Serbian Cup


The Serbian Cup is the national football cup of Serbia. The winner of the competition gets a spot in the UEFA Europa League qualifying round.
From 2006 to 2010, the competition was known as the Lav Cup for sponsorship reasons.

History

Serbia's cup tournament is the legal successor to the Serbia and Montenegro Cup and in turn of the Yugoslav Cup. This cup tournament lasted for four seasons up until the dissolution of the state union of Serbia and Montenegro in 2006. The tournament was dominated by Serbian clubs with no Montenegrin sides reaching the final. Belgrade giants Red Star were easily the most successful club reaching the final all four years winning twice and losing in the final the other two seasons. Surprisingly, Red Star's cross-town rival Partizan did not appear in a single final.
After Montenegro left the state union with Serbia in 2006 both football associations got to work on organizing a new tournament.

Trophy

Before the tournament even began it was decided that Serbia's cup would have a new trophy and that the old one which was won by Red Star the year before would remain in its museum. However the association decided that the championship trophy would remain the same. To find a new trophy for the cup they decided to make a contest at Belgrade's Art College where students would each make one and then a trophy would be selected. The Serbian Football Association officials presented the new trophy of the National Cup competition on Monday December 11, 2006. Artist Mihajlo Mlinar defeated 50 other students in the contest held at Belgrade's Art College. The trophy which is heavily inspired by Eastern Orthodox Christianity as well as Serbian history was proclaimed as the perfect trophy for the biggest football competition in Serbia.
When the press asked Mlinar which club has his support, the 25-year-old answered that he simply never had a day of football training and that his only favorite is Serbia. Everybody present agreed that the student was the perfect candidate for making the trophy, and that he fully deserved the cash prize of 250,000 Serbian Dinars. Mlinar immediately became one of the most recognized faces across Belgrade. On May 15, 2007 at Partizan's stadium Red Star defeated Vojvodina to be the first ever Serbian Cup winner and the first team to lift the trophy that Mlinar created.

Sponsorship

In 2006, Serbian FA agreed the marketing rights with Carlsberg Srbija, previously known as Pivara Čelarevo, and the competition was named after its main brand Lav pivo. The Carlsberg affiliate signed a deal to support the Serbian Cup for four years. The company will take out a sum of €1,000,000 which will be divided in four for every year of competition. That means that the awards annual budget is going to be €250,000. Along with the rewards from endorsements the winner of the Serbian Cup gets a spot in the UEFA Europa League if they are not already qualified through Serbian SuperLiga.
PeriodSponsorName
2006–2010 Lav pivoLav Cup

Cup winners

Note: The Serbian Cup has been derived from two defunct cup tournaments the first being the Yugoslav Cup and the other being the Serbia and Montenegro Cup. The 2006–07 season was the first one that Serbia has ever held as an independent football association. For a list of previous Serbian cup winners during those tournaments visit their respective pages.

Key

Result

SeasonWinnerScoreRunner-upLocationVenueAttendance
2006–07Red Star 2–0VojvodinaBelgradePartizan Stadium25,000
2007–08Partizan 3–0ZemunBelgradePartizan Stadium13,950
2008–09Partizan 3–0SevojnoBelgradePartizan Stadium13,434
2009–10Red Star3–0VojvodinaBelgradePartizan Stadium23,000
2010–11Partizan 3–0 1VojvodinaBelgradeRed Star Stadium25,000
2011–12Red Star2–0Borac ČačakKruševacMladost Stadium11,000
2012–13Jagodina1–0VojvodinaBelgradePartizan Stadium15,000
2013–14Vojvodina2–0JagodinaBelgradePartizan Stadium8,000
2014–15Čukarički1–0PartizanBelgradeRajko Mitić Stadium10,000
2015–16Partizan2–0Javor IvanjicaGornji MilanovacMetalac Stadium4,500
2016–17Partizan 1–0Red StarBelgradePartizan Stadium20,000
2017–18Partizan2–1Mladost LučaniSurdulicaSurdulica City Stadium3,500
2018–19Partizan1–0Red StarBelgradeRajko Mitić Stadium20,000
2019–20Vojvodina2–2 PartizanNišČair Stadium5,000

Performance by club

Semi-finals