Premier League International Cup Explained

Premier League International Cup
Region:Europe
Number Of Teams:24 (group stage)
8 (knockout)
Related Comps:Premier League 2
Most Successful Club: Porto
(2 titles)
Organiser:Premier League
Website:Official website
Current:2024–25 Premier League International Cup

The Premier League International Cup is an English football competition for under-23 teams from across Europe.[1] It was designed to provide players in English Category One academies with the opportunity to match themselves against other elite European footballers from their age group in a competitive environment.[1] The competition was created by the Premier League as part of the organisation's Elite Player Performance Plan and is not sanctioned by UEFA.[2]

Overview

The competition featured under-23 sides from twelve English clubs and twelve other European clubs for the 2017–18 season.[3] Prior the 2016–17 season, eight English and eight other European clubs competed in the competition. English teams qualify via their standing in the Premier League 2 and entry by European clubs is by invitation from the Premier League. For the 2014–15 tournament, the 16 teams were split into four groups of four. Upon completion of the group stage, the winners and runners-up from each group progressed to the quarter-finals, semi-finals and final, all played as single-leg ties.[1] UEFA tried to block the creation of the tournament and refused to sanction its creation. To circumvent this, all games are hosted in England with games involving two foreign teams being held at neutral venues.[2] English clubs play a minimum of two of their fixtures at the main stadium of their senior side.[4] To ensure the focus is on development, the Premier League made no prize money available for the competition.

As in the Professional U21 Development League, teams are allowed to field three overage outfield players and one overage goalkeeper per match.

The most successful team is Porto with two titles. Porto won the trophy in two consecutive seasons by beating Sunderland on 17 May 2017 and Arsenal on 8 May 2018.

Finals

width=5%Seasonwidth=8%Winnerswidth=3%Scorewidth=8%Runners-upwidth=15%Losing semi-finalistswidth=10%Final stage host
2014–15 Manchester City1–0 Porto Fulham and Leicester CityAcademy Stadium, Manchester
2015–16 Villarreal4–2 PSV Chelsea and PortoThe Den, London
2016–17 Porto5–0 Sunderland Norwich City and Swansea CityStadium of Light, Sunderland
2017–18 Porto1–0 Arsenal Newcastle United and VillarrealEmirates Stadium, London
2018–192–0 Dinamo Zagreb Reading and SouthamptonThe Den, London
2019–20Aborted after the group stage due to the COVID-19 pandemic in England
2020–21No competition due to the COVID-19 pandemic in England
2021–22
2022–23 PSV3–1 Crystal Palace Fulham and ValenciaSelhurst Park, London
2023–24 Crystal Palace1–0 PSV Everton and West Ham UnitedSelhurst Park, London

Performances

By club

Performance in Finals by club
scope=colTeamscope=colWinnersscope=colRunners-upscope=col class="unsortable"Years wonscope=col class="unsortable"Years runner-up
scope=row Porto212016–17, 2017–182014–15
PSV122022–232015–16, 2023–24
scope=row Crystal Palace112023–242022–23
scope=row Manchester City102014–15
scope=row Villarreal102015–16
scope=row Bayern Munich102018–19
scope=row Sunderland012016–17
scope=row Arsenal012017–18
scope=row Dinamo Zagreb012018–19

By nation

Performance in Finals by nation!Country!Winners!Runners-up!Years won!Years runner-up
232014–15, 2023–242016–17, 2017–18, 2022–23
212016–17, 2017–182014–15
122022–232015–16, 2023–24
102015–16
102018–19
012018–19

Top scorers by season

SeasonGoalsPlayerClub
2014–156 Harry Panayiotou Leicester City
Leandro Silva Porto
2015–166 Kasey Palmer Chelsea
2016–174 Carlton Morris Norwich City
2017–185 Adrián Dalmau Villarreal
James Wilson Manchester United
2018–195 Danny Loader Reading
2019–207 Liam Cullen Swansea City
2022–235 Jason van Duiven PSV
2023–245 Mohamed Nassoh PSV
Romain Perret Lyon

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Premier League International Cup explained. 28 April 2019. www.premierleague.com.
  2. News: Opposition to Champions League reforms given further backing by Premier League. Tom. Morgan. The Telegraph . June 5, 2019. www.telegraph.co.uk.
  3. News: 'Playing best Premier League teams is amazing'. Premier League. 13 September 2016. 13 September 2016.
  4. Web site: U21S JOIN PREMIER LEAGUE INTERNATIONAL CUP. www.canaries.co.uk.