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| Liga Nacional de Fútbol Profesional | |
|---|---|
| Name | Liga Nacional de Fútbol Profesional |
| Country | Spain |
| Confed | UEFA |
| Founded | 1984 |
| Divisions | 1 (Primera División), 1 (Segunda División) |
| Teams | 20 (Primera), 22 (Segunda) |
| Relegation | Segunda División B / Primera Federación |
| Levels | 1–2 |
| Domestic cup | Copa del Rey |
| Confed cup | UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League, UEFA Europa Conference League |
| Champions | FC Barcelona (most recent) |
| Most successful club | Real Madrid CF |
| Television | LaLiga TV, Movistar+, beIN Sports España |
Liga Nacional de Fútbol Profesional is the governing body that administers the top two professional football divisions in Spain, overseeing the Primera División and Segunda División. It organizes competition, commercial rights, discipline, and stadium criteria while liaising with Real Federación Española de Fútbol, UEFA, and FIFA. The organisation shapes match calendars, TV contracts, and regulatory frameworks affecting clubs such as FC Barcelona, Real Madrid CF, Atlético Madrid, Sevilla FC, and Valencia CF.
The entity was established in 1984, evolving from earlier structures connected to Real Federación Española de Fútbol and regional federations like the Federación Madrileña de Fútbol and Federación Catalana de Fútbol. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s it navigated commercialisation trends that involved television partners such as Antena 3 (Spanish TV network), Televisión Española, and later private broadcasters like Canal+ (Spanish TV channel), influencing transfers of stars such as Diego Maradona, Hugo Sánchez, Gary Lineker, Romário, and Zinedine Zidane. The 2000s saw clashes over media rights with broadcasters including Mediapro and Sogecable, while competition reforms intersected with European developments involving UEFA Champions League expansion and the Bosman ruling affecting clubs like Real Sociedad, Athletic Bilbao, and Real Betis. Financial fair play measures from UEFA and governance scrutiny in the 2010s forced restructuring of debt-prone institutions such as Racing de Santander and Levante UD.
The institution is governed by an assembly of club representatives drawn from Primera División and Segunda División teams including RC Celta de Vigo, Real Valladolid, Rayo Vallecano, Deportivo de La Coruña, and Girona FC. Executive operations are managed by a president and an executive committee; notable officeholders have included figures tied to entities like La Caixa and media groups such as Grupo Prisa. The league coordinates with national bodies—Consejo Superior de Deportes and Real Federación Española de Fútbol—and international authorities like UEFA and FIFA for regulation, disciplinary jurisdiction, and international match windows that affect players from Argentina, Brazil, Portugal, France, and Morocco who populate club rosters.
The Primera División typically comprises 20 clubs such as Real Sociedad, Real Zaragoza, Real Valladolid, RCD Espanyol, and Getafe CF playing a double round-robin with home-and-away fixtures that determine qualification for European competitions: top teams enter UEFA Champions League and UEFA Europa League while others may contest UEFA Europa Conference League. The Segunda División uses a 22-team league with promotion play-offs involving sides like Granada CF and CA Osasuna determining elevation to the top tier. Relegation leads clubs into Primera Federación or historically into Segunda División B (old). The calendar integrates domestic cup matches in the Copa del Rey and international breaks coordinated with FIFA match windows.
Member clubs have iconic venues such as Camp Nou (home of FC Barcelona), Santiago Bernabéu Stadium (Real Madrid CF), Metropolitano Stadium (Atlético Madrid), Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán Stadium (Sevilla FC), and Mestalla Stadium (Valencia CF). Smaller grounds include Estadio de la Cerámica (Villarreal CF), Estadio El Sadar (CA Osasuna), San Mamés (Athletic Bilbao), and Anoeta Stadium (Real Sociedad). Stadium licensing, safety, and pitch standards are enforced in partnership with municipal authorities like Ayuntamiento de Barcelona and regional governments such as the Junta de Andalucía, while infrastructure projects often involve corporate partners like ACME-style construction firms and financial institutions including Banco Santander.
Governance relies on statutes adopted by the assembly of club delegates and overseen by a president and sports directorate; past presidents have negotiated with stakeholders including Moncloa-linked policymakers and media conglomerates such as Mediaset España. Financial management addresses broadcasting revenue distribution, salary controls, and licensing subject to UEFA's financial regulations and Spanish judicial rulings from courts such as the Audiencia Nacional (Spain). Disciplinary matters engage refereeing bodies linked to Consejo Superior de Deportes and technology initiatives have introduced systems like Video Assistant Referee trialled in cooperation with International Football Association Board-aligned protocols.
Television and digital rights are the primary revenue sources, historically negotiated with entities like LaLiga TV, Movistar+, beIN Sports, Mediaset España, and Atresmedia. International distribution reaches markets through deals in United Kingdom, United States, China, India, and Latin America, involving platforms such as ESPN, DAZN, and regional broadcasters. Sponsorships link the league to global brands including Santander (bank), EA Sports, Nike, and Adidas, while matchday commercialisation engages ticketing partners and hospitality firms. Legal disputes over rights have involved companies such as Mediapro and resulted in judicial consideration by the Tribunal Supremo (Spain).
The top division's all-time honors list features record holders like Real Madrid CF (most league titles) and standout players such as Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, Telmo Zarra, Hugo Sánchez, and Alfredo Di Stéfano who hold scoring records. Clubs such as FC Barcelona and Real Madrid CF have set attendance and revenue benchmarks; Sevilla FC and Atlético Madrid have prominent European trophies like the UEFA Europa League. Individual awards connected to the league include recognition akin to the Pichichi Trophy and Zamora Trophy, while statistical milestones reflect historic matches like high-scoring fixtures involving Real Madrid CF and FC Barcelona derbies known as El Clásico.