The Teresa Herrera Trophy (Spanish: Trofeo Teresa Herrera) is an annual pre-season football tournament hosted by Deportivo La Coruña at the Estadio Riazor.

Teresa Herrera Trophy
Trofeo Teresa Herrera
Teresa Herrera Trophy exhibited at
Museu Cosme Damião
Organising bodyDep. La Coruña
Founded1946; 78 years ago (1946)
RegionA Coruña, Spain
Number of teams2
Related competitionsJoan Gamper Trophy
Current championsSpain Dep. La Coruña (2023)
Most successful club(s)Spain Dep. La Coruña
(25 titles)
Television broadcastersTelevisión de Galicia

Established in 1946, the tournament is usually held in August, and since 1990 it always features local club Deportivo.

The trophy was named after Teresa Margarita Herrera y Pedrosa (1712–1791), a philanthropist born in A Coruña that dedicated her life to the poor, using her house as shelter for sick and poor women in the city.[1] In 1791 she founded the Hospital de la Caridad ("Charity Hospital"), specially dedicated to maternity and orphanage.[1][2]

History edit

First played in 1946, the competition originally began as a means to raise money for the poor of the city of A Coruña in Galicia, Northern Spain. The trophy is named in honour of an 18th-century local woman who was famed for her work with the region's poor.

The first match in 1946 was a game between Sevilla and Athletic Club; Sevilla won the match 3–2.[3]

(Left): Supporters of Uruguayan club Nacional in 2014; (center): Sporting Portugal v Sporting Guijón match, 2014; (right): Players of Deportivo La Curuña holding the trophy in 2015

List of champions edit

Ed. Year Winner Score Runner-up Third place Fourth place
1
1946   Sevilla 3–2   Athletic Bilbao
none [n 1]
2
1947   Athletic Bilbao 3–2   Vasco da Gama
none [n 1]
3
1948   Barcelona 2–1   Porto
none [n 1]
4
1949   Real Madrid 2–1   Racing Paris
none [n 1]
5
1950   Lazio 3–1   Atlético Madrid
none [n 1]
6
1951   Barcelona 4–2   Young Boys
none [n 1]
7
1952   Valencia 2–1   Olympique Roubaix
none [n 1]
8
1953   Real Madrid 8–1   Toulouse
none [n 1]
9
1954   Sevilla 3–2   Helsingborg
none [n 1]
10
1955   Deportivo La Coruña 4–1   Athletic Bilbao
none [n 1]
11
1956   Atlético Madrid 4–1   1. FC Köln
none [n 1]
12
1957   Vasco da Gama 4–2   Athletic Bilbao
none [n 1]
13
1958   Nacional 2–1   Flamengo
none [n 1]
14
1959   Santos 4–1   Botafogo
none [n 1]
15
1960   Sevilla 2–1   Newcastle United
none [n 1]
16
1961   Sporting CP 3–2   Reims
none [n 1]
17
1962   Deportivo La Coruña 4–2   Benfica
none [n 1]
18
1963   Monaco 3–2   Vasco da Gama
none [n 1]
19
1964   Deportivo La Coruña 4–0   Sporting CP   Porto and   Roma
20
1965   Atlético Madrid 2–1   Vitória Setúbal
none [n 1]
21
1966   Real Madrid 2–0   Deportivo La Coruña
none [n 1]
22
1967   Racing Ferrol 3–0   Celta Vigo   Deportivo La Coruña   Pontevedra
23
1968   Vitória Setúbal 2–1   Rapid Wien
none [n 1]
24
1969   Deportivo La Coruña 1–0   Nacional   Olympic Charleroi   Bayern Munich
25
1970   Ferencváros 0–0 (4–2 p)   San Lorenzo
none [n 1]
26
1971   Red Star Belgrade 3–1   Deportivo La Coruña
none [n 1]
27
1972   Barcelona 2–0   ADO Den Haag
none [n 1]
28
1973   Atlético Madrid 2–1   Spartak Trnava   Újpest Dózsa   Ajax
29
1974   Peñarol 3–2   Borussia MG   Barcelona   Atlético Madrid
30
1975   Peñarol 3–3 (p)   Cruzeiro   Atlético Madrid   Stoke City
31
1976   Real Madrid 2–0   Cruzeiro   PSV Eindhoven   Peñarol
32
1977   Fluminense 4–1   Dukla Prague   Real Madrid   Feyenoord
33
1978   Real Madrid 2–0   Flamengo   Deportivo La Coruña   Fluminense
34
1979   Real Madrid 1–0   Sporting Gijón   Budapest Honvéd   West Bromwich Albion
35
1980   Real Madrid 3–1   Sporting Gijón   Porto   Flamengo
36
1981   Dynamo Kyiv 1–0   Atlético Madrid   Deportivo La Coruña   Barcelona
37
1982   Dynamo Kyiv 4–1   Barcelona   Bayern Munich   Internacional
38
1983   Athletic Bilbao 1–0   Peñarol   Real Madrid   Dynamo Kyiv
39
1984   Roma 2–2 (p)   Vasco da Gama   Manchester United   Athletic Bilbao
40
1985   Atlético Madrid 1–0   Porto   Fluminense   Real Madrid
41
1986   Atlético Madrid 1–0   Santos   Real Madrid   São Paulo
42
1987   Benfica 1–1 (p)   Deportivo La Coruña   Sporting Gijón   Everton
43
1988   PSV Eindhoven 3–1   Atlético Madrid   Liverpool   Real Sociedad
44
1989   Bayern Munich 4–1   Steaua București   Real Madrid   PSV Eindhoven
45
1990   Barcelona 2–0   Benfica   Bayern Munich   Deportivo La Coruña
46
1991   Porto 1–0   Deportivo La Coruña   Ajax   Real Madrid
47
1992   São Paulo 4–1   Barcelona   Peñarol   Deportivo La Coruña
48
1993   Barcelona 1–0   São Paulo   Deportivo La Coruña   Lazio
49
1994   Real Madrid 1–0   Deportivo La Coruña   Sampdoria   Porto
50
1995   Deportivo La Coruña 2–0   Real Madrid   Flamengo   Benfica
51
1996   Botafogo 4–4 (3–0 p)   Juventus   Deportivo La Coruña   Ajax
52
1997   Deportivo La Coruña 2–2 (p)   PSV Eindhoven   Atlético Madrid   Vasco da Gama
53
1998   Deportivo La Coruña 2–0   Lazio   Real Madrid   Atlético Madrid
54
1999   Celta Vigo 1–0   Boca Juniors   La Coruña   Corinthians
55
2000   Deportivo La Coruña 2–2 (4–3 p)   Lazio
none [n 1]
56
2001   Deportivo La Coruña 2–1   Real Madrid   Peñarol   Cruz Azul
57
2002   Deportivo La Coruña 1–0   Cruz Azul   Atlético Madrid   Nacional
58
2003   Deportivo La Coruña [1]   América   Nacional
59
2004   Deportivo La Coruña 3–1   Atlético Madrid   Real Zaragoza   Sporting CP
60
2005   Deportivo La Coruña 2–1   Nacional   Peñarol
61
2006   Deportivo La Coruña 3–1   Milan   Atlético Madrid   Nacional
62
2007   Deportivo La Coruña 2–1   Real Madrid   Os Belenenses   Atalanta
63
2008   Deportivo La Coruña 2–1   Atlético Madrid   Cruz Azul   Sporting Gijón
64
2009   Atlético Madrid 1–1 (4–3 p)   Deportivo La Coruña
none [n 1]
65
2010   Newcastle United 0–0 (5–3 p)   Deportivo La Coruña
none [n 1]
66
2011   Sevilla 1–1 (4–3 p)   Deportivo La Coruña
none [n 1]
67
2012   Deportivo La Coruña 2–2 (4–3 p)   Atlético Madrid
none [n 1]
68
2013   Real Madrid 4–0   Deportivo La Coruña
none [n 1]
69
2014   Deportivo La Coruña 1–0   Sporting Gijón   Sporting CP   Nacional
70
2015   Deportivo La Coruña 1–0   Braga
none [n 1]
71
2016   Deportivo La Coruña 2–0   Villarreal
none [n 1]
72
2017   Deportivo La Coruña 2–0   West Bromwich Albion
none [n 1]
73
2018   Athletic Bilbao 2–2 (4–1 p)   Deportivo La Coruña
none [n 1]
74
2019   Deportivo La Coruña 1–0   Real Betis
none [n 1]
75
2020   Deportivo La Coruña 6–0   Amateur Combined [n 2]
none [n 1]
76
2021   Ponferradina 2–1[4]   Deportivo La Coruña
none [n 1]
77
2022   Deportivo La Coruña 4–2   Metalist Kharkiv
none [n 1]
78
2023   Deportivo La Coruña 4–0   Red Bull Bragantino
none [n 1]
Notes
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am Two-teams competition.
  2. ^ Local name: "Combinado del Fútbol Aficionado Coruñés"

Women's tournament edit

Since 2013 a women's football trophy is also held. Until 2016, when Deportivo La Coruña created its women's football section, the tournament was hosted by a local women's team.

The inaugural edition was contested by the two top local teams, second tier Victoria CF and third tier Orzán SD.[5]

In 2014 the match was played in Riazor for the first time, and it featured a foreign opponent, Boavista FC. A qualifier tournament for several local teams was arranged, which was won by defending champion Victoria. Boavista played with old Deportivo uniforms since their own were stolen.[6]

In 2015, Victoria again made it to the Trophy after beating Orzán on penalties,[7] but this time it suffered a crushing defeated against 3-times national champion Rayo Vallecano.[8]

List of champions edit

Ed. Year Champion Result Runner-up
1
2013   Victoria 3–0   Orzán
2
2014   Victoria 2–1   Boavista
3
2015   Rayo Vallecano 7–0   Victoria
4
2016   Deportivo La Coruña 2–0   Villarreal
5
2017   Athletic Club 1–0   Deportivo La Coruña
6
2018   Athletic Club 1–0   Deportivo La Coruña
7
2019   Granadilla Tenerife 5–1   Deportivo La Coruña
8
2020   Deportivo La Coruña 1–1 (5–3 p)   Victoria
9
2021   Valadares Gaia 0–0 (5–4 p)   Deportivo La Coruña
10
2022   Deportivo La Coruña 2–2 (5–4 p)   Famalicão
11
2023   Deportivo La Coruña 2–0   Deportivo Alavés Gloriosas

Titles by club edit

Men's tournament edit

Team Nation Titles Years won
Deportivo La Coruña   Spain 25 1955, 1962, 1964, 1969, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019, 2020, 2022, 2023
Real Madrid   Spain 9 1949, 1953, 1966, 1976, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1994, 2013
Atlético Madrid   Spain 6 1956, 1965, 1973, 1985, 1986, 2009
Barcelona   Spain 5 1948, 1951, 1972, 1990, 1993
Sevilla   Spain 4 1946, 1954, 1960, 2011
Athletic Bilbao   Spain 3 1947, 1983, 2018
Peñarol   Uruguay 2 1974, 1975
Dynamo Kyiv   Ukraine 2 1981, 1982
Lazio   Italy 1 1950
Valencia   Spain 1 1952
Vasco da Gama   Brazil 1 1957
Nacional   Uruguay 1 1958
Santos   Brazil 1 1959
Sporting CP   Portugal 1 1961
Monaco   France 1 1963
Racing Ferrol   Spain 1 1967
Vitória de Setúbal   Portugal 1 1968
Ferencváros   Hungary 1 1970
Red Star Belgrade   Serbia 1 1971
Fluminense   Brazil 1 1977
Roma   Italy 1 1984
Benfica   Portugal 1 1987
PSV Eindhoven   Netherlands 1 1988
Bayern Munich   Germany 1 1989
Porto   Portugal 1 1991
São Paulo FC   Brazil 1 1992
Botafogo   Brazil 1 1996
Celta Vigo   Spain 1 1999
Newcastle United   England 1 2010
Ponferradina   Spain 1 2021

Women's tournament edit

Team Nation Winners Years won
Deportivo La Coruña   Spain 4 2016, 2020, 2022, 2023
Victoria   Spain 2 2013, 2014
Athletic Club   Spain 2017, 2018
Rayo Vallecano   Spain 1 2015
Granadilla Tenerife   Spain 2019
Valadares Gaia   Portugal 2021

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Teresa Herrera: una vida dedicada a la mujer y a los más necesitados de A Coruña by Pilar Barreiro, 19 Aug 2019
  2. ^ Teresa Herrera Trophy at RSSSF
  3. ^ "Teresa Herrera: Sevilla FC 3 Athletic Club 2". Athletic Bilbao. 30 June 1946. Retrieved 28 September 2018.
  4. ^ "La Deportiva supera al Dépor y conquista el LXXVI Teresa Herrera". MARCA. August 8, 2021.
  5. ^ Official website Archived 2014-10-24 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ S.L, Titania Cía Editorial. "El Victoria conquista el Teresa Herrera femenino en Riazor - Domingo, 10 Agosto 2014 01:06". El Confidencial.
  7. ^ "El Victoria, a la final del Teresa Herrera en Riazor". La Voz de Galicia. August 3, 2015.
  8. ^ "El Rayo se corona en el Teresa Herrera femenino". AS.com. August 8, 2015.

External links edit