Arsip

FC Bayern Munich season

2016–17 FC Bayern Munich season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bayern Munich
2016–17 season
President Karl Hopfner
(until 25 November)
Uli Hoeneß
(from 25 November)
Chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge
Manager Carlo Ancelotti
Stadium Allianz Arena
Bundesliga 1st
DFB-Pokal Quarter-finals
DFL-Supercup Winners
UEFA Champions League Round of 16
Top goalscorer League:
Robert Lewandowski
(15 goals)

All:
Robert Lewandowski
(23 goals)
Highest home attendance 75,000
Lowest home attendance 70,000
Average home league attendance 75,000
Biggest win Bayern 6–0 Bremen
Biggest defeat Atlético 1–0 Bayern
Dortmund 1–0 Bayern
Rostov 3–2 Bayern
Home colours
Away colours
Third colours
All statistics correct as of 12 February 2017.

The 2016–17 FC Bayern Munich season is the 118th season in the football club’s history and 52nd consecutive and overall season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having won promotion from the Regionalliga in 1965 after winning the Regionalliga Süd. Bayern Munich will also participate in this season’s edition of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal, and the premier continental cup competition, the UEFA Champions League. Bayern are the reigning Bundesliga and DFB-Pokal champions, and therefore will also participate in the German super cup, the DFL-Supercup. It is the 12th season for Bayern in the Allianz Arena, located in Munich, Germany. The season covers a period from 11 July 2016 to 30 June 2017.

Contents

Review

Background

Bayern won the double in the previous season after winning a record-setting fourth consecutive and 25th overall Bundesliga title (26th German title) and 18th DFB-Pokal title.[1][2][3] Manager Pep Guardiola did not extend his contract, and decided to move to Manchester City. Carlo Ancelotti was announced as his replacement in December 2015.[4][5]

In addition, Bayern hired Paul Clement as their assistant coach.[6] Hermann Gerland was also kept as an assistant coach, after also having been an assistant under Louis van Gaal, Jupp Heynckes, and Pep Guardiola. Toni Tapalović was retained as the goalkeeping coach, while Giovanni Mauri and Francesco Mauri were brought in as fitness coaches.[7] In August, Carlo Aneclotti named his son Davide as assistant manager, joining Clement and Gerland.[8]

Bayern signed Renato Sanches from Benfica and Mats Hummels from Borussia Dortmund on 10 May.[9] Serdar Tasci returned to Spartak Moscow after his loan spell was finished.[10] On 24 May, Pierre-Emile Højbjerg confirmed that he would be leaving Bayern, and on 11 July he transferred to Southampton.[11][12] Patrick Weihrauch, who never made a senior appearance for Bayern, also left the club for Würzburger Kickers on 2 June.[13] On 6 June, after making 17 appearances in all competitions during the 2015–16 season, Sebastian Rode left the club for Borussia Dortmund.[14][15] Medhi Benatia was sent out on a season-long loan to Juventus, with the option to make it permanent for €17M.[16] On 1 August, Mario Götze returned to Borussia Dortmund after three difficult seasons at the club.[17] Goalkeeper Ivan Lučić signed for Bristol City on 27 July.[18]

July

The new season officially began on 11 July 2016 with the presentation of Carlo Ancelotti as new manager and a training session.[19] Jérôme Boateng, Manuel Neuer, Joshua Kimmich, Thomas Müller, Mats Hummels, Robert Lewandowski, Kingsley Coman, and Renato Sanches were all given an extended break until 5 August after UEFA Euro 2016.

On 23 July, Bayern played in their first pre-season friendly match against SV Lippstadt.[20] The friendly was organised with Karl-Heinz Rummenigge‘s former club as part of a 60th birthday present for him. The match was meant to take place in October 2015, but was cancelled and rescheduled for July. Bayern won the match 4–3 after goals from Julian Green, Arjen Robben, and Franck Ribéry, along with a Lippstadt own goal. However, Robben suffered a hamstring injry, ruling him out for six weeks.[21] On 20 July, Bayern faced Manchester City and former manager Pep Guardiola at home. Bayern won the match 1–0 after a goal from Erdal Öztürk in the 76th minute.[22] Bayern’s third pre-season friendly took place on 23 July against SpVgg Landshut. Bayern won 3–0 with goals from Franck Ribéry, David Alaba, and Daniel Hägler.[23]

In March 2016, Bayern announced they would participate in a summer tour (referred to as the “2016 Audi Summer Tour”) in the United States as part of the International Champions Cup, after success with their previous US visit in 2014.[24] Bayern began their International Champions Cup campaign against Milan on 27 July in Chicago. Milan took the lead, but Bayern struck back with a goals from Ribéry and Alaba to give them the lead at half-time. In the second half, Milan retook the lead after scoring two goals. However, Bayern were awarded a penalty in the dying minutes, and Ribéry converted it to secure a 3–3 draw. The match would be decided on penalties, which Bayern lost 5–3 after Rafinha missed his spot kick.[25] However, one point was still awarded for a loss on penalties. In their second match, Bayern faced Internazionale on 30 July in Charlotte. Bayern won the match 4–1 after a goal from Ribéry and a hat-trick from Green.[26]

August

In their third match on 3 August, Bayern faced Real Madrid in East Rutherford. Bayern lost 1–0 after Danilo scored the winning goal in the 79th minute. Bayern finished 6th in the United States and Europe table.[27]

Bayern returned to Munich on 4 August, and began final preparations for the new season. Their first competitive match was the DFL-Supercup away to Borussia Dortmund on 14 August.[28] As Bayern completed the domestic double the previous season, Dortmund qualified as league runners-up. Bayern won the match 2–0 with second half goals from Arturo Vidal and Thomas Müller, after being outplayed in the opening 45 minutes.[29]

In the first round of the DFB-Pokal, Bayern were drawn against fourth-division side Carl Zeiss Jena.[30] The away match took place on 19 August. Bayern won 5–0 with a first half hat-trick from Lewandowski, and goals from Vidal and Hummels in the second period.[31]

Bayern qualified automatically for the UEFA Champions League group stage after winning the Bundesliga the previous season. The draw for the group stage took place on 25 August, at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco. Bayern were placed in Pot 1, and were drawn into Group D, along with Atlético Madrid, who knocked them out of the semi-finals in the previous season, PSV Eindhoven, and Rostov.[32]

In late June, the DFL released the full Bundesliga schedule for the upcoming season.[33] Bayern Munich were selected to face Werder Bremen at home in the season opener on 26 August.[33] Bayern won the match 6–0, making it the biggest win by a defending champion to start the season. Xabi Alonso opened the scoring in the 9th minute, followed by Lewandowski four minutes later. Lewandowski then scored his second in the first minute of the second half, followed by goals from Philipp Lahm in the 66th minute and Ribéry in the 73rd. Lewandowski then completed his hat-trick in the 77th minute from the penalty spot.[34] The win put Bayern in first following the matchday. Following the match, Bayern were drawn into a derby match against FC Augsburg at home for the second round of the DFB-Pokal, to take place on 26 October.[35]

September

After the international break, Bayern faced Schalke 04, who were 15th in the table, for matchday 2 of the Bundesliga on 9 September. Bayern won the away match 2–0, sealing the win with two late goals. Lewandowski put Bayern ahead in the 81st minute, and Joshua Kimmich scored his first goal for the club in the second minute of stoppage time. The win kept Bayern at top of the table.[36]

On 13 September, Bayern faced Russian side Rostov at home for the first Champions League fixture. Bayern won the match 5–0, with Lewandowski converting a penalty in the 28th minute before Müller scored on his birthday during second half stoppage time. Kimmich then scored a brace, with goals in the 53rd and 60th minutes. Juan Bernat then finished off the scoring with a goal in the 90th minute. With the win, Bayern finished top of Group D.[37]

Bayern faced FC Ingolstadt, who were 16th in the table, at home on matchday 3 of the Bundesliga on 17 September. Bayern won the derby match 3–1, keeping them top of the table. Bayern went behind 8 minutes in after a goal from Darío Lezcano, but equalised four minutes later via a goal from Lewandowski. Alonso scored in the 50th minute to put Bayern in front, and Rafinha sealed the win with a goal in the 84th minute, his first since April 2013.[38]

On 21 September, matchday 4 of the Bundesliga, Bayern played at home against Hertha BSC, who were second in the table and had a perfect record. Bayern won the match 3–0, putting them 2 points clear at the top of the table. Ribéry opened the scoring in the 16th minute, before Thiago extended Bayern’s lead in the 68th minute. Robben, returning from injury, scored his first of the season in the 72nd minute after coming on as a substitute to wrap up the scoring.[39]

Bayern met Hamburger SV on matchday 5 of the Bundesliga, taking place on 24 September. The match finished as a 1–0 win for Bayern, keeping them in first place in the league. The match was scoreless until the 88th minute, when Kimmich scored the lone goal, giving Bayern the late victory. The next day, Hamburg coach Bruno Labbadia was sacked after a winless start to the Bundesliga.[40]

On 28 September, Bayern faced Spanish side Atlético Madrid away on matchday 2 in the Champions League. Bayern lost the match 0–1 for their first competitive loss of the season, putting them second in the group behind Atlético. Madrid opened the scoring in the 35th minute through Yannick Carrasco, deflecting off the post and in. Although having numerous opportunities, Bayern were unable to equalise, and in the 84th minute, Atlético were given a penalty after a poor challenge by Vidal on Filipe Luís. Antoine Griezmann missed the penalty, having hit the crossbar, but Atlético held on for the victory.[41]

October

Bayern faced 1. FC Köln at home on 1 October, matchday 6 of the Bundesliga. The match finished as a 1–1 draw, their first dropped league points of the season, with Bayern staying 3 points clear at the top of the table. Kimmich opened the scoring for Bayern in the 40 minutes in, before Anthony Modeste equalised 63rd minute against the run of play. Bayern had numerous opportunities, but were unable to capitalise, making it two winless games in a row for the Bavarians.[42]

After the international break, Bayern faced Eintracht Frankfurt away on 15 October, week 7 of the Bundesliga. The match finished as a 2–2 draw, their third consecutive winless match, but stayed first in the table with a 2 point lead. Robben opened the scoring for Bayern in the 10th minute, before Szabolcs Huszti equalised for Frankfurt right before half-time. Bayern once again went ahead after a goal from Kimmich in the 62nd minute, but Eintracht once again leveled the score, with a goal from Marco Fabián in the 78th minute securing the draw.[43] During the match, reserve goalkeeper Tom Starke was sent off from the sidelines after a confrontation with Frankfurt players. However, he was not listed as a substitute despite being on the bench. The DFB Sports Court handed Starke a one match suspension, making him unavailable for selection against Borussia Mönchengladbach.[44]

On 19 October, Bayern met Dutch side PSV Eindhoven at home on matchday 3 of the Champions League. Bayern won the match 4–1, staying second in the group standings. Müller opened the scoring in the 13th minute, before Kimmich added a second 8 minutes later. Luciano Narsingh got a goal back for Eindhoven to reduce the deficit to 2–1 going into half-time. In the 59th minute, Lewandowski put Bayern back to a two-goal lead, before Robben wrapped up the scoring in the 84th minute.[45]

Bayern met Borussia Mönchengladbach at home on 22 October, matchday 8 of the Bundesliga. The match finished as a 2–0 win to Bayern, maintaining their 2 point lead at the top of the table. Vidal scored the first goal for Bayern in the 16th minute via a header. Fifteen minutes later, Douglas Costa extended Bayern’s lead, which was enough for the win.[46]

On 26 October, Bayern met FC Augsburg in round 2 of the DFB-Pokal. Bayern won the derby match 3–1, advancing to the round of 16. Lahm opened the scoring for Bayern only two minutes in, before Green doubled Bayern’s lead four minutes before half-time. Only two minutes in the second half, Augsburg were awarded a penalty after Hummels knocked Gojko Kačar to the ground. Koo Ja-cheol had has penalty saved by Neuer, maintaining Bayern’s two-goal advantage. Nine minutes later, Bayern were also awarded a penalty after a handball from Georg Teigl. However, Müller skied the ball over the crossbar. Augsburg then cut the deficit in the 68th minute via a goal from Ji Dong-won. In the third minute of stoppage time, Alaba scored Bayern’s third goal and sealed the win.[47] Following the match, Bayern were drawn against VfL Wolfsburg in the round of 16 of the DFB-Pokal, to take place on 7–8 February 2017 at home.[48]

On 29 October, Bayern met FC Augsburg once again, this time away in week 9 of the Bundesliga. Bayern again won the derby match by the same scoreline of 3–1, keeping themselves first in the table by two points. Lewandowski opened the scoring in the 19th minute, before Robben doubled Bayern’s advantage two minutes later. After two minutes into the second half, Lewandowski completed a brace, putting Bayern up by three. In the 67th minute, Koo Ja-cheol got a goal back for Augsburg, which ended up only as a consolation.[49]

November

Bayern met PSV Eindhoven once again on 1 November, matchday 4 of the Champions League. Bayern won the match 2–1, keeping themselves second in the group standings. Santiago Arias opened the scoring for PSV with a possibly offside header past Neuer. However, the linesman did not see this, and the goal was given. In the 34th minute, Bayern were given the chance to equalise from the penalty spot after a handball from Andrés Guardado. Lewandowski scored the penalty to put Bayern level. The score remained level until the 73rd minute, when Lewandowski completed a brace with a goal following a cross from Alaba. With the win, Bayern qualified for the knockout phase of the Champions League, along with Atlético Madrid. The win also meant the elimination of PSV from the Champions League.[50]

On 5 November, Bayern played 1899 Hoffenheim at home on matchday 10 of the Bundesliga. The match finished as a 1–1 draw, keeping Bayern at the top of the table based on goal difference. Kerem Demirbay opened the scoring for Hoffenheim in the 16th minute. Bayern equalised in the 34th minute via an own goal from Steven Zuber after a cross from Douglas Costa intended for Lewandowski. Both sides had chances in the second half, but the scores remained level.[51]

Players

Squad

As of 10 January 2017 [52][53]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 Germany GK Manuel Neuer (vice-captain)
5 Germany DF Mats Hummels
6 Spain MF Thiago
7 France MF Franck Ribéry
8 Spain MF Javi Martínez
9 Poland FW Robert Lewandowski
10 Netherlands MF Arjen Robben
11 Brazil MF Douglas Costa
13 Brazil DF Rafinha
14 Spain MF Xabi Alonso
17 Germany DF Jérôme Boateng
18 Spain DF Juan Bernat
No. Position Player
21 Germany DF Philipp Lahm (captain)
22 Germany GK Tom Starke
23 Chile MF Arturo Vidal
25 Germany FW Thomas Müller (3rd captain)
26 Germany GK Sven Ulreich
27 Austria DF David Alaba
29 France FW Kingsley Coman (on loan from Juventus)
30 Germany MF Niklas Dorsch
32 Germany MF Joshua Kimmich
35 Portugal MF Renato Sanches
40 Germany MF Fabian Benko

Transfers

In

N P Nat. Name Age EU Moving from Type Transfer
window
Ends Transfer
fee
Source
35 MF Portugal Renato Sanches 18 EU Benfica Transfer Summer 2021 € 35M [9]
5 DF Germany Mats Hummels 27 EU Borussia Dortmund Transfer Summer 2021 € 38M [9]

Out

N P Nat. Name Age EU Moving to Type Transfer
window
Transfer
fee
Source
4 DF Germany Serdar Tasci 29 EU Spartak MoscowRussia Loan return Summer [10]
36 FW Germany Patrick Weihrauch 22 EU Würzburger Kickers Transfer Summer Undisclosed [13]
20 MF Germany Sebastian Rode 25 EU Borussia Dortmund Transfer Summer € 14M [15]
34 MF Denmark Pierre-Emile Højbjerg 20 EU SouthamptonEngland Transfer Summer € 15M [12]
5 DF Morocco Medhi Benatia 29 Non-EU JuventusItaly Loan Summer €3M [16]
19 MF Germany Mario Götze 24 EU Borussia Dortmund Transfer Summer € 26M [17]
33 GK Austria Ivan Lučić 21 EU Bristol CityEngland Transfer Summer Undisclosed [18]
37 FW United States Julian Green 21 EU VfB Stuttgart Transfer Winter € 0.3M
28 DF Germany Holger Badstuber 27 EU Schalke 04 Loan Winter € 3M

Club

Kits

Home
Home
alternate 1
Home
alternate 2
Away
Away
alternate 1
Away
alternate 2
Third
Third
alternate
Recycled
edition
Goalkeeper
home
Goalkeeper
away
Goalkeeper
third
Type Shirt Shorts Socks Additional information
Home Red White Red
Home alternate 1 Red Red Red
Home alternate 2 Red Red White Worn on 15 October (vs Eintracht Frankfurt)
Away Dim grey / slate grey / black Black Black
Away alternate 1 Dim grey / slate grey / black Black White Worn on 28 September (vs Atlético Madrid)
Away alternate 2 Dim grey / slate grey / black White Black Worn on 1 November (vs PSV Eindhoven)
Third White Maroon White European kit
Third alternate White White White Worn on 20 January (vs SC Freiburg)
Recycled edition Red Red Red Special edition adidas x Parley kit entirely made of recycled ocean plastic; worn on 5 November (vs 1899 Hoffenheim)[54]
Goalkeeper home Midnight blue Midnight blue Midnight blue
Goalkeeper away Light green Light green Light green
Goalkeeper third White White White Worn on 6 December (vs Atlético Madrid)

Friendly matches

  Win   Draw   Loss

International Champions Cup

Pos Team Pld W WP LP L GF GA GD Pts
4 Spain Barcelona 3 2 0 0 1 7 7 0 6
5 Spain Real Madrid 3 2 0 0 1 5 5 0 6
6 Germany Bayern Munich 3 1 0 1 1 7 5 +2 4
7 Italy Inter Milan 3 1 0 0 2 4 7 −3 3
8 Italy Milan 3 0 1 0 2 4 8 −4 2
Source: ICC
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored

Telekom Cup

Main article: 2017 Telekom Cup

Competitions

  Win   Draw   Loss

Overview

Competition First match Last match Starting round Final position Record
Pld W D L GF GA GD Win %
Bundesliga 26 August 2016 20 May 2017 Matchday 1 20 15 4 1 45 12 +33 75.00
DFB-Pokal 19 August 2016 Round 1 3 3 0 0 9 1 +8 100.00
DFL-Supercup 14 August 2016 Final Winners 1 1 0 0 2 0 +2 100.00
Champions League 13 September 2016 Group stage 6 4 0 2 14 6 +8 66.67
Total 30 23 4 3 70 19 +51 76.67

Last updated: 12 February 2017
Source: Competitions

DFL-Supercup

Main article: 2016 DFL-Supercup

Bundesliga

Main article: 2016–17 Bundesliga

League table

Pos Team

Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Bayern Munich 20 15 4 1 45 12 +33 49 Qualification to Champions League group stage
2 RB Leipzig 20 13 3 4 36 20 +16 42
3 Eintracht Frankfurt 20 10 5 5 25 18 +7 35
4 Borussia Dortmund 20 9 7 4 40 23 +17 34 Qualification to Champions League play-off round
5 1899 Hoffenheim 20 8 10 2 36 21 +15 34 Qualification to Europa League group stage
Updated to match(es) played on 12 February 2017. Source: DFB
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored; 4) Head-to-head points; 5) Head-to-head goal difference; 6) Head-to-head away goals scored; 7) Away goals scored; 8) Play-off.[55]

Results summary

Overall Home Away
Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts W D L GF GA GD W D L GF GA GD
20 15 4 1 45 12  +33 49 7 3 0 27 5  +22 8 1 1 18 7  +11

Last updated: 12 February 2017.
Source: Bundesliga

Results by round

Round 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34
Ground H A H H A H A H A H A H A H A H A A H A A H A H A H A H A H A H A H
Result W W W W W D D W W D L W W W W W W W D W
Position 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

Last updated: 12 February 2017.
Source: Bundesliga
Ground: A = Away; H = Home. Result: D = Draw; L = Loss; W = Win; P = Postponed.

Matches

DFB-Pokal

Main article: 2016–17 DFB-Pokal

UEFA Champions League

Group stage

Pos Team

Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Spain Atlético Madrid 6 5 0 1 7 2 +5 15 Advance to knockout phase
2 Germany Bayern Munich 6 4 0 2 14 6 +8 12
3 Russia Rostov 6 1 2 3 6 12 −6 5 Transfer to Europa League
4 Netherlands PSV Eindhoven 6 0 2 4 4 11 −7 2
Source: UEFA
Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers

Knockout phase

Round of 16

Squad statistics

Appearances and goals

As of 18 December 2016

Appearances denote players in the starting lineup, with the numbers in parentheses denoting appearances as substitute.

No. Name Bundesliga DFB-Pokal DFL-Supercup Champions League Total
Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Goalkeepers
1 Germany Manuel Neuer 15 0 2 0 1 0 5 0 23 0
22 Germany Tom Starke 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
26 Germany Sven Ulreich 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0
Defenders
5 Germany Mats Hummels 11 (2) 1 1 (1) 1 1 0 4 (2) 0 17 (5) 2
13 Brazil Rafinha 5 (4) 1 1 0 0 (1) 0 3 0 9 (5) 1
17 Germany Jérôme Boateng 5 (2) 0 1 0 0 0 4 0 10 (2) 0
18 Spain Juan Bernat 4 (1) 0 2 0 0 0 2 (1) 2 8 (2) 2
21 Germany Philipp Lahm 10 1 2 1 1 0 4 0 17 2
27 Austria David Alaba 12 (2) 0 1 (1) 1 1 0 5 0 19 (3) 1
Midfielders
6 Spain Thiago 13 (1) 2 1 0 1 0 5 0 20 (1) 2
7 France Franck Ribéry 7 (3) 2 1 0 1 0 2 (1) 0 11 (4) 2
8 Spain Javi Martínez 12 0 1 0 1 0 2 (2) 0 16 (2) 0
10 Netherlands Arjen Robben 7 (2) 5 0 0 0 0 3 (1) 1 10 (3) 6
11 Brazil Douglas Costa 5 (6) 2 0 0 0 0 3 (2) 1 8 (8) 3
14 Spain Xabi Alonso 12 (1) 2 0 0 1 0 3 0 16 (1) 2
23 Chile Arturo Vidal 8 (5) 1 1 (1) 1 1 1 4 0 14 (6) 3
30 Germany Niklas Dorsch 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
32 Germany Joshua Kimmich 7 (5) 4 2 0 0 (1) 0 3 (2) 3 12 (8) 7
35 Portugal Renato Sanches 4 (5) 0 1 0 0 0 2 (3) 0 7 (8) 0
40 Germany Fabian Benko 0 0 0 (1) 0 0 0 0 0 0 (1) 0
Forwards
9 Poland Robert Lewandowski 14 (1) 11 1 3 1 0 6 5 22 (1) 19
25 Germany Thomas Müller 10 (3) 1 2 0 1 1 4 (2) 2 17 (5) 4
29 France Kingsley Coman 4 (2) 0 1 0 0 (1) 0 0 (1) 0 5 (4) 0
Players transferred out during the season
28 DF Germany Holger Badstuber 0 (1) 0 0 (1) 0 0 0 1 0 1 (2) 0
37 FW United States Julian Green 0 0 1 (1) 1 0 0 0 0 1 (1) 1

Goalscorers

As of 18 December 2016
Rank Position Name Bundesliga DFB-Pokal DFL-Supercup Champions League Total
1 FW Poland Robert Lewandowski 11 3 0 5 19
2 MF Germany Joshua Kimmich 4 0 0 3 7
3 MF Netherlands Arjen Robben 5 0 0 1 6
4 MF Brazil Douglas Costa 3 0 0 1 4
FW Germany Thomas Müller 1 0 1 2 4
6 MF Chile Arturo Vidal 1 1 1 0 3
7 MF Spain Xabi Alonso 2 0 0 0 2
DF Spain Juan Bernat 0 0 0 2 2
DF Germany Mats Hummels 1 1 0 0 2
DF Germany Philipp Lahm 1 1 0 0 2
MF France Franck Ribéry 2 0 0 0 2
MF Spain Thiago 2 0 0 0 2
13 DF Austria David Alaba 0 1 0 0 1
FW United States Julian Green 0 1 0 0 1
DF Brazil Rafinha 1 0 0 0 1
Own goal 1 0 0 0 1
Total 35 8 2 14 59

Clean sheets

As of 18 December 2016
Rank Name Bundesliga DFB-Pokal DFL-Supercup Champions League Total
1 Germany Manuel Neuer 7 1 1 2 11
Total 7 1 1 2 11

Disciplinary record

As of 18 December 2016
Rank Position Name Bundesliga DFB-Pokal DFL-Supercup Champions League Total
YC Yellow cardYellow cardRed card Red card YC Yellow cardYellow cardRed card Red card YC Yellow cardYellow cardRed card Red card YC Yellow cardYellow cardRed card Red card YC Yellow cardYellow cardRed card Red card
1 MF Spain Javi Martínez 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0
MF Spain Thiago 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 4 0 0
3 MF Spain Xabi Alonso 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0
DF Germany Mats Hummels 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0
DF Germany Philipp Lahm 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 3 0 0
MF France Franck Ribéry 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0
MF Chile Arturo Vidal 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3 0 0
8 DF Germany Jérôme Boateng 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 2 0 0
FW France Kingsley Coman 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0
MF Portugal Renato Sanches 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0
11 MF Germany Joshua Kimmich 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0
FW Poland Robert Lewandowski 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0
Total 20 0 0 1 0 0 3 0 0 7 0 0 31 0 0

References

 

 

This entry was posted on 13 Februari 2017, in Cinta.

Manchester City F.C. season

2016–17 Manchester City F.C. season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Manchester City
2016–17 season
Chairman Khaldoon Al Mubarak
Manager Pep Guardiola
Stadium Etihad Stadium
Premier League 3rd
FA Cup Fifth round
League Cup Fourth round
UEFA Champions League Round of 16
Top goalscorer League:
Sergio Agüero (11)

All:
Sergio Agüero (18)
Home colours
Away colours
Third colours

The 2016–17 season is Manchester City‘s 115th season of competitive football, 88th season in the top division of English football and 20th season in the Premier League since the league was first created with City as one of the original 22 founder-members.[1] They are competing in all three domestic competitions, as well as the UEFA Champions League for the fifth year in a row.

Contents

Club “brand update”

In conjunction with the recruitment of Pep Guardiola, the manager whom City’s executives had sought to hire since they joined the club four years hence and the man synonymous with the style of football they wanted the club to espouse,[2] Manchester City announced a series of adjustments to the club’s “brand” as of the start of the season.

On 15 October 2015, the club announced that they intended to enter into a consultation with their fans over the designing of a new badge to replace the design that had been brought in 1997 and which had largely been unpopular since.[3] The result of the online-based consultation was a design bearing many of the hallmarks of the crest replaced in 1997, plus some elements of the style established by the other club badges of fellow City Football Group teams Melbourne City FC and New York City FC. While many praised the logo for its simplicity and similarity to the beloved previous design, it was criticised from other corners for its slightly amateurish appearance, its removal of the words “Football Club” and for its failure to more closely replicate the earlier badge.[4]

On 30 June 2016, the day before Guardiola officially started his new role as well as the day on which the new badge was made official,[5] the club unexpectedly announced the renaming of their Twitter accounts and website. Replacing the old “branding” of MCFC (the initials of the club), both social media outlets were rechristened “ManCity”. While the move was popular among many, especially the club’s more recent foreign fans for whom the styling was already their preferred abbreviation of the club’s name, the change provoked another mixed reaction from the Manchester-based core supporter base, with many criticising the decision to use a wording often used by the club’s rivals, as well as highlighting the decision to again remove the “Football Club” wording.[6]

Non-competitive

Pre-season

On 20 July 2016, Manchester City began their pre-season with a 0–1 defeat against Bayern Munich. Due to weather during the International Champions Cup, the derby against Manchester United was cancelled, and City went on to play Borussia Dortmund in their next cup match, which they would go on to win 6–5 on penalties after drawing 1–1 at the end of regular time. A match was played on 7 August against Arsenal in the 2016 Supermatchen, which ended 3-2 to Arsenal. To replace the game against Manchester United, which was cancelled, City arranged a friendly against St Johnstone, which was played behind closed doors.

Friendly

2016 International Champions Cup

2016 Super Match

Competitions

Overall

Competition Started round Current
position / round
Final
position / round
First match Last match
Premier League 3rd 13 August 2016 TBD
FA Cup Third round Fifth round 6 January 2017 TBD
League Cup Third round Fourth round 21 September 2016 26 October 2016
UEFA Champions League Play-off round Round of 16 16 August 2016 TBD

Last updated: 5 February 2017
Source: Competitions

Premier League

League table

Pos Team

Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
3 Arsenal 25 15 5 5 54 28 +26 50 Qualification for the Champions League group stage
4 Liverpool 25 14 7 4 54 30 +24 49 Qualification for the Champions League play-off round
5 Manchester City 24 15 4 5 49 29 +20 49 Qualification for the Europa League group stage
6 Manchester United 25 13 9 3 38 21 +17 48
7 Everton 25 11 8 6 40 27 +13 41
Updated to match(es) played on 12 February 2017. Source: Premier League
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored; 4) Play-offs (only if needed to decide champion, teams for relegation or teams for UEFA competitions).[7]

Results summary

Overall Home Away
Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts W D L GF GA GD W D L GF GA GD
24 15 4 5 49 29  +20 49 7 4 1 23 13  +10 8 0 4 26 16  +10

Last updated: 5 February 2017.
Source: Premier League

Results by matchday

Matchday 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38
Ground H A H A H A A H H A H A A H A H H A A H A H A H
Result W W W W W W L D D W D W W L L W W W L W L D W W
Position 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 3 4 4 4 2 2 3 3 5 5 5 3

Last updated: 5 February 2017.
Source: Statto.com
Ground: A = Away; H = Home. Result: D = Draw; L = Loss; W = Win; P = Postponed.

Matches

38 matches are played, 2 against each other team in the league; one at home and one away. Manchester City’s biggest rivals, Manchester United, also competed in the 2016-17 Premier League season.

FA Cup

Main article: 2016–17 FA Cup

As a Premier League club, Manchester City entered the competition in the third round, drawing West Ham United away from home.

League Cup

Main article: 2016–17 EFL Cup

As a European club, Manchester City entered the competition in the third round, drawing Swansea City away from home.

UEFA Champions League

Play-off Round

The draw for the Champions League play-off round took place on 5 August 2016. Manchester City were a seeded team in the league route. They were drawn against Steaua București of Romania.

Group stage

The group stage draw was made on 25 August 2016 in Monaco. Manchester City were drawn with Barcelona (pot 1), Borussia Mönchengladbach (pot 3), and Celtic (pot 4).[8]

Pos Team

Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification BAR MC MGL CEL
1 Spain Barcelona 6 5 0 1 20 4 +16 15 Advance to knockout phase 4–0 4–0 7–0
2 England Manchester City 6 2 3 1 12 10 +2 9 3–1 4–0 1–1
3 Germany Borussia Mönchengladbach 6 1 2 3 5 12 −7 5 Transfer to Europa League 1–2 1–1 1–1
4 Scotland Celtic 6 0 3 3 5 16 −11 3 0–2 3–3 0–2
Source: UEFA
Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers

Round of 16

Squad information

First team squad

N P Nat. Name Age EU Since App Goals Ends Transfer fee Notes
1 GK Chile Claudio Bravo 33 Non-EU 2016 23 0 2020 £15.4M
3 RB France Bacary Sagna 33 EU 2014 78 0 2017 Free
4 CB Belgium Vincent Kompany 30 EU 2008 304 14 2019 £6M Captain
5 RB Argentina Pablo Zabaleta 32 Non-EU 2008 323 11 2017 £6M
6 DM Brazil Fernando 29 Non-EU 2014 95 4 2019 £12M
7 LW England Raheem Sterling 22 EU 2015 78 18 2020 £44M
8 CM Germany İlkay Gündoğan 26 EU 2016 16 5 2020 £20M
9 LW Spain Nolito 30 EU 2016 23 6 2020 £13.8M
10 ST Argentina Sergio Agüero 28 Non-EU 2011 234 154 2019 £38M
11 LB Serbia Aleksandar Kolarov 31 EU 2010 237 21 2018 £16M
13 GK Argentina Willy Caballero 35 Non-EU 2014 34 0 2017 £4.4M
15 RW Spain Jesús Navas 31 EU 2013 169 8 2017 £14.9M
17 AM Belgium Kevin De Bruyne 25 EU 2015 71 21 2021 £54.5M Record Signing
18 CM England Fabian Delph 27 EU 2015 34 3 2020 £8M
19 RM Germany Leroy Sané 21 EU 2016 17 3 2021 £37M
21 AM Spain David Silva 31 EU 2010 288 48 2019 £24M
22 LB France Gaël Clichy 31 EU 2011 188 3 2017 £7M
24 CB England John Stones 22 EU 2016 29 1 2022 £47.5M
25 CM Brazil Fernandinho 31 Non-EU 2013 154 16 2017 £30M
30 CB Argentina Nicolás Otamendi 29 Non-EU 2015 76 1 2020 £28M
33 ST Brazil Gabriel Jesus 19 Non-EU 2017 4 3 2021 £27M
42 CM Ivory Coast Yaya Touré 33 Non-EU 2010 283 82 2017 £24M
50 RB Spain Pablo Maffeo 19 EU 2013 3 0 2019 £85,000 Academy Graduate
53 CB England Tosin Adarabioyo 19 EU 2003 4 0 2017 Free Academy Graduate
54 GK England Angus Gunn 21 EU 2011 0 0 2020 £235,000 Academy Graduate
69 LB Spain Angeliño 20 EU 2013 3 0 2019 £3.83M Academy Graduate
72 ST Nigeria Kelechi Iheanacho 20 Non-EU 2014 55 20 2021 £360,000 Academy Graduate
75 CM Spain Aleix García 19 EU 2013 7 1 2020 £1.7M Academy Graduate

Last updated: 5 February 2017
Source: mancity.com
Ordered by squad number. Appearances include league and cup appearances, including as substitute.

Playing statistics

As of 5 February 2017

Appearances (Apps.) numbers are for appearances in competitive games only including sub appearances
Red card numbers denote: Numbers in parentheses represent red cards overturned for wrongful dismissal.

No. Nat. Player Pos. Premier League FA Cup League Cup Champions League Total
Apps Goal YC Red card Apps Goal YC Red card Apps Goal YC Red card Apps Goal YC Red card Apps Goal YC Red card
1 Chile Claudio Bravo GK 19 4 1 23 1
3 France Bacary Sagna DF 12 2 2 1 3 17 3
4 Belgium Vincent Kompany DF 3 1 1 2 6 1
5 Argentina Pablo Zabaleta DF 14 1 2 1 1 6 1 22 1 3
6 Brazil Fernando MF 12 3 1 2 1 5 20 4
7 England Raheem Sterling MF 22 5 5 2 1 1 1 6 1 2 31 7 8
8 Germany İlkay Gündoğan MF 10 3 6 2 1 16 5 1
9 Spain Nolito FW 14 4 3 1 2 1 6 2 23 6 3 1
10 Argentina Sergio Agüero FW 18 11 3 1 1 1 1 6 6 26 18 3 1
11 Serbia Aleksandar Kolarov DF 22 1 6 1 1 7 2 31 1 8
13 Argentina Willy Caballero GK 5 2 2 4 13
15 Spain Jesús Navas MF 14 1 1 2 5 22 1
17 Belgium Kevin De Bruyne MF 23 4 4 1 1 5 1 30 5 4
18 England Fabian Delph MF 4 2 1 1 7 1
19 Germany Leroy Sané FW 12 2 1 1 2 2 17 3
21 Spain David Silva MF 22 2 4 2 1 5 2 1 29 5 5
22 France Gaël Clichy DF 14 1 2 2 1 6 24 2
24 England John Stones DF 20 1 1 1 1 7 29 1 1
25 Brazil Fernandinho MF 19 1 3 2 7 1 2 1 26 2 5 3
30 Argentina Nicolás Otamendi DF 19 8 1 1 6 1 27 9
33 Brazil Gabriel Jesus FW 3 3 1 1 4 3 1
42 Ivory Coast Yaya Touré MF 13 4 2 2 2 1 1 16 6 3
50 Spain Pablo Maffeo DF 1 2 3
53 England Tosin Adarabioyo DF 1 2 3
54 England Angus Gunn GK
55 Spain Brahim Díaz MF 1 1
69 Spain Angeliño DF 1 1 2
72 Nigeria Kelechi Iheanacho FW 15 4 2 1 3 2 20 6 1
75 Spain Aleix García MF 3 1 2 1 6 1
On loan England Joe Hart GK 1 1
On loan France Samir Nasri MF 1 1
Own goals 3 1 0 0 4
Totals 49 49 4 8 3 0 2 2 0 18 10 2 77 64 6

Source: (for players and positions) First Team Squad (for squad numbers) Squad Profiles (for actual stats.)

Goalscorers

Includes all competitive matches. The list is sorted alphabetically by surname when total goals are equal.

Correct as of match played on 5 February 2017
No. Pos. Player Premier League FA Cup League Cup Champions League TOTAL
10 FW Argentina Sergio Agüero 11 1 0 6 18
7 MF England Raheem Sterling 5 1 0 1 7
72 FW Nigeria Kelechi Iheanacho 4 0 0 2 6
9 FW Spain Nolito 4 0 0 2 6
42 MF Ivory Coast Yaya Touré 4 2 0 0 6
17 MF Belgium Kevin De Bruyne 4 0 0 1 5
8 MF Germany İlkay Gündoğan 3 0 0 2 5
21 MF Spain David Silva 2 1 0 2 5
33 FW Brazil Gabriel Jesus 3 0 0 0 3
19 FW Germany Leroy Sané 2 1 0 0 3
22 DF France Gaël Clichy 1 0 1 0 2
25 MF Brazil Fernandinho 1 0 0 1 2
18 MF England Fabian Delph 0 0 0 1 1
75 MF Spain Aleix García 0 0 1 0 1
11 DF Serbia Aleksandar Kolarov 1 0 0 0 1
24 DF England John Stones 0 1 0 0 1
5 DF Argentina Pablo Zabaleta 1 0 0 0 1
Own Goals 3 1 0 0 4
Totals 49 8 2 18 77

Awards

Premier League Player of the Month award

Awarded monthly to the player who was chosen by a panel assembled by the Premier League’s sponsor

Month Player
August [10] England Raheem Sterling

Etihad Player of the Month awards

Awarded to the player that receives the most votes in a poll conducted each month on the MCFC OWS

Month Player
August[11] England Raheem Sterling
September[12] Belgium Kevin De Bruyne
October[13] Germany İlkay Gündoğan
November[14] Belgium Kevin De Bruyne
December[15] Ivory Coast Yaya Touré

Transfers and loans

Transfers in

First Team
Date Position No. Player From club Transfer fee
1 June 2016 MF 8 Germany İlkay Gündoğan Germany Borussia Dortmund £20,000,000[16]
1 July 2016 FW 9 Spain Nolito Spain Celta Vigo £13,800,000[17]
4 July 2016 MF 35 Ukraine Oleksandr Zinchenko Russia Ufa £1,700,000[18][19]
2 August 2016 FW 19 Germany Leroy Sane Germany Schalke 04 £37,000,000[20]
6 August 2016 FW 29 Colombia Marlos Moreno Colombia Atlético Nacional £4,750,000[21]
9 August 2016 DF 24 England John Stones England Everton £47,500,000[22]
25 August 2016 GK 1 Chile Claudio Bravo Spain Barcelona £15,400,000[23]
19 January 2017 FW 33 Brazil Gabriel Jesus Brazil Palmeiras £27,000,000[24]
EDS, Academy and other
Date Position No. Player From club Transfer fee
24 June 2016 MF Argentina Benjamin Garre Argentina Vélez Sarsfield Undisc.[25]
30 June 2016 MF Australia Aaron Mooy Australia Melbourne City Free[26]
1 July 2016 FW Switzerland Lorenzo Gonzalez Switzerland Servette Undisc.
4 July 2016 GK England Louie Moulden England Liverpool Free[27]
19 July 2016 GK Argentina Gerónimo Rulli Uruguay Deportivo Maldonado £4,000,000[28]
16 August 2016 DF Spain Pablo Marí Spain Gimnàstic Tarragona Undisc.[29]
23 September 2016 FW Wales Rabbi Matondo Wales Cardiff City Undisc.
20 January 2017 DF England Finley Burns England Southend United £175,000[30]
31 January 2017 MF Venezuela Yangel Herrera Venezuela Atletico Venezuela Undisc.[31]
31 January 2017 FW Spain Nabil Touaizi Spain Valencia €300,000[31]

Total Spending: Decrease £149,745,000

Transfers out

First Team
Exit date Position No. Player To club Transfer fee
10 June 2016 DF 26 Argentina Martín Demichelis Spain Espanyol Free
10 June 2016 GK 29 England Richard Wright Retired Released
EDS and Academy
Exit date Position No. Player To club Transfer fee
10 June 2016 DF England Sam Tattum Free Agent Free Agent
10 June 2016 GK England Charlie Albinson Free Agent Released
18 June 2016 DF 48 Belgium Mathias Bossaerts Belgium Oostende Free
18 June 2016 MF 66 France Seko Fofana Italy Udinese £3,800,000[32]
29 June 2016 DF –– France Florian Lejeune Spain SD Eibar £1,200,000[33]
1 July 2016 MF –– Portugal Rafael Camacho England Liverpool Free[34]
1 July 2016 DF –– England Diego Lattie England Liverpool Free[35]
31 August 2016 MF –– Malta Myles Beerman Scotland Rangers Undisclosed[36]
1 January 2017 GK –– Argentina Gerónimo Rulli Spain Real Sociedad Undisclosed[37]
12 January 2017 MF 73 England George Glendon England Fleetwood Town Undisclosed[38]
13 January 2017 GK 45 Republic of Ireland Ian Lawlor England Doncaster Rovers Undisclosed[39]
24 January 2017 MF –– Ghana Bismark Adjei-Boateng United States Colorado Rapids Undisclosed[40]
31 January 2017 MF 37 Republic of Ireland Jack Byrne England Wigan Athletic Undisclosed[41]

Loans out

First Team
Start date End date Position No. Player To club
6 August 2016 30 June 2017 FW 29 Colombia Marlos Moreno Spain Deportivo La Coruña[21]
26 August 2016 30 June 2017 MF 35 Ukraine Oleksandr Zinchenko Netherlands PSV[42]
31 August 2016 30 June 2017 GK 1 England Joe Hart Italy Torino
31 August 2016 30 June 2017 MF 8 France Samir Nasri Spain Sevilla
31 August 2016 30 June 2017 FW 14 Ivory Coast Wilfried Bony England Stoke City
31 August 2016 30 June 2017 DF 20 France Eliaquim Mangala Spain Valencia
31 August 2016 30 June 2017 DF 28 Belgium Jason Denayer England Sunderland
1 January 2017 31 January 2017[a] DF 69 Spain Angeliño Spain Girona[44]
1 January 2017 30 June 2017 DF 50 Spain Pablo Maffeo Spain Girona[44]
31 January 2017 30 June 2017 DF 69 Spain Angeliño Spain RCD Mallorca[43]
EDS, Academy and other
Start date End date Position No. Player To club
10 June 2016 30 June 2017 MF 47 Australia Luke Brattan Australia Melbourne City[45]
10 June 2016 30 June 2017 MF Australia Anthony Cáceres Australia Melbourne City[45]
1 July 2016 6 January 2017 [b] MF 37 Republic of Ireland Jack Byrne England Blackburn Rovers[47]
6 July 2016 30 June 2017 MF Australia Aaron Mooy England Huddersfield Town[48]
10 July 2016 30 June 2017 MF Ghana Thomas Agyepong Netherlands NAC Breda[49]
10 July 2016 30 June 2017 DF 56 England Ashley Smith-Brown Netherlands NAC Breda[49]
15 July 2016 30 June 2017 FW Spain Ruben Sobrino Spain Deportivo Alavés[50]
21 July 2016 30 June 2017 FW Ghana Yaw Yeboah Netherlands FC Twente[51]
23 July 2016 30 June 2017 FW 48 Turkey Enes Ünal Netherlands FC Twente[52]
29 July 2016 30 June 2017 MF Ghana Divine Naah Denmark FC Nordsjælland[53]
9 August 2016 1 January 2017 GK Argentina Gerónimo Rulli Spain Real Sociedad[37]
11 August 2016 2 January 2017 [c] FW 51 France David Faupala Netherlands NAC Breda[55]
13 August 2016 2 January 2017 MF 73 England George Glendon England Fleetwood Town[56]
15 August 2016 30 June 2017 FW 62 England Brandon Barker Netherlands NAC Breda[57]
16 August 2016 11 January 2017 [d] MF 76 Spain Manu García Spain Alavés[59]
16 August 2016 30 June 2017 DF Spain Pablo Marí Spain Girona[29]
17 August 2016 January 2017 DF England Callum Bullock England Crewe Alexandra[60]
25 August 2016 30 June 2017 MF 59 Kosovo Bersant Celina Netherlands Twente[61]
31 August 2016 30 June 2017 MF 52 England Kean Bryan England Bury[62]
31 August 2016 30 June 2017 DF 46 England Shay Facey Netherlands Heerenveen[63]
31 August 2016 17 January 2017[e] MF 36 Argentina Bruno Zuculini Spain Rayo Vallecano
2 September 2016 31 December 2016 FW Sweden Zackarias Faour Denmark Midtjylland
11 January 2017 30 June 2017 MF 76 Spain Manu García Netherlands NAC Breda[58]
17 January 2017 30 June 2017 MF 61 England James Horsfield Netherlands NAC Breda[65]
17 January 2017 30 June 2017 MF 36 Argentina Bruno Zuculini Italy Hellas Verona[64]
19 January 2017 30 June 2017 GK 64 Wales Billy O’Brien Scotland St Mirren[66]
31 January 2017 30 April 2017 FW 51 France David Faupala England Chesterfield[67]
31 January 2017 30 June 2017 FW Sweden Zackarias Faour Denmark FC Nordsjaelland[68]
8 February 2017 August 2017 DF Nigeria Chidiebere Nwakali Norway Sogndal Fotball[69]

 

  • On 31 January 2017, Angelino’s half-season loan at Girona was cut short and he joined RCD Mallorca for the remainder of the season.[43]
  • On 6 January 2017, Jack Byrne’s season-long loan at Blackburn Rovers was cut short.[46]
  • On 2 January 2017, David Faupala’s season-long loan at NAC Breda was cut short.[54]
  • On 11 January 2017, Manu García’s season-long loan at Alavés was cut short and he joined NAC Breda for the remainder of the season.[58]

 

  1. On 17 January 2017, Bruno Zuculini’s season-long loan at Vallecano was cut short and he joined Hellas Verona for the remainder of the season.[64]

References

 

 

This entry was posted on 13 Februari 2017, in Cinta.

FC Barcelona season

2016–17 FC Barcelona season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Barcelona
2016–17 season
President Josep Maria Bartomeu
Manager Luis Enrique
Stadium Camp Nou
La Liga 2nd
Copa del Rey Final
Supercopa de España Winners
UEFA Champions League Round of 16
Top goalscorer League:
Luis Suárez (18)

All:
Lionel Messi (32)
Highest home attendance 98,485 vs Real Madrid
(3 December 2016)
Lowest home attendance 58,560 vs Real Sociedad
(26 January 2017)
Average home league attendance 81,652
Home colours
Away colours
Third colours

The 2016–17 season is Football Club Barcelona’s 117th in existence and the club‘s 86th consecutive season in the top flight of Spanish football. Barcelona are involved in four competitions after completing the Double of winning La Liga and Copa del Rey during the last season.

Contents

Season overview

June

On 1 June, the club announced that Sandro Ramírez‘s contract would be rescinded.[1] On 2 June, Barcelona announced that Dani Alves would be departing the club after eight seasons.[2] On 3 June, Barcelona announced that German club Borussia Dortmund have informed them of their desire to activate the buy-out clause for Marc Bartra.[3] On 5 June, the club announced that Denis Suárez will be forming part of the first team for this season.[4]

July

On 1 July, Barcelona and Neymar negotiated a five-year contract extension lasting until 30 June 2021.[5] On 4 July, the club completed the transfer of Denis Suárez.[6] On 12 July, the club announced the transfers of 22-year-old French international defender Samuel Umtiti from Lyon[7] and Lucas Digne from Paris Saint-Germain for the next five seasons, respectively.[8] On 14 July, the two transfers were completed.[9][10] On 19 July, Barcelona and Sergi Samper negotiated a three-year contract extension lasting until 30 June 2019, including promotion to the first team.[11] On 19 July, Barcelona and Munir El Haddadi also negotiated a three-year contract extension lasting until 30 June 2019.[12] On 19 July, Barcelona and Qatar Airways extended sponsorship agreement for one year more.[13] On 21 July, Barcelona and Valencia reached an agreement for the transfer of Portuguese international midfielder André Gomes.[14] On 26 July, the transfer was completed.[15] During the press conference of Gomes’ presentation, the club announced midfielder Javier Mascherano‘s contract was extended until 30 June 2019.[16] On 30 July, Barcelona won their first pre-season match against Scottish champions Celtic with a 1–3 score in Dublin as part of the 2016 International Champions Cup.[17]

August

On 1 August, the club cancelled the contracts of Alex Song and Martín Montoya.[18][19] On 3 August, Barcelona defeated English Premier League champions Leicester City 4–2 in Stockholm with goals from Munir (2), Luis Suárez and Barcelona B player Rafa Mújica.[20] On 6 August, Barcelona were soundly defeated by Liverpool 4–0 at Wembley Stadium in London.[21] On 8 August, the club loaned Thomas Vermaelen to Italian club Roma with an option to buy.[22] On 10 August, the 2016 Joan Gamper Trophy was played against Italian club Sampdoria, finishing 3–2 with a goal from Luis Suárez and two from Lionel Messi.[23] On 14 August 2016, Barcelona won the first official match in the 2016 Supercopa de España against Sevilla with a 0–2 away score.[24] On 18 August 2016, Barcelona beat Sevilla with 3–0 (5–0 aggregate) and won their 12th Supercopa de España.[25] On 20 August, Barcelona defeated Real Betis 6–2 in their first Liga match, with a hat-trick from Luis Suárez, two goals from Messi and one from Arda Turan.[26] On 25 August, the club completed the transfer of 27-year-old goalkeeper Jasper Cillessen from Ajax on a five-year contract,[27] with goalkeeper Claudio Bravo then joining Manchester City after a two-year spell with Barça.[28] Several hours later, both teams were drawn into Group C of the Champions League draw, alongside Borussia Mönchengladbach and Celtic.[29] On 28 August, Barcelona defeated Athletic Bilbao 0–1 with a goal from Rakitic and Luis Enrique wins his 100th match as Barça manager,[30] Ter Stegen made most goalkeeper passes in one single match in LaLiga.[31] On 30 August, the club completed the last transfer of Paco Alcácer from Valencia.[32]

September

On 10 September, in the match against Deportivo Alaves, Barcelona suffered a 1-2 defeat.[33] On 13 September, Barcelona defeated Celtic 7–0 in the opening match of Group C in the Champions League. Messi notched his first hat-trick of the season, while Neymar provided four assists and a free-kick goal.[34] On 17 September, Barcelona faced for the first time recently promoted Leganés at the Estadio Municipal de Butarque. Barcelona won 1–5 with two goals from Messi and one each from Luis Suárez, Neymar and Rafinha.[35] On 21 September, Barcelona drew against Atlético Madrid 1–1; Ivan Rakitić gave Barça the lead before half-time, but Atlético battled back to draw level in the second half after Messi was substituted out due to injury.[36] On 24 September, Barcelona won 0–5 over Sporting de Gijón through two goals from Neymar and one each from Suárez, Turan and Rafinha.[37] On 28 September, Barcelona defeated Borussia Mönchengladbach 1–2 with goals from Turan and Gerard Piqué, turning around a 1–0 first-half deficit to Barça top of Group C.[38]

October

On 2 October, Barcelona lost to Celta de Vigo 4–3; a second-half resurgence not enough for Luis Enrique’s side as they finished on the wrong end of a seven-goal thriller away in Vigo.[39] On 15 October, Barcelona defeated Deportivo de La Coruña 4–0 with two goals from Rafinha and one each from Luis Suárez and Messi, the latter who returned from injury in the match.[40] On 19 October, Barcelona defeated Manchester City – led by former Barça manager Pep Guardiola – 4–0 at home on the strength of a Messi hat-trick.[41] On 22 October, Barcelona defeated Valencia 2–3 at Mestalla, Messi spot-kick in injury time secured three points out of an electrifying encounter.[42] On 29 October, Barcelona won Granada 1–0 in the 1,500th game at Camp Nou, Barça found it tough to breakdown the stubborn visitors but Rafinha’s strike was enough to claim the win.[43]

November

On 1 November, Barcelona was defeated by Manchester City 3–1 at Manchester, Guardiola’s team came from behind after Messi opened scoring.[44] On 6 November, Barcelona won 1–2 against Sevilla at the Sánchez Pizjuán; Messi canceled out Vitolo’s opener late in the first half before setting up Luis Suárez for the winner in a frenetic game.[45] On 16 November, the club announced Rakuten signed up as FC Barcelona’s new main global partner; the Japanese company will appear on the front of the team’s shirt and become the Global Innovation and Entertainment Partner for the next four seasons, starting 1 July 2017.[46] On 19 November, Barca drew Málaga 0–0, a domineering performance was frustrated by 90 minutes of intense Andalusian defending.[47] On 23 November, Barcelona won 0–2 against Celtic at Celtic Park; coupled with Man City’s draw in Germany, they clinched a seeded berth in the round of sixteen.[48] Also in this game Messi reached 100 goals in international competitions for Barcelona.[49] On 27 November, Barcelona drew 1–1 with Real Sociedad at Anoeta, Messi’s second-half leveller halted Barça’s run of four straight league losses in San Sebastian.[50] On 30 November, Barcelona drew Hércules 1–1, a fine long range strike from debutant Aleña gave Barça a slight advantage going into the second leg.[51]

December

2016–17 FC Barcelona at the Match of Champions: Afghan boy Murtaza Ahmadi (left), who became a hit on the internet earlier this year with Lionel Messi jersey made from plastic bag, finally met his hero.

On 3 December, Barcelona drew 1–1 with Real Madrid, Luis Suárez’ header being cancelled out by 90th minute Ramos equaliser.[52] On 6 December, Barcelona won 4–0 against Borussia Mönchengladbach, a game which saw a hat-trick from Arda Turan.[53] On 10 December, Barcelona won Osasuna 0–3, Luis Suárez breaks the deadlock in the second half, and two further goals from Leo Messi go on to claim all three points in Pamplona.[54] On 12 December, Barcelona were drawn against Paris Saint-Germain in the round of 16 of the Champions League.[55] On 15 December, Barcelona and Suárez negotiated a five-year contract extension lasting until 30 June 2021.[56] On 18 December, Barcelona won 4–1 against Espanyol in the Derbi barceloní.[57] On 21 December, Barcelona won 7–0 against Hércules; Paco Alcácer scored his first official goal and Arda Turan got a hat-trick as Barça cruised into the last 16 of the Copa del Rey.[58] On 23 December, Barcelona was drawn against Athletic Club in the round of 16 of the Copa del Rey.[59]

January

On 8 January Barcelona drew 1–1 with Villarreal, with Messi scoring the equalizer in the 90th minute.[60] On 11 January, Barcelona won 3-1 against Athletic Bilbao, goals from Suárez, Neymar and Messi secured an action-packed victory that kept alive the quest for a third consecutive Copa del Rey trophy.[61] On 14 January, Barcelona won 5-0 against Las Palmas, a brace from Luis Suárez and one each for Leo Messi, Arda Turan and Aleix Vidal gave Barça a winning home start to the league in 2017.[62] On 19 January Barcelona won 0–1 against Real Sociedad, Neymar’s 21st-minute penalty ended decade of disappointments in San Sebastián.[63] On 22 January, Barcelona won 0-4 against Eibar, a first-half strike from Denis followed by a goal each from the trident in the second secured another three points to stay within reach of the top two.[64] On 26 January, Barcelona won 5-2 against Real Sociedad, a brace from Denis Suárez and further goals by Leo Messi, Luis Suárez and Arda Turan sent Barça into the final four of the Copa del Rey.[65] On 29 January Barcelona drew 1–1 with Real Betis, an incident-packed game saw Suárez snatched a draw in the 90th minute after the Catalans had already seen at least one valid equaliser overruled.[66]

February

On 1 February, Barcelona won 1-2 against Atlético Madrid, Suárez and Messi put the Catalans in command but Griezmann’s second half header kept Atletico alive.[67] On 4 February, Barcelona won 3-0 against Athletic Club, Paco Alcácer, Leo Messi, and Aleix Vidal all found the net.[68] On 7 February, Barcelona draw 1-1 against Atlético Madrid, Luis Suárez’s tap-in just before half-time was enough to see the Catalans into fourth consecutive Copa del Rey final despite late drama which saw the visitors equalise and the Uruguayan sent off.[69] On 11 February, Barcelona won 0-6 against Alavés, breath-taking display saw Catalans hit fellow cup-finalists, Luis Suárez (2), Neymar Jr, Leo Messi and Ivan Rakitic on target, plus one own goal; Aleix Vidal suffered a very serious-looking ankle injury late in the game[70]

Players

Squad information

N P Nat. Name Age EU Since App Goals Ends Transfer fee Notes
1 GK Germany Ter Stegen 24 EU 2014 67 0 2021 €12M
3 CB Spain Piqué 30 EU 2008 375 35 2019 €5M Originally from Youth system
4 CM Croatia I. Rakitić 28 EU 2014 129 20 2019 €18M
5 DM Spain Sergio (2nd vc) 28 EU 2008 406 12 2021 YS
6 CM Spain Denis Suárez 23 EU 2016 21 1 2020 €3.25M Originally from Youth system
7 FW Turkey Arda 30 EU 2015 45 14 2019 €34M
8 CM Spain A. Iniesta (captain) 32 EU 2002 607 55 2018 YS
9 CF Uruguay Suárez 30 Non-EU 2014 127 106 2021 €81M
10 FW Argentina Messi (vice-captain) 29 EU 2004 561 484 2018 YS Second nationality: Spain
11 FW Brazil Neymar Jr 25 Non-EU 2013 168 94 2021 €57.1M
12 CM Brazil Rafinha 24 EU 2011 61 10 2020 YS Second nationality: Spain
13 GK Netherlands Cillessen 27 EU 2016 4 0 2021 €13M
14 CB Argentina Mascherano (3rd vc) 32 EU 2010 302 0 2019 €22M Second nationality: Italy
17 CF Spain Paco Alcácer 23 EU 2016 12 1 2021 €30M
18 LB Spain Jordi Alba 27 EU 2012 175 9 2020 €14M Originally from Youth system
19 LB France Digne 23 EU 2016 16 1 2021 €16.5M
20 RB Spain S. Roberto 25 EU 2010 125 5 2019 YS
21 CM Portugal André Gomes 23 EU 2016 20 0 2021 €35M
22 RB Spain Aleix Vidal 27 EU 2015 20 1 2020 €18M Originally from Youth system
23 CB France Umtiti 23 EU 2016 16 0 2021 €25M
24 CB France Mathieu 33 EU 2014 81 4 2018 €20M
25 GK Spain Masip 28 EU 2014 4 0 2017 YS

Players in

N P Nat. Name Age EU Moving from Type Transfer
window
Ends Transfer
fee
Source
6 MF Spain Denis Suárez 23 EU Spain Villarreal Buyback clause Summer 2020 €3.25M FCBarcelona.com
RB Spain Martín Montoya 25 EU Spain Real Betis Loan return Summer 2020 Free FCBarcelona.com
17 MF Cameroon Alex Song 29 EU England West Ham United Loan return Summer 2018 Free FCBarcelona.com
30 MF Croatia Alen Halilović 20 EU Spain Sporting Gijón Loan return Summer 2020 Free FCBarcelona.com
FW Spain Cristian Tello 25 EU Italy Fiorentina Loan return Summer 2020 Free FCBarcelona.com
23 DF France Samuel Umtiti 23 EU France Lyon Transfer Summer 2021 €25M FCBarcelona.com
19 DF France Lucas Digne 23 EU France Paris Saint-Germain Transfer Summer 2021 €16.5M+€4M
variables
FCBarcelona.com
21 MF Portugal André Gomes 23 EU Spain Valencia Transfer Summer 2021 €35M+€20M
variables
FCBarcelona.com
13 GK Netherlands Jasper Cillessen 27 EU Netherlands Ajax Transfer Summer 2021 €13M+€2M
variables
FCBarcelona.com
17 FW Spain Paco Alcácer 23 EU Spain Valencia Transfer Summer 2021 €30M+€2M
variables
FCBarcelona.com

Total spending: €122.75M

Players out

N P Nat. Name Age EU Moving to Type Transfer
window
Transfer
fee
Source
19 FW Spain Sandro Ramírez 20 EU Spain Málaga End of contract Summer Free MalagaCF.com
6 DF Brazil Dani Alves 33 EU Italy Juventus End of contract Summer Free Juventus.com
15 CB Spain Marc Bartra 25 EU Germany Borussia Dortmund Transfer Summer €8M BVB.de
30 MF Croatia Alen Halilović 20 EU Germany Hamburg Transfer Summer €5M HSV.de
21 DF Brazil Adriano 32 EU Turkey Beşiktaş Transfer Summer €0.6M BJK.tr.com
DF Spain Martín Montoya 25 EU Spain Valencia Contract termination Summer Free ValenciaCF.com
17 MF Cameroon Alex Song 29 EU Russia Rubin Kazan Contract termination Summer Free Rubin-Kazan.ru
23 DF Belgium Thomas Vermaelen 31 EU Italy Roma Loan Summer Free ASRoma.com
FW Spain Cristian Tello 25 EU Italy Fiorentina Loan Summer Free ViolaChannel.tv
13 GK Chile Claudio Bravo 33 EU England Manchester City Transfer Summer €18M+€2M variables ManCity.com
16 MF Spain Sergi Samper 22 EU Spain Granada Loan Summer Free GranadaCF.es
2 DF Brazil Douglas 26 Non-EU Spain Sporting Gijón Loan Summer Free RealSporting.com
17 FW Spain Munir El Haddadi 21 EU Spain Valencia Loan Summer Free ValenciaCF.com

Total income: €31.6 million

Net: Decrease €91.15 million

Technical staff

Position Staff
First team head coach Luis Enrique
Assistant coach Juan Carlos Unzué
Technical assistant Roberto Moreno
Auxiliary coach Joan Barbarà
Fitness coach Rafa Pol
Goalkeeping coach José Ramón de la Fuente
Scoutings Àlex García
Jordi Melero
Jaume Torras
Physiotherapist Jaume Minull
Juanjo Brau
Roger Gironès
Xavi Linde
Psychologist Joaquín Valdés
Doctor Ricard Pruna
Daniel Medina
Team liaison Carles Naval
Football Area Technical Commission Jordi Mestre
Javier Borda
Carles Rexach
Ariedo Braida
Academy director Jordi Roura
B team coach Gerard López

Statistics

Squad statistics

League Europe Cup Others Total Stats
Games played 22 6 8 2 38
Games won 14 5 5 2 26
Games drawn 6 0 2 0 8
Games lost 2 1 1 0 4
Goals scored 61 20 21 5 107
Goals conceded 18 4 8 0 30
Goal difference 43 16 13 5 77
Clean sheets 10 4 2 2 18
Goal by Substitute 1 2 1 1 5
Total shots
Shots on target
Corners
Players used
Offsides
Fouls suffered
Fouls committed
Yellow cards 39 9 17 3 68
Red cards 0 1 2 0 3

Players Used: Barcelona has used a total of – different players in all competitions.

Goalscorers

No. Pos. Nation Name La Liga Champions League Copa del Rey Supercopa de España Total
10 FW Argentina Messi 17 10 4 1 32
9 FW Uruguay Suárez 18 2 4 1 25
7 MF Turkey Arda 3 4 4 2 13
11 FW Brazil Neymar 6 2 2 0 10
12 MF Brazil Rafinha 5 0 1 0 6
4 MF Croatia I. Rakitić 3 0 1 0 4
3 DF Spain Piqué 2 1 0 0 3
6 MF Spain Denis Suárez 1 0 2 0 3
17 FW Spain Paco Alcácer 1 0 1 0 2
22 DF Spain Aleix Vidal 2 0 0 0 2
8 MF Spain Iniesta 0 1 0 0 1
18 DF Spain Jordi Alba 1 0 0 0 1
19 DF France Digne 0 0 1 0 1
24 DF France Mathieu 1 0 0 0 1
28 MF Spain Aleña 0 0 1 0 1
17 FW Spain Munir 0 0 0 1 1
# Own goals 1 0 0 0 1
TOTAL 61 20 21 5 107

Last updated: 11 February 2017[71]

Hat-tricks

Player Against Result Date Competition
Uruguay Luis Suárez Spain Real Betis 6–2 (H) 20 August 2016 La Liga
Argentina Lionel Messi Scotland Celtic 7–0 (H) 13 September 2016 Champions League
Argentina Lionel Messi England Manchester City 4–0 (H) 19 October 2016 Champions League
Turkey Arda Turan Germany Borussia Mönchengladbach 4–0 (H) 6 December 2016 Champions League
Turkey Arda Turan Spain Hércules 7–0 (H) 21 December 2016 Copa del Rey

(H) – Home ; (A) – Away

Clean sheets

As of 14 January 2017.

Rank Name La Liga Copa del Rey Champions League Supercopa de España Total Played Games
1 Germany Ter Stegen 10 0 3 0 13 26
1 Netherlands Jasper Cillessen 0 2 1 0 3 9
1 Chile Claudio Bravo 0 0 0 2 2 3
Total 10 2 4 2 18 38

Disciplinary record

Includes all competitive matches. Players listed below made at least one appearance for Barcelona first squad during the season.

N P Nat. Name La Liga Champions League Copa del Rey Supercopa de España Total Notes
Yellow card Second yellow card Red card Yellow card Second yellow card Red card Yellow card Second yellow card Red card Yellow card Second yellow card Red card Yellow card Second yellow card Red card
1 GK Germany Ter Stegen 1 1 2
3 DF Spain Piqué 4 1 5
4 MF Croatia Ivan Rakitić 3 3 1 7
5 MF Spain Sergio 5 1 1 1 8
6 MF Spain Denis Suárez 1 1
7 MF Turkey Arda 1 1
8 MF Spain Iniesta 1 1
9 FW Uruguay Suárez 6 1 1 1 8 1
10 FW Argentina Messi 3 2 5
11 FW Brazil Neymar 5 3 3 11
12 MF Brazil Rafinha 1 1
13 GK Netherlands Cillessen 1 1
14 MF Argentina Mascherano 5 1 1 7
18 MF Spain Jordi Alba 2 1 2 5
19 DF France Digne 2 2
20 MF Spain S. Roberto 3 1 1 4 1
21 MF Portugal Gomes 2 2
22 DF Spain Aleix Vidal 1 1
23 DF France Umtiti 2 2 1 5
24 DF France Mathieu 1 1

Last updated: 11 February 2017
Source: ESPNFC.com, FCBarcelona.com
Ordered by Red card, Second yellow card and Yellow card
Yellow card = Number of bookings; Second yellow card = Number of sending offs after a second yellow card; Red card = Number of sending offs by a direct red card.

Injury record

N P Nat. Name Type Status Source Match Inj. Date Ret. Date
1 GK Germany Ter Stegen Knee Injury (sprained ligament in left knee) Recovery icon.png FCB.com in training 11 August 2016 24 August 2016
8 MF Spain A. Iniesta Knee Injury (strained posterior capsule in right knee) Recovery icon.png FCB.com vs Sevilla 14 August 2016 10 September 2016
24 DF France Mathieu Hamstring (torn femoral bicep in right leg) Recovery icon.png FCB.com vs Sevilla 14 August 2016 10 September 2016
14 MF Argentina Mascherano Hamstring (in right leg) Recovery icon.png FCB.com vs Sevilla 17 August 2016 24 August 2016
10 FW Argentina Messi Groin injury (abductor muscle in left hamstring) Recovery icon.png FCB.com vs Athletic Bilbao 28 August 2016 10 September 2016
21 MF Portugal André Gomes Muscular bruise (on right leg) Recovery icon.png FCB.com in training with
Portugal
30 August 2016 13 September 2016
1 GK Germany Ter Stegen Hamstring (pulled hamstring) Recovery icon.png FCB.com in training 9 September 2016 13 September 2016
23 DF France Umtiti Knee injury (Internal ligament strain on his left knee) Recovery icon.png FCB.com in training 20 September 2016 15 October 2016
10 FW Argentina Messi Groin injury (in right leg) Recovery icon.png FCB.com vs Atlético Madrid 21 September 2016 15 October 2016
18 DF Spain Jordi Alba Thigh injury (in left leg) Recovery icon.png FCB.com vs Italy
with Spain
6 October 2016 19 October 2016
20 RB Spain S. Roberto Abductor strain (in right leg) Recovery icon.png FCB.com in training with
Spain
8 October 2016 22 October 2016
13 GK Netherlands Jasper Cillessen Ankle sprain (sprained ligaments in his right ankle) Recovery icon.png FCB.com in training with
Netherlands
8 October 2016 29 October 2016
18 DF Spain Jordi Alba Thigh injury (strained left hamstring) Recovery icon.png FCB.com vs Manchester City 19 October 2016 19 November 2016
3 DF Spain Piqué Ankle sprain (sprained ligaments in right ankle) Recovery icon.png FCB.com vs Manchester City 19 October 2016 19 November 2016
23 DF France Umtiti Thigh injury (rupture to the femoral biceps muscle of his left thigh) Recovery icon.png FCB.com in training with
France
9 November 2016 30 November 2016
8 MF Spain A.Iniesta Knee injury (lateral collateral ligament in right knee) Recovery icon.png FCB.com vs Valencia 22 October 2016 3 December 2016
24 DF France Mathieu Calf Injury (tear in right soleus) Recovery icon.png FCB.com vs Espanyol 25 October 2016 5 January 2017
13 GK Netherlands Jasper Cillessen Soleus muscle (in left leg) Recovery icon.png FCB.com in the vacation 30 December 2016 12 January 2017
12 MF Brazil Rafinha Hamstring (in right biceps femoris muscle) Recovery icon.png FCB.com in training 17 January 2017 1 February 2017
8 MF Spain A. Iniesta Soleus muscle (in left leg) Recovery icon.png FCB.com vs Real Sociedad 20 January 2017 7 February 2017
5 MF Spain Sergio Ankle sprain (Sprained external lateral ligament in right ankle) Recovery icon.png FCB.com vs Eibar 22 January 2017 7 February 2017
12 MF Brazil Rafinha Nose Fractured Injury icon 2.svg FCB.com vs Athletic Bilbao 4 February 2017 February 2017
14 MF Argentina Mascherano Hamstring (thigh injury in left leg) Injury icon 2.svg FCB.com vs Atlético Madrid 7 February 2017 26 February 2017
22 DF Spain Aleix Vidal Broken ankle Injury icon 2.svg FCB.com vs Alavés 11 February 2017 August 2017

Injury icon 2.svg – Player is injured
Recovery icon.png – Player has recovered from injury
Last updated: 11 February 2017
Source: FC Barcelona

Pre-season

International Champions Cup

  Win   Draw   Loss

Joan Gamper Trophy

Qatar Airways Cup

Competitions

Overall

Competition Started round Current
position / round
Final
position / round
First match Last match
La Liga Matchday 1 2nd 20 August 2016 21 May 2017
Copa del Rey Round of 32 Final 30 November 2016 27 May 2017
Supercopa de España Final Winners 14 August 2016 17 August 2016
UEFA Champions League Group stage Round of 16 13 September 2016

Last updated: 11 February 2017.
Source: Competitions

Overview

Competition Record
Pld W D L GF GA GD Win %
La Liga 22 14 6 2 61 18 +43 63.64
Copa del Rey 8 5 2 1 21 8 +13 62.50
Supercopa de España 2 2 0 0 5 0 +5 100.00
UEFA Champions League 6 5 0 1 20 4 +16 83.33
Total 38 26 8 4 107 30 +77 68.42

Last updated: 11 February 2017.
Source: Competitions

Supercopa de España

  Win   Draw   Loss

La Liga

Main article: 2016–17 La Liga

League table

Pos Team

Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Real Madrid 20 15 4 1 54 18 +36 49 Qualification to Champions League group stage
2 Barcelona 22 14 6 2 61 18 +43 48
3 Sevilla 22 14 4 4 44 28 +16 46
4 Atlético Madrid 22 12 6 4 39 18 +21 42 Qualification to Champions League play-off round
5 Real Sociedad 22 13 2 7 36 31 +5 41 Qualification to Europa League group stage
Updated to match(es) played on 12 February 2017. Source: La Liga, Soccerway
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Head-to-head points; 3) Head-to-head goal difference; 4) Goal difference; 5) Goals scored; 6) Fair-play points; 7) Play-off.[72]

Results summary

Overall Home Away
Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts W D L GF GA GD W D L GF GA GD
22 14 6 2 61 18  +43 48 6 3 1 26 7  +19 8 3 1 35 11  +24

Last updated: 11 February 2017.
Source: Competitive matches

Results by round

Round 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38
Ground H A H A H A A H A H A H A H A H A H A A H A H A H H A H A H A H A H A H A H
Result W W L W D W L W W W W D D D W W D W W D W W
Position 1 2 5 2 3 2 4 4 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 2 2 2

Last updated: 11 February 2017.
Source: League matches
Ground: A = Away; H = Home. Result: D = Draw; L = Loss; W = Win; P = Postponed.

Matches

Copa del Rey

Round of 32

Round of 16

Quarter-finals

Semi-finals

Final

UEFA Champions League

Group stage

Pos Team

Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification BAR MC MGL CEL
1 Spain Barcelona 6 5 0 1 20 4 +16 15 Advance to knockout phase 4–0 4–0 7–0
2 England Manchester City 6 2 3 1 12 10 +2 9 3–1 4–0 1–1
3 Germany Borussia Mönchengladbach 6 1 2 3 5 12 −7 5 Transfer to Europa League 1–2 1–1 1–1
4 Scotland Celtic 6 0 3 3 5 16 −11 3 0–2 3–3 0–2
Source: UEFA
Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers

  Win   Draw   Loss

Knockout phase

  Win   Draw   Loss

Round of 16

2016 Supercopa de Catalunya

References

 

 

  1. “Primera División 2016/2017 – Season rules”. Scoresway. Retrieved 14 September 2016.

External links

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