2006–07 La Liga Explained

Competition:La Liga
Season:2006–07
Dates:26 August 2006 – 17 June 2007
Winners:Real Madrid
30th title
Relegated:Celta Vigo
Real Sociedad
Gimnàstic
Continentalcup1:Champions League
Continentalcup1 Qualifiers:Real Madrid
Barcelona
Sevilla
Valencia
Continentalcup2:UEFA Cup
Continentalcup2 Qualifiers:Villarreal
Zaragoza
Getafe (as Copa del Rey runners-up)
Continentalcup3:Intertoto Cup
Continentalcup3 Qualifiers:Atlético Madrid
League Topscorer:Ruud van Nistelrooy
(25 goals)
Biggest Home Win:Osasuna 5–1 Real Betis
(14 January 2007)[1]
Gimnàstic 4–0 Espanyol
(28 January 2007)[2]
Barcelona 4–0 Villarreal
(25 November 2006)[3]
Sevilla 4–0 Levante
(29 August 2006)[4]
Sevilla 4–0 Deportivo La Coruña
(20 December 2006)[5]
Valencia 4–0 Gimnàstic
(1 October 2006)[6]
Valencia 4–0 Deportivo La Coruña
(10 December 2006)[7]
Biggest Away Win:Atlético Madrid 0–6 Barcelona
(20 May 2007)[8]
Highest Scoring:Racing Santander 5–4 Athletic Bilbao
(1 April 2007)[9]
Matches:380
Total Goals:942
Prevseason:2005–06
Nextseason:2007–08

The 2006–07 La Liga season was the 76th since its establishment. It began on 27 August 2006, and concluded on 17 June 2007.

Real Madrid won La Liga thanks to a superior head-to-head record against runners-up Barcelona. Celta Vigo, Real Sociedad and Gimnàstic were relegated.

Barcelona was in first place for much of the season while arch-rivals Real Madrid were six points behind and in fourth. However, Barcelona began playing inconsistently after January, while Madrid's form improved in that same period. On 12 May 2007, Real Madrid took the league lead for the first time all season after defeating Espanyol 4–3, coming back from a 3–1 first-half deficit. The following Sunday, Barcelona dropped points with a 1–1 draw to struggling Real Betis. By virtue of their superior head-to-head record, Madrid sat at the top of La Liga with both teams having four league games left.https://web.archive.org/web/20081002060030/http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7007688383

On the penultimate day of the season, Barcelona failed to overcome city rivals Espanyol in the Barcelona derby, drawing 2–2.[10] In the final La Liga matches, Barcelona thrashed Gimnàstic 5–1, but Madrid came back from a 1–0 deficit to beat Mallorca 3–1 and clinch the title thanks to head-to-head superiority.

Teams

Twenty teams competed in the league – the top seventeen teams from the previous season and the three teams promoted from the Segunda División. The promoted teams were Recreativo, Gimnàstic and Levante, returning to the top flight after an absence of three, fifty-six and one years respectively. They replaced Alaves, Cádiz (both teams relegated after a season's presence) and Málaga (ending their seven-year top flight spell).

Stadiums

TeamStadiumCapacity
98,772
80,354
55,926
55,005
55,000
52,132
45,500
39,750
34,600
34,596
32,500
32,200
Levante25,354
23,142
23,000
22,400
Recreativo de Huelva19,860
19,553
16,300
Gimnàstic de Tarragona14,500

(*) Promoted from Segunda División.

Personnel and kits

TeamChairmanHead CoachKit manufacturerShirt sponsor (front)Shirt sponsor (back)Shirt sponsor (sleeve)Shorts sponsor
Athletic BilbaoFernando García Mané100% AthleticNoneNoneNoneNone
Enrique Cerezo Javier AguirreNikeKiaKyoceraNoneAsisa Salud
BarcelonaJoan Laporta Frank RijkaardNikeUNICEFNoneTV3None
BetisLeon Gomez Luis FernandezKappaAndalucía/Grupo Azabache/Clipeus (in cup matches)AndalucíaNoneGrupo Azabache
Celta de VigoHoracio Gómez Hristo StoichkovUmbroCitroënNoneTelevisión de GaliciaCitroën
DeportivoAugusto Lendoiro Joaquín CaparrósJomaFadesaNoneNoneNone
Espanyol Ernesto ValverdeuhlsportQuat InversionesInterapuestas.comTV3Hoteles Hesperia
GetafeÁngel Torres Bernd SchusterJomaGrupo GalcoOpción Centro de OcioNonePropietarios del Suelo de Getafe
GimnàsticRaül Font Paco FloresNàsticTarragonaPisoperfectoTV3Costa Daurada, Hipoteca Mania
LevanteJulio Romero Abel ResinoLuanviComunitat ValencianaNoneCanal NouTop Recambios
MallorcaVicenç Grande Gregorio ManzanoReialViajes IberiaConstrucciones Llabrés FeliuIB3Illes Balears
OsasunaLuis Sabalza Cuco ZigandaAstoreRestauraReyno de NavarraCaja NavarraYingli Solar
Francisco Pernía Miguel Ángel PortugalJomaSantander Ciudad ExcelenteCantabria 2006: Liébana Tierra de JúbiloNoneNone
Real SociedadMiguel Ángel Fuentes Miguel Ángel LotinaAstoreFIATC SegurosNGS EuropeNGS EuropeFIATC Seguros, NGS Europe
Real MadridRamón Calderón Fabio CapelloAdidasBenQ SiemensNoneNoneNone
RecreativoFrancisco Mendoza MarcelinoCejudoCepsa/Caja San FernandoCaja San Fernando/AndalucíaNoneNone
SevillaJosé María del Nido Juande RamosJoma888.comAndalucíaAndalucía888.com
ValenciaJuan Bautista Soler Quique Sánchez FloresNikeToyotaNoneCanal NouNone
VillarrealFernando Roig Manuel PellegriniPumaAeroport CastellóNoneCanal NouNone
ZaragozaEduardo Bandrés Víctor FernándezLottoExpo Zaragoza 2008 TelefónicaNoneNoneNone

League table

Awards

Pichichi Trophy

The Pichichi Trophy is awarded to the player who scores the most goals in a season.

RankPlayerClubGoals
1 Ruud van NistelrooyReal Madrid25
2 Diego MilitoZaragoza23
3 Frédéric KanoutéSevilla21
RonaldinhoBarcelona
5 Diego ForlánVillarreal19
6 David VillaValencia16
7 Fernando BaianoCelta Vigo15
Raúl TamudoEspanyol
9 Lionel MessiBarcelona14
Fernando TorresAtlético Madrid
Source: LFP

Zamora Trophy

The Ricardo Zamora Trophy is awarded to the goalkeeper with the lowest ratio of goals conceded to matches played. http://www.lfp.es/competiciones/2006-07/primera/menosgoleados.asp

RankPlayerClubGoals againstMatchesAverage
1 Roberto AbbondanzieriGetafe3036
2 Víctor ValdésBarcelona3338
3 Leo FrancoAtlético Madrid2832
4 Sebastián VieraVillarreal2528
5 Andrés PalopSevilla3234
6 Claudio BravoReal Sociedad2929
7 Santiago CañizaresValencia3332
8 Iker CasillasReal Madrid4038
9 ToñoRacing Santander3632
10 José Francisco MolinaLevante3934

Fair Play award

RankClubwidth=50px Points
1Recreativo Huelva 84
2103
3104
4106
5108
6110
7116
8125
9126
10129
11131
12133
13135
14137
15139
16144
17145
18150
19151
20189

Pedro Zaballa award

Cuco Ziganda (Osasuna head coach) and David Belenguer (Getafe footballer)[11] [12]

Overall

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Osasuna 5-1 Betis. RFEF. 14 January 2007 . 7 September 2010. es.
  2. Web site: Nàstic 4-0 Espanyol. RFEF. 28 January 2007 . 7 September 2010. es.
  3. Web site: Barcelona 4-0 Villarreal. RFEF. 25 November 2006 . 7 September 2010. es.
  4. Web site: Sevilla 4-0 Levante. RFEF. 29 August 2006 . 7 September 2010. es.
  5. Web site: Sevilla 4-0 Deportivo. RFEF. 20 December 2006 . 7 September 2010. es.
  6. Web site: Valencia 4-0 Gimnàstic. RFEF. 1 October 2006 . 7 September 2010. es.
  7. Web site: Valencia 4-0 Deportivo. RFEF. 10 December 2006 . 7 September 2010. es.
  8. Web site: Atlético Madrid 0-6 Barcelona. RFEF. 20 May 2007 . 7 September 2010. es.
  9. Web site: Racing Santander 5-4 Athletic Bilbao. RFEF. 1 April 2007 . 6 September 2010. es.
  10. News: Remembering the Tamudazo When Espanyol Dashed Barcelona's La Liga Title Dream. Sharma. Rik. Bleacher Report. 27 March 2014 . 18 June 2018.
  11. Web site: Premio a los mejores (RFEF Magazine, page 52) . Prize for the best . . July 2007 . 5 September 2010 . es . https://web.archive.org/web/20101205065710/http://www.rfef.es/FCKeditor/UserFiles/File/noticias/Rev%20RFEF%2099.pdf . 5 December 2010 . dead .
  12. Web site: Ganadores del Trofeo Pedro Zaballa . Pedro Zaballa award Winners . . 5 September 2010 . es . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100407195555/http://www.rfef.es/index.jsp?nodo=298 . 7 April 2010 .