2017 Budha Subba Gold Cup

The 2017 Budha Subba Gold Cup is the 19th edition of the Budha Subba Gold Cup held in Dharan and organised by Redbull . 10 teams participated in the tournament. The defending champions Manang Marshyangdi Club did not participate. All matches were held at the ANFA Technical Center Dharan-17.[1] In total, eight teams from Nepal participated in the tournament and were joined by two teams from India. United Sikkim FC from Gangtok, India was also supposed to play in this tournament but had to withdraw due to a "technical problem".[2] It was replaced by Kanchanjunga FC.

2017 Budha Subba Gold Cup
Tournament details
Host countryNepal Nepal
CityDharan
Dates16 February – 25 February 2017
Teams10
Venue(s)ANFA Technical Center Dharan-17
Final positions
ChampionsNepal Nepal Police Club (5th title)
Runners-upNepal Sankata FC
Tournament statistics
Matches played9
Goals scored27 (3 per match)
Top scorer(s)Nepal Ju Manu Rai (4 goals)
Best player(s)Nepal Ju Manu Rai
Best goalkeeperNepalRoshan Khadka
2016
2018

Teams

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Team City
Dharan FC Red Dharan
Dharan FC Yellow Dharan
Karkarvitta Training Center Jhapa Kakarvitta
APF Club Kathmandu
Nepal Police Club Kathmandu
Sankata FC Kathmandu[3]
Pokhara FC Pokhara
Rupandehi FC Rupandehi
Durgapur Steel Calcutta  Calcutta, India
Kanchanjunga FC  Silguri, India

Bracket

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The following is the bracket which the 2017 Budha Subba Gold Cup resembled. Numbers in parentheses next to the match score represent the results of a penalty shoot-out.[1][4][5]

Qualification games Quarter-finals Semifinals Final
APF Club 0
Sankata FC 3 Sankata FC 1[6]
Durgapur Steel Calcutta 2 Sankata FC 2
Rupandehi FC 1
Karkarvitta Training Center Jhapa 1(1)[7]
Rupandehi FC 1(3)
Sankata FC 1(5)
Nepal Police Club 1(6)
Pokhara FC 0
Nepal Police Club 1 (10)[4] Dharan F.C. Red 3
Dharan F.C. (Yellow) 1(9) Dharan F.C. Red 1
Nepal Police Club 3
Kanchanjunga FC 2
Nepal Police Club 3


Awards and prize money

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  • Prize Money for winning team: NPRs 500,000 (Nepal Police Club)
  • Prize Money for runners-up: NPRs 250,000 (Sankata FC)
  • Highest Goal Scorer Award: Ju Manu Rai and Anil Gurung (both Sankata FC) They each get NPRs 12,500 as prize money.
  • Best Coach Award: Kumar Katuwal (Nepal Police Club) Prize money: NPRs 15,000
  • Best Striker of the Tournament Award: Ju Manu Rai (Nepal Police Club) Prize money: NPRs 15,000
  • Best Midfielder of the Tournament Award: Heman Gurung (Dharan F.C.) Prize money: NPRs 15,000
  • Best Defender of the Tournament Award: Bikram Dhimal (Nepal Police Club) Prize money: NPRs 15,000
  • Best Goalkeeper of the Tournament Award: Roshan Khadka (Nepal Police Club) Prize money: NPRs 15,000
  • Rising Player of the Tournament Award: Rajin Subba (Dharan F.C.) Prize money: NPRs 10,000

[8]

References

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  1. ^ a b "19th Budha Subba Gold Cup". GoalNepal. Retrieved 10 October 2017.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ "Kanchanjunga FC vs Nepal Police Club". GoalNepal. Retrieved 10 October 2017.
  3. ^ "Sankata Club (SC)". GoalNepal. Archived from the original on 17 October 2017. Retrieved 10 October 2017.
  4. ^ a b "Police shoot Dharan FC out". The Kathmandu Post. Retrieved 10 October 2017.
  5. ^ "Budha Subba Gold Cup: NPC pip Sankata for trophy". The Kathmandu Post. Retrieved 10 October 2017.
  6. ^ "Sankata edge APF to reach semis". The Kathmandu Post. Retrieved 10 October 2017.
  7. ^ "Kakarvitta Vs Rupandehi". GoalNepal. Archived from the original on 21 October 2017. Retrieved 10 October 2017.
  8. ^ "Sankata Club vs Nepal Police Club". GoalNepal. Archived from the original on 21 October 2017. Retrieved 20 October 2017.