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The Danish Cup ( da, Landspokalturneringen; often referred to as Pokalen) is the official "single-elimination tournament, knockout" cup competition in Danish football, run by the Danish Football Association. The cup has been contested annually since 1955. The winner will qualify for the UEFA Europa League tournament the following year, where they (as of the 2009–10 season) will enter in the third qualifying round. The latest edition, 2017-18 Danish Cup, was won by Danish Superliga, Superliga-side Brøndby IF, Brøndby, beating Danish Superliga, Superliga-side Silkeborg IF, Silkeborg 3–1 on 10 May 2018 at Parken Stadium, thereby winning their first domestic trophy since 2007-08 Danish Cup, 2008. The final traditionally takes place on ''Kristi Himmelfarts Dag'' (Feast of the Ascension, The Ascension) and it is always played in the Danish national stadium Parken. However in the 1991 and 1992 seasons the final had been rescheduled to Odense Stadion and Århus Stadion respectively due to the renovation of Parken. Furthermore, in 2011, because Ascension Thursday fell on 2 June and an international match date was already allotted for this date, the Danish Cup final was played two weeks earlier on 22 May, which coincided with the annual Copenhagen Marathon. The club with most final appearances is Aarhus Gymnastikforening, AGF with 12 finals, having won 9 of them. Attention has been brought to the fact that the final on most occasions unpractically is played before the last rounds of the league, which can open up for speculation in the benefit of losing league games at the end of the season especially for the cup runner-up if the winner is heading for the league championship. Recently former AaB player David Nielsen claimed in his autobiography that after losing the cup final in 2004 to FC Copenhagen, he deliberately missed opportunities to score against them when AaB and FC Copenhagen met in the final league match because FCK would win the championship (and thereby the double) and land AaB in the UEFA Cup as losing cup finalists.


Sponsorship

The Danish FA sanctioned nation-wide cup tournament has been sponsored since the 1990. File:blank.png , Giro Cup
(1990 to 1995–96)
Sponsor: Danske Bank, GiroBank File:Compaq Cup logo 1999.svg , Compaq Cup
(1996–97 to 1998–99)
Sponsor: Compaq File:blank.png , DONG Cup
(Spring 2000–2004)
Sponsor: Ørsted (company), DONG File:Ekstra Bladet Cup 2008.svg , Ekstra Bladet Cup
(2008–09 to 2010–11)
Sponsor: Ekstra Bladet File:DBU Pokalen logo.svg , DBU Pokalen
(2011–12 to 2017–18)
No cup sponsor File:blank.png , Sydbank Pokalen
(2018–19 to 2021–22)
Sponsor: Sydbank File:DBU Pokalen logo.svg , Pokalen
(2022–23)
No cup sponsor


Format

Each club may only have one team in the tournament (their first team). If a match (except one of the two-legged semifinals, except if the 2nd match's result gives an Aggregate score, aggregate tie, including the away goals rule) ends in a tie, two fifteen-minute extra time periods will be played, with Penalty shoot-out (association football), penalty kicks if the tie remains after the extra time.


The participants

The teams are not seeded, but the lowest placed team from the previous season will always get the home pitch advantage.


Until 2005/06

*1st round, 64 teams **48 teams qualified through preliminary cups held by the Football in Denmark#The structure of the FA, regional associations. **16 teams from the Danish 2nd Division, 2nd division (all teams) *2nd round, 32+8 teams **32 teams from the 1st round (winners) **8 teams from the Danish 1st Division, 1st division (9th–16th placed) *3rd round, 20+8 teams **20 teams from the 2nd round **6 teams from the 1st division (3rd–8th placed) **2 teams from the Danish Superliga, Superliga (11th–12th, the relegated teams which are now in the 1st division) *4th round, 14+6 teams **14 teams from the 3rd round **4 teams from the Superliga (7th–10th) **2 teams from the 1st division (1st–2nd, the promoted teams which are now in the Superliga) *5th round, 10+6 teams **10 teams from the 4th round **6 teams from the Superliga (1st–6th) *Quarterfinals, 8 teams **8 teams from the 5th round – and so on until the finals.


From 2006/07

*1st round, 88 teams **48 teams qualified through preliminary cups held by the Football in Denmark#The structure of the FA, regional associations. **28 teams from the Danish 2nd Division, 2nd divisions (all teams) **12 teams from the Danish 1st Division, 1st division (5th–16th placed) *2nd round, 44+12 teams **44 teams from the 1st round (winners) **4 teams from the 1st division (1st–4th placed) **8 teams from the Danish Superliga, Superliga (5th–12th placed). *3rd round, 28+4 teams **28 teams from the 2nd round **4 teams from the Superliga (1st–4th placed) *4th round, 16 teams **16 teams from the 3rd round *Quarterfinals, 8 teams **8 teams from the 4th round – and so on until the finals.


From 2021/22

*1st round, 92 teams **4 teams qualified through preliminary cups held by the Football in Denmark#The structure of the FA, regional associations. **12 teams from the Danish 3rd Division, 3rd divisions **12 teams from the Danish 2nd Division, 2nd divisions **12 teams from the Danish 1st Division, 1st division *2nd round, 58+6 teams **44 teams from the 1st round (winners) **6 teams from the Danish Superliga, Superliga (5th–12th placed). *3rd round, 28+4 teams **26 teams from the 2nd round **6 teams from the Superliga (1st–6th placed) *4th round, 16 teams **16 teams from the 3rd round *Quarterfinals, 8 teams **8 teams from the 4th round – and so on until the finals.


Finals


Results by team


Footnotes


References


External links


Page on the website of the DBU


RSSSF.com
Danish Cup summary
SOCCERWAY) {{National football Cups (UEFA region) Danish Cup, Football cup competitions in Denmark, 1 National association football cups, Denmark