Croatian Football Cup


The Croatian Football Cup is an annually held football tournament for Croatian football clubs and is the second most important competition in Croatian football after the Croatian First Football League championship. It is governed by the Croatian Football Federation and usually runs from late August to late May. Cup winners automatically qualify for next season's UEFA Europa League, except when cup winners are also First League champions, in which case cup finalists take their berth in the Europa League.
The cup was established in 1992, after Croatian clubs had abandoned the Yugoslav First League and Yugoslav Cup competitions following the breakup of Yugoslavia. As of the most recent 2018–19 season a total of 28 cup seasons were held. The competition has historically been dominated by the two Eternal Derby sides - the most successful club is Dinamo Zagreb who appeared in 21 finals and won 15 titles, followed by Hajduk Split who won 6 titles out of 11 finals they appeared in.
Either Dinamo or Hajduk appeared in all but two cup finals and only three other clubs have won the cup - Rijeka, Inter Zaprešić and Osijek. Although clubs can qualify for the cup via regional county cups, which are usually contested by second-, third- or fourth-level sides, Istra 1961 in 2003 was the only team in the history of the competition to have reached the cup final from outside the top level.

Format

Although in theory any club can take part in the cup, 48 teams enter the competition proper, based on three criteria:
  1. Top sixteen best-ranked teams according to club coefficients calculated by the Croatian Football Federation which take into account their cup records in the previous five seasons
  2. Twenty-one club winners of regional cups organised in each of 21 counties of Croatia
  3. Eleven regional cup finalists, from the top 11 counties with the greatest number of active football clubs registered
Clubs which qualify via regional cups always enter in the preliminary round, which consists of 16 single-legged fixtures. In case of a draw at the end of normal time, thirty minutes of extra time is played, and if scores are still level, a penalty shootout is held to determine the winner of the tie.
Sixteen winners of the preliminary ties go on to the first round proper, where they are joined by the sixteen best-ranked clubs according to cup coefficient. Round of 32 and round of 16 are also played as single-legged fixtures. Until the 2014–15 season, from the quarter-finals onward, the competition employed a two-legged tie format, with winners progressing through on aggregate score. Since 2015–16, quarter-finals are also played as single-legged fixtures and, since 2017–18, the same applies for semi-finals.
In case the score is still level at the end of regular time, extra time is played. If the score remains level after extra time, a penalty shootout takes place to determine tie winners. With the exception of 1997 and 1999 finals, all finals were also played as two-legged fixtures until the rules were most recently changed for the 2014–15 season and a single-match final was made permanent.

List of winners

Key

List of winners

Results by team

Winning managers

By individual

Footnotes