2015–16 La Liga

La Liga
Season 2015–16
Dates 21 August 2015 – 15 May 2016
Champions Barcelona
24th title
Relegated Rayo Vallecano
Getafe
Levante
Champions League Barcelona
Real Madrid
Atlético Madrid
Villarreal
Sevilla (as Europa League champions)
Europa League Athletic Bilbao
Celta Vigo
Matches played 380
Goals scored 1,043 (2.74 per match)
Top goalscorer Luis Suárez
(40 goals)
Best goalkeeper Jan Oblak
(0.47 goals/match)
Biggest home win Real Madrid 10–2 Rayo Vallecano
(20 December 2015)
Biggest away win Deportivo La Coruña 0–8 Barcelona
(20 April 2016)
Highest scoring Real Madrid 10–2 Rayo Vallecano
(20 December 2015)
Longest winning run 12 matches[1]
Barcelona
Real Madrid
Longest unbeaten run 23 matches[1]
Barcelona
Longest winless run 13 matches[1]
Deportivo La Coruña
Getafe
Longest losing run 7 matches[1]
Getafe
Highest attendance 98,902
Barcelona 1–2 Real Madrid
(2 April 2016)[1]
Lowest attendance 4,215
Eibar 5–1 Granada
(18 January 2016)[1]
Total attendance 10,554,764[1]
Average attendance 27,775[1]

The 2015–16 La Liga football season (known as the Liga BBVA for sponsorship reasons) was the 85th since its establishment. Barcelona were the defending champions. It started on 21 August 2015 and concluded on 15 May 2016. Barcelona retained the title (their 24th Liga title) after beating Granada 3–0 on the final matchday.[2]

Luis Suárez finished as top scorer, being the first player apart from Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo to do so since the 2008–09 season.

Teams

Promotion and relegation (pre-season)

A total of 20 teams contested the league, including 17 sides from the 2014–15 season and three promoted from the 2014–15 Segunda División. This included the two top teams from the Segunda División (Real Betis and Sporting de Gijón), and the winners of the play-offs (Las Palmas).[3]

Almería and Córdoba were relegated to 2015–16 Segunda División in the last season, after being two and one years, respectively in La Liga. Elche was administratively relegated despite finishing 13th.[4] Following the competition rules, Eibar, who finished 18th, remained in the league.[5]

Real Betis was the first team from Segunda to achieve promotion, after a one-year absence from La Liga, on 24 May 2015 after winning 3–0 over Alcorcón.[6]

Sporting Gijón, promoted after finishing second, qualified on 7 June 2015, after winning 3–0 against Betis and taking advantage of the draw of Girona, who could not retain the promotion spot on the last match day. Sporting returned to the top level after three years.

Las Palmas achieved promotion on 21 June 2015 after defeating Real Zaragoza in the promotion playoff final on away goals, winning the second leg at home 2–0, after losing the first leg away 3–1. Las Palmas returned to the top level after 13 years. They also became the first island team to play in La Liga since Mallorca's relegation to Segunda Division in the 2012–13 season. During those 13 years, they played two seasons in Segunda División B.

Stadiums and locations

Location of teams in 2015–16 La Liga (Canary Islands)
Team Location Stadium Capacity
Athletic Bilbao Bilbao San Mamés 53,289
Atlético Madrid Madrid Vicente Calderón 54,907
Barcelona Barcelona Camp Nou 99,354
Celta Vigo Vigo Balaídos 30,000
Deportivo La Coruña A Coruña Riazor 34,600
Eibar Eibar Ipurua 6,267
Espanyol Barcelona RCDE Stadium 40,500
Getafe Getafe Coliseum Alfonso Pérez 17,393
Granada Granada Nuevo Los Cármenes 23,156
Las Palmas Las Palmas Gran Canaria 32,150
Levante Valencia Ciutat de València 26,354
Málaga Málaga La Rosaleda 30,044
Rayo Vallecano Madrid Vallecas 14,708
Real Betis Seville Benito Villamarín 52,500
Real Madrid Madrid Santiago Bernabéu 85,454
Real Sociedad San Sebastián Anoeta 32,076
Sevilla Seville Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán 42,500
Sporting Gijón Gijón El Molinón 29,029
Valencia Valencia Mestalla 55,000
Villarreal Villarreal El Madrigal 24,890

Personnel and sponsorship

Team Head Coach Captain Kit Shirt sponsor
Athletic Bilbao Spain Ernesto Valverde Spain Carlos Gurpegui Nike Kutxabank
Atlético Madrid Argentina Diego Simeone Spain Gabi Nike Plus500, Azerbaijan,1 Huawei2
Barcelona Spain Luis Enrique Spain Andrés Iniesta Nike Qatar Airways, UNICEF,4 Beko2
Celta Vigo Argentina Eduardo Berizzo Spain Hugo Mallo Adidas Citroën, Abanca, Estrella Galicia3
Deportivo La Coruña Spain Víctor Sánchez Spain Manuel Pablo Lotto Estrella Galicia, Abanca,1 西甲欢乐多5
Eibar Spain José Luis Mendilibar Spain Daniel García Puma AVIA, Wiko1 3
Espanyol Romania Constantin Gâlcă Spain Javi López Joma Rastar
Getafe Argentina Juan Esnáider Spain Pedro León Joma Tecnocasa Group
Granada Spain José González Spain Diego Mainz Joma Solver Sports Capital
Las Palmas Spain Quique Setién Spain David García Acerbis Gran Canaria
Levante Spain Rubi Spain Juanfran Nike East United
Málaga Spain Javi Gracia Portugal Duda Nike
Rayo Vallecano Spain Paco Jémez Spain David Cobeño Kelme QBAO.com, Nevir1
Real Betis Uruguay Gus Poyet Spain Jorge Molina Adidas UED Sports, Wiko1 3
Real Madrid France Zinedine Zidane Spain Sergio Ramos Adidas Fly Emirates
Real Sociedad Spain Eusebio Sacristán Spain Xabi Prieto Adidas QBAO.com, Kutxabank1
Sevilla Spain Unai Emery Spain José Antonio Reyes New Balance
Sporting Gijón Spain Abelardo Fernández Spain Alberto Lora Kappa Gijón, Telecable,3 Ternera Asturiana2
Valencia Spain Pako Ayestarán Spain Paco Alcácer Adidas beIN Sports1
Villarreal Spain Marcelino Spain Bruno Soriano Xtep Pamesa Cerámica
1. ^ On the back of shirt.
2. ^ On the sleeves.
3. ^ On the shorts.
4. ^ Barcelona makes a donation to UNICEF in order to display the charity's logo on the back of the club's kit.
5. ^ Deportivo has a Chinese characters phrase on the back of its shorts meaning "La Liga is Diverse".
6. Additionally, referee kits are now being made by Adidas, sponsored by Würth, and Nike has a new match ball, the Ordem LFP.

Managerial changes

Team Outgoing manager Manner of
departure
Date of vacancy Position
in table
Replaced by Date of appointment
Real Madrid Italy Carlo Ancelotti Sacked 25 May 2015[7] Pre-season Spain Rafael Benítez 3 June 2015[8]
Getafe Spain Pablo Franco 1 June 2015[9] Spain Fran Escribá 26 June 2015[10]
Eibar Spain Gaizka Garitano Mutual consent 30 June 2015[11] Spain José Luis Mendilibar 30 June 2015[12]
Las Palmas Spain Paco Herrera Sacked 19 October 2015[13] 19th Spain Quique Setién 19 October 2015[14]
Levante Spain Lucas Alcaraz 26 October 2015[15] 20th Spain Rubi 27 October 2015
Real Sociedad Scotland David Moyes 9 November 2015[16] 16th Spain Eusebio Sacristán 9 November 2015
Valencia Portugal Nuno Espírito Santo Resigned 29 November 2015[17] 9th England Gary Neville 2 December 2015[18]
Espanyol Spain Sergio González Sacked 14 December 2015 12th Romania Constantin Gâlcă 14 December 2015[19]
Real Madrid Spain Rafael Benítez 4 January 2016[20] 3rd France Zinedine Zidane 4 January 2016[20]
Real Betis Spain Pepe Mel 10 January 2016[21] 15th Spain Juan Merino 3 February 2016
Granada Spain José Ramón Sandoval 22 February 2016[22] 20th Spain José González 22 February 2016[23]
Valencia England Gary Neville 30 March 2016[24] 14th Spain Pako Ayestarán 30 March 2016[24]
Getafe Spain Fran Escribá 11 April 2016[25] 19th Argentina Juan Esnáider 12 April 2016
Real Betis Spain Juan Merino End of caretaker spell 9 May 2016[26] 14th Uruguay Gus Poyet 9 May 2016

Overview

On 14 May 2016, Barcelona won their 24th title with a win over Granada CF by 3–0 at Estadio Nuevo Los Cármenes.[27] Real Madrid finished as runner-up after performing a 12-win streak until the end of the season.[28]

The first team relegated to Segunda División was Levante UD, after losing 1–3 against Málaga CF on 2 May 2016.[29]

On 15 May 2016, Sporting Gijón remained in La Liga after beating Villarreal by 2–0 and taking advantage of Getafe's loss against Real Betis in its separate match, Getafe being relegated from La Liga for the first time in its history. Rayo Vallecano was also relegated despite winning its last season game.[30]

League table

Standings

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Barcelona (C) 38 29 4 5 112 29 +83 91 Qualification for the Champions League group stage
2 Real Madrid 38 28 6 4 110 34 +76 90
3 Atlético Madrid 38 28 4 6 63 18 +45 88
4 Villarreal 38 18 10 10 44 35 +9 64 Qualification for the Champions League play-off round
5 Athletic Bilbao 38 18 8 12 58 45 +13 62 Qualification for the Europa League group stage[lower-alpha 1]
6 Celta Vigo 38 17 9 12 51 59 8 60
7 Sevilla 38 14 10 14 51 50 +1 52 Qualification for the Champions League group stage[lower-alpha 2]
8 Málaga 38 12 12 14 38 35 +3 48[lower-alpha 3]
9 Real Sociedad 38 13 9 16 45 48 3 48[lower-alpha 3]
10 Real Betis 38 11 12 15 34 52 18 45
11 Las Palmas 38 12 8 18 45 53 8 44[lower-alpha 4]
12 Valencia 38 11 11 16 46 48 2 44[lower-alpha 4]
13 Espanyol 38 12 7 19 40 74 34 43[lower-alpha 5]
14 Eibar 38 11 10 17 49 61 12 43[lower-alpha 5]
15 Deportivo La Coruña 38 8 18 12 45 61 16 42
16 Granada 38 10 9 19 46 69 23 39[lower-alpha 6]
17 Sporting Gijón 38 10 9 19 40 62 22 39[lower-alpha 6]
18 Rayo Vallecano (R) 38 9 11 18 52 73 21 38 Relegation to the Segunda División
19 Getafe (R) 38 9 9 20 37 67 30 36
20 Levante (R) 38 8 8 22 37 70 33 32
Source: La Liga, Soccerway
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Head-to-head points; 3) Head-to-head goal difference; 4) Goal difference; 5) Goals scored; 6) Fair-play points; 7) Play-off.
(C) Champion; (R) Relegated.
Notes:
  1. Since the winners of the 2015–16 Copa del Rey, Barcelona, qualified for European competition based on league position, the spot awarded to the cup winners (Europa League group stage) was passed to the sixth-placed team and the spot awarded to the sixth-placed team (Europa League third qualifying round) was passed to the seventh-placed team.
  2. Sevilla qualified for the Champions League group stage by winning the 2015–16 UEFA Europa League. Based on their league position (7th), they would have received the spot above to enter the Europa League third qualifying round. This spot was vacated without replacement as per UEFA regulations.
  3. 1 2 Málaga ahead of Real Sociedad on head-to-head record; Málaga–Real Sociedad 3–1, Real Sociedad–Málaga 1–1.
  4. 1 2 Las Palmas ahead of Valencia on head-to-head record; Valencia–Las Palmas 1–1, Las Palmas–Valencia 2–1.
  5. 1 2 Espanyol ahead of Eibar on head-to-head goal difference; Eibar–Espanyol 2–1, Espanyol–Eibar 4–2.
  6. 1 2 Granada ahead of Sporting Gijón on head-to-head record; Granada–Sporting Gijón 2–0, Sporting Gijón–Granada 3–3.

Positions by round

The table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included in the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards. For example, if a match is scheduled for matchday 13, but then postponed and played between days 16 and 17, it will be added to the standings for day 16.

Team \ Round 1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738
Barcelona54115243221111111222111111111111111111
Real Madrid105221321112333333333333333333333333322
Atlético Madrid33654554343222222111222222222222222233
Villarreal76433115555465554444444444444444444444
Athletic Bilbao17201013151713141288977977689866787766766556565
Celta Vigo21342432434544445555577866677555665656
Sevilla131718202016121381110111010788977755555555677777777
Málaga915151819181717161717201817161311111012121010111211111298888910888
Real Sociedad111116171112161615161614151313141415141315131110991091011109910121199
Real Betis6189111410810101311121111111112141515141413141313131011131413141213131410
Las Palmas191413161214191918191818192019191616161618161818181715151515121011139101011
Valencia15108710898977798891010111111121412111291112141514128891112
Espanyol4812869109111013101212121213121314131517171614141414121315151515141513
Eibar12568777766689101098666886788889911101111121214
Deportivo La Coruña8979766669985666679899991010121313101112131414151315
Granada207111518202020191819171718171718171717161819192019181817171717171717161616
Sporting Gijón1412171013151112171214151614141617181819191716161718191919191818181818181817
Rayo Vallecano121619129111515141512131416181819191918171915151516161716161616161616171918
Getafe1819201417131411131415161315151515131210101112131415171618181919201919191719
Levante1613141916191818202020192019202020202020202020201920202020202020192020202020

Source: BDFutbol

Leader
2016–17 UEFA Champions League group stage
2016–17 UEFA Champions League Play-off round
2016–17 UEFA Europa League group stage
2016–17 UEFA Europa League Third qualifying round
Relegation to 2016–17 Segunda División

Results

Home \ Away[1] ATH ATM FCBCELRCDEIBESPGETGCFLPALEVMCFRVARBBRMARSOSFCRSGVCFVIL
Athletic Bilbao 01 01 21 41 52 21 31 11 22 20 00 10 31 12 01 31 30 31 00
Atlético Madrid 21 12 20 30 31 10 20 30 10 10 10 10 51 11 30 00 10 21 00
Barcelona 60 21 61 22 31 50 60 40 21 41 10 52 40 12 40 21 60 12 30
Celta Vigo 01 02 41 11 32 10 00 21 33 43 10 30 11 13 10 11 21 15 00
Deportivo La Coruña 22 11 08 20 20 30 02 01 13 21 33 22 22 02 00 11 23 11 12
Eibar 20 02 04 11 11 21 31 51 01 20 12 10 11 02 21 11 20 11 12
Espanyol 21 13 00 11 10 42 10 11 10 11 20 21 03 06 05 10 12 10 22
Getafe 01 01 02 01 00 11 31 12 40 30 10 11 10 15 11 11 11 22 20
Granada 20 02 03 02 11 13 11 32 32 51 00 22 11 12 03 21 20 12 13
Las Palmas 00 03 12 21 02 02 40 40 41 00 11 01 10 12 20 20 11 21 00
Levante 22 21 02 12 11 22 21 30 12 32 01 21 01 13 04 11 00 10 10
Málaga 01 10 12 20 20 00 11 30 22 41 31 11 01 11 31 00 10 12 01
Rayo Vallecano 03 02 15 30 13 11 30 20 21 20 31 12 02 23 22 22 21 00 21
Real Betis 13 01 02 11 12 04 13 21 20 10 10 01 22 11 10 00 11 10 11
Real Madrid 42 01 04 71 50 40 60 41 10 31 30 00 102 50 31 40 51 32 30
Real Sociedad 00 02 10 23 11 21 23 12 30 01 11 11 21 21 01 20 00 20 02
Sevilla 20 03 21 12 11 10 20 50 14 20 31 21 32 20 32 12 20 10 42
Sporting Gijón 02 21 13 01 11 20 24 12 33 31 03 10 22 12 00 51 21 01 20
Valencia 03 13 11 02 11 40 21 22 10 11 30 30 22 00 22 01 21 01 02
Villarreal 31 10 22 12 02 11 31 20 10 01 30 10 21 00 10 00 21 20 10

Updated to games played on 15 May 2016.
Source: La Liga
1 ^ The home team is listed in the left-hand column.
Colours: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.
For coming matches, an a indicates there is an article about the match.

Season statistics

Scoring

Top goalscorers

As of 15 May 2016.[33][34]
Barcelona's Luis Suárez won the Pichichi Trophy, scoring 40 goals in the season.
Rank Player Club Goals
1 Uruguay Luis Suárez Barcelona 40
2 Portugal Cristiano Ronaldo Real Madrid 35
3 Argentina Lionel Messi Barcelona 26
4 Brazil Neymar Barcelona 24
France Karim Benzema Real Madrid
6 France Antoine Griezmann Atlético Madrid 22
7 Spain Aritz Aduriz Athletic Bilbao 20
8 Wales Gareth Bale Real Madrid 19
Spain Rubén Castro Real Betis
10 Spain Borja Bastón Eibar 18

Top assists

As of 15 May 2016.[35]
Rank Player Club Assists
1 Argentina Lionel Messi Barcelona 16
Uruguay Luis Suárez Barcelona
3 Spain Koke Atlético Madrid 14
4 Brazil Neymar Barcelona 12
5 Portugal Cristiano Ronaldo Real Madrid 11
6 Wales Gareth Bale Real Madrid 10
Spain Roberto Soldado Villarreal
Germany Toni Kroos Real Madrid
Spain Marco Asensio Espanyol
10 Spain Jonathan Viera Las Palmas 9

Zamora Trophy

The Zamora Trophy is awarded by newspaper Marca to the goalkeeper with least goals-to-games ratio. A goalkeeper must play at least 28 games of 60 or more minutes to be eligible for the trophy.[36]

As of 15 May 2016.[37]
Rank Name Club Goals
Against
Matches Average
1 Slovenia Jan Oblak Atlético Madrid 18 38 0.47
2 Chile Claudio Bravo Barcelona 22 32 0.69
3 France Alphonse Areola Villarreal 26 32 0.81
4 Costa Rica Keylor Navas Real Madrid 28 34 0.82
5 Spain Gorka Iraizoz Athletic Bilbao 37 36 1.03

Hat-tricks

PlayerForAgainstResultDateReference
Portugal Cristiano Ronaldo5Real MadridEspanyol6–0 (A)12 September 2015Report
Spain Imanol AgirretxeReal SociedadGranada3–0 (A)22 September 2015Report
Brazil CharlesMálagaReal Sociedad3–1 (H)3 October 2015Report
Brazil Neymar4BarcelonaRayo Vallecano5–2 (H)17 October 2015Report
France Kevin GameiroSevillaGetafe5–0 (H)24 October 2015Report
Uruguay Luis SuárezBarcelonaEibar3–1 (H)25 October 2015Report
Spain Aritz AdurizAthletic BilbaoRayo Vallecano3–0 (A)29 November 2015Report
Paraguay Antonio SanabriaSporting GijónLas Palmas3–1 (H)6 December 2015Report
Wales Gareth Bale4Real MadridRayo Vallecano10–2 (H)20 December 2015Report
France Karim BenzemaReal MadridRayo Vallecano10–2 (H)20 December 2015Report
Argentina Lionel MessiBarcelonaGranada4–0 (H)9 January 2016Report
Wales Gareth BaleReal MadridDeportivo La Coruña5–0 (H)9 January 2016Report
Uruguay Luis SuárezBarcelonaAthletic Bilbao6–0 (H)17 January 2016Report
Paraguay Antonio SanabriaSporting GijónReal Sociedad5–1 (H)22 January 2016Report
Portugal Cristiano RonaldoReal MadridEspanyol6–0 (H)31 January 2016Report
Uruguay Luis SuárezBarcelonaCelta Vigo6–1 (H)14 February 2016Report
Spain Aritz AdurizAthletic BilbaoDeportivo La Coruña4–1 (H)2 March 2016Report
Argentina Lionel MessiBarcelonaRayo Vallecano5–1 (A)3 March 2016Report
Portugal Cristiano Ronaldo4Real MadridCelta Vigo7–1 (H)5 March 2016Report
Uruguay Luis Suárez4BarcelonaDeportivo La Coruña8–0 (A)20 April 2016Report
Spain Paco AlcácerValenciaEibar4–0 (H)20 April 2016Report
Morocco Youssef El-ArabiGranadaLevante5–1 (H)21 April 2016Report
Uruguay Luis Suárez4BarcelonaSporting Gijón6–0 (H)23 April 2016Report
Uruguay Luis SuárezBarcelonaGranada3–0 (A)14 May 2016Report

4 Player scored four goals
5 Player scored five goals
(H) – Home ; (A) – Away

Discipline

As of 12 May 2016[38][39]

Attendances

Pos Team Total High Low Average Change
1 Barcelona 1,486,763 98,902 65,531 78,251 +0.8%
2 Real Madrid 1,286,433 80,148 61,564 67,707 −7.8%
3 Atlético Madrid 820,812 51,933 29,737 43,201 −7.2%
4 Athletic Bilbao 797,268 47,785 37,552 41,961 +3.3%
5 Valencia 709,329 47,217 27,876 37,333 −14.8%
6 Real Betis 686,700 46,061 24,879 36,142 +18.0%1
7 Sevilla 646,007 40,395 21,915 34,000 +9.3%
8 Sporting Gijón 440,723 28,140 19,536 23,196 +20.1%1
9 Deportivo La Coruña 437,148 29,666 16,185 23,008 +8.1%
10 Las Palmas 402,922 28,414 15,819 21,206 +32.4%1
11 Málaga 401,292 28,290 13,909 21,121 −5.1%
12 Real Sociedad 386,468 27,484 12,755 20,340 −8.0%
13 Espanyol 348,353 27,395 12,461 18,334 −1.9%
14 Celta Vigo 342,272 24,519 13,584 18,014 −5.9%
15 Villarreal 318,573 23,450 12,843 16,767 +5.0%
16 Granada 301,361 20,552 12,711 15,861 −3.8%
17 Levante 259,258 22,424 9,225 13,645 −10.6%
18 Rayo Vallecano 218,308 13,775 9,301 11,490 +8.1%
19 Getafe 138,861 12,772 4,532 7,308 −0.7%
20 Eibar 98,868 5,941 4,215 5,204 +8.9%
League total 10,527,719 98,902 4,215 27,705 +3.6%

Updated to games played on 15 May 2016
Source:
Notes:
1: Team played last season in Segunda División.

LFP Awards

Seasonal

La Liga's governing body, the Liga de Fútbol Profesional, honoured the competition's best players and coach with the La Liga Awards.[40]

Recipient
Best Player France Antoine Griezmann (Atlético Madrid)
Best Coach Argentina Diego Simeone (Atlético Madrid)
Best Goalkeeper Slovenia Jan Oblak (Atlético Madrid)
Best Defender Uruguay Diego Godín (Atlético Madrid)
Best Midfielder Croatia Luka Modrić (Real Madrid)
Best Forward Argentina Lionel Messi (Barcelona)

Monthly

Month Manager of the Month Player of the Month Reference
Manager Club Player Club
September Spain Marcelino Villarreal Spain Nolito Celta Vigo [41][42]
October Spain Ernesto Valverde Athletic Bilbao Spain Borja Bastón Eibar [43][44]
November Argentina Diego Simeone Atlético Madrid Brazil Neymar Barcelona [45][46]
December Spain Javi Gracia Málaga Spain Lucas Pérez Deportivo La Coruña [47][48]
January Spain Unai Emery Sevilla Argentina Lionel Messi Barcelona [49][50]
February Spain Eusebio Sacristán Real Sociedad Venezuela Miku Rayo Vallecano [51][52]
March Spain Quique Setién Las Palmas Spain Aritz Aduriz Athletic Bilbao [53][54]
April France Zinedine Zidane Real Madrid Spain Koke Atlético Madrid [55][56]
May Spain Luis Enrique Barcelona Uruguay Luis Suárez Barcelona [57][58]

Number of teams by autonomous community

Autonomous Community Number of teams Teams
1  Andalusia4Granada, Málaga, Real Betis and Sevilla
 Community of MadridAtlético Madrid, Getafe, Rayo Vallecano and Real Madrid
3  Basque Country3Athletic Bilbao, Eibar and Real Sociedad
 Valencian CommunityLevante, Valencia and Villarreal
5  Catalonia2Barcelona and Espanyol
 GaliciaCelta Vigo and Deportivo La Coruña
7  Asturias1Sporting Gijón
 Canary IslandsLas Palmas

Broadcasting rights

Telefónica purchased the exclusive television broadcasting rights to telecast the 2015–16 season in Spain. Sky Sports have exclusive rights in the United Kingdom and beIN Sports have exclusive rights to air the season in various countries, including the United States, Canada, MENA, France and the Middle East.[59] KBSN Sports have the exclusive television broadcasting rights in South Korea except internet broadcasting.[60]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "La Liga Statistics – 2015–16". ESPN FC. Entertainment and Sports Programming Network (ESPN). Retrieved 26 September 2015.
  2. http://www.mundodeportivo.com/futbol/la-liga-bbva/20160514/401793583944/campeones-a-lo-grande.html
  3. "Segunda División:Season Rules". scoresway.com. Retrieved 22 March 2015.
  4. "Official statement". LFP.es. 5 June 2015.
  5. "Javier Tebas: "We are certain the Royal Decree will soon be signed"". LFP.es. 25 March 2015.
  6. "A Primera por la puerta grande". MARCA.com. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
  7. "Real Madrid sack Carlo Ancelotti; Rafael Benitez tipped to take over". BBC. 25 May 2015.
  8. "Rafa Benitez named new coach of Real Madrid". Sky Sports. 3 June 2015. Retrieved 3 June 2015.
  9. "Pablo Franco no entrenará al Getafe la próxima temporada" (in Spanish). LFP.es. 1 June 2015.
  10. "Fran Escriba named new Getafe head coach as Spaniard agrees three-year deal". Daily Mail. 26 June 2015.
  11. "SD Eibar y Gaizka Garitano rescinden el contrato" (in Spanish). SD Eibar. 30 June 2015. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015.
  12. "José Luis Mendilibar nuevo entrenador de SD Eibar" (in Spanish). SD Eibar. 30 June 2015. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015.
  13. "Las Palmas sack Paco Herrera as manager after poor start". ESPN. 19 October 2015.
  14. "Quique Setién toma el mando en la UD Las Palmas" (in Spanish). LFP. 19 October 2015.
  15. "Lucas Alcaraz says goodbye at Levante training ground". As. 26 October 2015. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  16. "David Moyes sacked by Real Sociedad after a year in charge". the Guardian.
  17. "Nuno Espírito Santo resigns as Valencia coach after defeat by Sevilla". The Guardian. 29 November 2015. Retrieved 29 November 2015.
  18. "VCF Official Statement Gary Neville".
  19. "Galca nuevo entrenador del RCD Espanyol".
  20. 1 2 "Zinedine Zidane replaces Rafael Benitez as Real Madrid coach".
  21. "Betis part company with coach Pepe Mel". LFP.es. 10 January 2016.
  22. "José Ramón Sandoval and Granada CF part company". LFP.es. 22 February 2016.
  23. "José González replaces José Ramón Sandoval as Granada coach". ESPN. 22 February 2016.
  24. 1 2 "Valencia give Gary Neville the chop". Marca. 30 March 2016. Retrieved 30 March 2016.
  25. "Fran Escribá deja de ser entrenador del Getafe" (in Spanish). Marca. 11 April 2016.
  26. "Gustavo Poyet named new Betis coach". LFP.es. 9 May 2016.
  27. "Barcelona wins La Liga title". Goal.com. 14 May 2016. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  28. "Cristiano Ronaldo scored twice as Real Madrid beat Deportivo La Coruna, but it was not enough to deny Barcelona the Spanish title". BBC. 14 May 2016. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  29. "Levante relegated after 3-1 defeat at Malaga". Eurosport. 2 May 2016. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  30. "Sporting Gijón escape drop as Getafe, Rayo Vallecano go down". As. 15 May 2016. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  31. "RFEF". actas.rfef.es.
  32. "Partido R. Betis – Getafe en directo, en vivo. Temporada 2015/2016 - Liga de Fútbol Profesional". Liga de Fútbol Profesional. Archived from the original on 21 May 2016. Retrieved 19 May 2016.
  33. "2015–16 La Liga top goalscorers". ESPN FC. Entertainment and Sports Programming Network. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
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  51. Eusebio Sacristan named Liga BBVA Manager of the Month for February; LFP.es, 4 March 2016
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