List of Real Madrid C.F. records and statistics

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A man in a white shirt and shorts looking upwards.
Cristiano Ronaldo, pictured here in 2015, is Real Madrid's all-time top-scorer with 338 goals in all competitions.

Real Madrid C.F. is a Spanish professional association football club based in Madrid. The club was formed in 1902 as Madrid Football Club, and played its first competitive match on May 13, 1902, when it entered the semi-final of the Campeonato de Copa de S.M. Alfonso XIII.[1] Real Madrid currently plays in La Liga, the top tier of Spanish football. Madrid was one of the founding members of La Liga in 1929, and is one of three clubs, including FC Barcelona and Athletic Bilbao, never to have been relegated from the league. They have also been involved in European football ever since they became the first Spanish club to enter the European Cup in 1955, except for the 1977–78 and 1996–97 seasons.

This list encompasses the major honours won by Real Madrid and records set by the club, their managers and their players. The player records section includes details of the club's leading goalscorers and those who have made most appearances in first-team competitions. It also records notable achievements by Real Madrid players on the international stage, and the highest transfer fees paid and received by the club.

The club currently holds the record for the most European Cup / UEFA Champions League triumphs with 10, and the most La Liga titles with 32. The club's record appearance maker is Raúl, who made 741 appearances from 1994 to 2010; the club's record goalscorer is Cristiano Ronaldo, who scored 338 goals in all competitions.

Honours

As of 30 December 2015, Real Madrid won a record 32 La Liga and a record 10 European Cup / UEFA Champions League trophies. The club was awarded with the recognition of FIFA Club of the 20th Century on 23 December 2000.[2] It also received the FIFA Order of Merit in 2004.[3] Added to this, Real is allowed to wear a multiple-winner badge on their shirt during UEFA Champions League matches as they have won more than five European Cups.[4]

Regional Competitions

  • Campeonato Regional Centro / Trofeo Mancomunado:[5] 23 (record)
    • 1902–03, 1904–05, 1905–06, 1906–07*, 1907–08, 1912–13, 1915–16, 1916–17, 1917–18, 1919–20, 1921–22, 1922–23, 1923–24, 1925–26, 1926–27, 1928–29, 1929–30, 1930–31, 1931–32, 1932–33, 1933–34, 1934–35, 1935–36
(* Madrid FC won the tournament, but the Madrid Football Federation annulled the results)

Domestic Competitions

League

Cup

(* Won Copa del Rey and La Liga)
(* First ever winners)

European Competitions

Official Titles

(* First ever winners)

Unofficial Titles

Worldwide Competitions

Official Titles

(* First ever winners)

Unofficial Titles

(* First ever winners)

Other Titles

Friendly Competitions

Created by Real Madrid

  • Santiago Bernabeu Trophy: 25 (record)
    • 1981, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1987, 1989, 1991, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2015

Created by Other Clubs

Players

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Appearances

Competitive, professional matches only.

As of 23 May 2015

Name Years League Cup Europe[A] Other[B] Total
1 Spain Raúl 1994–2010 550 37 132 22 741
2 Spain Iker Casillas 1999–2015 510 40 152 23 725
3 Spain Manuel Sanchís 1983–2001 524 67 100 20 710
4 23x15px Carlos Santillana 1971–1988 461 84 87 13 645
5 Spain Fernando Hierro 1989–2003 439 43 103 16 601
6 23x15px Francisco Gento 1953–1971 428 74 95 2 599
7 23x15px José Camacho 1973–1989 414 61 90 12 577
8 23x15px Pirri 1964–1979 417 67 75 2 561
9 Spain Míchel 1981–1996 404 53 88 14 559
10 Spain Guti 1995–2010 387 40 99 16 542

Others

1Includes all European club competitive competitions, Intercontinental Cup and FIFA Club World Cup.
2Includes all European club competitive competitions and Intercontinental Cup.
3Includes European Cup / UEFA Champions League, UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League, UEFA Super Cup and UEFA Intertoto Cup.

Goalscorers

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As of 9 January 2016
# Name Years League[9] Cup Europe[A] Other[B] Total Ratio
1 Portugal Cristiano Ronaldo 2009–present 239 (219) 21 (28) 75 (69) 5 (9) 338 (325) 1.04
2 Spain Raúl 1994–2010 228 (550) 18 (37) 66 (132) 11 (22) 323 (741) 0.44
3 ArgentinaColombia23x15px Alfredo Di Stéfano 1953–1964 216 (282) 40 (50) 49 (58) 3 (6) 308 (396) 0.78
4 23x15px Carlos Santillana 1971–1988 186 (461) 49 (84) 47 (87) 7 (13) 289 (645) 0.45
5 Hungary23x15px Ferenc Puskás 1958–1966 156 (180) 49 (41) 35 (39) 2 (2) 242 (262) 0.92
6 Mexico Hugo Sánchez 1985–1992 164 (207) 19 (32) 23 (39) 2 (4) 208 (282) 0.74
7 23x15px Francisco Gento 1952–1970 126 (428) 22 (74) 30 (95) 1 (2) 179 (599) 0.3
8 23x15px Pirri 1964–1979 123 (417) 25 (67) 23 (75) 0 (2) 171 (561) 0.3
Spain Emilio Butragueño 1983–1995 123 (341) 16 (39) 27 (75) 5 (8) 171 (463) 0.37
10 23x15px Amancio Amaro 1962–1976 119 (344) 14 (58) 22 (67) 0 (2) 155 (471) 0.33

By competition

1Includes all European club competitive competitions, Intercontinental Cup and FIFA Club World Cup.
2Includes European Cup / UEFA Champions League, UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League, UEFA Super Cup and UEFA Intertoto Cup.

In a single season

In a single match

Others

Historical goals

Goal Name Date Match
1st ever England Arthur Johnson 13 May 1902 Barcelona 3 – Real Madrid 1
1st in La Liga 23x15px Jaime Lazcano 10 February 1929 Real Madrid 5 – Europa 0
1st in European Cup 23x15px Miguel Muñoz 8 September 1955 Servette 0 – Real Madrid 2
1000th in La Liga 23x15px Pahiño 5 November 1950 Athletic 2 – Real Madrid 5
1000th in European Competition France Karim Benzema 16 September 2014 Real Madrid 5 – FC Basel 1
2000th in La Liga 23x15px Francisco Gento 9 November 1963 Real Madrid 3 – Pontevedra 1
3000th in La Liga Spain Juanito 20 January 1982 Salamanca 1 – Real Madrid 3
4000th in La Liga Chile Iván Zamorano 22 December 1994 Valladolid 0 – Real Madrid 5
5000th in La Liga Spain Guti 14 September 2008 Real Madrid 4 – Numancia 3

Internationals

Award winners

Ballon d'Or (1956–2009)

The following players have won the Ballon d'Or while playing for Real Madrid:[14]

FIFA Ballon d'Or

The following players have won the FIFA Ballon d'Or while playing for Real Madrid:

European Golden Shoe

The following players have won the European Golden Shoe while playing for Real Madrid:

UEFA Club Footballer of the Year

The following players have won the UEFA Club Footballer of the Year award while playing for Real Madrid:

FIFA World Player of the Year

The following players have won the FIFA World Player of the Year award while playing for Real Madrid:

UEFA Best Player in Europe Award

The following players have won the UEFA Best Player in Europe Award while playing for Real Madrid:

Transfers

Highest transfer fees paid

Cristiano Ronaldo, signed in June 2009 from Manchester United for £80 million, became Real Madrid's most expensive purchase.

Real Madrid's record signings are Gareth Bale and Cristiano Ronaldo. Bale, who signed for the club from Tottenham Hotspur for a fee which according to media reports where between £78-85.3 million in September 2013. Ronaldo, who signed from Manchester United for a fee of £80 million in July 2009.

Player From Transfer Fee
(£ millions)[15][16]
Date Ref
1 Wales Gareth Bale England Tottenham 85.3 September 2013 [17]
2 Portugal Cristiano Ronaldo England Manchester United 80 June 2009 [18]
3 Colombia James Rodríguez France Monaco 63 July 2014 [19]
4 Brazil Kaká Italy Milan 56 June 2009 [20]
5 France Zinedine Zidane Italy Juventus 45 July 2001 [21]
6 Portugal Luís Figo Spain Barcelona 37 July 2000 [22]
7 Spain Asier Illarramendi Spain Real Sociedad 34 July 2013 [23]
8 France Karim Benzema France Lyon 30 August 2009 [24]
9 Spain Xabi Alonso England Liverpool 30 August 2009 [25]
10 Croatia Luka Modrić England Tottenham 30 September 2012 [26]

Highest transfer fees received

The club's record sale came in 26 August 2014, when they sold Ángel Di María to Manchester United for a British record fee of £59.7 million.

Player To Transfer Fee
(£ millions)[15][16]
Date Ref
1 Argentina Ángel Di María England Manchester United 59.7 August 2014 [27]
2 Germany Mesut Özil England Arsenal 42.4 September 2013 [28]
3 Argentina Gonzalo Higuaín Italy Napoli 34.5 July 2013 [29]
4 Brazil Robinho England Manchester City 32.5 September 2008 [30]
5 France Nicolas Anelka France Paris Saint-Germain 22 July 2000 [31]
6 Netherlands Arjen Robben Germany Bayern Munich 22 August 2009 [32]
7 England Michael Owen England Newcastle United 17 September 2005 [33]
8 France Claude Makélélé England Chelsea 16 September 2003 [34]
9 Netherlands Wesley Sneijder Italy Internazionale 14 August 2009 [35]
10 Netherlands Klaas-Jan Huntelaar Italy Milan 13 August 2009 [36]

Managerial records

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  • First full-time manager: England Arthur Johnson.
  • Longest-serving manager by time: 23x15px Miguel Muñoz – 15 years in two spells from February 1959 to April 1959 and from April 1960 to January 1974.
  • Longest-serving manager by matches: 23x15px Miguel Muñoz – 604 matches.

Team records

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Matches

Record wins

0–7 against FC Progrès Niedercorn (during the 1978–79 European Cup).[37]
1–7 against Real Zaragoza (during the 1987–88 La Liga).
2–8 against Deportivo de La Coruña (during the 2014–15 La Liga).

Record defeats

5–0 against 1. FC Kaiserslautern in the 1981–82 UEFA Cup.
5–0 against Milan in the 1988–89 European Cup.

Streaks

  • Longest unbeaten run (all major competitions): 34 matches (1988–89 season).
  • Longest unbeaten run (League): 31 matches (from day 36 1987–88 season, to day 28 1988–89 season).
  • Longest unbeaten home run (League): 121 matches (from 1956–57 season, to 1964–65 season).[38]
  • Longest winning streak (League): 15 matches (1960–61 season).
  • Longest winning streak (League and UEFA Champions League): 18 matches (2014–15 season).
  • Longest winning streak (League, Cup and UEFA Champions League): 20 matches (2014–15 season).
  • Longest winning streak (League, Cup, UEFA Champions League and FIFA Club World Cup): 22 matches (2014–15 season).
  • Longest winning streak from first match of season (League): 9 matches (1968–69 season).
  • Longest losing streak (League): 5 matches (from day 34 2008–09 season, to day 38 2008–09 season).
  • Longest drawing streak (League): 4 matches (2006–07 season).
  • Longest streak without a win (League): 9 matches (1984–85 season).
  • Longest scoring run (League): 35 matches (1951–52 season to 1952–53 season).
  • Longest non-scoring run (League): 3 matches (2001–02 season).
  • Longest streak without conceding a goal (League): 7 matches (1997–98 season).
  • Longest streak without conceding a goal (League and Cup): 8 matches (2013–14 season).
  • Longest streak without conceding a goal (Cup): 8 matches (2013–14 season).

Wins/draws/losses in a season

  • Most league wins in a season: 32 in 38 games (during the 2011–12 season).
  • Most league home wins in a season: 18 in 19 games (during 1987–88 and 2009–10 seasons).
  • Most league away wins in a season: 16 in 19 games (during the 2011–12 season).
  • Most league draws in a season: 15 in 34 games (during the 1978–79 season).
  • Most league defeats in a season: 13 in 34 games (during the 1973–74 season).
  • Fewest league wins in a season: 7 in 18 games (during the 1929–30 season).
  • Fewest league draws in a season:
  • Fewest league defeats in a season: 0 in 18 games (during the 1931–32 season).

Goals

  • Most league goals scored in a season: 121 (during the 2011–12 season).
  • Most goals scored in a season in all competitions: 174 (during the 2011–12 season).
  • Fewest league goals scored in a season: 24 (during the 1930–31 season).
  • Most league goals conceded in a season: 71 (during the 1950–51 season).
  • Fewest league goals conceded in a season: 15 (during the 1931–32 season).

Points

  • Most points in a season:
Two points for a win: 66 in 44 matches (during the 1986–87 season).
Three points for a win: 100 in 38 matches (during the 2011–12 season).[39]
  • Fewest points in a season:
Two points for a win: 17 in 18 matches (during the 1929–30 season).
Three points for a win: 70 in 42 matches (during the 1995–96 season).

Season-by-season performance

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Footnotes

A. ^ The "Europe" column constitutes goals and appearances in the European Cup / UEFA Champions League, UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League and UEFA Intertoto Cup.
B. ^ The "Other" column constitutes goals and appearances in the Supercopa de España, the Copa de la Liga, the UEFA Super Cup, the Intercontinental Cup and the FIFA Club World Championship.

References

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  7. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-3086428/Xavi-one-trophy-away-decorated-player-Spanish-football-history.html
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  17. http://www.fifa.com/world-match-centre/news/newsid/219/598/0/index.html?
  18. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/teams/m/man_utd/8121951.stm
  19. http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/28418131
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  23. BBC Sport: 'Real Madrid sign £34m Asier Illarramendi from Real Sociedad', 12 July 2013. Retrieved 19 September 2013.
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  37. Stammbaum Progrès Niederkorn
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