1950 | Valencia (55) | **55** |
| 6 | ESP | Quini | FW | 1968–1987 | Sporting Gijón (36) | ||||
| Barcelona (14) | **50** | ||||||||
| 7 | HUNESP | {{sortname | Ferenc | Puskás | Puskas, Ferenc}} | FW | 1958–1966 | Real Madrid (49) | **49** |
| TCHHUNESP | {{sortname | László | Kubala | Kubala}} | FW | 1951–1965 | Barcelona (49) | **49** | |
| ESP | Santillana | FW | 1970–1988 | Real Madrid (49) | **49** | ||||
| 10 | ESP | César Rodríguez | FW | 1939–1960 | Granada (3) | ||||
| Barcelona (36) | |||||||||
| Elche (8) | **47** |
Individual records
Main article: Football records and statistics in Spain#Copa del Rey
- Most goals scored: 81 –
- Most goals scored in finals: 9 –
- Most finals scored in: 7 –
- Most assists provided in finals: 6 –
- Most man of the match awards won in finals: 3 –
- Most appearances made in finals: 10 – and Sergio Busquets
- Most cup wins: 7 – José Maria Belauste, Piru Gaínza, Gerard Piqué, Sergio Busquets and
Broadcasters
From the 2019–20 season, the final match is already included in La Copa broadcasting rights package. Previously, the final match is excluded in selected countries (other broadcasters (including Spain) will receive the Supercopa rights after covering a Copa final match) due to laws and regulations of the tournament broadcasting rights by CNMC in Spain.
Spain and Andorra
2025-2027
| Broadcaster | Copa del Rey | Supercopa | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| RTVE | |||
| Movistar+ |
International
| Country | Broadcaster | Copa del Rey | Supercopa | Ref | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TOLO | |||||
| Solh Sports | |||||
| Africa | Sporty TV (English) | ||||
| StarTimes (English) | |||||
| Canal+ (French) | |||||
| ZAP (Portuguese) | |||||
| SuperSport | |||||
| Flow | |||||
| Armenia TV | |||||
| beIN Sports | |||||
| DAZN | Puls 4 | ||||
| Sportdigital | |||||
| L'Équipe | |||||
| Cronache di Spogliatoio | |||||
| Arena Sport | |||||
| RTL-TVI (French) | |||||
| Unitel | |||||
| Xsports | |||||
| ESPN | |||||
| Astro | |||||
| Max Sport | bTV Action | ||||
| Ring | |||||
| Central America | Sky Sports | ||||
| RCN | |||||
| Win Sports | |||||
| Mega | |||||
| ZhiBo8 | |||||
| Tele Rebelde | |||||
| Czechia | Nova Sport | ||||
| Sport Live | |||||
| Bold+ | |||||
| ECDF | |||||
| Go3 Sport | |||||
| Veikkaus | |||||
| Action 24 | |||||
| Sport1 | |||||
| Indian subcontinent | FanCode | ||||
| IRIB | |||||
| Persiana Sports | |||||
| Premier Sports | TNT Sports | ||||
| Charlton | |||||
| U-Next | |||||
| Sport+ | |||||
| ICE | |||||
| MBC Group | |||||
| Shasha | Thmanyah | ||||
| Canal+ | |||||
| Ziggo Sport | |||||
| VG+ | |||||
| Begin | |||||
| América TV | |||||
| Eleven Sports | |||||
| Sport TV | |||||
| Prima Sport | Digi Sport | ||||
| Match TV | |||||
| Coupang Play | |||||
| SCCN | |||||
| Sportbladet | |||||
| Varzish TV | |||||
| True Sports | |||||
| Türkiye | S Sport | ||||
| Maincast | MEGOGO | ||||
| Zo'r TV | |||||
| Meridiano TV | |||||
| Venevisión |
Notes
A. En route to the final, Español de Madrid had tied one game and had not completed the other game, which led Athletic Bilbao to file a complaint. Faced with this problem and unable to quickly resolve the case, the Madrid Association decided to award the cup to Athletic as defending champions.
B. Playing as Club Ciclista de San Sebastián.
C. Playing as Vasconia de San Sebastián.
D. A mini-group of three teams was played, with Athletic Bilbao defeating Madrid FC 2–0 a day before their win over Vasconia, thus the match between the Basque teams was decisive in deciding the winner, although not a typical final (Vasconia then played Madrid the following day to complete the group, also winning 2–0).
E. The first final, played the day earlier, ended 2–2 after extra time.
F. Originally played as a two-legged final. The first match, played seven days earlier, ended 2–2, and the second match, played six days earlier, ended 0–0.
G. The first final, played two days earlier, ended 0–0 after extra time.
H. The first and second final ended 1–1 after extra time. Both matches were played a month before the second replay.
I. Real Madrid won the penalty shoot-out 4–3.
J. Betis won the penalty shoot-out 8–7.
K. Real Sociedad won the penalty shoot-out 4–2.
L. Zaragoza won the penalty shoot-out 5–4.
M. The match was suspended by heavy rain and hail in the 79th minute, and was resumed three days later.
N. Barcelona won the penalty shoot-out 5–4.
References
References
- "Spanish Cup 2023/24 | National Associations".
- (20 September 2013). "Strategic talks in Dubrovnik". UEFA.
- "Spain – Cup 1902".
- (3 April 2009). "La FEF no reconocerá al Barça la Liga del año 37". Diario AS.
- "Palmarés". [[Diario Marca]].
- [[IFFHS]]. "Todos los campeonatos nacionales del mundo, sus equipos campeones y sus mejores goleadores 1901-10: Explicación, bases y comentarios".
- Real Federación Española de Fútbol. (March 2011). "Historial".
- "El Levante, a un paso de la Copa... de 1937". El Pais.
- "Trophy Villar Cup delay Levante". www.levante-emv.com (News Sports).
- "La RFEF reconoce al Levante como campeón de la Copa de la República de 1937; y al Deportivo, del Concurso de España 1912".
- [https://www.marca.com/futbol/copa-rey/2023/03/25/641ef935ca47410a6f8b4572.html La Federación reconoce la Copa del Levante de 1937 y la del Deportivo de 1912], [The Federation recognizes Levante's 1937 Cup and Deportivo's 1912 Cup], Noel Rodilla, Marca, 25 March 2023 (in Spanish)
- (29 April 2019). "La nueva Copa del Rey saldrá con 116 equipos". [[Royal Spanish Football Federation]].
- (29 April 2019). "Así quedan el calendario, y los nuevos formatos de Copa y Supercopa de la RFEF". [[Marca (newspaper).
- (25 January 2024). "El Athletic es una máquina imparable de ganar partidos en la Copa".
- (22 December 2010). "El Sevilla se queda en propiedad con la Copa del Rey gracias a España". MARCA.COM.
- (21 April 2011). "La Copa 'suplente' ya está en la sala de trofeos del Bernabéu". MARCA.COM.
- Tremlett, Giles. (21 April 2011). "Real Madrid player Sergio Ramos drops Spanish cup under a bus". The Guardian.
- Matilla, Alfredo. (2019-04-29). "Rubiales aprueba sus cambios con mayoría, Cerezo y Bartomeu le apoyan y LaLiga impugnará".
- "Luis Rubiales, re-elected and strengthened within UEFA {{!}} www.rfef.es/en".
- UEFA.com. (2020-09-22). "New term for Rubiales in Spain".
- (2020-01-24). "La Copa del Rey se pone emocionante".
- (2020-01-12). "Supercopa de España 2019-20: cómo funciona, nuevo formato, resultads, cuándo se juega, dónde y equipos {{!}} Goal.com Espana".
- EP. (2020-01-31). "Athletic-Barça, Madrid-Real Sociedad, Granada-Valencia y Mirandés-Villarreal, en copa".
- "Mega Cricket World".
- OLAZABAL, PERU. (2020-01-13). ""No queríamos que se acabara el partido"".
- (7 April 2024). "Cup Success nothing new. 24th trophy for the Lions, first of the 21st century - WINNERS OF THE SPANISH CHAMPIONSHIP - COPA DE SM EL REY".
- "Spain - Cup 1902".
- "Rankings King's Cup".
- Athletic Club. "Athletic Club". athletic-club.eus.
- Super Utilisateur. "Ficha Josep SAMITIER Vilalta". elaguanis.com.
- Athletic Club. "Athletic Club". athletic-club.eus.
- "Gorostiza for Valencia". ciberche.net.
- Redacción Ciberche. "Estadisticas de todos los jugadores del Valencia CF". ciberche.net.
- "Quini. Goles para el recuerdo". cihefe.es.
- Super Utilisateur. "Ficha Ferenç PUSKAS Biro". elaguanis.com.
- Super Utilisateur. "Ficha Carlos Alonso González "SANTILLANA"". elaguanis.com.
- (2021-04-17). "Messi's Copa del Rey record as he celebrates 35th Barcelona trophy".
- (2019-05-25). "Barcelona lose to Valencia in Copa del Rey final despite Lionel Messi goal".
- "Spain - List of Cup Finals".
- "Messi, Sergio and Piqué, record holders in the Copa del Rey".
- (8 November 2019). "RFEF announces €80m Copa del Rey domestic and international rights deals".
- "Copa del Rey: Tus programas favoritos de TVE, en RTVE Play".
- (2022-11-02). "Movistar lands Copa del Rey package and Spanish Super Cup rights".
- "StarTimes".
- [[ESPN Brasil. (8 January 2020). "HOJE TEM SUPERCOPA A Supercopa da Espanha tem um novo formato em 2020, e @alinares01 explica qual é o caminho para o título! HOJE, às 16h, tem Valencia x Real Madrid na semifinal, e você assiste AO VIVO e EXCLUSIVO na ESPN Brasil e no WatchESPN!".
- (10 January 2020). "ESPN+ reaches deal to stream the Copa del Rey".
- "CANAL+ Myanmar FG on Instagram: "UNICODE 🤩စပိန်စူပါဖလားပြိုင်ပွဲကြီးကို CANAL+ SPORTS ချ န်နယ်ကနေ တိုုက်ရိုက်ထုတ်လွှင့်ပြသပေးသွားတော့မှာနော်။🤩 ⚽️ဘာစီလိုနာ၊ ရီးရဲလ်မက်ဒရစ်၊…"".
- "Larojadirecta "(Spanish soccer representative organization)..."".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Copa del Rey — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report