2015–16 La Liga

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] Barcelona, Real Madrid and Atlético Madrid were engaged in an intense title race, with the three teams finishing with 91, 90 and 88 points respectively.

La Liga
Season2015–16
Dates21 August 2015 – 15 May 2016
ChampionsBarcelona
24th title
RelegatedRayo Vallecano
Getafe
Levante
Champions LeagueBarcelona
Real Madrid
Atlético Madrid
Villarreal
Sevilla (as Europa League winners)
Europa LeagueAthletic Bilbao
Celta Vigo
Matches played380
Goals scored1,043 (2.74 per match)
Top goalscorerLuis Suárez
(40 goals)
Best goalkeeperJan Oblak
(0.47 goals per match)
Biggest home winReal Madrid 10–2 Rayo Vallecano
(20 December 2015)
Biggest away winDeportivo La Coruña 0–8 Barcelona
(20 April 2016)
Highest scoringReal Madrid 10–2 Rayo Vallecano
(20 December 2015)
Longest winning run12 matches[1]
Barcelona
Real Madrid
Longest unbeaten run23 matches[1]
Barcelona
Longest winless run13 matches[1]
Deportivo La Coruña
Getafe
Longest losing run7 matches[1]
Getafe
Highest attendance98,902
Barcelona 1–2 Real Madrid
(2 April 2016)[1]
Lowest attendance4,215
Eibar 5–1 Granada
(18 January 2016)[1]
Total attendance10,554,764[1]
Average attendance27,775[1]

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.

Teamsedit

Promotion and relegation (pre-season)edit

A total of twenty teams contested the league, including seventeen 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 Gijón, and the winners of the play-offs, Las Palmas.[3]

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

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

On 7 June 2015, Sporting Gijón secured promotion on the final matchday, after their 3–0 win against Betis allowed the club to leapfrog Girona, who drew their final match and could not retain second place and automatic promotion. Sporting returned to the top level after three years.

Las Palmas achieved promotion on 21 June 2015, after defeating Zaragoza in the promotion play-off final on away goals. Las Palmas won the second 2–0 leg at home after losing the first leg away 3–1, and returned to the first division after thirteen years away. They also became the first island team to play in La Liga since Mallorca's relegation from the top flight in the 2012–13 season. During those thirteen seasons, the club spent two of them in the third-tier Segunda División B.

Stadiums and locationsedit

Location of teams in 2015–16 La Liga (Canary Islands)
TeamLocationStadiumCapacity
Athletic BilbaoBilbaoSan Mamés53,289
Atlético MadridMadridVicente Calderón54,907
BarcelonaBarcelonaCamp Nou99,354
Celta VigoVigoBalaídos30,000
Deportivo La CoruñaA CoruñaRiazor34,600
EibarEibarIpurua6,267
EspanyolBarcelonaRCDE Stadium40,500
GetafeGetafeColiseum Alfonso Pérez17,393
GranadaGranadaNuevo Los Cármenes23,156
Las PalmasLas PalmasGran Canaria32,150
LevanteValenciaCiutat de València26,354
MálagaMálagaLa Rosaleda30,044
Rayo VallecanoMadridVallecas14,708
Real BetisSevilleBenito Villamarín52,500
Real MadridMadridSantiago Bernabéu85,454
Real SociedadSan SebastiánAnoeta32,076
SevillaSevilleRamón Sánchez Pizjuán42,500
Sporting GijónGijónEl Molinón29,029
ValenciaValenciaMestalla55,000
VillarrealVillarrealEl Madrigal24,890

Personnel and sponsorshipedit

TeamHead CoachCaptainKitShirt sponsor
Athletic Bilbao Ernesto Valverde Carlos GurpeguiNikeKutkabank
Atlético Madrid Diego Simeone GabiNikePlus500, Azerbaijan Land of Fire1, Huawei2
Barcelona Luis Enrique Andrés IniestaNikeQatar Airways, Beko2, UNICEF4
Celta Vigo Eduardo Berizzo Hugo MalloAdidasCitroën, Estrella Galicia 0,01 3, Abanca3
Deportivo La Coruña Víctor Sánchez Manuel PabloLottoEstrella Galicia 0,0, Abanca1, 西甲欢乐多5
Eibar José Luis Mendilibar Daniel GarcíaPumaAVIA, Wiko1 3, Eibar Energia Hiria2
Espanyol Constantin Gâlcă Javi LópezJomaPower8/Rastar, Riviera Maya2 3
Getafe Juan Esnáider Pedro LeónJomaTecnocasa Group, Gedesco1
Granada José González Diego MainzJomaSolver Sports Capital, Banco Mare Nostrum1, Coviran1, Caja Rural Granada2
Las Palmas Quique Setién David GarcíaAcerbisGran Canaria, Grupo DISA1, Islas Canarias1/Air Europa1, CajaSur2, BeCordial Hotels & Resorts3, Binter3/Domingo Alonso3, Volkswagen3
Levante Rubi JuanfranNikeEast United/BetEast, Baleària1, Valencia1, BetEast2
Málaga Javi Gracia DudaNikeBenahavis1
Rayo Vallecano Paco Jémez David CobeñoKelmeQbao.com, Halcón Viajes1
Real Betis Gus Poyet Jorge MolinaAdidasUED Sports, Wiko1 3
Real Madrid Zinedine Zidane Sergio RamosAdidasFly Emirates
Real Sociedad Eusebio Sacristán Xabi PrietoAdidasQbao.com, Kutxabank1, Canal+2
Sevilla Unai Emery José Antonio ReyesNew BalanceReale Seguros6, Andalucía1 6, ZTE3 6
Sporting Gijón Abelardo Fernández Alberto LoraKappaGijón, Ternera Asturiana2, Telecable3, Nissan3
Valencia Pako Ayestarán Paco AlcácerAdidasCodere (only in UEFA matches), Gol Televisión/beIN Sports1, Codere2
Villarreal Marcelino Bruno SorianoXtepPamesa Cerámica, Endavant
1. ^ On the back of shirt.
2. ^ On the sleeves.
3. ^ On the shorts.
4. ^ Barcelona made a donation to UNICEF in order to display the charity's logo on the back of the club's kit.
5. ^ Deportivo had a phrase in Chinese characters on the back of its shorts meaning "La Liga is Diverse".
6. ^ Sevilla featured these sponsors only for the 2016 Copa del Rey Final.
7. Additionally, referee kits were now made by Adidas, sponsored by Würth, and Nike had a new match ball, the Ordem LFP.

Managerial changesedit

TeamOutgoing managerManner of
departure
Date of vacancyPosition
in table
Replaced byDate of appointment
Real Madrid Carlo AncelottiSacked25 May 2015[7]Pre-season Rafael Benítez3 June 2015[8]
Getafe Pablo Franco1 June 2015[9] Fran Escribá26 June 2015[10]
Eibar Gaizka GaritanoMutual consent30 June 2015[11] José Luis Mendilibar30 June 2015[12]
Las Palmas Paco HerreraSacked19 October 2015[13]19th Quique Setién19 October 2015[14]
Levante Lucas Alcaraz26 October 2015[15]20th Rubi27 October 2015
Real Sociedad David Moyes9 November 2015[16]16th Eusebio Sacristán9 November 2015
Valencia Nuno Espírito SantoResigned29 November 2015[17]9th Gary Neville2 December 2015[18]
Espanyol Sergio GonzálezSacked14 December 201512th Constantin Gâlcă14 December 2015[19]
Real Madrid Rafael Benítez4 January 2016[20]3rd Zinedine Zidane4 January 2016[20]
Real Betis Pepe Mel10 January 2016[21]15th Juan Merino (caretaker)3 February 2016
Granada José Ramón Sandoval22 February 2016[22]20th José González22 February 2016[23]
Valencia Gary Neville30 March 2016[24]14th Pako Ayestarán30 March 2016[24]
Getafe Fran Escribá11 April 2016[25]19th Juan Esnáider12 April 2016
Real Betis Juan MerinoEnd of caretaker spell9 May 2016[26]14th Gus Poyet9 May 2016

Overviewedit

On 14 May 2016, Barcelona won their second consecutive and 24th overall La Liga title, following a 3–0 win over Granada at the Estadio Nuevo Los Cármenes on the final matchday.[27] Real Madrid finished one point behind Barcelona as runners-up, having gone on a twelve-match win streak to close out the season.[28] Atlético Madrid ended the season three points off the top in third place, having been eliminated from title contention after a loss to Levante on the penultimate matchday.[29]

Levante were the first team to be mathematically relegated to the Segunda División, following a 1–3 loss against Málaga on 2 May 2016.[30] On 15 May 2016, Sporting Gijón ensured they would remain in the top flight after defeating Villarreal 2–0 and taking advantage of Getafe's loss against Real Betis, which saw Getafe relegated from La Liga for the first time in club history. Rayo Vallecano also went down despite winning their final match of the season.[31]

League tableedit

Standingsedit

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification or relegation
1Barcelona (C)38294511229+8391Qualification for the Champions League group stage
2Real Madrid38286411034+7690
3Atlético Madrid3828466318+4588
4Villarreal381810104435+964Qualification for the Champions League play-off round
5Athletic Bilbao38188125845+1362Qualification for the Europa League group stage[a]
6Celta Vigo38179125159−860
7Sevilla381410145150+152Qualification for the Champions League group stage[b]
8Málaga381212143835+348[c]
9Real Sociedad38139164548−348[c]
10Real Betis381112153452−1845
11Las Palmas38128184553−844[d]
12Valencia381111164648−244[d]
13Espanyol38127194074−3443[e]
14Eibar381110174961−1243[e]
15Deportivo La Coruña38818124561−1642
16Granada38109194669−2339[f]
17Sporting Gijón38109194062−2239[f]
18Rayo Vallecano (R)38911185273−2138Relegation to Segunda División
19Getafe (R)3899203767−3036
20Levante (R)3888223770−3332
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) Champions; (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. ^ a b Málaga finished ahead of Real Sociedad on head-to-head record; Málaga 3–1 Real Sociedad, Real Sociedad 1–1 Málaga.
  4. ^ a b Las Palmas finished ahead of Valencia on head-to-head record; Valencia 1–1 Las Palmas, Las Palmas 2–1 Valencia.
  5. ^ a b Espanyol finished ahead of Eibar on head-to-head goal difference; Eibar 2–1 Espanyol, Espanyol 4–2 Eibar.
  6. ^ a b Granada finished ahead of Sporting Gijón on head-to-head record; Granada 2–0 Sporting Gijón, Sporting Gijón 3–3 Granada.

Resultsedit

Home \ AwayATHATMFCBCELRCDEIBESPGETGCFLPALEVMCFRVARBBRMARSOSFCRSGVCFVIL
Athletic Bilbao0–10–12–14–15–22–13–11–12–22–00–01–03–11–20–13–13–03–10–0
Atlético Madrid2–11–22–03–03–11–02–03–01–01–01–01–05–11–13–00–01–02–10–0
Barcelona6–02–16–12–23–15–06–04–02–14–11–05–24–01–24–02–16–01–23–0
Celta Vigo0–10–24–11–13–21–00–02–13–34–31–03–01–11–31–01–12–11–50–0
Deportivo La Coruña2–21–10–82–02–03–00–20–11–32–13–32–22–20–20–01–12–31–11–2
Eibar2–00–20–41–11–12–13–15–10–12–01–21–01–10–22–11–12–01–11–2
Espanyol2–11–30–01–11–04–21–01–11–01–12–02–10–30–60–51–01–21–02–2
Getafe0–10–10–20–10–01–13–11–24–03–01–01–11–01–51–11–11–12–22–0
Granada2–00–20–30–21–11–31–13–23–25–10–02–21–11–20–32–12–01–21–3
Las Palmas0–00–31–22–10–20–24–04–04–10–01–10–11–01–22–02–01–12–10–0
Levante2–22–10–21–21–12–22–13–01–23–20–12–10–11–30–41–10–01–01–0
Málaga0–11–01–22–02–00–01–13–02–24–13–11–10–11–13–10–01–01–20–1
Rayo Vallecano0–30–21–53–01–31–13–02–02–12–03–11–20–22–32–22–22–10–02–1
Real Betis1–30–10–21–11–20–41–32–12–01–01–00–12–21–11–00–01–11–01–1
Real Madrid4–20–10–47–15–04–06–04–11–03–13–00–010–25–03–14–05–13–23–0
Real Sociedad0–00–21–02–31–12–12–31–23–00–11–11–12–12–10–12–00–02–00–2
Sevilla2–00–32–11–21–11–02–05–01–42–03–12–13–22–03–21–22–01–04–2
Sporting Gijón0–22–11–30–11–12–02–41–23–33–10–31–02–21–20–05–12–10–12–0
Valencia0–31–31–10–21–14–02–12–21–01–13–03–02–20–02–20–12–10–10–2
Villarreal3–11–02–21–20–21–13–12–01–00–13–01–02–10–01–00–02–12–01–0
Source: La Liga
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Season statisticsedit

Scoringedit

Top goalscorersedit

Barcelona's Luis Suárez won the Pichichi Trophy, with his 40 goals in the season also enough for the European Golden Shoe.
RankPlayerClubGoals[34][35]
1 Luis SuárezBarcelona40
2 Cristiano RonaldoReal Madrid35
3 Lionel MessiBarcelona26
4 Karim BenzemaReal Madrid24
NeymarBarcelona
6 Antoine GriezmannAtlético Madrid22
7 Aritz AdurizAthletic Bilbao20
8 Gareth BaleReal Madrid19
Rubén CastroReal Betis
10 Borja BastónEibar18

Top assistsedit

RankPlayerClubAssists[36]
1 Lionel MessiBarcelona16
Luis SuárezBarcelona
3 KokeAtlético Madrid14
4 NeymarBarcelona12
5 Cristiano RonaldoReal Madrid11
6 Marco AsensioEspanyol10
Gareth BaleReal Madrid
Toni KroosReal Madrid
Roberto SoldadoVillarreal
10 Jonathan VieraLas Palmas9

Zamora Trophyedit

The Zamora Trophy was awarded by newspaper Marca to the goalkeeper with least goals-to-games ratio. A goalkeeper had to play at least 28 games of 60 or more minutes to be eligible for the trophy.[37]

RankNameClubGoals
Against
MatchesAverage[38]
1 Jan OblakAtlético Madrid18380.47
2 Claudio BravoBarcelona22320.69
3 Alphonse AreolaVillarreal26320.81
4 Keylor NavasReal Madrid28340.82
5 Gorka IraizozAthletic Bilbao37361.03

Hat-tricksedit

PlayerForAgainstResultDateReference
Cristiano Ronaldo5Real MadridEspanyol6–0 (A)12 September 2015Report
Imanol AgirretxeReal SociedadGranada3–0 (A)22 September 2015Report
CharlesMálagaReal Sociedad3–1 (H)3 October 2015Report
Neymar4BarcelonaRayo Vallecano5–2 (H)17 October 2015Report
Kevin GameiroSevillaGetafe5–0 (H)24 October 2015Report
Luis SuárezBarcelonaEibar3–1 (H)25 October 2015Report
Aritz AdurizAthletic BilbaoRayo Vallecano3–0 (A)29 November 2015Report
Antonio SanabriaSporting GijónLas Palmas3–1 (H)6 December 2015Report
Gareth Bale4Real MadridRayo Vallecano10–2 (H)20 December 2015Report
Karim BenzemaReal MadridRayo Vallecano10–2 (H)20 December 2015Report
Lionel MessiBarcelonaGranada4–0 (H)9 January 2016Report
Gareth BaleReal MadridDeportivo La Coruña5–0 (H)9 January 2016Report
Luis SuárezBarcelonaAthletic Bilbao6–0 (H)17 January 2016Report
Antonio SanabriaSporting GijónReal Sociedad5–1 (H)22 January 2016Report
Cristiano RonaldoReal MadridEspanyol6–0 (H)31 January 2016Report Archived 24 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine
Luis SuárezBarcelonaCelta Vigo6–1 (H)14 February 2016Report
Aritz AdurizAthletic BilbaoDeportivo La Coruña4–1 (H)2 March 2016Report
Lionel MessiBarcelonaRayo Vallecano5–1 (A)3 March 2016Report
Cristiano Ronaldo4Real MadridCelta Vigo7–1 (H)5 March 2016Report
Luis Suárez4BarcelonaDeportivo La Coruña8–0 (A)20 April 2016Report
Paco AlcácerValenciaEibar4–0 (H)20 April 2016Report
Youssef El-ArabiGranadaLevante5–1 (H)21 April 2016Report
Luis Suárez4BarcelonaSporting Gijón6–0 (H)23 April 2016Report
Luis SuárezBarcelonaGranada3–0 (A)14 May 2016Report

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

Disciplineedit

[39][40]

Overalledit

Attendancesedit

PosTeamTotalHighLowAverageChange
1Barcelona1,486,76398,90265,53178,251+0.8%
2Real Madrid1,286,43380,14861,56467,707−7.8%
3Atlético Madrid820,81251,93329,73743,201−7.2%
4Athletic Bilbao797,26847,78537,55241,961+3.3%
5Valencia709,32947,21727,87637,333−14.8%
6Real Betis686,70046,06124,87936,142+18.0%1
7Sevilla646,00740,39521,91534,000+9.3%
8Sporting Gijón440,72328,14019,53623,196+20.1%1
9Deportivo La Coruña437,14829,66616,18523,008+8.1%
10Las Palmas402,92228,41415,81921,206+32.4%1
11Málaga401,29228,29013,90921,121−5.1%
12Real Sociedad386,46827,48412,75520,340−8.0%
13Espanyol348,35327,39512,46118,334−1.9%
14Celta Vigo342,27224,51913,58418,014−5.9%
15Villarreal318,57323,45012,84316,767+5.0%
16Granada301,36120,55212,71115,861−3.8%
17Levante259,25822,4249,22513,645−10.6%
18Rayo Vallecano218,30813,7759,30111,490+8.1%
19Getafe138,86112,7724,5327,308−0.7%
20Eibar98,8685,9414,2155,204+8.9%
League total10,527,71998,9024,21527,705+3.6%

Source:[citation needed]
Notes:
1: Team played last season in Segunda División.

La Liga Awardsedit

Seasonaledit

La Liga's governing body, the Liga Nacional de Fútbol Profesional, honoured the competition's best players and coach with the La Liga Awards.[41]

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

Team of the Yearedit

Team of the Year[42]
Goalkeeper Jan Oblak (Atlético Madrid)
Defence Sergio Ramos (Real Madrid) Gerard Piqué (Barça) Diego Godín (Atlético Madrid) Marcelo (Real Madrid)
Midfield

Andrés Iniesta(Barça)

Luka Modrić (Real Madrid) Sergio Busquets (Barça)
Attack Lionel Messi (Barça) Luis Suárez (Barça) Cristiano Ronaldo (Real Madrid)

Monthlyedit

MonthManager of the MonthPlayer of the MonthReference
ManagerClubPlayerClub
September MarcelinoVillarreal NolitoCelta Vigo[43][44]
October Ernesto ValverdeAthletic Bilbao Borja BastónEibar[45][46]
November Diego SimeoneAtlético Madrid NeymarBarcelona[47][48]
December Javi GraciaMálaga Lucas PérezDeportivo La Coruña[49][50]
January Unai EmerySevilla Lionel MessiBarcelona[51][52]
February Eusebio SacristánReal Sociedad MikuRayo Vallecano[53][54]
March Quique SetiénLas Palmas Aritz AdurizAthletic Bilbao[55][56]
April Zinedine ZidaneReal Madrid KokeAtlético Madrid[57][58]
May Luis EnriqueBarcelona Luis SuárezBarcelona[59][60]

Broadcasting rightsedit

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.[61] KBSN Sports have the exclusive television broadcasting rights in South Korea except internet broadcasting.[62]

Referencesedit

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  18. ^ "VCF Official Statement Gary Neville". Valencia CF.
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  32. ^ "RFEF". actas.rfef.es.
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  36. ^ "Assists at ESPN". ESPN FC. Entertainment and Sports Programming Network.
  37. ^ "Trofeo Zamora La Liga Santander - MARCA.com". MARCA.com.
  38. ^ "Trofeo Zamora Liga BBVA". Marca.
  39. ^ "Yellow cards". Archived from the original on 4 May 2016. Retrieved 26 April 2016.
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  42. ^ "The Liga BBVA 2015/16 Team of the Season". Liga de Fútbol Profesional. 1 June 2016. Archived from the original on 18 November 2018. Retrieved 4 June 2016.
  43. ^ Marcelino wins Liga BBVA Manager of the Month for September Archived 12 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine; LFP.es 5 October 2015
  44. ^ : Nolito named liga BBVA player of the month for September Archived 5 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine; LFP.es 1 October 2015
  45. ^ "Ernesto Valverde named Liga BBVA manager of the Month for October". La Liga. 6 November 2015. Archived from the original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  46. ^ Borja Bastón named Liga BBVA Player of the Month for October Archived 8 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine; LFP.es 5 November 2015
  47. ^ Diego Simeone named Liga BBVA Manager of the Month for November Archived 12 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine; LFP.es 8 December 2015
  48. ^ Neymar named Liga BBVA Player of the Month for November Archived 12 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine; LFP.es 8 December 2015
  49. ^ Lucas Pérez, mejor jugador de la Liga BBVA en diciembre; LaLiga.es, 8 January 2016 (in Spanish)
  50. ^ [1]; LaLiga.es, 12 January 2016 (in Spanish)
  51. ^ Unai Emery, Liga BBVA manager of the month for January Archived 13 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine; LFP.es, 12 February 2016
  52. ^ Messi named Liga BBVA Player of the Month for January Archived 1 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine; LFP.es 12 February 2016
  53. ^ Eusebio Sacristan named Liga BBVA Manager of the Month for February Archived 12 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine; LFP.es, 4 March 2016
  54. ^ Miku named Liga BBVA Player of the Month for February Archived 12 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine; LFP.es, 4 March 2016
  55. ^ "Quique Setien named Liga BBVA Manager of the Month for March". LaLiga.es. 1 April 2016. Archived from the original on 13 September 2017. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
  56. ^ "Aduriz named Liga BBVA Player of the Month for March". LaLiga.es. 1 April 2016. Archived from the original on 17 April 2016. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
  57. ^ "Zinedine Zidane named Liga BBVA Manager of the Month for April". LFP.es. 19 May 2016. Archived from the original on 25 July 2017. Retrieved 19 May 2016.
  58. ^ "Koke named Liga BBVA Player of the Month for April". LFP.es. 19 May 2016. Archived from the original on 14 August 2017. Retrieved 19 May 2016.
  59. ^ "Luis Enrique named Liga BBVA Manager of the Month for May". LaLiga.es. 21 May 2016. Archived from the original on 24 June 2016. Retrieved 21 May 2016.
  60. ^ "Luis Suarez named Liga BBVA Player of the Month for May". LaLiga.es. 21 May 2016. Archived from the original on 24 June 2016. Retrieved 21 May 2016.
  61. ^ "Spanish La Liga 2015-16 TV Channels Broadcast, Coverage". Sports Mirchi. Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  62. ^ "프로그램 소개" (in Korean). KBSN.

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