2017–18 Estonian Cup
The 2017–18 Estonian Cup was the 28th season of the Estonian main domestic football knockout tournament. FCI Levadia won their ninth title after defeating Flora in the final.
Country | Estonia |
---|---|
Teams | 98 |
Champions | FCI Levadia (9th title) |
Runners-up | Flora |
← 2016–17 2018–19 → |
The winner of the Cup were to qualify for the first qualifying round of the 2018–19 UEFA Europa League, but as FCI Levadia were already qualified the spot passed to Narva Trans.
First Round (1/64)
The draw was made by Estonian Football Association on 27 May 2017.[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 |
---|---|---|
10 June | ||
Viimsi JK II (4) | 0–13 | Nõmme Kalju FC (1) |
11 June | ||
JK Piraaja Tallinn (4) | 1–2 | FC Maardu Aliens (6) |
15 June | ||
Tallinna FC Soccernet (6) | 1–3 | Kohtla-Nõmme (RL) |
20 June | ||
FC Jõgeva Wolves II (6) | 3–2 | JK Õismäe Torm (RL) |
Pirita JK Reliikvia (5) | 1–5 | Rakvere JK Tarvas (2) |
FC Flora U21 (2) | 10–0 | Rumori Calcio II (RL) |
Anija JK (6) | 7–0 | FC Puhkus Mehhikos (RL) |
21 June | ||
JK Väätsa Vald (5) | 0–1 | SK Tääksi (5) |
Tallinna FC TransferWise (6) | 2–0 | FC Tallinna Wolves (RL) |
Raplamaa JK (4) | 0–1 | Tartu JK Welco (2) |
FC Otepää (4) | 6–0 | Tallinna JK Jalgpallihaigla (6) |
JK Kernu Kadakas (5) | 7–2 | JK Raudteetöölised (RL) |
Paide Linnameeskond (1) | 27–0 | FC Hiiu United (RL) |
Navi Vutiselts (5) | 2–2 (a.e.t.) (2–4 p) |
Kuusalu JK Rada (5) |
FC Kose (5) | 1–10 | Raasiku FC Joker (3) |
FC Flora U19 (4) | 5–0 | FC Vastseliina (5) |
Rakvere JK Tarvas II (6) | 0–7 | Kohtla-Järve JK Järve (3) |
FC Tartu (5) | 3–1 | Tallinna FC Eston Villa (5) |
Kadrina SK Moe (6) | 4–1 | Põlva FC Lootos (6) |
FCP Pärnu (6) | 1–4 | Türi Ganvix JK (4) |
NPM Silmet (RL) | 2–0 | Maarjamäe FC Igiliikur (6) |
Tartu Ülikool Fauna (5) | 1–0 | Viimsi Lõvid (RL) |
Saue JK Laagri (4) | 10–2 | Rasmus Värki Jalgpallikool (RL) |
Lihula JK (5) | 7–1 | FC Elbato (RL) |
Tartu JK Tammeka U21 (3) | 6–1 | Tallinna FC Olympic Olybet (6) |
Jõgeva SK Noorus-96 (4) | 4–1 (a.e.t.) | SK Imavere (4) |
22 June | ||
FC Ararat Tallinn (4) | 5–3 (a.e.t.) | Tallinna FC Zapoos (6) |
Paide Linnameeskond III (5) | 12–1 | Pärnu JK Poseidon II (6) |
FCI Tallinn (1) | 7–0 | FCI Tallinn U21 (2) |
FC Levadia Tallinn (1) | 3–0 | FC Nõmme United (4) |
JK Narva Trans (1) | 6–1 | Maardu Linnameeskond (2) |
FC Jõgeva Wolves (5) | 5–1 | FK Odratakkel (RL) |
28 June | ||
FC Järva-Jaani (5) | 18–2 | JK 32.KK (RL) |
17 July | ||
FC Flora (1) | 17–1 | Tartu FC Helios (5) |
Byes
These teams were not drawn and secured a place in the second round without playing:
- Meistriliiga (Level 1): JK Sillamäe Kalev, Tartu JK Tammeka, Pärnu JK Vaprus, Viljandi JK Tulevik
- Esiliiga (2): FC Santos Tartu, JK Tallinna Kalev, FC Kuressaare, FC Elva
- Esiliiga B (3): Viimsi JK
- II Liiga (4): Tallinna FC Levadia III, Tallinna JK Legion, Maardu United, Kohtla-Järve JK Järve II, Narva United FC
- III Liiga (5): Põhja-Tallinna JK Volta, JK Tallinna Kalev III, Rumori Calcio Tallinn, Suure-Jaani United, Koeru JK, Ambla Vallameeskond, JK Loo, Pärnu JK Poseidon, Tallinna FC Castovanni Eagles, FC Zenit Tallinn, Läänemaa JK, FC Lelle
- IV Liiga (6): Tallinna Depoo, Kohila Püsivus, FC Warrior Valga
- Rahvaliiga (RL): JK Rapla Lokomotiiv
Second round (1/32)
The draw for the second round was made on 28 June 2017.[3]
Home team | Score[2] | Away team |
---|---|---|
16 July | ||
FC Kuressaare (2) | 12–0 | Kadrina SK Moe (6) |
18 July | ||
Kohtla-Järve JK Järve II (4) | 0–8 | FC Flora U21 (2) |
JK Tallinna Kalev (2) | c | Rakvere JK Tarvas (2) |
19 July | ||
FC Flora U19 (4) | 0–1 | Tartu JK Welco (2) |
23 July | ||
FC Maardu Aliens (6) | 6–1 | SK Tääksi (5) |
Maardu United (4) | 10–0 | Valga FC Warrior (6) |
FC Jõgeva Wolves II (6) | 0–3 | Kohila Püsivus (6) |
Tallinna FC TransferWise (6) | 3–2 (a.e.t.) | Tartu Ülikool Fauna (5) |
FC Lelle (5) | 2–2 (a.e.t.) (4–2 p) |
Kohtla-Nõmme (RL) |
24 July | ||
Tallinna FC Castovanni Eagles (5) | 0–4 | FCI Tallinn (1) |
JK Kernu Kadakas (5) | 2–1 | JK Rapla Lokomotiv (RL) |
Kuusalu JK Rada (5) | 2–1 (a.e.t.) | JK Loo (5) |
Viimsi JK (3) | 6–1 | FC Jõgeva Wolves (5) |
Türi Ganvix JK (4) | 12–1 | Tallinna Depoo (6) |
25 July | ||
JK Sillamäe Kalev (1) | 1–2 (a.e.t.) | FC Levadia Tallinn (1) |
Anija JK (6) | 5–1 | Lihula JK (5) |
FC Järva-Jaani (5) | 1–4 | Põhja-Tallinna JK Volta (5) |
Tallinna FC Levadia III (4) | 3–0 | Tallinna JK Legion (4) |
FC Zenit Tallinn (5) | 5–2 | FC Otepää (4) |
FC Elva (2) | 8–0 | Tallinna FC Ararat TTÜ (4) |
Paide Linnameeskond (1) | 7–3 | Jõgeva SK Noorus-96 (4) |
JK Tallinna Kalev III (5) | 1–5 | FC Tartu (5) |
26 July | ||
Narva United FC (4) | 2–1 | Pärnu JK Vaprus (1) |
Pärnu JK Poseidon (5) | 2–0 | Raasiku FC Joker (3) |
FC Santos Tartu (2) | 0–3 | Paide Linnameeskond III (5) |
Ambla Vallameeskond (5) | 1–4 | Läänemaa JK (5) |
Koeru JK (5) | 0–1 | Nõmme Kalju FC (1) |
Rumori Calcio Tallinn (5) | 6–0 | NPM Silmet (RL) |
JK Narva Trans (1) | 8–0 | Suure-Jaani United (5) |
27 July | ||
Kohtla-Järve JK Järve (3) | w/o | Saue JK Laagri (4) |
1 August | ||
Viljandi JK Tulevik (1) | 1–0 | Tartu JK Tammeka (1) |
2 August | ||
Tartu JK Tammeka U21 (3) | 0–7 | FC Flora (1) |
Third round (1/16)
The draw for the third round was made on 27 July 2017.[4]
Home team | Score[2] | Away team |
---|---|---|
6 August | ||
FC Kuressaare (2) | 9–1 | Kuusalu JK Rada (5) |
8 August | ||
FC Levadia Tallinn (1) | 3–1 | Paide Linnameeskond (1) |
Maardu United (4) | 3–3 (a.e.t.) (4–3 p) |
Tallinna FC TransferWise (6) |
JK Narva Trans (1) | 9–2 | Tallinna FC Levadia III (4) |
FCI Tallinn (1) | 16–0 | Anija JK (6) |
Narva United FC (4) | 0–8 | FC Flora (1) |
Kohila Püsivus (6) | 0–8 | Viljandi JK Tulevik (1) |
9 August | ||
Viimsi JK (3) | 0–2 | FC Flora U21 (2) |
Rakvere JK Tarvas (2) | 4–0 | Pärnu JK Poseidon (5) |
Nõmme Kalju FC (1) | 8–0 | FC Lelle (5) |
Läänemaa JK (5) | 2–1 | Türi Ganvix JK (4) |
Põhja-Tallinna JK Volta (5) | 5–1 | FC Zenit Tallinn (5) |
Paide Linnameeskond III (5) | 11–0 | FC Tartu (5) |
Rumori Calcio Tallinn (5) | 3–2 | JK Kernu Kadakas (5) |
30 August | ||
Kohtla-Järve JK Järve (3) | 5–0 | Tartu JK Welco (2) |
FC Maardu Aliens (6) | 0–3 | FC Elva (2) |
Fourth round (1/8)
The draw for the fourth round was made on 17 August 2017.[5]
Home team | Score[2] | Away team |
---|---|---|
19 September | ||
Läänemaa JK (5) | 1–7 | FCI Tallinn (1) |
FC Flora (1) | 2–0 | FC Elva (2) |
20 September | ||
Tallinna FC Levadia (1) | 7–0 | Kohtla-Järve JK Järve (3) |
Viljandi JK Tulevik (1) | w/o | Maardu United (4) |
Nõmme Kalju FC (1) | 1–1 (a.e.t.) (5–4 p) |
Paide Linnameeskond III (5) |
Põhja-Tallinna JK Volta (5) | 0–3 | FC Flora U21 (2) |
Rumori Calcio Tallinn (5) | 0–6 | FC Kuressaare (2) |
27 September | ||
JK Narva Trans (1) | 2–0 (a.e.t.) | Rakvere JK Tarvas (2) |
Quarter-finals
The draw was made on 22 February 2018. At the end of the 2017 league season Levadia and FCI Tallinn merged. The second reserve team of FCI Tallinn, playing in the fourth league, inherited the club's name and cup entry.[6]
17 April 2018 | Nõmme Kalju (1) | 0–1 | FCI Levadia (1) | Tallinn |
18:00 (UTC+3) | Report | Morozov 9' | Stadium: Hiiu Stadium Referee: Kristo Külljastinen |
17 April 2018 | Narva Trans (1) | 6–0 | FCI Tallinn (4) | Narva |
19:00 (UTC+3) |
|
Report | Stadium: Narva Kalev-Fama staadion Referee: Martti Pukk |
18 April 2018 | Kuressaare (1) | 0–7 | Flora (1) | Kuressaare |
18:00 (UTC+3) | Report |
|
Stadium: Kuressaare kunstmurustaadion Referee: Tomi Rahula |
18 April 2018 | Flora U21 (2) | 7–3 | Viljandi Tulevik (1) | Tallinn |
19:00 (UTC+3) |
|
Report |
|
Stadium: Sportland Arena Referee: Karl Koppel |
Semi-finals
The draw was made on 19 April 2018.[7]
8 May 2018 | Narva Trans (1) | 0–5 | FCI Levadia (1) | Narva |
18:00 (UTC+3) | Report | Stadium: Kreenholmi Stadium Referee: Joonas Jaanovits |
Final
Final was played on 19 May 2018 at A. Le Coq Arena.[7]
19 May 2018 | FCI Levadia (1) | 1–0 | Flora (1) | Tallinn |
16:00 (UTC+3) | Debelko 67' | Report | Stadium: A. Le Coq Arena Attendance: 2369 Referee: Kristo Tohver |
See also
References
- "VIDEO: Karikavõistlustel selgusid avaringi paarid". EFA. Retrieved 28 May 2017.
- "Tipneri karikavõistlused". Estonian Football Association. Retrieved 28 May 2017.
- "Tipneri karikavõistlustel loositi kokku mitmed Premium liiga meeskonnad". EFA. Retrieved 28 June 2017.
- "Karikaloos viis kokku Levadia ja Paide". soccernet.ee. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- "Tipneri karikavõistlustel Premium liiga meeskonnad kokku ei saanud". EFA. Retrieved 19 August 2017.
- "Karikavõistluste loos viis kokku Kalju – FCI Levadia". Estonian Football Association. Retrieved 22 February 2018.
- "Karikavõistlustel loositi poolfinaalpaarid". Estonian Football Association. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
External links
- Official website (in Estonian)