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RCD Espanyol

Association football club in Spain

RCD Espanyol

Association football club in Spain

FieldValue
clubnameEspanyol
imageRCD Espanyol crest.svg
image_size160px
fullnameReial Club Deportiu
Espanyol de Barcelona, S.A.D.
short nameRCDE
nicknamePeriquitos (Parakeets) Blanc-i-blaus (White and Blue)
founded(as Sociedad Española de Football)
stadiumRCDE Stadium
capacity40,000
ownerVelocity Sports Partners (sports investment division of ALK Capital)
chrtitlePresident
chairmanAlan Pace
managerManolo González
mgrtitleHead coach
league
season
position
website
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current2025–26 RCD Espanyol season

Espanyol de Barcelona, S.A.D. Reial Club Deportiu Espanyol de Barcelona (; "Royal Spanish Sports Club of Barcelona"), commonly known as RCD Espanyol, is a Spanish professional sports club based in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The club competes in La Liga, the top tier of Spanish football.

Founded in 1900 in Barcelona, Espanyol currently play their home games just outside the city at the RCDE Stadium, which holds up to 40,000 spectators. Domestically, Espanyol has won the Copa del Rey four times, most recently in 2006. In international competitions, the club reached the UEFA Cup final in 1988 and 2007. It has a long-standing local rivalry with FC Barcelona.

Name

First shield of Club Español de Fútbol

Initially known as the Sociedad Española de Football on its foundation, the name was changed to Club Español de Fútbol in 1901. In 1906, the club folded due to financial reasons and most of the players joined the X Sporting Club, which came to win the Campionat de Catalunya three times in a row before disappearing in 1908 to merge with the Spanish Jiu-Jitsu Club to be effectively relaunched as the Club Deportivo Español, and in 1910, they adopted their present-day colours. Espanyol is one of several Spanish football clubs granted patronage by the Spanish crown and thus entitled to use Real in their names and the royal crown on their badge. This right was granted to Espanyol in 1912 by Alfonso XIII and the club subsequently became known as the Real Club Deportivo Español.

Following the abdication of the same king in 1931 and the declaration of the Second Spanish Republic, due to prohibition of royal symbols, the club adopted the more Catalan/republican friendly name, Club Esportiu Espanyol. After the Spanish Civil War, the name was reverted.

The club took the Catalan spelling for its name in February 1995. The word "Deportiu" in Reial Club Deportiu Espanyol de Barcelona is a Catalanised form of the original word "Deportivo" (Castilian), despite the correct word being "Esportiu" in the Catalan language. This choice was made in order to retain the initials "RCD" in the club's name.

History

Foundation and club culture

Espanyol was founded on 28 October 1900 by Ángel Rodríguez Ruiz, an engineering student at the University of Barcelona. The club's original home was in the well-off district of Sarrià; Espanyol was the first club in Spain formed exclusively by Spanish fans of the game, with the other early clubs having links to Britain or central Europe. File:RCD Espanyol campions 1904.jpg|CD Espanyol de Barcelona, Catalan champions in 1904 File:RCD Espanyol 1912.jpg|RCD Español in 1912

A friend of the club founder owned a textile business and happened to have an abundance of yellow material left over from a job. In 1910, the club changed its name to the Club Deportivo Español and at the proposal of Eduardo Corrons, the club's number one partner for many years, the club agreed to choose blue and white stripes as shirt colours and as the central colours of the club badge. Blue and white were chosen in homage to the colours on the shield of the great Sicilian-Aragonese Admiral Roger de Lluria, who sailed the Mediterranean protecting the interests of the Crown of Aragon in the Middle Ages.

In 1906, Club Español de Football had to suspend its activities due to a lack of players, since most of them were university students who enrolled to study at universities outside Catalonia. X Sporting Club took advantage of this as most of the remaining Español players joined them, which meant a big leap in quality for the club, and as a result the X won the Catalan championship three times in a row between 1905 and 1908, beating the likes of FC Internacional and FC Barcelona for the title. This historic side had the likes of Pedro Gibert, José Irízar, and Santiago Massana. It was not until 1909 that X and Español were restructured again, when several of the former university students returned to Barcelona with the idea of refounding Club Español de Football, which they achieved on 27 December 1908, when X merged with the Spanish Jiu-Jitsu Club.

In the 1910s, they won the Campionat de Catalunya three times, in 1911–12, 1914–15, and 1917–18, winning later largely thanks to their backline led by Ricardo Zamora. They also reached the final of the Copa del Rey twice in 1911 and 1915, but lost to Athletic Bilbao on both occasions.

In 1994, Espanyol created its reserve team, Espanyol B, currently playing in the Segunda División B.

Two UEFA Cup finals (1988–2009)

Javier Clemente was hired in 1986. In his first season, he took the team to a joint-best third place, qualifying for the UEFA Cup. They defeated Borussia Mönchengladbach, A.C. Milan, Inter Milan, TJ Vitkovice, and Club Brugge KV to reach the final, losing on penalties to Bayer 04 Leverkusen after a 3–3 aggregate draw. Two relegations followed, but the club remained in La Liga from winning the 1993–94 Segunda División until relegated at the conclusion of the 2019-20 COVID pandemic impacted season.

Juli Pardo oversaw the transformation of the club into a Sociedad Anónima Deportiva. In the wake of the accumulated debt, the club were forced to sell the Sarrià Stadium, which was eventually demolished in 1997.

Paco Flores' Espanyol won the 2000 Copa del Rey Final 2–1 against Atlético Madrid at Mestalla, a first cup win since 1940. Six years later, under Miguel Ángel Lotina, the club won again, this time 4–1 against Real Zaragoza in Madrid, with goals by Raúl Tamudo, Luis García (two) and Coro.

Chart of RCD Espanyol league performance 1929–present

With this cup win, Espanyol entered the UEFA Cup. They won all their group games, before dispatching Livorno, Maccabi Haifa, Benfica, and Werder Bremen to reach the final. In the final, held on 16 May at Hampden Park in Glasgow, Espanyol fell to fellow La Liga side Sevilla, losing 3–1 in a shootout following a 2–2 draw. They became the only football team in UEFA Cup history to remain unbeaten in the tournament, yet not take home the trophy. Walter Pandiani, who would leave the club at the end of the season, was the UEFA Cup's top goalscorer that season. On 9 June 2007, Tamudo became Espanyol's highest-ever goalscorer after surpassing the 111 goals scored by Rafael Marañón, and ended the night with 113.

On 31 May 2009, Espanyol played its last match at the Estadio Olímpico de Montjuic, a 3–0 defeat of Málaga. Espanyol had played in the Estadi Olímpic after moving from their previous ground in Sarria. With the move, club talisman Raúl Tamudo had the unique distinction of having played in three different home stadiums with his club: Sarrià, Montjuïc and, beginning in the 2009–10 season, the Cornellà-El Prat.

Recent years (2009–present)

In January 2009, former Espanyol defender Mauricio Pochettino was hired as manager with the club in the relegation zone – his first senior job. He won 2–1 against rivals Barcelona at the Camp Nou in February to help keep the club up; Barcelona, under Pep Guardiola, won the treble that season.

After 12 seasons playing at the Estadi Olímpic de Montjuïc, Espanyol moved to the Estadi de Cornellá-El Prat. The new stadium was officially inaugurated on 2 August 2009 with a match between Espanyol and Liverpool; Espanyol won 3–0, with Luis García scoring the first goal at the ground, followed by a Ben Sahar double. Six days later, Espanyol captain Daniel Jarque died from a cardiac arrest aged 26 in the Florence neighbourhood of Coverciano, where the club was at the time after playing several fixtures in Italy. Since then, in the 21st minute – his former shirt number – of every Espanyol match, an ovation is made in his honour for a full minute.

After Pochettino left in 2012, the club maintained their position in the top flight under a series of other managers. In January 2016, Chinese businessman Chen Yansheng took over the club by acquiring a 54% stake. In the 2018–19 season, Espanyol finished 7th, thus returning to the Europa League for the first time since their final run in 2006–07. However, the club suffered relegation for the first time since 1994 the following season, after a 1–0 loss at Barcelona. On 3 August 2020 the club published an official statement urging La Liga to suspend relegation; nevertheless relegation was not avoided. Espanyol won promotion back to La Liga at the first attempt on 8 May 2021 following a 0–0 draw against Zaragoza, with four matches to spare in the 42-game season.

Since 2022, Espanyol have been involved in a strategic cooperation with LEYU SPORTS, who became the official Asian partner of the club. On 28 May 2023, Espanyol were relegated to the Segunda División after two seasons in La Liga. Following a 4th place finish in the Segunda División, the club was promoted back to La Liga following a promotion 2–0 (2–1 aggregate) win against Real Oviedo on 23 June 2024.

On October 8, 2025, Velocity Sports Partners (VSP) announced that it had completed the acquisition of a majority stake in the Spanish club. VSP is the sports investment arm of ALK Capital.

Rivalries

''El derbi barceloní''

Main article: Derbi barceloní

In the first half of the 20th century during the Miguel Primo de Rivera dictatorship (1923–1930), FC Barcelona was seen as a symbol of Catalan identity. This contrasted with RCD Espanyol which cultivated alignment with the central authority.

In 1918, the municipalities of Catalonia promoted a campaign to ask the Spanish Government for a Statute of Autonomy. FC Barcelona joined that request and the Catalan press recognised FC Barcelona as a major cultural arm of the Catalan independence movement. The city's other team, RCD Espanyol, dissociated itself from the claim due to the former's success on the European stage.

Today FC Barcelona is the club that is closer to the political powers in Catalonia. Its last presidents have linked the club with the Catalan independence movement and the holding of a referendum, even though this causes discomfort among some Catalan fans and those in the rest of Spain who feel neglected and think the team is biased against them. Although some of RCD Espanyol's directors have expressed pro-independence stances, the club stays out of politics. It is believed that most of the team's fans are against the independence of Catalonia.

On numerous occasions RCD Espanyol has complained of unfavourable treatment towards the club in favour of FC Barcelona by some sections of Catalonian public media such as TV3.

Despite these differences in ideology, the derbi (derby) has always been more relevant to Espanyol supporters than those of Barcelona (who hold El Clásico in higher regard instead) due to the difference in objectives.

Though it is the most played local derby in the history of La Liga, it is also the most unbalanced, with Barcelona overwhelmingly dominant. In the league table, Espanyol has only managed to finish above Barça on three occasions in almost 70 years and the only all-Catalan Copa del Rey final was won by Barça in 1957. Espanyol has the consolation of achieving the largest margin win with a 6–0 victory in 1951.

Espanyol achieved a 2–1 win against FC Barcelona during the 2008–09 season, becoming the first team to defeat Barcelona at Camp Nou in their treble-winning season.

Espanyol lost 0–1 to FC Barcelona on 8 July 2020, to be relegated to the Segunda División.

Stadium

Main article: RCDE Stadium

From 1923 until 1997, Espanyol played their home games in Estadi de Sarrià in the Sarrià-Sant Gervasi district of Barcelona. In 1997, they moved to the Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys on Montjuïc. For the beginning of the 2009–10 season, Espanyol moved into the newly constructed RCDE Stadium (also known as Estadi Cornellà-El Prat) between Cornellà de Llobregat and El Prat de Llobregat.

File:Sarrià.jpg|Estadi de Sarrià File:Estadi Olímpic de Montjuïc - Barcelona's 1992 Olympic Stadium.jpg|Estadi Olímpic de Montjuïc File:Estadicornellaelprat 3.jpg|RCDE Stadium

Competition summary

Main article: List of RCD Espanyol seasons, RCD Espanyol in European football

  • 87 seasons in Primera División
  • 6 seasons in Segunda División
  • 8 participations in UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League
  • 2 participations in Inter-Cities Fairs Cup
  • 2 participations in UEFA Intertoto Cup

Achievements

  • In 1928, Espanyol became a founding member of La Liga, and in 1929, the team won their first Copa del Rey. Espanyol has completed the highest number of seasons in La Liga without winning the title.
  • The team has qualified for the UEFA Cup/Europa League eight times (including the qualifications following their 2000 and 2006 Spanish Cup wins, which in earlier eras would instead have granted entry to the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup).
  • Espanyol reached the UEFA Cup final in 1988, losing to Bayer Leverkusen of then-West Germany on penalty kicks (3–2), after a two-legged final of contrasts ended level (3–0 in Barcelona, 0–3 in Leverkusen). They reached a second final in 2007, losing to compatriots Sevilla, again on penalties (3–1) after a memorable match at Hampden Park, Glasgow ended 1–1 after normal time, and 2–2 after extra time.

Honours

Men's football

National

League

Cups

Regional

Women's football

League

Main article: RCD Espanyol (women)

Cups

Players

Current squad

Reserve team

Main article: RCD Espanyol B

Out on loan

Retired numbers

Main article: List of retired numbers in association football}}<!--{{details, Retired numbers in association football

;Notes

Players with most appearances

#NameYearsLa LigaSegunda DivisiónCopa del ReyCopa de la LigaUEFA CupOtherTotal
1ESP Raúl Tamudo1996–2010340261496 appearances in UEFA Intertoto Cup and 3 appearances in Supercopa de España389
2ESP Antonio Argilés1950–1964301La Liga relegation play-offs]]384All appearances in Inter-Cities Fairs Cup357
3ESP José María1965–197626931332Intertoto Cup]]346
4CMR Thomas N'Kono1982–1990241La Liga relegation play-offs]]301910333
5ARG Mauricio Pochettino1994–200627530132All appearances in Supercopa de España320
6ESP Fernando Molinos1974–19842644366319
7ESP Manuel Zúñiga1979–198825929189315
8ESP Marañón1974–19832614346314
9ESP Arteaga1993–20032382832102All appearances in Supercopa de España310
10ESP Diego Orejuela1982–1991216La Liga relegation play-offs]] and 1 appearance in La Liga promotion play-offs271512303

Notes

Coaches

Club officials

  • Copa del Rey :Winners (1): 1941
  • Catalan championship :Winners (2): 1931, 1932 :Runners-up (3): 1941, 1943, 1954

Women's basketball

  • Copa de la Reina :Winners (1): 1943 :Runners-up (1): 1944

Men's rink hockey

Main article: RCD Espanyol Hoquei

  • Copa del Rey :Winners (11): 1944, 1947, 1948, 1949, 1951, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1961, 1962 :Runners-up (4): 1946, 1952, 1953, 1958

Women's volleyball

Main article: RCD Espanyol (volleyball)

  • Superliga :Winners (3): 1985, 1988, 1991
  • Copa de la Reina :Winners (5): 1984, 1985, 1986, 1990, 1992

Men's baseball

  • División de Honor :Winners (2): 1946, 1953

References

References

  1. https://www.rcdespanyol.com/en/events
  2. "History". RCD Espanyol.
  3. (28 October 2019). "Homenage a Ángel Rodríguez".
  4. (8 February 2018). "Por qué el Espanyol se llamó Español".
  5. (13 January 2000). "Spain - Cup 1903".
  6. (16 September 2021). "Nou Velòdrom de Barcelona". Chiefe.
  7. (19 January 2000). "Spain - Cup 1915".
  8. "Squad of Espanyol B 1994-95 Tercera División".
  9. (4 May 2013). "El Espanyol tocó la gloria ante el Bayer Leverkusen". Mundo Deportivo.
  10. (11 May 2018). "Mor Juli Pardo, expresident de l'Espanyol". [[Corporació Catalana de Mitjans Audiovisuals]].
  11. (28 May 2000). "El Espanyol se corona en Mestalla". El País.
  12. (12 April 2006). "El Espanyol conquista su cuarta Copa del Rey". El Mundo.
  13. (17 May 2007). "Palop ensures cup joy for Sevilla". [[UEFA]].
  14. (20 January 2009). "Pochettino replaces luckless Mané at Espanyol". UEFA.
  15. (1 October 2016). "How Mauricio Pochettino's Espanyol beat Pep Guardiola's Barcelona". Sky Sports.
  16. (2 August 2009). "Reds suffer pain in Spain".
  17. (8 August 2009). "Espanyol stunned by Jarque death". BBC.
  18. (22 January 2016). "New Espanyol owner aiming for Champions League within three years". The Guardian.
  19. (30 August 2019). "Friendly Europa League draw for Sevilla, Getafe and Espanyol". Marca.
  20. Roche, Calum. (9 July 2020). "Barcelona keep title race alive as they relegate rivals Espanyol". Diario AS.
  21. Sid Lowe. (9 July 2020). "Espanyol slip away to Barcelona's tune but the silence will sting too". The Guardian.
  22. (3 August 2020). "RCD Espanyol de Barcelona Comunicado Oficial".
  23. "乐鱼与西班牙人达成战略合作,共创数字体育新潮流 - IT之家".
  24. (2024-06-23). "Espanyol wins promotion playoffs to return to top tier of Spanish soccer".
  25. "Velocity Sports Partners complete acquisition of RCD Espanyol de Barcelona". ALK Capital.
  26. Missiroli, Antonio. (March 2002). "European football cultures and their integration: the 'short' Twentieth Century". Europa (web portal).
  27. Burns, Jimmy. (November 6, 2017). "In troubled times, FC Barcelona defines modern Catalonia".
  28. "FC Barcelona, more than a club".
  29. Temprano, Alejandra. (2016-01-11). "El Barça cae en su trampa con el tuit de la vergüenza de Bartomeu". [[esdiario.com]].
  30. (2015-09-10). "Joan Collet: "Vamos a dar guerra al Madrid"".
  31. "El Espanyol "exige" la retirada de la campaña 'Si sientes el Barça, sientes Cataluña'". ELMUNDO.
  32. SERGI LÓPEZ-EGEA. (2016-03-03). "Ensenyament retira un texto ofensivo con el Espanyol". El Periódico.
  33. "El Espanyol y el Joventut denuncian pensamiento único en Cataluña". Economiadigital.
  34. (1 October 2016). "How Mauricio Pochettino's Espanyol beat Pep Guardiola's Barcelona". skysports.com.
  35. Licia Granello. (October 22, 1987). "Il Milan è già disperato". [[la Repubblica]].
  36. Licia Granello. (November 5, 1987). "Un Milan senza attacco Una partita senza storia". [[la Repubblica]].
  37. Gianni Mura. (November 26, 1987). "Ma l' Inter soffre ancora". [[la Repubblica]].
  38. Gianni Mura. (December 10, 1987). "L' Inter perde l' ultima chance". [[la Repubblica]].
  39. (May 5, 1988). "Finale UEFA Tre gol dell' Espanyol". [[la Repubblica]].
  40. (May 19, 1988). "Coppa UEFA Il Bayer vince ai rigori". [[la Repubblica]].
  41. "Spain – List of Second Division Champions".
  42. "Spain – List of Cup Finals".
  43. "Spain – List of Champions of Catalonia".
  44. (25 October 2016). "El Espanyol gana la Supercopa". Roger Torelló.
  45. "RCD Espanyol - Equips". RCD Espanyol.
  46. "First Team RCD Espanyol Marc Roca Junqué #21". RCD Espanyol de Barcelona S.A.D.
  47. (31 August 2021). "Nico Melamed, dorsal 21". RCD Espanyol.
  48. "Teams". RCD Espanyol.
  49. (15 March 2017). "Pericos sobre ruedas". La Vanguardia.
  50. (26 May 2017). "Reneix el gegant adormit". L'Esportiu de Catalunya.
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