Joan Gamper Trophy

The Joan Gamper Trophy (Catalan: Trofeu Joan Gamper, or simply TJG) or Joan Gamper Cup is an annual association football exhibition match held in August, before the start of Barcelona's La Liga season, where top division clubs from the world compete against them.[1] The competition is hosted by FC Barcelona at the Camp Nou stadium and is named in honour of Joan Gamper, a founding member, player, and later president of the club. The competition was inaugurated in 1966 by Enric Llaudet, one of Gamper's successors as club president.[2] The trophy itself is an 800-gram (1.8 lb) silver cup with five micrometres of gold finishing, on top of a 10-kilogram (22 lb) marble plinth base.[3]

Joan Gamper Trophy
Trofeu Joan Gamper
The trophy awarded to champions
Founded1966; 58 years ago (1966)
RegionCatalonia
Number of teams4 (1966–96)
2 (1997–present)
Current championsSpain Barcelona
(46th title)
Most successful club(s)Spain Barcelona
(46 titles)
Television broadcastersTV3 Televisió de Catalunya
Barça TV
Websitefcbarcelona.com

Initially, four teams participated in the competition, which featured two semi-finals, a third-place play-off, and a final. For the first competition in 1966, Barcelona were joined by Belgium's Anderlecht, France's Nantes, and Germany's 1. FC Köln. Barcelona beat the German team 3–1 in the final. Köln subsequently won the competition in 1978 and 1981 and were runners-up in 1979, making them the only team, other than the hosts, to win the competition more than once. The next edition saw the first appearance of another Spanish team, Atlético Madrid, who along with the hosts, were joined by German side Bayern Munich, and Argentina's Boca Juniors. The latter two clubs are among the most regular guests. Bayern were runners-up in 1984, 1987 and 2006, while Boca became the first of several South American guests to be invited and have since returned in 1977, 1984, 2003, 2008 and 2018. The only non-European team to win the tournament was Brazil's Internacional, in 1982.

Subsequent competitions have included teams from Italy's Serie A, Germany's Bundesliga, and other leagues. Other top-flight Spanish clubs have also occasionally been invited, including Tenerife and Valencia, who were winners in 1993 and 1994, respectively. Since 1997, the competition has only featured a one-off game, the tournament being shortened due to an increased fixture list and a shorter close season.[1] If the match is tied after ninety minutes, no extra time is played and the winner is decided by a penalty shoot-out.

Winners and results

Four teams (1966–1996)

Ed.YearWinnersScoreRunners-upThird placeScoreFourth place
1
1966 Barcelona
3–1
1. FC Köln Anderlecht
7–0
Nantes
2
1967 Barcelona
2–1
Atlético Madrid Boca Juniors
1–0
Bayern Munich
3
1968 Barcelona
5–4
Flamengo Athletic Bilbao
3–1
Werder Bremen
4
1969 Barcelona
2–1
Zaragoza Slovan Bratislava
2–1
Estudiantes (LP)
5
1970 Újpest
3–1
Dynamo Moscow Barcelona
1–0
Schalke 04
6
1971 Barcelona
1–0
Chacarita Juniors Budapest Honvéd
2–0
Bayern Munich
7
1972 Borussia MG
3–2
CSKA Sofia Barcelona
0–0 (5–4 p)
Vasco da Gama
8
1973 Barcelona
2–2 (5–3 p)
Borussia MG Municipal
1–1 (8–7 p)
San Lorenzo
9
1974 Barcelona
4–1
Rangers Athletic Bilbao
1–0
Ajax
10
1975 Barcelona
2–1
Feyenoord Spartak Trnava
1–1 (7–6 p)
Újpest
11
1976 Barcelona
2–0
Eintracht Frankfurt Sparta Prague
1–1 (4–3 p)
CSKA Moscow
12
1977 Barcelona
4–1
Schalke 04 Boca Juniors
2–1
Slovan Bratislava
13
1978 1. FC Köln
5–0
Rapid Wien Barcelona
3–2
Botafogo
14
1979 Barcelona
3–2 (a.e.t.)
Köln Anderlecht
2–2 (6–5 p)
Zürich
15
1980 Barcelona
2–1
Vasco da Gama River Plate
0–0 (4–2 p)
PSV Eindhoven
16
1981 1. FC Köln
4–0
Barcelona Vasco da Gama
2–1
Ipswich Town
17
1982 Internacional
3–1
Manchester City Barcelona
1–1 (5–4 p)
1. FC Köln
18
1983 Barcelona
2–1
Borussia Dortmund Anderlecht
4–2
Nottingham Forest
19
1984 Barcelona
3–1
Bayern Munich Boca Juniors
2–0
Aston Villa
20
1985 Barcelona
3–1
Hamburger SV Ajax
4–2
Rapid Wien
21
1986 Barcelona
1–0
PSV Eindhoven Tottenham Hotspur
2–1
Milan
22
1987 Porto
2–0
Bayern Munich Barcelona
3–2
Ajax
23
1988 Barcelona
3–1
Steaua București Peñarol
3–3 (5–4 p)
PSV Eindhoven
24
1989 Mechelen
2–0
Sochaux Barcelona
1–0
Internacional
25
1990 Barcelona
3–1
Anderlecht PSV Eindhoven
2–1
Spartak Moscow
26
1991 Barcelona
3–0
Marseille Internacional
2–0
Rapid Wien
27
1992 Barcelona
2–0
Feyenoord CSKA Sofia
3–3 (8–7 p)
Club Brugge
28
1993 Tenerife
3–1
Barcelona Bordeaux
2–0
Hajduk Split
29
1994 Valencia
4–1
Barcelona PSV Eindhoven
2–1
Brescia
30
1995 Barcelona
5–1
San Lorenzo Feyenoord
3–2
CSKA Sofia
31
1996 Barcelona
2–1
Internazionale Anderlecht
3–2
San Lorenzo

Two teams (1997–present)

Ed.YearWinnersScoreRunners-upAttend.FC Barcelona goalsMan of the match
32
1997 Barcelona
2–2 (6–5 p)
Sampdoriac. 20,000Anderson (11), Giovanni (67 p.)
33
1998 Barcelona
2–2 (5–4 p)
Santosc. 10,000Rivaldo (39), Figo (41)
34
1999 Barcelona
3–1
Sporting CPc. 20,000Figo (7 p.), Dani (24), Déhu (44)
35
2000 Barcelona [4]
2–1
PSV Eindhovenc. 45,000Rivaldo (14 p.), Gerard (25)
36
2001 Barcelona [5]
3–2
Parmac. 50,000Saviola (30), Christanval (33), Alfonso (75)
37
2002 Barcelona [6]
1–0
Red Star Belgrade35,640Rochemback (80)
38
2003 Barcelona [7]
1–1 (5–3 p)
Boca Juniors90,075Gerard (68)
39
2004 Barcelona [8]
2–1
Milan98,771Giuly (36), A. Iniesta (68)
40
2005 Juventus [9]
2–2 (4–2 p)
Barcelona91,826A. Iniesta (66), Gio (69)
41
2006 Barcelona [10]
4–0
Bayern Munich76,644Ronaldinho (29 f.k.), Eto'o (32, 39), Saviola (51)
42
2007 Barcelona [11]
5–0
Internazionale98,559Ronaldinho (6 p.), Giovani (11), Toure Yaya (37), A. Iniesta (55), Motta (78)
43
2008 Barcelona [12]
2–1
Boca Juniors71,210Puyol (90+2), Eto'o (90+5)
44
2009 Manchester City [13]
1–0
Barcelona94,123
45
2010 Barcelona [14]
1–1 (3–1 p)
Milan96,165David Villa (46)
46
2011 Barcelona [15]
5–0
Napoli78,002Fàbregas (26), Keita (31), Pedro (62), Messi (66, 77) Seydou Keita
47
2012 Sampdoria [16]
1–0
Barcelona55,498 Sergi Roberto
48
2013 Barcelona [17]
8–0
Santos81,251Messi (8), Léo (12 o.g.), Alexis (20), Pedro (28), Fàbregas (51, 66), Adriano (73), Dongou (81) Lionel Messi
49
2014 Barcelona [18]
6–0
León72,475Messi (3), Neymar Jr (12, 43), Munir (55, 78), Sandro (89) Lionel Messi
50
2015 Barcelona[19]
3–0
Roma94,422Neymar Jr (26), Messi (41), I. Rakitić (65) Ivan Rakitić
51
2016 Barcelona [20]
3–2
Sampdoria72,334Suárez (16), Messi (21, 34 f.k.) Lionel Messi
52
2017 Barcelona [21]
5–0
Chapecoense64,705Deulofeu (6), Sergio (11), Messi (28), Suárez (55), Denis Suárez (74) Sergio Busquets
53
2018 Barcelona [22]
3–0
Boca Juniors70,089Malcom (18), Messi (39), Rafinha (67) Lionel Messi
54
2019 Barcelona [23]
2–1
Arsenal98,812Maitland-Niles (69 o.g.), Suárez (90) Frenkie de Jong
55
2020 Barcelona [24]
1–0
Elche0 [note 1]Griezmann (2) Philippe Coutinho
56
2021 Barcelona [25]
3–0
Juventus2,924 [note 2]Memphis (3), Braithwaite (57), Riqui Puig (90+2) Neto Murara
57
2022 Barcelona [26]
6–0
UNAM83,021Lewandowski (3), Pedri (5, 19), O. Dembélé (10), Aubameyang (49), F. de Jong (84) Robert Lewandowski
58
2023 Barcelona [27]
4–2
Tottenham Hotspur35,224 [note 3]Lewandowski (3), Ferran (81), Ansu Fati (90), Ez Abde (90+3) Frenkie de Jong

Women's Gamper Trophy

Ed.YearWinnersScoreRunners-upAttend.FC Barcelona Femení goalsMVP
1
2021 [28] Barcelona [29]
6–0
Juventus1,783[note 2]Aitana (2), J. Hermoso (3, 16), Paredes (12), Graham (27), Bruna (48) Jennifer Hermoso
2
2022 [30] Barcelona [31]
6–0
Montpellier5,124[note 2]Geyse (23, 52), Patri (27, 45), Rolfö (55), Ari (77) Patricia Guijarro
3
2023 [32] Barcelona [33]
5–0
Juventus5,485[note 2]Graham (5), Lenzini (33 o.g.), Bruna (35), Vicky (41), María León (76) Mapi León

Performance by team

Men's

Chacarita Juniors (left) and FC Bayern Munich starting line ups before playing their match in the 1971 edition
Carlos Córdoba (left) and Dennis Mortimer, captains of Boca Juniors and Aston Villa respectively, before the 1984 third place match
Lionel Messi dribbing during the Barcelona v Manchester City match in 2009
Men's Joan Gamper Trophy statistics
TeamWinnerRunner-upThirdFourthTotal
Barcelona466658
Köln2215
Sampdoria123
Juventus112
Manchester City112
Mönchengladbach112
Internacional1113
Újpest112
Mechelen11
Porto11
Tenerife11
Valencia11
Boca Juniors336
Bayern Munich325
PSV Eindhoven2226
Feyenoord213
Milan213
Internazionale22
Santos22
Anderlecht145
CSKA Sofia1113
Vasco da Gama1113
Tottenham Hotspur112
Rapid Wien123
San Lorenzo123
Schalke 04112
Arsenal11
Atlético Madrid11
Borussia Dortmund11
Chacarita Juniors11
Chapecoense11
Dynamo Moscow11
Eintracht Frankfurt11
Elche11
Flamengo11
Hamburg11
León11
Marseille11
Napoli11
Parma11
Rangers11
Red Star Belgrade11
Roma11
Sochaux11
Sporting CP11
Steaua București11
UNAM11
Zaragoza11
Athletic Bilbao22
Ajax123
Slovan Bratislava112
Bordeaux11
Budapest Honvéd11
Municipal11
Peñarol11
River Plate11
Spartak Trnava11
Sparta Prague11
Aston Villa11
Botafogo11
Brescia11
Club Brugge11
CSKA Moscow11
Estudiantes (LP)11
Hajduk Split11
Ipswich Town11
Nantes11
Nottingham Forest11
Spartak Moscow11
Werder Bremen11
Zürich11

Women's

Women's Joan Gamper Trophy statistics
TeamWinnerRunner-upTotal
Barcelona33
Juventus22
Montpellier11

Awards and records

Awards

Lionel Messi holds a number of records in the history of the Joan Gamper Trophy
Most Valuable Player

Records

Top goalscorers
RankPlayerClubGoals
1 Lionel Messi Barcelona9
2
Juan Manuel Asensi7
Txiki Begiristain
Hristo Stoichkov
5 Josep Maria Fusté6
Marcial Pina

Consecutive goalscoring

  • Lionel Messi is the only player in the history of Joan Gamper Trophy who has scored in six consecutive editions (2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018).

See also

References

General
  • Lozano Ferrer, Carles; et al. (19 February 2010). "Trofeo Joan Gamper (Barcelona-Spain) 1966–2022". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation (RSSSF). Retrieved 30 September 2022.
Specific

Footnotes

External links