2021–22 FC Barcelona season

Barcelona
2021–22 season
PresidentJoan Laporta
Head coachRonald Koeman
(until 28 October)
Sergi Barjuán
(interim, from 28 October to 7 November)
Xavi
(from 8 November)
StadiumCamp Nou
La Liga2nd
Copa del ReyRound of 16
Supercopa de EspañaSemi-finals
UEFA Champions LeagueGroup stage
UEFA Europa LeagueQuarter-finals
Top goalscorerLeague:
Memphis Depay (12)

All:
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang
Memphis Depay
(13 each)
Highest home attendance86,422 vs Real Madrid
(24 October 2021)
Lowest home attendance20,384 vs Real Sociedad
(15 August 2021)
Biggest winBarcelona 4–0 Athletic Bilbao
Barcelona 4–0 Osasuna
Real Madrid 0–4 Barcelona
Biggest defeatBarcelona 0–3 Bayern Munich
Benfica 3–0 Barcelona
Bayern Munich 3–0 Barcelona

The 2021–22 season was the 122nd season in the existence of Futbol Club Barcelona and its 91st consecutive season in the top flight of Spanish football. In addition to the domestic league, Barcelona participated in this season's editions of the Copa del Rey, the Supercopa de España, the UEFA Champions League, and the UEFA Europa League, entering the latter competition for the first time since 2003–04. This was also the first season since 2003–04 not to feature Lionel Messi, who transferred to Paris Saint-Germain after his contract expired.

The season was a tumultuous one, as Barcelona's economic problems forced the departure of Messi and Griezmann, in addition to not being able to replace them with quality players. Barcelona finished third in their Champions League group and failed to reach the knockout stages for the first time since 2003, when it competed in the UEFA Cup after a disastrous domestic campaign the previous season. Furthermore, poor domestic form saw Barça drop as low as ninth in the league by late October, which triggered head coach Ronald Koeman's sacking. He was replaced by a club legend Xavi, who managed to reverse the team's fortunes with new winter signings Ferran Torres and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang. The team's highlight of the season was the 4–0 thrashing of Real Madrid at the Bernabéu, which helped propel them to the second place in the standings, one they never relinquished for the rest of the campaign. However, April saw Barcelona get knocked out of the Europa League by Eintracht Frankfurt. Coupled with several league stumbles in April and May, in addition to earlier defeats in the Supercopa de España and Copa del Rey, Barça ended up trophyless, never managing to catch up with runaway leaders Real Madrid.

Kits[edit]

Home (Domestic)
Home (European)
Away
Away alt.
Third (2019–20 fourth)0
Goalkeeper 1
Goalkeeper 2
Goalkeeper 3

Kit information[edit]

This was the final season of Rakuten as Barcelona's main sponsor shirt before replaced by Spotify next season.

  • Home: The home kit featured unusual design, instead of blue and red stripes, or halves, or any of the variations used in recent years, the new Barcelona home kit took the graphics from the club crest and applies to the entire front. The shorts were also very unusual, featuring half blue and half red sides together with two blue and red hoops socks. The home kit was used for La Liga and Copa del Rey matches.
  • Home (European): Barcelona also released the home kit for European matches. The kit features traditional Barcelona stripes with illustrations that highlighted landmarks of various Barcelona neighborhoods inside the stripes (these include, among others, the three chimneys of Poble Sec or the original La Masia, which is located next to the Camp Nou). The blue shorts and navy socks completed the set.
  • Away: The away kit was purple with a shiny iridescent logo and with the blue and red stripes on the sides, purple shorts with blue and red stripes and purple socks completing the set.
  • Third: Barcelona continued to use their 2019–20 Senyera fourth kit for the third season in a row. This time, it was featured on a more regular basis compared to the previous seasons, and in fact served as a third kit due to the absence of a new third kit with contrasting colors.

Season overview[edit]

May[edit]

On 31 May, Barcelona announced the signing of Sergio Agüero from Manchester City on a free transfer.[1]

June[edit]

On 1 June, Barcelona announced the signing of Eric García from Manchester City on a free transfer.[2]

On 2 June, Barcelona announced the signing of Emerson Royal from Real Betis. Barça had informed Betis that they would exercise their option to bring back Emerson after his two-year long loan spell with the Verdiblancos.[3]

On 19 June, Barcelona announced the signing of Memphis Depay from Olympique Lyonnais on a free transfer.[4]

On 27 June, OGC Nice activated their option to buy Jean-Clair Todibo permanently from his loan spell for €8.5 million plus €7 million in variables.[5]

On 29 June, Barcelona and Olympique de Marseille reached an agreement for the transfer of Konrad de la Fuente for €3 million. Barça will also receive a percentage of any future transfer fee.[6] Barça also terminated the contract of Matheus Fernandes.[7]

July[edit]

On 1 July, Lionel Messi's contract expired amidst negotiations to sign a new contract, effectively making Messi a free agent.[8]

On 4 July, Barcelona and Wolverhampton Wanderers reached an agreement for the loan of Francisco Trincão for the rest of the season with an option to buy for €29 million.[9]

On 6 July, Barcelona and Leeds United reached an agreement for the transfer of Junior Firpo for a fee of €15 million.[10]

On 7 July, UD Almería triggered Sergio Akieme's buy option for €3.5 million, with Barcelona reserving a right to 10% of any future sale and a right to first refusal.[11]

On 9 July, Barcelona and SK Rapid Wien reached an agreement over the loan of Yusuf Demir, with Barça receiving an option to buy for €10 million.[12]

On 10 July, Barcelona and Getafe reached an agreement for the transfer of Carles Aleñá.[13]

On 17 July, Monchu joined Granada CF on a free deal following the expiration of his contract, with Barça reserving a right to 50% of any future sale, and a right to first refusal with a buyback option.[14]

August[edit]

Despite reaching an agreement with Messi and having planned to sign a contract on 5 August, the club announced that Messi would not stay at the club due to financial and structural obstacles posed by La Liga regulations.[15][16] He subsequently joined Paris Saint-Germain on 10 August.[17]

On 15 August, Barcelona defeated Real Sociedad 4–2 at home. Goals from Gerard Piqué, Sergi Roberto and a brace from Martin Braithwaite ensured victory in their first La Liga match of the season.[18]

On 21 August, Barcelona drew with Athletic Bilbao away at San Mamés in the second match of the season. Iñigo Martínez scored for Athletic Club, and Memphis Depay scored his first official goal for Barça to end the match 1–1.[19]

On 29 August, Barcelona defeated Getafe 2–1 at home, thanks to goals from Sergi Roberto and Memphis Depay.[20]

On 31 August, Barcelona reached an agreement with RB Leipzig for the transfer of Ilaix Moriba for €16 million with €6 million in add-ons;[21] reached an agreement with Spezia for the loan of Rey Manaj for a fee of €300,000 with an option to buy for €2.7 million at the end of the season;[22] reached an agreement with Tottenham Hotspur for the transfer of Emerson Royal for €25 million;[23] and reached an agreement with Atlético Madrid for the loan of Antoine Griezmann for a reported fee of €10 million with a mandatory buy option of €40 million.[24] Barça also announced the signing of Luuk de Jong from Sevilla on a season long loan with an option to buy.[25]

September[edit]

On 2 September, Barcelona and Beşiktaş reached an agreement for the loan of Miralem Pjanić for the rest of the season.[26]

On 14 September, Barcelona lost 3–0 at home to Bayern Munich in the first UEFA Champions League game of the season. Thomas Müller and Robert Lewandowski (brace) scored for the Bavarians.[27]

On 20 September, Barcelona drew 1–1 with Granada at home. Barça conceded early in the match, but a goal from Ronald Araújo in the last minute of the game levelled the score.[28]

On 23 September, Barcelona drew 0–0 with Cádiz away from home.[29]

On 26 September, Barcelona defeated Levante 3–0 at home. Memphis, Luuk de Jong and Ansu Fati were the goalscorers, with the latter making his return after a 10-month absence due to injury. De Jong also scored his first goal for Barça.[30]

On 29 September, Barcelona lost 3–0 against Benfica away from home on the second matchday of the Champions League.[31]

October[edit]

On 2 October, Barcelona lost 2–0 against Atlético Madrid away from home. Thomas Lemar and former Barça player Luis Suárez scored the goals.[32]

On 14 October, Barcelona and midfielder Pedri reached an agreement to extend the player's contract for a further four seasons through to 2026 with a release clause of €1 billion.[33]

On 17 October, Barcelona defeated Valencia 3–1 at home. Valencia took the lead early in the match, but goals from Fati, Memphis and Philippe Coutinho ensured victory for Barça.[34]

On 20 October, Barcelona defeated Dynamo Kyiv 1–0 at home in the Champions league. Piqué scored the only goal in the game.[35] Later that day Barcelona announced that they had reached an agreement with Ansu Fati to extend the player's contract for a further five seasons through to 2027 with a release clause of €1 billion.[36]

On 24 October, Barcelona were defeated in El Clásico 2–1 at home, with David Alaba and Lucas Vázquez scoring for Real Madrid. Sergio Agüero scored in the last minute for a late consolation.[37]

On 27 October, Barcelona were again defeated, this time by Rayo Vallecano 1–0 away, with Radamel Falcao scoring the winner in the first half.[38] It was Rayo's first league win over Barça in 19 years.[39]

On 28 October, Barcelona announced the dismissal of Ronald Koeman as the first team coach, ending his spell at the club after 14 months.[40]

On 29 October, Barcelona announced the appointment of Barcelona B head coach Sergi Barjuán as the interim manager of the first team.[41]

On 30 October, Barcelona drew 1–1 with Deportivo Alavés at home. Memphis scored first for the Blaugrana, but Alavés equalised shortly after, courtesy of Luis Rioja.[42]

November[edit]

On 2 November, Barcelona defeated Dynamo Kyiv 1–0 away from home in the Champions league. Ansu Fati scored the only goal in the game.[43]

On 6 November, Barcelona announced the appointment of Xavi as the new first team head coach until 2024.[44] Later that day, Barcelona drew 3–3 with Celta Vigo away from home. Barça had a three-goal lead within the first half with goals from Fati, Busquets and Memphis, but a spirited performance from Celta levelled the score in the second half with the equalising goal from Iago Aspas coming in the final minute.[45]

On 12 November, Barcelona announced an agreement in principle to sign former right-back Dani Alves on a free transfer.[46]

On 20 November, on Xavi's managerial debut, Barcelona defeated Espanyol 1–0 at home in the derbi barceloní. Memphis scored from the penalty spot.[47]

On 23 November, Barcelona drew 0–0 with Benfica at home in the Champions League.[48]

On 27 November, Barcelona defeated Villarreal 3–1 away from home. Frenkie de Jong scored first, but Samuel Chukwueze equalised for the Yellow Submarine. Memphis and Coutinho scored late to seal the win for Barça.[49]

December[edit]

On 4 December, Barcelona lost to Real Betis 1–0 at home. Juanmi scored for the visitors.[50]

On 8 December, Barcelona lost to Bayern 3–0 away from home at an empty Allianz Arena. Müller, Leroy Sané and Jamal Musiala scored for the home side, eliminating Barça from the group stage and making the Blaugrana play in the UEFA Europa League for the first time since 2003.[51][52]

On 9 December, Barcelona and Granada reached an agreement for the loan of Álex Collado until the end of the season.[53]

On 12 December, Barcelona drew 2–2 with Osasuna away from home. Nico and Abde scored for Barca.[54]

On 15 December, Sergio Agüero announced his retirement in a press conference at the Camp Nou.[55]

On 18 December, Barcelona defeated Elche 3–2 at home. Goals from Ferran Jutglà and Gavi gave an early two goal lead for Barça, But two goals scored by Elche in two minutes made the score level. Nico scored in the late stages of the game to earn victory for Barça.[56]

On 21 December, Barcelona drew 1–1 with Sevilla at the Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán, with Papu Gómez opening the account for Los Rojiblancos and Araújo equalising in the dying moments of the first–half.[57]

On 28 December, Barcelona announced the signing of Ferran Torres, with Torres signing a 5-year contract until 2027, with a buyout clause of €1 billion.[58]

January[edit]

On 2 January, Barcelona defeated Real Mallorca 1–0 at the Visit Mallorca Stadium. Luuk de Jong scored the only goal.[59]

On 5 January, Barcelona started their Copa del Rey campaign with a 2–1 away win against Linares.[60]

On 7 January, Barcelona reached an agreement with Aston Villa for the loan of Philippe Coutinho until the end of the season.[61]

On 8 January, Barcelona drew 1–1 with Granada away from home. Luuk de Jong took the lead for Barcelona but Granada equalised at the closing stages of the game.[62]

On 10 January, Samuel Umtiti extended his contract until 2026, which allowed Barcelona to register Ferran Torres.[63]

On 12 January, the second Clásico of the season was contested, this time at the semi-final stage of the Supercopa de España. Luuk de Jong and Ansu Fati scored equalisers for Barça, but it was not enough as Madrid won 3–2 after extra time.[64]

On 13 January, Barcelona reached an agreement with Rapid Wien to end the loan of Yusuf Demir.[65]

On 20 January, Barcelona were knocked out of the Copa del Rey round of 16 by Athletic Bilbao 3–2 at San Mamés, with Iker Muniain's late winner cancelling out Ferran Torres and Pedri's goals, with the former scoring his first Barça goal.[66]

On 23 January, Barcelona defeated Deportivo Alavés 1–0 away, thanks to a late winner from Frenkie de Jong.[67]

On 29 January, Barcelona announced the signing of Adama Traoré on loan from Wolverhampton Wanderers.[68]

February[edit]

On 5 February, Barcelona announced the signing of Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang for free after his contract with Arsenal was terminated.[69]

On 6 February, Barcelona defeated Atletico Madrid 4–2 at home. Atletico took an early lead but goals from Jordi Alba, Gavi, Araújo and Dani Alves provided a convincing victory for Barça.[70]

On 13 February, Barcelona drew 2–2 with Espanyol away from home. Pedri scored an early goal to give lead for Barça, but two goals from the home side almost made them win the match before a late goal from Luuk de Jong which earned a point for Barcelona.[71]

On 17 February, Barcelona opened their Europa league campaign with a 1–1 draw with Napoli at home in the first leg of the round of 32. Napoli scored first and Ferran Torres converted a penalty to level the score.[72]

On 20 February, Barcelona defeated Valencia 4–1 away from home. A goal from Frenkie de Jong and a hat-trick from Aubameyang gained victory over Los Che.[73]

On 24 February, Barcelona defeated Napoli 4–2 away from home in the second leg of the Europa League round of 32. Jordi Alba, Frenkie de Jong, Pique and Aubameyang scored for Barça.[74]

On 27 February, Barcelona defeated Athletic Bilbao 4–0 at home. Aubameyang, Dembélé, Luuk de Jong and Memphis Depay scored for Barcelona to secure three points.[75]

March[edit]

On 6 March, Barcelona defeated Elche 2–1 away from home. Elche scored late in the first half, but goals from Torres and Depay turned the game in favour of Barcelona.[76]

On 10 March, Barcelona drew 0–0 with Galatasaray at home in the first leg of the Europa League round of 16.[77]

On 13 March, Barcelona defeated Osasuna 4–0 at home. Ferran Torres scored a brace while Aubameyang and Riqui Puig added a goal each.[78]

On 17 March, Barcelona defeated Galatasaray 2–1 away from home in the second leg of the Europa League round of 16. Galatasaray scored the first goal of the match but goals from Pedri and Aubameyang cancelled out their lead and secured 2–1 aggregate victory for Barça.[79]

On 20 March, in the third Clásico of the season, Barcelona defeated Real Madrid 4–0 away from home. A brace from Aubameyang and goals from Araújo and Torres secured a crushing victory at the Bernabeu.[80]

April[edit]

On 3 April, Barcelona defeated Sevilla 1–0 at home. Pedri scored the only goal of the match. With this win, Barça climes up to second in the league standings.[81]

On 7 April, Barcelona drew 1–1 with Eintracht Frankfurt away from home in the first leg of the Europa League quarter-finals. Ferran Torres scored for Barcelona.[82]

On 10 April, Barcelona defeated Levante 3–2 away from home. Aubameyang and Pedri scored for Barça while having conceded two penalties. Luuk de Jong scored a late goal to earn the victory for Barcelona.[83]

On 14 April, Barcelona lost to Eintracht Frankfurt 3–2 at home in the second leg of the Europa League quarter-finals. Frankfurt dominated the game having a three-goal lead until the end of the regulation time. Barcelona's goals came in the stoppage time with Busquets scoring and Depay converting a penalty. With an aggregate score of 4–3, Barcelona were eliminated from the Europa League.[84]

On 18 April, Barcelona lost to Cádiz 1–0 at home.[85]

On 21 April, Barcelona defeated Real Sociedad 1–0 away from home. Aubameyang scored the only goal in the first half of the match.[86]

On 24 April, Barcelona lost to Rayo Vallecano 1–0 at home.[87]

On 26 April, Barcelona and defender Ronald Araújo reached an agreement to extend the player's contract through to 2026 with a release clause of €1 billion.[88]

May[edit]

On 1 May, Barcelona defeated Real Mallorca 2–1 at home. Memphis Depay and Sergio Busquets scored for Barça.[89]

On 7 May, Barcelona defeated Real Betis 2–1 away from home. Ansu Fati scored while former Barça player Marc Bartra scored the equaliser for Betis. Jordi Alba scored in the final minutes of the match to earn the victory.[90]

On 10 May, Barcelona defeated Celta Vigo 3–1 at home. Memphis scored a goal while Aubameyang added a brace.[91]

On 12 May, Aston Villa triggered Philippe Coutinho's option to buy for a fee of €20 million with Barça receiving a 50% sell-on percentage.[92]

On 15 May, Barcelona drew 0–0 with Getafe away from home.[93]

On 22 May, Barcelona lost to Villarreal 2–0 at home in the last game of the season. Barcelona finished their league campaign in the second position, qualifying for the next season's Supercopa de España and UEFA Champions League.[94][95]

Players[edit]

First team[edit]

N
Pos.
Nat.
Name
Age
EU
Since
App
Goals
Ends
Transfer fee
Notes
1 GK Germany Marc-André ter Stegen 32 EU 2014 327 0 2025 €12M
2 DF United States Sergiño Dest 23 EU 2020 72 3 2025 €21M Second nationality: Netherlands
3 DF Spain Gerard Piqué (vice-captain) 37 EU 2008 606 52 2024 €5M Originally from Youth system
4 DF Uruguay Ronald Araújo 25 Non-EU 2019 82 6 2026 €1.7M
5 MF Spain Sergio Busquets (captain) 35 EU 2008 680 18 2023 Youth system
6 MF Spain Riqui Puig 24 EU 2018 57 2 2023 Youth system
7 FW France Ousmane Dembélé 27 EU 2017 150 32 2022 €105M
8 DF Brazil Dani Alves 41 EU 2022 (Winter) 408 22 2022 Free Second nationality: Spain
9 FW Netherlands Memphis Depay 30 EU 2021 38 13 2023 Free Second nationality: Ghana
10 FW Spain Ansu Fati 21 EU 2019 58 19 2027 Youth system
11 FW Spain Adama Traoré 28 EU 2022 (Winter) 21 1 2022 Loan Originally from Youth system
On loan from Wolverhampton Wanderers
12 FW Denmark Martin Braithwaite 32 EU 2020 (Winter) 58 10 2024 €18M
13 GK Brazil Neto 34 EU 2019 21 0 2023 €26M Second nationality: Italy
14 MF Spain Nico González 22 EU 2021 37 2 2024 Youth system
15 DF France Clément Lenglet 29 EU 2018 160 7 2026 €35.9M
16 MF Spain Pedri 21 EU 2020 74 9 2026 €5M
17 FW Netherlands Luuk de Jong 33 EU 2021 29 7 2022 Loan On loan from Sevilla
18 DF Spain Jordi Alba (4th captain) 34 EU 2012 429 25 2024 €14M Originally from Youth system
19 FW Spain Ferran Torres[note 1] 24 EU 2022 (Winter) 26 7 2027 €55M
20 MF Spain Sergi Roberto (3rd captain) 32 EU 2010 316 12 2022 Youth system
21 MF Netherlands Frenkie de Jong 27 EU 2019 140 13 2026 €75M
22 DF Spain Óscar Mingueza 25 EU 2020 66 2 2023 Youth system
23 DF France Samuel Umtiti 30 EU 2016 133 2 2026 €25M
24 DF Spain Eric García 23 EU 2021 36 0 2026 Free Originally from Youth system
25 FW Gabon Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang 34 EU 2022 (Winter) 23 13 2025 Free Second nationality: France

From Barcelona B and Youth Academy[edit]

N
Pos.
Nat.
Name
Age
EU
Since
App
Goals
Ends
Transfer fee
Notes
27 GK Montenegro Lazar Carević 25 Non-EU 2021 0 0 2023 Youth system
29 FW Spain Ferran Jutglà 25 EU 2021 9 2 2022 Free
30 MF Spain Gavi 19 EU 2021 47 2 2023 Youth system
31 DF Spain Alejandro Balde 20 EU 2021 7 0 2024 Youth system
33 FW Morocco Abde Ezzalzouli 22 EU 2021 12 1 2024 €2M Second nationality: Spain
34 MF Spain Álvaro Sanz 23 EU 2021 3 0 2023 Youth system
35 DF Spain Arnau Comas 24 EU 2021 0 0 2022 Youth system
36 GK Spain Arnau Tenas 22 EU 2019 0 0 2023 Youth system
37 FW Spain Ilias Akhomach 20 EU 2021 3 0 2023 Youth system
38 DF Spain Guillem Jaime 25 EU 2021 0 0 2022 Free Originally from Youth system
39 FW Spain Estanis Pedrola 20 EU 2022 1 0 2024 Youth system
40 MF Brazil Lucas de Vega 24 EU 2022 0 0 2022 Youth system Second nationality: Spain
41 DF Spain Mika Màrmol 22 EU 2022 1 0 2023 Youth system
42 GK Spain Ander Astralaga 20 EU 2022 0 0 2023 Youth system
43 MF Spain Jandro Orellana 23 EU 2022 0 0 2023 Youth system
44 MF Spain Antonio Aranda 23 EU 2022 0 0 2023 Free

Transfers[edit]

In[edit]

No. Pos Player Transferred from Fee Date Source
19 FW Argentina Sergio Agüero England Manchester City Free transfer 1 July 2021[A] [1]
24 DF Spain Eric García England Manchester City Free transfer 1 July 2021[B] [2]
22 DF Brazil Emerson Royal Real Betis €9,000,000 1 July 2021[C] [3]
9 FW Netherlands Memphis Depay France Lyon Free transfer 1 July 2021[D] [4]
8 DF Brazil Dani Alves Free agent Free transfer 17 November 2021[E] [46]
19 FW Spain Ferran Torres England Manchester City €55,000,000[F] 1 January 2022[G] [58]
25 FW Gabon Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang England Arsenal Free transfer 2 February 2022 [69]
Total €64,000,000

Out[edit]

No. Pos Player Transferred to Fee Date Source
19 MF Brazil Matheus Fernandes Brazil Palmeiras Contract termination 29 June 2021 [7]
FW United States Konrad de la Fuente France Marseille €3,500,000 1 July 2021[H] [6]
DF Spain Juan Miranda Real Betis Free transfer 1 July 2021[I] [96]
DF France Jean-Clair Todibo France Nice €8,500,000[J] 1 July 2021[K] [5]
10 FW Argentina Lionel Messi France Paris Saint-Germain Free transfer 1 July 2021[L] [15][17]
24 DF Spain Junior Firpo England Leeds United €15,000,000 6 July 2021 [10]
DF Spain Sergio Akieme Almería €3,500,000 7 July 2021 [11]
6 MF Spain Carles Aleñá Getafe €5,000,000 10 July 2021 [13]
MF Spain Monchu Granada Free transfer 16 July 2021 [14]
MF Guinea Ilaix Moriba Germany RB Leipzig €16,000,000[M] 31 August 2021 [21]
22 DF Brazil Emerson Royal England Tottenham Hotspur €25,000,000[N] 31 August 2021 [23]
19 FW Argentina Sergio Agüero Retired 15 December 2021 [55]
11 FW Austria Yusuf Demir Austria Rapid Wien Loan return 13 January 2022 [65]
Total €76,500,000
  1. ^ Deal agreed on 31 May 2021
  2. ^ Deal agreed on 1 June 2021
  3. ^ Deal agreed on 2 June 2021
  4. ^ Deal agreed on 19 June 2021
  5. ^ Cannot play until 1 January 2022
  6. ^ Fee Could rise to €65,000,000
  7. ^ Deal agreed on 28 December 2021
  8. ^ Deal agreed on 29 June 2021
  9. ^ Deal agreed on 1 June 2021
  10. ^ Fee may eventually rise to €15,500,000
  11. ^ Deal agreed on 27 June 2021
  12. ^ Joined on 10 August
  13. ^ Fee may eventually rise to €22,000,000
  14. ^ €5,000,000 of the €25,000,000 will be paid to Real Betis

Loans in[edit]

No. Pos Player Loaned from Fee Date On loan until Source
11 FW Austria Yusuf Demir Austria Rapid Wien €500,000[A] 9 July 2021 End of season[B] [12]
17 FW Netherlands Luuk de Jong Sevilla €1,000,000[C] 31 August 2021 End of Season [25]
11 FW Spain Adama Traoré England Wolverhampton Wanderers None[D] 29 January 2022 End of season [68]
Total €1,500,000
  1. ^ Option to buy for €10,000,000 at the end of the season
  2. ^ Loan terminated on 13 January 2022
  3. ^ Option to buy for €10,000,000 at the end of the season
  4. ^ Option to buy for €30,000,000 at the end of the season

Loans out[edit]

No. Pos Player Loaned to Fee Date On loan until Source
17 FW Portugal Francisco Trincão England Wolverhampton Wanderers €6,000,000[A] 4 July 2021 End of Season [97]
17 FW Albania Rey Manaj Italy Spezia €300,000[B] 31 August 2021 End of Season [22]
7 FW France Antoine Griezmann Atlético Madrid €10,000,000[C] 31 August 2021 End of Season[D] [24]
8 MF Bosnia and Herzegovina Miralem Pjanić Turkey Beşiktaş €3,000,000 2 September 2021 End of Season [26]
32 MF Spain Álex Collado Granada None 7 January 2022[E] End of Season [53]
14 MF Brazil Philippe Coutinho England Aston Villa None[F] 7 January 2022 End of Season [61]
26 GK Spain Iñaki Peña Turkey Galatasaray None 31 January 2022 End of Season [99]
Total €19,300,000
  1. ^ Option to buy for €29,000,000 at the end of the season
  2. ^ Option to buy for €2,700,000 at the end of the season
  3. ^ Obligation to buy for €40,000,000
  4. ^ Used the option to extend the loan to the end of next season on 10 August 2022[98]
  5. ^ Deal agreed on 9 December 2021
  6. ^ Option to buy for €35,000,000 at the end of the season

Transfer summary[edit]

Undisclosed fees are not included in the transfer totals.

Pre-season and friendlies[edit]

  Win   Draw   Loss   Fixtures

21 July 2021 Friendly Barcelona Spain 4–0 Spain Gimnàstic Barcelona, Spain
19:00 CEST (UTC+2)
Report
Stadium: Johan Cruyff Stadium
Attendance: 2,037
Referee: Alejandro Muñiz Ruiz
24 July 2021 Friendly Barcelona Spain 3–1 Spain Girona Barcelona, Spain
19:00 CEST (UTC+2)
Report
Stadium: Johan Cruyff Stadium
Attendance: 2,858
Referee: Miguel Ángel Ortiz Arias
31 July 2021 Friendly VfB Stuttgart Germany 0–3 Spain Barcelona Stuttgart, Germany
19:00 CEST (UTC+2) Report
Stadium: Mercedes-Benz Arena
Attendance: 25,000
Referee: Tobias Reichel
4 August 2021 Friendly Red Bull Salzburg Austria 2–1 Spain Barcelona Wals-Siezenheim, Austria
19:00 CEST (UTC+2)
Report Stadium: Red Bull Arena
Referee: Rene Eisner
8 August 2021 Joan Gamper Trophy Barcelona Spain 3–0 Italy Juventus Barcelona, Spain
21:30 CEST (UTC+2)
Report
Stadium: Johan Cruyff Stadium
Attendance: 2,924
Referee: César Soto Grado
13 October 2021 Friendly Barcelona Spain 2–2 Spain Cornellà Barcelona, Spain
11:00 CEST (UTC+2) Report Stadium: Ciutat Esportiva Joan Gamper
14 December 2021 Maradona Cup Barcelona Spain 1–1
(2–4 p)
Argentina Boca Juniors Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
20:00 AST (UTC+3)
Report Stadium: Mrsool Park
Penalties
25 May 2022 A-Leagues All Stars Game A-Leagues All Stars Australia 2–3 Spain Barcelona Sydney, Australia
Report
Stadium: Accor Stadium
Attendance: 70,174
Referee: Alex King

Competitions[edit]

Overall record[edit]

Competition First match Last match Starting round Final position Record
Pld W D L GF GA GD Win %
La Liga 15 August 2021 22 May 2022 Matchday 1 2nd 38 21 10 7 68 38 +30 055.26
Copa del Rey 5 January 2022 20 January 2022 Round of 32 Round of 16 2 1 0 1 4 4 +0 050.00
Supercopa de España 12 January 2022 Semi-finals Semi-finals 1 0 0 1 2 3 −1 000.00
UEFA Champions League 14 September 2021 8 December 2021 Group stage Group stage 6 2 1 3 2 9 −7 033.33
UEFA Europa League 17 February 2022 14 April 2022 Knockout round play-offs Quarter-finals 6 2 3 1 10 8 +2 033.33
Total 53 26 14 13 86 62 +24 049.06

Source: Soccerway

La Liga[edit]

League table[edit]

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Real Madrid (C) 38 26 8 4 80 31 +49 86 Qualification for the Champions League group stage
2 Barcelona 38 21 10 7 68 38 +30 73
3 Atlético Madrid 38 21 8 9 65 43 +22 71
4 Sevilla 38 18 16 4 53 30 +23 70
5 Real Betis 38 19 8 11 62 40 +22 65 Qualification for the Europa League group stage[a]
Source: LaLiga Santander
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Head-to-head points; 3) Head-to-head goal difference; 4) Goal difference; 5) Goals scored; 6) Fair-play points (Note: Head-to-head record is used only after all the matches between the teams in question have been played)[100]
(C) Champions
Notes:
  1. ^ Since the winners of the 2021–22 Copa del Rey, Real Betis, qualified for European competition based on league position, the Europa League berth awarded to the Copa del Rey winners was passed to the sixth-placed team, and the Europa Conference League berth awarded to the sixth-placed team was passed to the seventh-placed team.

Results summary[edit]

Overall Home Away
Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts W D L GF GA GD W D L GF GA GD
38 21 10 7 68 38  +30 73 12 2 5 37 19  +18 9 8 2 31 19  +12

Source: La Liga

Results by round[edit]

Round1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738
GroundHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAAHAHAAHAHAHAHAHAHAH
ResultWDWDDDWLWLLDDWWLDWWDLWWDWWWWWWWLWWWWDL
Position34477769799997778856654444333222222222
Source: La Liga
A = Away; H = Home; W = Win; D = Draw; L = Loss; P = Postponed

Matches[edit]

The league fixtures were announced on 30 June 2021.[101][102]

15 August 2021 1 Barcelona 4–2 Real Sociedad Barcelona
20:00 CEST (UTC+2)
Report
Stadium: Camp Nou
Attendance: 20,384
Referee: Alejandro Hernández Hernández
21 August 2021 2 Athletic Bilbao 1–1 Barcelona Bilbao
22:00 CEST (UTC+2)
Report
Stadium: San Mamés
Attendance: 9,394
Referee: Juan Martínez Munuera
29 August 2021 3 Barcelona 2–1 Getafe Barcelona
17:00 CEST (UTC+2)
Report
Stadium: Camp Nou
Attendance: 26,543
Referee: Pablo González Fuertes
20 September 2021 5 Barcelona 1–1 Granada Barcelona
21:00 CEST (UTC+2)
Report
Stadium: Camp Nou
Attendance: 27,097
Referee: Santiago Jaime Latre
23 September 2021 6 Cádiz 0–0 Barcelona Cádiz
22:00 CEST (UTC+2)
Report
Stadium: Nuevo Mirandilla
Attendance: 12,180
Referee: Carlos del Cerro Grande
26 September 2021 7 Barcelona 3–0 Levante Barcelona
16:15 CEST (UTC+2)
Report
Stadium: Camp Nou
Attendance: 35,334
Referee: Isidro Díaz De Mera Escuderos
2 October 2021 8 Atlético Madrid 2–0 Barcelona Madrid
21:00 CEST (UTC+2)
Report
Stadium: Wanda Metropolitano
Attendance: 60,594
Referee: César Soto Grado
17 October 2021 9 Barcelona 3–1 Valencia Barcelona
21:00 CEST (UTC+2)
Report
Stadium: Camp Nou
Attendance: 47,317
Referee: Jesús Gil Manzano
24 October 2021 10 Barcelona 1–2 Real Madrid Barcelona
16:15 CEST (UTC+2)
Report
Stadium: Camp Nou
Attendance: 86,422
Referee: José María Sánchez Martínez
27 October 2021 11 Rayo Vallecano 1–0 Barcelona Madrid
19:00 CEST (UTC+2)
Report
Stadium: Vallecas
Attendance: 9,340
Referee: Antonio Mateu Lahoz
30 October 2021 12 Barcelona 1–1 Alavés Barcelona
21:00 CEST (UTC+2)
Report
Stadium: Camp Nou
Attendance: 37,278
Referee: Jorge Figueroa Vázquez
6 November 2021 13 Celta Vigo 3–3 Barcelona Vigo
16:15 CET (UTC+1)
Report
Stadium: Balaídos
Attendance: 13,146
Referee: Alejandro Hernández Hernández
20 November 2021 14 Barcelona 1–0 Espanyol Barcelona
21:00 CET (UTC+1)
Report
Stadium: Camp Nou
Attendance: 74,418
Referee: Carlos del Cerro Grande
Note: First league match with Xavi as manager.
27 November 2021 15 Villarreal 1–3 Barcelona Villarreal
21:00 CET (UTC+1)
Report
Stadium: Estadio de la Cerámica
Attendance: 19,050
Referee: César Soto Grado
4 December 2021 16 Barcelona 0–1 Real Betis Barcelona
16:15 CET (UTC+1)
Report Stadium: Camp Nou
Attendance: 66,529
Referee: Pablo González Fuertes
12 December 2021 17 Osasuna 2–2 Barcelona Pamplona
16:15 CET (UTC+1)
Report
Stadium: El Sadar
Attendance: 21,427
Referee: Juan Martínez Munuera
18 December 2021 18 Barcelona 3–2 Elche Barcelona
18:30 CET (UTC+1)
Report
Stadium: Camp Nou
Attendance: 41,664
Referee: Javier Alberola Rojas
21 December 2021 4 Sevilla 1–1 Barcelona Seville
21:30 CET (UTC+1)
Report
Stadium: Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán
Attendance: 31,358
Referee: Carlos del Cerro Grande
Note: The match was originally scheduled for 11 September 2021, but was postponed due to the late return of several South American players from international duty.[103]
2 January 2022 19 Mallorca 0–1 Barcelona Palma
21:00 CET (UTC+1)
Report
Stadium: Visit Mallorca Estadi
Attendance: 14,654
Referee: Antonio Mateu Lahoz
8 January 2022 20 Granada 1–1 Barcelona Granada
18:30 CET (UTC+1)
Report
Stadium: Nuevo Los Cármenes
Attendance: 14,442
Referee: Pablo González Fuertes
23 January 2022 22 Alavés 0–1 Barcelona Vitoria-Gasteiz
21:00 CET (UTC+1) Report Stadium: Mendizorrotza
Attendance: 14,056
Referee: Jorge Figueroa Vázquez
6 February 2022 23 Barcelona 4–2 Atlético Madrid Barcelona
16:15 CET (UTC+1)
Report
Stadium: Camp Nou
Attendance: 74,221
Referee: Jesús Gil Manzano
13 February 2022 24 Espanyol 2–2 Barcelona Barcelona
21:00 CET (UTC+1)
Report
Stadium: RCDE Stadium
Attendance: 25,049
Referee: Alejandro Hernández Hernández
20 February 2022 25 Valencia 1–4 Barcelona Valencia
16:15 CET (UTC+1)
Report
Stadium: Mestalla
Attendance: 38,315
Referee: Carlos del Cerro Grande
27 February 2022 26 Barcelona 4–0 Athletic Bilbao Barcelona
21:00 CET (UTC+1)
Report
Stadium: Camp Nou
Attendance: 69,770
Referee: Guillermo Cuadra Fernández
6 March 2022 27 Elche 1–2 Barcelona Elche
16:15 CET (UTC+1)
Report
Stadium: Martínez Valero
Attendance: 30,146
Referee: Mario Melero López
13 March 2022 28 Barcelona 4–0 Osasuna Barcelona
21:00 CET (UTC+1)
Report
Stadium: Camp Nou
Attendance: 54,507
Referee: Ricardo de Burgos Bengoetxea
20 March 2022 29 Real Madrid 0–4 Barcelona Madrid
21:00 CET (UTC+1)
Report
Stadium: Santiago Bernabéu
Attendance: 60,017
Referee: Juan Martínez Munuera
3 April 2022 30 Barcelona 1–0 Sevilla Barcelona
21:00 CEST (UTC+2)