'The Inter-Cities Fairs Cup' was a
European football competition played between 1955 and 1971. The competition was the idea of
Swiss pools supremo,
Ernst Thommen,
Ottorino Barrasi from
Italy and the English
FA general secretary,
Stanley Rous, all of whom later became senior officials at
FIFA. As the name suggests, the competition was set up to promote
international trade fairs. Friendly games were regularly held between teams from cities holding trade fairs and it was from these games that the competition evolved. The competition was initially only open to teams from cities that hosted trade fairs and where these teams finished in their national league had no relevance. Early competitions also featured a ''one city, one team'' rule. After 1968 it was sometimes referred to as the ''Runners Up Cup'', with teams now qualifying based on league position. In 1971 it was replaced by the '
UEFA Cup'.
History
Spanish era
The first competition was to be held over two seasons to avoid clashes with national leagues fixtures. However, because it was also intended to coincide with trade fairs it ran over into a third year. It commenced in 1955 and eventually finished in 1958. Cities that entered teams included
Basle,
Birmingham,
Copenhagen,
Frankfurt,
Vienna,
Cologne,
Lausanne,
Leipzig,
London,
Milan and
Zagreb. The first competition included a group stage and also featured some city representative teams instead of clubs. The eventual finalists were
Barcelona and a
London XI. While the latter side consisted of players from eleven different clubs, the former was effectively
FC Barcelona with one player from
RCD Espanyol. After a 2-2 draw at
Stamford Bridge, Barcelona emerged triumphant after winning the return 6-0. A second tournament took place between 1958 and 1960. This time the group stage format was abandoned in favour of a knockout tournament. FC Barcelona retained the cup, beating
Birmingham City F.C. 4-1 in the final.
The third tournament was held over the course of the 1960-61 season and all subsequent tournaments were completed over one season. The season also saw the holders, FC Barcelona, compete in both the Fairs Cup and
European Cup. During the early days of European competition, these tournaments were effectively rivals and there was little or no co-ordination between the administrators running them. However, the
European Cup quickly established itself as the premier club competition, largely because it had the advantage of featuring national league champions and was completed in a single season from the very start. The efforts of FC Barcelona ended in failure in both competitions. In the Fairs Cup quarter-finals they lost 7-6 on aggregate to
Hibernian F.C. while in the European Cup they were beaten in the final by
SL Benfica.
A.S. Roma took three games to beat Hibernian in the semi-finals before they progressed to the final. Birmingham City reached their second final in two years but once again they were defeated. After a 2-2 draw at home, they lost the 2-0 to Roma in the return.
The 1961-62 season saw the rules amended to allow three teams from each country to enter. The ''one city, one team'' was also abandoned and the cities of
Edinburgh and Barcelona were represented by two teams each. The former entered both Hibernian and
Heart of Midlothian while the later was represented by both FC Barcelona and RCD Espanyol. This increase in teams resulted in
Spanish teams continuing to dominate the competition. FC Barcelona were now regularly joined by
Valencia CF and
Real Zaragoza. These three clubs won the competition six times between them from 1958 to 1966. The Fairs Cup also saw three all-Spanish finals in 1962, 1964 and 1966. The 1962 final saw Valencia CF beat FC Barcelona 7-3 on aggregate and in 1963 they retained the title after beating
Dinamo Zagreb with a 4-1 aggregate score. They reached their third final in 1964 but lost 2-1 to Real Zaragoza in a single game at the
Camp Nou.
The 1965 edition saw a record entry of 48 teams, testimony to the growing status of the Fairs Cup. It also produced only the second final not to feature a Spanish team.
Ferencvaros of
Hungary beat
Juventus F.C. in another single game final. The 1966 competition attracted attention for all the wrong reasons.
Chelsea F.C. were pelted with rubbish at AS Roma and
Leeds United F.C. fought a bruising encounter with Valencia CF which ended with three dismissals. Leeds United also had
Johnny Giles sent off in the semi-final against Real Zaragoza. The final saw FC Barcelona beat Real Zaragoza 4-3 on aggregate.
English era
The 1967 tournament saw the emergence of
English clubs with Leeds United reaching the final. Although they lost to
Dinamo Zagreb, they returned the following season and defeated
Ferencvaros to become the first English club to win the competition. The subsequent victories of
Newcastle United F.C. and
Arsenal F.C. and a second win for Leeds United saw English clubs winning the last four Fairs Cup tournaments. The last final saw Leeds United declared winners on away goals after drawing with Juventus 3-3 on aggregate.
UEFA Cup
The 1971-72 season saw the competition taken over by
UEFA and relaunched, with a new trophy, as the
UEFA Cup. By replacing the trophy, renaming the competition and revising the entry regulations,
UEFA effectively ended the Fairs Cup. The Inter-Cities Fairs Cup is not regarded as a UEFA competition by UEFA
[1]
[2]. On
September 22 1971, a one-off match was played between cup-holders Leeds United and three-time winners FC Barcelona to decide who would gain permanent possession of the original trophy. Barcelona won this play-off 2-1.
Finals
| Season | Home Team | Score | Away Team | Venue |
|---|
| 1971''Trophy Play-Off'' | 'CF Barcelona' (ESP) | '2 - 1' | Leeds United (ENG) | Camp Nou, Barcelona |
| Single match play-off |
| 1970/71''Details'' | Juventus (ITA) | '2 - 2' | 'Leeds United' (ENG) | Stadio Comunale, Turin |
'Leeds United' (ENG) | '1 - 1' | Juventus (ITA) | Elland Road, Leeds |
Aggregate: 3-3 'Leeds United' won on away goals | |
| 1969/70''Details'' | Anderlecht (BEL) | '3 - 1' | 'Arsenal' (ENG) | Parc Astrid, Brussels |
'Arsenal' (ENG) | '3 - 0' | Anderlecht (BEL) | Arsenal Stadium, London |
| 'Arsenal' won 4-3 on aggregate | |
| 1968/69''Details'' | 'Newcastle United' (ENG) | '3 - 0' | Újpest FC (HUN) | St. James' Park, Newcastle |
Újpest FC (HUN) | '2 - 3' | 'Newcastle United' (ENG) | Megyeri úti Stadium, Budapest |
| 'Newcastle United' won 6-2 on aggregate | |
| 1967/68''Details'' | 'Leeds United' (ENG) | '1 - 0' | Ferencvaros (HUN) | Elland Road, Leeds |
Ferencvaros (HUN) | '0 - 0' | 'Leeds United' (ENG) | Nepstadion, Budapest |
| 'Leeds United' won 1-0 on aggregate | |
| 1966/67''Details'' | 'Dinamo Zagreb' (YUG) | '2 - 0' | Leeds United (ENG) | Maksimir, Zagreb |
Leeds United (ENG) | '0 - 0' | 'Dinamo Zagreb' (YUG) | Elland Road, Leeds |
| 'Dinamo Zagreb' won 2-0 on aggregate | |
| 1965/66''Details'' | 'CF Barcelona' (ESP) | '0 - 1' | Real Zaragoza (ESP) | Camp Nou, Barcelona |
Real Zaragoza (ESP) | '2 - 4 aet' | 'CF Barcelona' (ESP) | La Romareda, Zaragoza |
| 'Barcelona' won 4-3 on aggregate | |
| 1964/65''Details'' | Juventus (ITA) | '0 - 1'
| 'Ferencvaros' (HUN) | Stadio Comunale, Turin |
| Single match played |
| 1963/64''Details'' | 'Real Zaragoza' (ESP) | '2 - 1' | Valencia CF (ESP) | Camp Nou, Barcelona |
| Single match played |
| 1962/63''Details'' | 'Dinamo Zagreb' (YUG) | '1 - 2' | 'Valencia CF' (ESP) | Maksimir, Zagreb |
'Valencia CF' (ESP) | '2 - 0' | 'Dinamo Zagreb' (YUG) | Luis Casanova Stadium, Valencia |
| 'Valencia CF' won 4-1 on aggregate | |
| 1961/62''Details'' | 'Valencia CF' (ESP) | '6 - 2' | CF Barcelona (ESP) | Luis Casanova Stadium, Valencia |
CF Barcelona (ESP) | '1 - 1' | 'Valencia CF' (ESP) | Camp Nou, Barcelona |
| 'Valencia CF' won 7-3 on aggregate | |
| 1960/61''Details'' | Birmingham City (ENG) | '2 - 2' | 'A.S. Roma' (ITA) | St Andrews, Birmingham |
'AS Roma' (ITA) | '2 - 0' | Birmingham City (ENG) | Stadio Olimpico, Rome |
| 'AS Roma' won 4-2 on aggregate | |
| 1958/60''Details'' | Birmingham City (ENG) | '0 - 0' | 'CF Barcelona' (ESP) | St Andrews, Birmingham |
'CF Barcelona' (ESP) | '4 - 1' | Birmingham City (ENG) | Camp Nou, Barcelona |
| 'CF Barcelona' won 4-1 on aggregate | |
| 1955/58''Details'' | London XI (ENG) | '2 - 2' | 'CF Barcelona' (ESP) | Stamford Bridge, London |
'CF Barcelona' (ESP) | '6 - 0' | London XI (ENG) | Camp Nou, Barcelona |
| 'CF Barcelona' won 8-2 on aggregate | |
''aet - after
extra time''
External links
★
Stats at Rsssf
References
1. http://www.uefa.com/uefa/news/kind=1/newsid=2571.html
2. http://www.uefa.com/competitions/supercup/news/kind=32/newsid=447085.html