UEFA SUPER CUP

(Redirected from European Super Cup)
UEFA Super Cup
UEFA Super Cup.gif
'Founded'
1972
'Continent'
Europe (UEFA)
'Number of Teams'
'2'
'Current Champions (2007-08)'
A.C. Milan
'Most successful club'
A.C. Milan
(5 time champions, 2 times runner-up)
'Website'
(Website)

The 'European Super Cup' ('UEFA Super Cup') is at stake in an annual football game between the reigning champions of the UEFA Cup and the Champions League. It takes place at the start of the domestic season, in August, and it is generally regarded as a minor event, with the Champions League and UEFA Cup winners not always fielding their strongest sides; since the game happens after the Summer transfer window, the teams selected may be different from the ones who won the qualifying competitions.
The most successful team is Italian side AC Milan, who have won the trophy five times. They faced Sevilla in the 2007 UEFA Super Cup on August 31, 2007 and won the match 3-1. The match was marred by the death of a Sevilla player just days before - Antonio Puerta. It is understood that AC Milan started the match unsure of how aggressively to play considering the emotionally charged nature of the evening, but Sevilla set the tone by scoring first, which led to Milan giving one of their finest performances and coming back to score three goals in the second half. Both teams dedicated the match to Puerta and all goalscorers made a point of celebrating Puerta's name which was printed on the back of all players shirts below their squad number.

Contents
History
European Super Cup finals
Single match finals
Two-legged finals
Performance by nation
By Club
See Also
External Links

History


The European Super Cup was created in 1972 by Anton Witkamp, a reporter and later sports editor of Dutch newspaper ''De Telegraaf''. The idea came to him in a time where Dutch total football was Europe's finest and Dutch football clubs were living their golden era (especially Ajax). Witkamp was looking for something new to definitely decide which was the best team in Europe and also to further test Ajax's legendary team, led by their star player Johan Cruyff. It was then proposed that the winner of the European Cup would face the winner of the Cup Winners' Cup.
All was set for a new competition to be born. However, when Witkamp tried to get an official endorsement to his competition, the UEFA president turned it down because of a one-year ban applied to Cup Winners' Cup holders Rangers, due to misbehavior of their supporters.
Still, the cup dispute went ahead despite the unofficial status. It was played in two legs and was financially supported by Dutch newspaper ''De Telegraaf''. Ajax beat Rangers and won the very first European Super Cup. Since then, the competition has been officially recognised and supported by UEFA.
Although the two-legged format was kept, in some years, the European Super Cup was decided in one single match whether because of schedule dilemmas or political problems. In 1974, 1981 and 1985, the European Super Cup was not played at all. Everton are in talks with UEFA to have a legends game in August against Juventus, with the winners claiming the 1985 trophy. The two clubs in question would have contested for the cup in 1985; had the game gone ahead.
Since 1998 the European Super Cup has always been decided in one single match, in Monaco's Stade Louis II.
At the end of the 1998/99 season, the Cup Winners' Cup was discontinued by UEFA. Since the beginning of the 1999/2000 season, the European Super Cup has been contested between the respective winners of the UEFA Champions League (formerly the European Cup before the format was changed) and the UEFA Cup.

European Super Cup finals


Single match finals

''Note: Match played in honour of Sevilla's Antonio Puerta who died on August 28.''
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Two-legged finals

YearHome TeamScoreAway TeamVenue
1997'Barcelona' (C2)
(ESP)
'2 - 0'Borussia Dortmund (C1)
(GER)
Camp Nou,
Barcelona
Borussia Dortmund
(GER)
'1 - 1''Barcelona'
(ESP)
Westfalenstadion,
Dortmund
'Barcelona' won 3-1 on aggregate
1996Paris Saint-Germain (C2)
(FRA)
'1 - 6''Juventus' (C1)
(ITA)
Parc des Princes,
Paris
'Juventus'
(ITA)
'3 - 1'Paris Saint-Germain
(FRA)
Stadio La Favorita,
Palermo
'Juventus' won 9-2 on aggregate
1995Zaragoza (C2)
(ESP)
'1 - 1''Ajax' (C1)
(NED)
La Romareda,
Zaragoza
'Ajax'
(NED)
'4 - 0'Zaragoza
(ESP)
Olympic Stadium,
Amsterdam
'Ajax' won 5-1 on aggregate
1994Arsenal (C2)
(ENG)
'0 - 0''A.C. Milan' (C1)
(ITA)
Highbury,
London
'A.C. Milan'
(ITA)
'2 - 0'Arsenal
(ENG)
San Siro,
Milan
'A.C. Milan' won 2-0 on aggregate
1993'Parma' (C2)
(ITA)
'0 - 1'A.C. Milan (C1)
(ITA)
Ennio Tardini,
Parma
A.C. Milan
(ITA)
'0 - 2
aet'
'Parma'
(ITA)
San Siro,
Milan
'Parma' won 2-1 on aggregate
Note: European champions Marseille were suspended due to a bribery scandal
1992Werder Bremen (C2)
(GER)
'1 - 1''Barcelona' (C1)
(ESP)
Weserstadion,
Bremen
'Barcelona'
(ESP)
'2 - 1'Werder Bremen
(GER)
Camp Nou,
Barcelona
'Barcelona' won 3-2 on aggregate
1991|'Manchester United' (C2)
(ENG)
'1 - 0'Red Star Belgrade (C1)
(YUG)
Old Trafford,
Manchester
Only the first leg was played in Manchester, due to political reasons in former Yugoslavia the game in Belgrade was not played.
1990Sampdoria (C2)
(ITA)
'1 - 1''A.C. Milan' (C1)
(ITA)
Stadio Luigi Ferraris,
Genoa
'A.C. Milan'
(ITA)
'2 - 0'Sampdoria
(ITA)
San Siro,
Milan
'A.C. Milan' won 3-1 on aggregate
1989Barcelona (C2)
(ESP)
'1 - 1''A.C. Milan' (C1)
(ITA)
Camp Nou,
Barcelona
'A.C. Milan'
(ITA)
'1 - 0'Barcelona
(ESP)
San Siro,
Milan
'A.C. Milan' won 2-1 on aggregate
1988'KV Mechelen' (C2)
(BEL)
'3 - 0'PSV Eindhoven (C1)
(NED)
Achter de Kazerne,
Mechelen
PSV Eindhoven
(NED)
'1 - 0''KV Mechelen'
(BEL)
Philips Stadion,
Eindhoven
'KV Mechelen' won 3-1 on aggregate
1987Ajax (C2)
(NED)
'0 - 1''FC Porto' (C1)
(POR)
De Meer Stadium,
Amsterdam
'FC Porto'
(POR)
'1 - 0'Ajax
(NED)
Estádio das Antas,
Porto
'FC Porto' won 2-0 on aggregate
1986'Steaua Bucharest' (C1)
(ROM)
'1 - 0'FC Dynamo Kyiv (C2)
(URS)
Stade Louis II,
Monaco
Single match played in neutral ground for political reasons
1985'NOT HELD'
Juventus (ITA) (C1) vs Everton (ENG) (C2)
Not held because of Heysel tragedy and consequent UEFA ban on English clubs
1984'Juventus' (C2)
(ITA)
'2 - 0'Liverpool (C1)
(ENG)
Stadio Comunale,
Turin
Only one match played because Liverpool could not find another date to play Juventus
1983Hamburger SV (C1)
(FRG)
'0 - 0''Aberdeen' (C2)
(SCO)
Volksparkstadion,
Hamburg
'Aberdeen'
(SCO)
'2 - 0'Hamburger SV
(FRG)
Pittodrie Stadium,
Aberdeen
'Aberdeen' won 2-0 on aggregate
1982Barcelona (C2)
(ESP)
'1 - 0''Aston Villa' (C1)
(ENG)
Camp Nou,
Barcelona
'Aston Villa'
(ENG)
'3 - 0
aet'
Barcelona
(ESP)
Villa Park,
Birmingham
'Aston Villa' won 3-1 on aggregate
1981'NOT HELD'
Liverpool (ENG) (C1) vs Dinamo Tbilisi (URS) (C2)
Not held because Liverpool could not find dates to meet Dinamo Tbilisi
1980Nottingham Forest (C1)
(ENG)
'2 - 1''Valencia' (C2)
(ESP)
City Ground,
Nottingham
'Valencia'
(ESP)
'1 - 0'Nottingham Forest
(ENG)
Luis Casanova Stadium,
Valencia
Aggregate: 2-2
'Valencia' won on away goals
1979'Nottingham Forest' (C1)
(ENG)
'1 - 0'Barcelona (C2)
(ESP)
City Ground,
Nottingham
Barcelona
(ESP)
'1 - 1''Nottingham Forest'
(ENG)
Camp Nou,
Barcelona
'Nottingham Forest' won 2-1 on aggregate
1978'Anderlecht' (C2)
(BEL)
'3 - 1'Liverpool (C1)
(ENG)
Parc Astrid,
Brussels
Liverpool
(ENG)
'2 - 1''Anderlecht'
(BEL)
Anfield,
Liverpool
'Anderlecht' won 4-3 on aggregate
1977Hamburger SV (C2)
(FRG)
'1 - 1''Liverpool' (C1)
(ENG)
Volksparkstadion,
Hamburg
'Liverpool'
(ENG)
'6 - 0'Hamburger SV
(FRG)
Anfield,
Liverpool
'Liverpool' won 7-1 on aggregate
1976Bayern Munich (C1)
(FRG)
'2 - 1''Anderlecht' (C2)
(BEL)
Olympiastadion,
Munich
'Anderlecht'
(BEL)
'4 - 1'Bayern Munich
(FRG)
Parc Astride,
Brussels
'Anderlecht' won 5-3 on aggregate
1975Bayern Munich (C1)
(FRG)
'0 - 1''FC Dynamo Kiev' (C2)
(URS)
Olympiastadion,
Munich
'FC Dynamo Kiev'
(URS)
'2 - 0'Bayern Munich
(FRG)
Republican Stadium,
Kiev
'FC Dynamo Kiev' won 3-0 on aggregate
1974'NOT HELD'
Bayern Munich (FRG) (C1) vs FC Magdeburg (GDR) (C2)
Not held for political reasons
1973A.C. Milan (C2)
(ITA)
'1 - 0''Ajax' (C1)
(NED)
San Siro,
Milan
'Ajax'
(NED)
'6 - 0'A.C. Milan
(ITA)
Olympisch Stadion,
Amsterdam
'Ajax' won 6-1 on aggregate
1972Rangers (C2)
(SCO)
'1 - 3''Ajax' (C1)
(NED)
Ibrox Stadium,
Glasgow
'Ajax'
(NED)
'3 - 2'Rangers
(SCO)
De Meer Stadium,
Amsterdam
'Ajax' won 6-3 on aggregate


★ ''aet - after extra time''

★ ''(C1) refers to entrants from the European Cup or Champions League''

★ ''(C2) refers to entrants from the Cup Winners' Cup''

★ ''(C3) refers to entrants from the UEFA or Fairs Cup''

Performance by nation


NationWinnersLosing finalistsWinning clubs
Italy93A.C. Milan (5), Juventus (2), Parma (1), Lazio (1)
England75Liverpool (3), Chelsea (1), Manchester United (1), Aston Villa (1), Nottingham Forest (1)
Spain68Barcelona (2), Valencia (2), Real Madrid (1), Sevilla (1)
Netherlands33Ajax (3)
Belgium30Anderlecht (2), KV Mechelen (1)
Portugal12Porto (1)
Scotland11Aberdeen (1)
Ukraine11Dynamo Kyiv (1)
Romania10Steaua Bucharest (1)
Turkey10Galatasaray (1)
Germany07
France01
Yugoslavia01
Russia01

By Club

TeamWinnersRunners-Up
1 AC Milan52
2 Liverpool F.C.32
3 AFC Ajax31
4 FC Barcelona24
5 Valencia CF20
Juventus20
Anderlecht20
7 FC Porto12
Real Madrid12
9 Manchester United11
Nottingham Forest11
Dynamo Kyiv11
Sevilla FC11
13 Steaua Bucharest10
Aston Villa10
Aberdeen10
Chelsea10
KV Mechelen10
AC Parma10
Lazio10
Galatasaray10
21 Bayern Munich03
22 HSV02
23 Feyenoord01
PSV01
Borussia Dortmund01
Rangers01
Real Zaragoza01
Werder Bremen01
Sampdoria01
Crvena Zvezda01
PSG01
CSKA Moscow01

See Also



UEFA Champions League

UEFA Cup

Super Cup

External Links



UEFA Super Cup

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