2016–17 Estonian Cup
Country | Estonia |
---|---|
Teams | 101[1] |
Champions | FCI Tallinn (1st title) |
Runners-up | Tartu Tammeka |
← 2015–16 2017–18 → |
The 2016–17 Estonian Cup was the 27th season of the Estonian main domestic football knockout tournament. FCI Tallinn won their first title after defeating Tammeka 2–0 in the final.
The winner of the Cup were to qualify for the 2017–18 UEFA Europa League, but as FCI Tallinn were already qualified for the Champions League as 2016 Meistriliiga champions the spot passed to Flora.
First round[]
The draw was made by Estonian Football Association on 21 May 2016, on the half-time of the 2015–16 final of the same competition.[1]
- League level of the club in the brackets.
- Rahvaliiga RL (people's league) is a league organized by Estonian Football Association, but not part of the main league system.
Home team | Score[2] | Away team |
---|---|---|
31 May | ||
(5) | w/o1 | (4) Tallinna FC Ararat TTÜ |
Kohtla-Järve JK Järve (2) | 3–0 | (RL) |
Pärnu JK Poseidon (5) | 7–0 | (RL) |
Rakvere JK Tarvas (1) | 13–0 | (RL) |
(6) | 0–6 | (2) Tallinna FC Infonet II |
2 June | ||
(6) | 4–0 | (5) |
(6) | w/o2 | (1) JK Sillamäe Kalev |
4 June | ||
(RL) | 0–2 (a.e.t.) | (3) FC Flora U19 |
5 June | ||
Tallinna JK Piraaja (4) | 11–1 | (RL) |
(6) | 8–1 | (RL) |
FC Elva (3) | 13–0 | (RL) |
6 June | ||
Tallinna FC Olympic Olybet (5) | 2–3 (a.e.t.) | (6) |
7 June | ||
(5) | 3–2 | (6) |
FC Jõgeva Wolves (6) | 7–0 | (6) |
Tallinna FC Flora (1) | 11–0 | (RL) |
Tallinna FC Levadia III (4) | 8–0 | (RL) |
(RL) | 0–1 | (4) Keila JK |
(6) | 7–0 | (5) Valga FC Warrior |
(6) | 0–4 | (5) Ambla Vallameeskond |
8 June | ||
(5) | 2–1 | (RL) |
FC Otepää (5) | 1–2 | (4) Narva United FC |
9 June | ||
FC Lelle (5) | 1–6 | (RL) |
FC Nõmme United (4) | 24–0 | (RL) |
(5) | 0–2 | (5) Vastseliina FC Tannem |
12 June | ||
(4) | 0–8 | (1) Nõmme Kalju FC |
15 June | ||
Kuusalu JK Rada (4) | 0–4 | (5) Raplamaa JK |
16 June | ||
Tartu JK Tammeka (1) | 2–0 | (2) Tartu FC Santos |
JK Tallinna Kalev (2) | 14–0 | (RL) |
(5) | 0–6 | (3) Tartu JK Welco |
18 June | ||
Tallinna FC Castovanni Eagles (5) | w/o3 | (RL) |
(5) | 0–4 | (2) Viljandi JK Tulevik |
19 June | ||
(5) | w/o4 | (5) JK Kaitseliit Kalev |
22 June | ||
Tartu FC Merkuur (4) | 6–4 | (5) |
26 June | ||
FC Kuressaare (3) | w/o5 | (5) |
JK Tammeka U21 (3) | 1–4 | (1) Pärnu Linnameeskond |
28 June | ||
Pirita JK Reliikvia (5) | 1–2 | (RL) |
3 July | ||
Tabasalu JK Charma (4) | 1–2 | (2) Maardu Linnameeskond |
- Notes
- Note 1: Tallinna JK Ararat TTÜ withdrew from the competition.
- Note 2: SK Roosu withdrew from the competition.
- Note 3: JK Pedajamäe withdrew from the competition.
- Note 4: JK Kaitseliit Kalev dissolved before the competition.
- Note 5: JK Väätsa Vald withdrew from the competition.
Byes[]
These teams were not drawn and secured a place in the second round without playing:
- Meistriliiga (Level 1): Tallinna FC Infonet, JK Narva Trans, Paide Linnameeskond, Tallinna FC Levadia,
- Esiliiga (2): FC Flora U21
- Esiliiga B (3): Raasiku FC Joker, Viimsi JK
- II Liiga (4): Jõgeva SK Noorus-96, Saue JK Laagri, Jõhvi FC Lokomotiv, Türi Ganvix JK, FC Kose, Viimsi JK II, Kiviõli FC Irbis, Tõrva JK, Tallinna JK Legion,
- III Liiga (5): , Tartu Ülikool Fauna, , SK Imavere Forss, Maardu United, JK Loo, ,
- IV Liiga (6): Tallinna JK Jalgpallihaigla, ,
Second round[]
The draw for the second round was made on 16 June 2016.[3]
Home team | Score[2] | Away team |
---|---|---|
9 July | ||
(5) | 5–0 | (6) Tallinna JK Jalgpallihaigla |
17 July | ||
Tartu JK Welco (3) | 0–8 | (1) Tallinna FC Flora |
20 July | ||
(6) | 1–5 | (3) FC Kuressaare |
24 July | ||
(6) | 0–3 | (5) Tartu Ülikool Fauna |
Ambla Vallameeskond (5) | 2–5 | (4) Tõrva JK |
Jõhvi FC Lokomotiv (4) | 1–1 (a.e.t.) (3–5) p |
(3) Tallinna FC Flora U19 |
Tallinna FC Castovanni Eagles (5) | w/o6 | (5) |
(RL) | w/o7 | (4) SK Imavere Forss |
26 July | ||
(5) | 1–4 | (4) Narva United FC |
Maardu United (5) | 2–10 | (1) JK Sillamäe Kalev |
Rakvere JK Tarvas (1) | 5–1 | (2) Maardu Linnameeskond |
Tallinna FC Infonet (1) | 9–0 | (4) Tallinna JK Piraaja |
2 August | ||
Paide Linnameeskond (1) | 1–0 | (4) FC Nõmme United |
FC Kose (4) | 0–2 | (5) Pärnu JK Poseidon |
Saue JK Laagri (4) | 6–1 | (6) FC Jõgeva Wolves |
Tartu JK Tammeka (1) | 3–0 | (5) |
3 August | ||
(4) | 0–5 | (2) Tallinna FC Infonet II |
(6) | 2–1 | (4) Kiviõli FC Irbis |
Kohtla-Järve JK Järve (2) | w/o | (6) |
Raasiku FC Joker (3) | 4–3 (a.e.t.) | (5) Raplamaa JK |
FC Elva (3) | 2–3 | (2) JK Tallinna Kalev |
Tallinna JK Legion (4) | 1–0 | (4) Türi Ganvix JK |
(RL) | 1–5 | (4) Jõgeva SK Noorus-96 |
4 August | ||
(5) | 5–3 (a.e.t.) | (5) |
7 August | ||
Viljandi JK Tulevik (2) | 13–0 | (5) JK Loo |
8 August | ||
(6) | 1–6 | (3) Viimsi JK |
9 August | ||
Pärnu Linnameeskond (1) | 2–4 | (1) Tallinna FC Levadia |
10 August | ||
(5) | 0–5 | (2) Tallinna FC Flora U21 |
Tartu FC Merkuur (4) | 3–4 (a.e.t.) | (6) |
17 August | ||
(5) | 4–4 (a.e.t.) (5–6) p |
(5) |
Tallinna FC Levadia III (4) | 4–1 | (4) Keila JK |
20 September | ||
JK Narva Trans (1) | 0–2 | (1) Nõmme Kalju FC |
- Notes
- Note 6: EMÜ SK were awarded a win as Castovanni Eagles fielded an unregistered player. The original score was 9–1.
- Note 7: Molycorp Silmet were awarded a win as SK Imavere Forss fielded an unregistered player. The original score was 2–3.
Third round[]
The draw for the third round was made on 11 August 2016.[4]
Home team | Score[2] | Away team |
---|---|---|
24 August | ||
Tartu Ülikool Fauna (5) | 4–6 | (5) |
1 September | ||
Viljandi JK Tulevik (2) | 1–0 | (1) JK Sillamäe Kalev |
Saue JK Laagri (4) | 0–3 | (2) Tallinna FC Infonet II |
4 September | ||
(RL) | 0–2 | (6) |
FC Kuressaare (3) | 3–2 | (4) Tallinna JK Legion |
(6) | 4–3 | (5) |
6 September | ||
(5) | 0–11 | (1) Tallinna FC Infonet |
7 September | ||
JK Tallinna Kalev (2) | 5–0 | (5) |
20 September | ||
Rakvere JK Tarvas (1) | 2–3 | (1) Paide Linnameeskond |
Tallinna FC Levadia III (4) | 1–8 | (1) Tartu JK Tammeka |
21 September | ||
(RL) | 6–5 (a.e.t.) | (3) Tallinna FC Flora U19 |
Kohtla-Järve JK Järve (2) | 0–2 | (2) Tallinna FC Flora U21 |
Narva United FC (4) | 0–0 (a.e.t.) (3–2) p |
(3) Viimsi JK |
27 September | ||
Tallinna FC Levadia (1) | 7–0 | (3) Raasiku FC Joker |
28 September | ||
Tallinna FC Flora (1) | 5–0 | (4) Tõrva JK |
5 October | ||
Nõmme Kalju FC (1) | 10–0 | (5) Pärnu JK Poseidon |
Fourth round[]
The draw for the fourth round was made on 21 September 2016.[5]
Home team | Score[2] | Away team |
---|---|---|
5 October | ||
Tartu JK Tammeka (1) | 5–1 | (6) |
12 October | ||
FC Kuressaare (3) | 5–0 | (6) |
16 October | ||
(5) | 0–5 | (2) Viljandi JK Tulevik |
18 October | ||
Tallinna FC Infonet (1) | 2–1 | (1) Tallinna FC Levadia |
19 October | ||
Nõmme Kalju FC (1) | 1–0 | (1) Tallinna FC Flora |
Tallinna FC Flora U21 (2) | 1–3 | (4) Narva United FC |
Tallinna FC Infonet II (2) | 1–4 | (1) Paide Linnameeskond |
15 November | ||
(RL) | 0–11 | (2) JK Tallinna Kalev |
Quarter-finals[]
The draw was made on 28 February 2017.[6]
11 April 2017 | Viljandi Tulevik (1) | 0–1 (a.e.t.) | Tartu Tammeka (1) | Viljandi |
18:00 (UTC+3) | Report | 120' | Stadium: Viljandi kunstmuruväljak Attendance: 160 Referee: Miko Pupart |
11 April 2017 | Tallinna Kalev (2) | 0–3 | Paide Linnameeskond (1) | Tallinn |
19:00 (UTC+3) | Report |
|
Stadium: Kalevi Keskstaadion Attendance: 88 Referee: Tomi Rahula |
12 April 2017 | Nõmme Kalju (1) | 1–1 (a.e.t.) (3–5 p) | FCI Tallinn (1) | Tallinn |
18:00 (UTC+3) |
|
Report |
|
Stadium: Hiiu Stadium Attendance: 206 Referee: Kristo Tohver |
Penalties | ||||
|
12 April 2017 | Narva United (4) | 3–1 | Kuressaare (2) | Narva |
19:00 (UTC+3) |
|
Report |
|
Stadium: Narva Fama staadion Attendance: 85 Referee: Toomas Nõmmiste |
Semi-finals[]
The draw was held on 13 April 2017.[7]
9 May 2017 | Tartu Tammeka (1) | 0–0 (a.e.t.) (4–2 p) | Paide Linnameeskond (1) | Tartu |
18:00 (UTC+3) | Report | Stadium: Tamme Stadium Attendance: 306 Referee: Kristo Tohver | ||
Penalties | ||||
10 May 2017 | FCI Tallinn (1) | 2–0 | Narva United (4) | Tallinn |
18:00 (UTC+3) |
|
Report | Stadium: Lasnamäe kunstmurustaadion Attendance: 170 Referee: Siim Rinken |
Final[]
27 May 2017 | FCI Tallinn (1) | 2–0 | Tartu Tammeka (1) | Tallinn |
16:00 (UTC+3) | Report | Stadium: A. Le Coq Arena Attendance: 1871 Referee: Mart Martin[8] |
See also[]
References[]
- ^ a b "Karikavõistlustel loositi uue hooaja avaringi paarid" [Opening round pairs for the new Cup drawn] (in Estonian). Estonian Football Association. 21 May 2016.
- ^ a b c d "KV » MÄNGUD (2016/2017)". Estonian Football Association. Retrieved 21 May 2016.
- ^ "Tipneri karika 1/32-finaalide keskne paar on Trans vs. Kalju". Estonian Football Association. Retrieved 19 June 2016.
- ^ "VIDEO: Karikaloos viis kokku ka Premium liiga klubid" (in Estonian). Estonian Football Association. 12 August 2016. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
- ^ "Karikaloos viis potentsiaalselt kokku mitmed favoriidid". www.jalgpall.ee. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
- ^ "Evald Tipneri nimelises karikasarjas loositi surmapaar". soccernet.ee. 28 February 2017. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
- ^ "Karikavõistluste poolfinaalid". Estonian Football Association. Retrieved 13 April 2017.
- ^ "FIFA Referees News: Estonia : 2017 Estonian Cup Final". 27 May 2017.
External links[]
- Official website (in Estonian)
- Estonian Cup
- 2016 in Estonian football
- 2017 in Estonian football
- 2016–17 European domestic association football cups