1920 Copa del Rey

Last updated
1920 Copa del Rey
20th Copa del Rey
Tournament details
Country Flag of Spain (1785-1873, 1875-1931).svg Spain
Defending champions Arenas Club de Getxo
Final positions
Champions FC Barcelona (4th title)
Runner-up Athletic de Bilbao
Tournament statistics
Matches played9
Goals scored27 (3 per match)
  1919
1921  

The Copa del Rey 1920 was the 20th staging of the Copa del Rey, the Spanish football cup competition.

Contents

The competition started in March 1920 and concluded on May 2, 1920, with the Final, held at El Molinón in Gijon, in which FC Barcelona lifted the trophy for the fourth time with a 2–0 victory over Athletic Bilbao.

Teams

Quarterfinals

First leg

Madrid FC 1–1 Athletic de Bilbao
Monjardín Soccerball shade.svg45' Report Belauste I Soccerball shade.svg10'
Madrid
Referee: Flag of Spain (1785-1873, 1875-1931).svg Paco Bru

Second leg

Athletic de Bilbao 4–1 Madrid FC
Laca Soccerball shade.svg7' (pen.), 30', 40'
Echevarría Soccerball shade.svg50'
Report Paco Soccerball shade.svg20'
San Mamés Stadium, Bilbao
Referee: Flag of Spain (1785-1873, 1875-1931).svg José Torrens

Athletic de Bilbao qualified for the semifinals.


Real Vigo Sporting 4–1 Sporting de Gijón
Dimas Soccerball shade.svg7'
Moncho Gil Soccerball shade.svg30'
Enrique Álvarez Soccerball shade.svg40', 50'
Report Bernabéu Soccerball shade.svg20'

Real Vigo qualified for the semifinals.

Byes: Real Unión, FC Barcelona (drawn against Sevilla FC, who withdrew after their proposal to play both legs in Madrid was rejected).

Semifinals

First leg

Real Unión 0–1 FC Barcelona
Report Alcántara Soccerball shade.svg5'
Estadio de Amute, Irun
Referee: Flag of Spain (1785-1873, 1875-1931).svg Federico Larrañaga

Athletic de Bilbao 2–1 Real Vigo Sporting
Echevarría Soccerball shade.svg64'
Belauste I Soccerball shade.svg90'
Report Moncho Gil Soccerball shade.svg50'
San Mamés Stadium, Bilbao
Referee: Flag of Spain (1785-1873, 1875-1931).svg Bertrán de Lis

Second leg

FC Barcelona 4–4 Real Unión
Vinyals Soccerball shade.svg5' (pen.), 70' (pen.)
Sesúmaga Soccerball shade.svg8'
Alcántara Soccerball shade.svg40'
Report Jáuregui Soccerball shade.svg17'
Azurza Soccerball shade.svg75'
Emery Soccerball shade.svg80'
René Petit Soccerball shade.svg85'
Camp de la Indústria, Barcelona
Referee: Flag of Spain (1785-1873, 1875-1931).svg Federico Larrañaga

FC Barcelona qualified for the final.


Athletic de Bilbao qualified for the final.

Final

FC Barcelona 2–0 Athletic Bilbao
Martínez Soccerball shade.svg70'
Alcántara Soccerball shade.svg80'
Report
El Molinón, Gijón
Attendance: 10,000
Referee: Flag of Spain (1785-1873, 1875-1931).svg Bertrán de Lis
Copa del Rey 1920 winners
FC Barcelona
4th title

Related Research Articles

The 2008–09 Copa del Rey was the 107th staging of the Copa del Rey. The competition started on 23 August 2008 and concluded on 13 May 2009 with the final, held at the Mestalla Stadium in Valencia, in which Barcelona lifted the trophy for the 25th time in their history with a 4–1 victory over Athletic Bilbao, who qualified for the third qualifying round of the 2009–10 UEFA Europa League. The defending cup holders were Valencia, but they were eliminated in the quarter-finals.

The Copa del Rey 1914 was the 14th staging of the Copa del Rey, the Spanish football cup competition.

The Copa del Rey 1915 was the 15th staging of the Copa del Rey, the Spanish football cup competition.

The Copa del Rey 1917 was the 17th staging of the Copa del Rey, the Spanish football cup competition.

The Copa del Rey 1918 was the 18th staging of the Copa del Rey, the Spanish football cup competition.

The Copa del Rey 1919 was the 19th staging of the Copa del Rey, the Spanish football cup competition.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1921 Copa del Rey</span> Football tournament season

The Copa del Rey 1921 was the 21st staging of the Copa del Rey, the Spanish football cup competition.

The King Alfonso XIII's Cup 1922 was the 22nd staging of the Copa del Rey, the Spanish football cup competition.

The King Alfonso XIII's Cup 1923 was the 23rd staging of the Copa del Rey, the Spanish football cup competition.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1924 Copa del Rey</span> Football tournament season

The King Alfonso XIII's Cup 1924 was the 24th staging of the Copa del Rey, the Spanish football cup competition.

The King Alfonso XIII's Cup 1925 was the 25th staging of the Copa del Rey, the Spanish football cup competition.

The King Alfonso XIII's Cup 1926 was the 26th staging of the Copa del Rey, the Spanish football cup competition.

The 1995–96 Copa del Rey was the 94th staging of the Copa del Rey.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1920 Copa del Rey final</span> Football match

The 1920 Copa del Rey Final was the 20th final of the Spanish cup competition, the Copa del Rey. The final was played at El Molinón, in Gijón, on 2 May 1920, in front of an attendance of 10,000 spectators, who saw FC Barcelona beat Athletic Bilbao 2–0, thus winning their fourth cup title. The goals were scored in the second-half by Vicente Martínez and Paulino Alcántara.

The 1987–88 Copa del Rey was the 86th staging of the Copa del Rey. The trophy was won by FC Barcelona after beating defending champions Real Sociedad 1–0 in the final.

The 1951 Copa del Generalísimo was the 49th staging of the Copa del Rey, the Spanish football cup competition.

The 1980–81 Copa del Rey was the 79th staging of the Spanish Cup, the annual domestic cup competition in the Spanish football. The tournament was attended by 138 teams from the main categories of Spanish football.

The 1982–83 Copa del Rey was the 81st staging of the Spanish Cup, the annual domestic football cup competition in Spain. The tournament was attended by 135 teams from the higher echelons of Spanish football.

The 1982–83 season is Real Madrid Club de Fútbol's 81st season in existence and the club's 52nd consecutive season in the top flight of Spanish football.

The 1922–23 Prince of Asturias Cup was the fifth tournament of the Prince of Asturias Cup, which is an inter-regional football competition contested by the regional selections of Spain.

References