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Revision as of 22:11, 14 May 2006

File:UEFA Cup.png
UEFA Cup logo

The UEFA Cup is a football competition for European club teams. It was founded on April 18, 1955 as the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup. It is the second most important competition for European club teams, the first being the UEFA Champions League.

History

The first Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, which lasted from 1955 to 1958, was a tournament open to cities that had hosted trade fairs, and not necessarily clubs - cities with more than one club sent representative teams (e.g. London). A second tournament took place between 1958 and 1960, all tournaments since have been held on a yearly basis.

As time progressed, the competition saw more clubs and fewer representative sides enter, so that by the mid-1960s, it was exclusively for clubs, who usually qualified by being a runner-up in their domestic league. However, a rule that only one club per city could enter was applied.

The competition completely dropped its link with the trade fairs and was renamed the UEFA Cup in 1971. Tottenham Hotspur F.C being the first winner of the UEFA Cup. However, the 'one club per city' rule was only rescinded in 1975; Everton had finished fourth in the English league and could thus qualify, but were barred from entry because Liverpool had also qualified by coming second. Everton appealed, saying the rule was an unfair anachronism, and UEFA agreed to overturn it.

The competition was traditionally open to the runners-up of domestic leagues, but in 1999, the competition was merged with the Cup Winners' Cup. Since then the winners of domestic cup competitions have also entered the UEFA Cup.

Qualification

Qualification for the competition is based on UEFA coefficients, with more places being offered to the more successful nations. Usually places are awarded to teams who finish in various runners-up places in the top-flight leagues of Europe, and the winners of the main cup competitions. A few countries have secondary cup competitions, but the only countries which send their secondary cup winners to the UEFA Cup are England and France.

First of all, if the previous UEFA Cup title-holders are not eligible to take part in either of the current UEFA club competitions (UEFA Champions League or UEFA Cup), the UEFA Administration may, at the request of the association of the club concerned, admit this club to the current UEFA Cup competition. Its participation will not be at the expense of the contingent of its association.

Qualification can be quite complicated if one team qualifies through two different ways at once. For example in England, the teams finishing 5th and 6th in the Premiership and the winners of the FA Cup and League Cup qualify. If the FA Cup winner has qualified for the Champions League by its league position, the runner-up goes to the UEFA Cup; however, the League Cup runner-up does not receive this privilege. It is possible for the teams in 6th and even 7th place in the Premiership to enter the UEFA Cup under the following circumstances:

  • The League Cup winners have qualified for European play, either by league position or through the FA Cup.
  • Both FA Cup finalists have qualified for the Champions League tournament, whether in the group stage or qualifying rounds, via their league position.

If only one of the above occurs, the 6th-place team in the Premiership gets a UEFA Cup entry, but not the 7th-place team. If both occur, the 6th- and 7th-place teams both earn UEFA Cup berths. Both occurred in 2004-05, as champions Chelsea won the League Cup, and second-place Arsenal defeated third-place Man United in the FA Cup Final.

Qualification for the UEFA Cup can also be attained in two other ways:

  • The eleven winners in the third round of the UEFA Intertoto Cup enter the UEFA Cup at the third qualifying round stage from the 2006-07 season.
  • Three more berths are given to federations that finish above a certain level in UEFA's Fair Play table. The top-placed federation automatically receives a Fair Play entry, and two other federations gain berths via a draw among all other federations that meet qualifying criteria. In all cases, the recipient of a country's Fair Play entry is the highest-placed team in the Fair Play table of that country's top league that has not already qualified for Europe.

More recently, clubs that are knocked out of the qualifying round and the group stage of the Champions League can also join the UEFA Cup, at different stages (see below).

Competition format

The competition was traditionally a pure knockout tournament. All ties were two-legged, including the final. Starting with the 1998 event, the final became a one-off match, but all other ties remained two-legged.

Before the 2004-05 season, the tournament consisted of one qualifying round, followed by a series of knockout rounds. The 16 losers in the third qualifying round of the Champions League entered at the first round proper; later in the tournament, the survivors would be joined by third-place finishers in the group phase of the Champions League.

The current competition format was introduced in 2004-05. Two qualifying rounds were introduced instead of one, and losers in the third qualifying round of the Champions League are still placed in the first round proper of the tournament. After the first round proper, the 40 survivors enter a group phase, with the clubs being drawn into eight groups of five each. Unlike the Champions League group phase, the UEFA Cup group phase is played in a single round-robin format, with each club playing two home and two away games. The top three teams in each group advance, where they are joined by the eight third-place teams in the Champions League group phase. From this point, knockout play resumes, with two-legged ties leading to the one-off final.

Trivia

  • The UEFA Cup traditionally was the only one among the three European trophies which gave most countries multiple entries. This has led to several national finals:
Season Country      
1971/72 England Tottenham Hotspur v Wolverhampton Wanderers
1979/80 West Germany Eintracht Frankfurt v Borussia Mönchengladbach
1989/90 Italy Juventus v Fiorentina
1990/91 Italy Internazionale v Roma
1994/95 Italy Parma v Juventus
1997/98 Italy Internazionale v Lazio
  • Never was a single country more dominant than in 1979/80: West Germany had five entrants that year (4 by right, and Borussia Mönchengladbach as the holders - they hadn't qualified for Europe in the Bundesliga), and all five reached the quarterfinals. This necessarily led to (at least) one inter-German tie, and 1.FC Kaiserslautern were eliminated by Bayern München 4-2 on aggregate. But all other German clubs made it past the quarterfinals, giving an all-German semifinal lineup:
  • The West Germany v Rest of Europe balance that UEFA Cup makes convincing reading: from 36 matches, the West German teams won 23, drew 7 and lost 6, scoring 74 goals and conceding 29. Typically, the team with the worst record (Eintracht, 8 4 1 3 14-8), who finished lowest of the 5 in the Bundesliga as well, went on to win the trophy. No German team was eliminated by a non-German team in the UEFA Cup that year!
  • Only one club has ever retained the UEFA Cup: Real Madrid won it in both 1984/85 and 1985/86.
  • If one combines the records of the Fairs' Cup and the UEFA Cup, English clubs won 6 times between 1967/68 and 1972/73.
  • The record number of consecutive participations in the UEFA Cup is 10; all teams to play at least 6 consecutive seasons (including eliminations in the qualifying rounds of the tournament proper):
Entries Club Seasons
10 Club Brugge 1996/97-2005/06
9 PAOK Thessaloniki 1997/98-2005/06
8 Celtic 1996/97-2003/04
8 Crvena Zvezda Belgrade 1998/99-2005/06
8 CSKA Sofia 1998/99-2005/06
8 Grazer AK 1998/99-2005/06
8 Shakhtar Donetsk 1998/99-2005/06
8 Slavia Praha 1998/99-2005/06
7 PSV Eindhoven 1979/80-1985/86
7 Spartak Moscow 1981/82-1987/88
7 Sporting CP 1988/89-1994/95
7 Parma 1998/99-2004/05
7 Brøndby 1999/00-2005/06
7 FC Vaduz 1999/00-2005/06
6 FC Köln
(also in Fairs' Cup 1970/71)
1971/72-1976/77
6 Grasshoppers 1972/73-1977/78
6 Dundee United 1977/78-1982/83
6 Werder Bremen 1982/83-1987/88
6 Internazionale 1983/84-1988/89
6 Rangers 1997/98-2002/03
6 FK Ventspils 2000/01-2005/06
6 Wisła Kraków 2000/01-2005/06
    • Apart from FC Köln, Vitória FC (Setúbal) also has a series of 7 seasons if we take the Fairs' Cup into account: 1968/69 -1974/75 (3 seasons in the Fairs and 4 in the UEFA Cup).
  • Entering both the Champions League and/or its qualifying rounds and the UEFA Cup in the same season has now become so common that a separate statistic of all clubs having done so in three or more consecutive seasons may be of interest (between square brackets the means of entering the UEFA Cup is indicated in chronological order, G denoting group stage, q denoting qualifying round):
Entries Club Seasons Stages
6 Shakhtar Donetsk 2000/01-2005/06 GqqqGq
3 Rangers 1999/00-2001/02 GGq
3 Celtic 2000/01-2003/04 GqG
3 Grazer AK 2002/03-2004/05 qqq
3 Club Brugge 2002/03-2004/05 qGq
3 Wisła Kraków 2003/04-2005/06 qqq
    • Benfica and Panathinaikos had a chance to join this group 2005/06 if they finished third in the Champions League group stage (series started 2003/04), but neither did so. Panathinaikos finished fourth in their group, knocking them out of European competition entirely. Benfica avoided the UEFA Cup completely, finishing second in their group and thereby advancing to the Champions League round of 16.
  • Several times, winning the UEFA Cup was a club's only chance to qualify for European competition in the next season. A win by such a mediocre, mid-table (and non-domestic-cup-winning) club then led to an extra place in the UEFA Cup for the country in question. The following clubs managed to save their season by winning the UEFA Cup:
Season Club Country Domestic position
1971/72 Tottenham Hotspur England 6th
1978/79 Borussia Mönchengladbach West Germany 10th
1979/80 Eintracht Frankfurt West Germany 9th
1983/84 Tottenham Hotspur England 8th
1987/88 Bayer Leverkusen West Germany 8th
1993/94 Internazionale Italy 13th
1996/97 Schalke 04 Germany 12th
    • Spurs did it twice; the Germans four times and Internazionale's 1993/94 finish is the worst by any winner of a European club title.

UEFA Cup Records

(tie for record for all European Cups)

UEFA Cup Finals

Main article: UEFA Cup Finals

Performance by nation

Nation Winners Losing finalists Winning clubs Runner-up clubs
England England 10 8 Liverpool (3), Leeds United (2), Tottenham Hotspur (2), Arsenal (1), Ipswich Town (1), Newcastle United (1) Middlesbrough FC (1), Arsenal FC (1), Tottenham Hotspur FC (1), Wolverhampton Wanderers FC (1), Leeds United FC (1), Birmingham City FC (2), London Select XI (1)
Italy Italy 10 8 Inter Milan (3), Juventus F.C. (3), Parma AC (2), SSC Napoli (1), A.S. Roma (1) S.S. Lazio (1), Internazionale Milano F.C. (1), Juventus F.C. (3), Torino Calcio (1), A.S. Roma (1), AC Fiorentina (1)
Spain Spain 10 6 Barcelona (3), Valencia (3), Real Madrid (2), Real Zaragoza (1), Sevilla FC (1) Deportivo Alavés (1), RCD Espanyol (1), Athletic Club Bilbao (1), Real Zaragoza (1), Valencia CF (1), FC Barcelona (1)
Germany Germany 6 7 Borussia Mönchengladbach (2), Bayer Leverkusen (1), Bayern Munich (1), Eintracht Frankfurt (1), Schalke 04 (1) BV Borussia Dortmund (2), VfB Stuttgart (1), 1. FC Köln (1), Hamburger SV (1), Borussia Mönchengladbach (2)
Netherlands Netherlands 4 2 Feyenoord (2), Ajax (1), PSV Eindhoven (1) AZ Alkmaar (1), Twente Enschede (1)
Sweden Sweden 2 0 IFK Göteborg (2)
France France 1 4 Paris Saint Germain (1) Olympique de Marseille (2), Girondins de Bordeaux (1), Bastia,
Belgium Belgium 1 3 Anderlecht (1) RSC Anderlecht (2), Club Brugge (1)
Hungary Hungary 1 3 Ferencvaros (1) Videoton (1), Újpest Dózsa (1), Ferencvaros (1)
Portugal Portugal 1 2 Porto (1) Sporting Clube de Portugal (1), SL Benfica (1)
Yugoslavia Yugoslavia 1 2 Dinamo Zagreb (1) Crvena Zvezda (1), Dinamo Zagreb (1)
Portugal Russia 1 0 CSKA Moscow (1)
Turkey Turkey 1 0 Galatasaray (1)
Scotland Scotland 0 2 - Celtic FC (1), Dundee United (1)
Austria Austria 0 1 - Casino Salzburg

See also

External link

Inter-Cities Fairs Cup
Seasons
Finals
Trophy Play-Off
UEFA Cup and UEFA Europa League
UEFA Cup era, 1971–2009
Seasons
Finals
Two-legged
Single-legged
UEFA Europa League era, 2009–present
Seasons
Finals

Template:UEFA Cup 2005/06

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