Copa Federación de España

Football tournament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Copa Real Federación Española de Fútbol, popularly known as the Copa Federación (Federation Cup) or Copa RFEF, is a Spanish football competition organised by the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF). It has been held since the 1993−94 season as a tournament for smaller football clubs, with a format similar to that of the Copa del Rey.

Organiser(s)RFEF
Founded1944 (old competition)
1993 (current competition)
Region Spain
Teams32
Quick facts Organiser(s), Founded ...
Copa Federación
The Copa Real Federación Española de Fútbol trophy
Organiser(s)RFEF
Founded1944 (old competition)
1993 (current competition)
Region Spain
Teams32
Current championsOurense CF
(1st title)
Most championshipsPuertollano
(3 titles)
Websiterfef.es/copa-rfef
2025 Copa Federación
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It is contested annually by clubs from Primera Federación, Segunda Federación and Tercera Federación that have not qualified for the Copa del Rey.

The competition is currently played in two phases. The first phase is organized at the regional level, following the regulations established by each autonomous federation. The second phase is national in scope and features 32 teams: the 20 best teams from the regional phase —one from each autonomous community, except Andalusia, which contributes two teams, plus one team each from Ceuta and Melilla—; five teams from Segunda Federación —the best team from each group in the previous season that did not qualify for the Copa del Rey—; and seven teams from the Tercera Federación —the second-placed teams from the previous season, regardless of group, with the best coefficients and without a Copa del Rey berth.

In the national phase, the 32 teams are divided into four groups of eight based on geographic proximity. Each group plays three single-elimination knockout rounds, with pairings determined by draw. The winner of each group advances to the final phase as a semi-finalist, and all four semi-finalists earn qualification for the Copa del Rey.

The current Copa Federación, created in 1994, is not considered by the RFEF the same as the original one. A similar competition with regional qualification tournaments for amateur clubs (including the affiliated teams of the professional clubs, such as Real Madrid C and FC Barcelona C), the Campeonato de España de Aficionados, operated from 1930 until 1987,[1] but is also considered to be distinct from the Copa Federación.

Finals

Old tournament

More information Season, Location ...
Season Location Winner Runner-up Score Note
1944–45BarcelonaSan MartínValladolid1–0
1945–46MadridAlavésSueca3–2
1946–50 Not played
1950–51ZaragozaRCD CórdobaBarakaldo3–2
1951–52MadridJaénOrensana3–1
1952–53MadridValladolidCacereño1–0
1953–54ZaragozaBetisValladolid3–2Not official
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Modern tournament

More information Season, Winner ...
Season Winner Runner-up 1st Leg 2nd Leg Agg.
1993–94Puertollano IndustrialPlatges de Calvià1–45–06–4
1994–95Las Palmas BBalaguer1–03–14–1
1995–96Mallorca BMurcia0–13–13–2 (a.e.t.)
1996–97BurgosGáldar1–14–15–1
1997–98BinéfarAlcalá1–22–03–2
1998–99Racing BLugo3–00–03–0
1999–2000SabadellElche2–01–33–3 (a)
2000–01MarinoTropezón1–03–04–0
2001–02Celta BGavà1–02–13–1
2002–03AvilésTomelloso3–01–04–0
2003–04BadalonaVillanueva0–04–14–1
2004–05MataróBenidorm1–21–02–2 (a)
2005–06PuertollanoHuesca1–12–03–1
2006–07PontevedraMallorca B4–10–14–2
2007–08OurenseReus2–11–13–2
2008–09JaénRayo Vallecano B0–04–14–1
2009–10San Roque LepeLorca Deportiva1–02–03–0
2010–11PuertollanoLemona0–24–14–3
2011–12BinissalemLemona5–01–66–6 (a)
2012–13Sant AndreuLa Hoya Lorca3–01–04–0
2013–14OurenseGuadalajara1–22–03–2
2014–15Real UniónCastellón1–03–04–0
2015–16Atlético BalearesRayo Majadahonda2–21–03–2
2016–17Atlético SaguntinoFuenlabrada0–03–03–0
2017–18PontevedraOntinyent1–00–01–0
2018–19MirandésCornellà3–02–25–2
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New format

Performances

Performance by club

New tournament

More information Team, Winners ...
Team Winners Runners-up Winning years Runner-up years
Puertollano31994, 2006, 2011
CD Ourense22008, 2014
Pontevedra22007, 2018
Llagostera/Badalona Futur22020, 2023
Mallorca B1119962007
Murcia1120191996
Las Palmas B11995
Burgos11997
Binéfar11998
Racing B11999
Sabadell12000
Marino12001
Celta B12002
Avilés12003
Badalona12004
Mataró12005
Jaén12009
San Roque Lepe12010
Binissalem12012
Sant Andreu12013
Real Unión12015
Atlético Baleares12016
Atlético Saguntino12017
Mirandés12019
Córdoba12021
Arenteiro12022
Extremadura12024
Ourense CF12025
Lemona22011, 2012
Platges Calvià11994
Balaguer11995
Gáldar11997
Alcalá11998
Lugo11999
Elche12000
Tropezón12001
Gavà12002
Tomelloso12003
Villanueva12004
Benidorm12005
Huesca12006
Reus12008
Rayo B12009
Lorca Deportiva12010
La Hoya Lorca12013
Guadalajara12014
Castellón12015
Rayo Majadahonda12016
Fuenlabrada12017
Ontinyent12018
Cornellà12019
Tudelano12019
Las Rozas12020
Guijuelo12021
Alzira12022
Talavera de la Reina12023
Compostela12024
Orihuela12025
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Performance by autonomous community

Regional tournaments

  1. Due to its size, Andalusia has two Tercera División leagues (one for Western/Lower Andalusia [es], the other for Eastern/Upper Andalusia [es]) and operated separate qualifying tournaments for the Copa Federación for each section until 2020, when the Andalusia Football Federation (RFAF) established a trophy for the entire region, the two finalists taking the qualification spots.[2]

See also

References

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