Antonio Puerta Trophy

The Antonio Puerta Trophy is an annual summer tournament hosted by Sevilla FC since 2008. The tournament is dedicated to Antonio Puerta, who died on 28 August 2007 (at the age of 22) after suffering a heart injury during the inaugural match of the 2007–08 La Liga season against Getafe.

Antonio Puerta Trophy
Organising bodySevilla FC
Founded2008 (2008)
RegionSeville, Spain
Number of teams2
Related competitionsJoan Gamper Trophy
Current championsSpain Sevilla (2023)
Most successful club(s)Spain Sevilla (10 titles)
Television broadcastersCanal Sur, SFC Televisión, Arena Sport, TV3 (in 2011 edition)

List of champions

# Year Winners Score Runners-up
1
2008Spain Sevilla
2–0
Spain Málaga
2
2009Spain Sevilla
2–1
Spain Xerez
3
2010Spain Granada
1–1 (4–2 p)
Spain Sevilla
4
2011Spain Sevilla
5–0
Spain Espanyol
5
2012Spain Sevilla
2–0
Spain La Coruña
6
2013Spain Sevilla
1–1 (4–2 p)
Spain Almería
7
2014Spain Sevilla
2–0
Spain Córdoba
2015
(not held)
8
2016Argentina Boca Juniors
4–3
Spain Sevilla
9
2017Spain Sevilla
2–1
Italy Roma
2018
(not held)
10
2019Spain Sevilla
2–0
Germany Schalke 04
2020–21
(not held)
11
2022Spain Sevilla
1–0
Spain Cádiz
12
2023Spain Sevilla
1–1 (4–1 p)
Ecuador Independiente del Valle

Match details

2008

Played on 23 August 2008 against Málaga CF, the team promoted to La Liga that year. It served to commemorate Antonio Puerta and all the victims of the Spanair Flight 5022, the aviation accident which occurred three days before.

Sevilla Spain2–0Spain Málaga
  • Luís Fabiano 29'
  • Renato 64'
Report
Attendance: 25,000
Referee: Domingo Palomino Núñez

2009

Played on 21 August 2009 against Xerez, team also promoted to Liga BBVA that year as occurred in 2008 with Málaga.

Sevilla Spain2–1Spain Xerez
Report Míchel 87'
Attendance: 21,000
Referee: Andrés Ceballos Silva

2010

It was played on November, during a Liga BBVA break because of UEFA Champions League Group Stage (matchday 5). The rival this time was Granada, team promoted that season to Liga Adelante. It has been the first time since this tournament exists that Sevilla lost the final match.

Sevilla Spain1–1Spain Granada
José Carlos 58' Report Calvo 9'
Penalties
2–4
Attendance: 3,000
Referee: Israel Mariscal Sánchez

2011

The fourth edition of the tournament was celebrated in summer again, during the pre-season. The guest for the first time wasn't Andalusian; it was RCD Espanyol, Sevilla twinned team after suffering a similar tragedy as happened to the organizing club in 2007 (Daniel Jarque's death).[1]

Sevilla Spain5–0Spain Espanyol
Report

2012

Played on 8 August 2012 due to the early start of 2012–13 La Liga, against Deportivo La Coruña, a traditional Sevilla "friend" team.

Sevilla Spain2–0Spain Deportivo La Coruña
Report

2013

2014

Sevilla Spain2–0Spain Córdoba
Report

2016

Sevilla's opponents were Boca Juniors, winners of the 2015 Argentine Primera División and the first non-Spanish team to take part.[2] About 2,000 visiting supporters (most of them expatriate Argentines living in European countries) attended the match.[3] Boca Juniors players wore a patch on their jerseys displaying the "16" worn by Puerta as a tribute to him.[4] Carlos Tévez, with two goals scored and two assists, was the man of match.[5][6]

Sevilla Spain3–4Argentina Boca Juniors
Report

2017

Sevilla Spain2–1Italy Roma
Džeko 90+1'

2019

Sevilla Spain2–0Germany Schalke 04
Mesa 35'
Munir 72' (pen.)
Report
Attendance: 25,000
Referee: Mario Melero López

2022

Sevilla Spain1–0Spain Cádiz
Delaney 68' Report
Referee: Mario Melero López

2023

Details : 2023 UEFA–CONMEBOL Club Challenge

The 2023 edition of the Antonio Puerta Trophy also formed the inaugural edition of the UEFA–CONMEBOL Club Challenge, the one-off match between the champions of the UEFA Europa League and Copa Sudamericana.

Sevilla Spain1–1Ecuador Independiente del Valle
Report
Penalties
4–1
Attendance: 19,407
Referee: Rade Obrenović (Slovenia)

Titles by team

Team Titles Years won
Spain Sevilla
10
2008, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2017, 2019, 2022, 2023
Spain Granada
1
2010
Argentina Boca Juniors
1
2016

Goalscorers

Goals Player Team Edition in
which scored
2 Spain José Carlos Spain Sevilla 2009, 2010
2 Spain Rodri Ríos Spain Sevilla 2011
2 Mali Frédéric Kanouté Spain Sevilla 2011
2 Argentina Diego Perotti Spain Sevilla 2009, 2013
2 Argentina Carlos Tévez Argentina Boca Juniors 2016
1 Brazil Luís Fabiano Spain Sevilla 2008
1 Brazil Renato Spain Sevilla 2008
1 Spain Míchel Spain Xerez 2009
1 Spain Carlos Calvo Spain Granada 2010
1 Spain Manu del Moral Spain Sevilla 2011
1 Spain Álvaro Negredo Spain Sevilla 2012
1 Germany Piotr Trochowski Spain Sevilla 2012
1 Spain Christian Spain Almería 2013
1 Spain Denis Suárez Spain Sevilla 2014
1 Colombia Carlos Bacca Spain Sevilla 2014
1 Argentina Darío Benedetto Argentina Boca Juniors 2016
1 Argentina Cristian Pavón Argentina Boca Juniors 2016
1 France Steven Nzonzi Spain Sevilla 2016
1 France Timothée Kolodziejczak Spain Sevilla 2016
1 Argentina Luciano Vietto Spain Sevilla 2016
1 Bosnia and Herzegovina Edin Džeko Italy Roma 2017
1 Spain Sergio Escudero Spain Sevilla 2017
1 Spain Nolito Spain Sevilla 2017
1 Spain Roque Mesa Spain Sevilla 2019
1 Morocco Munir Spain Sevilla 2019
1 Denmark Thomas Delaney Spain Sevilla 2022
1 Argentina Lautaro Díaz Ecuador Independiente del Valle 2023
1 Spain Pedro Ortiz Spain Sevilla 2023

References

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