INTERCONTINENTAL CUP (FOOTBALL)

:''Toyota Cup redirects here, for other uses see Toyota Cup (disambiguation)''
1980-2004 Logo

The 'European/South American Cup', commonly referred to as the 'Intercontinental Cup' or 'Toyota Cup', was a football competition endorsed by UEFA and CONMEBOL, contested between the winners of the European Champions League and the South American Copa Libertadores in a match played each year, from 1980 always in Japan.
The Cup was called the 'World Club Championship' until the first FIFA Club World Cup was held in 2000.
From 2005 the Intercontinental Cup was replaced by the FIFA Club World Cup, which also includes North American, Asian, African and Oceanian winners.

Contents
History
Cup Format
Intercontinental Cup finals
Single match finals
Two-legged finals
Overall Statistics
By Team
By countries
By continent
Coaches
Team - Players
Man of the Match
See also
External links

History


The first team to claim a "World Championship" were clubs, Hibernian F.C., who as Scottish Cup winners challenged and defeated FA Cup winners Preston North End on August 13, 1887. The next season's winners, Renton F.C. challenged and defeated FA Cup holders West Bromwich Albion the following year, although the match was played without authorization from their respective associations. With the subsequent creation of the English and Scottish Football Leagues, the concept of a club as World Champion took on less importance as the clubs focused on winning their national leagues and the game spread further abroad.
The World Club Championship forerunner to today's cup was created by Henri Delaunay as a way of determining who is the top club in the world (Europe and South America being the football world's top continents).
Europe already had its European Champions Club Cup, but South America did not have a similar competition. Thus, South American ''Confederación'' (CONMEBOL's predecessor) created a similar competition, and named it after the heroes of South American independence. The Copa Libertadores made the World Club Championship viable.
The first match-up was in 1960, between Spanish side Real Madrid and the Uruguayan club Peñarol.
Ever since the 1950s (and especially since the 1970s) many talented South Americans have crossed the Atlantic to play for European teams, who also tend to be richer. Perhaps as a consequence, South American fans always attached more importance to the Intercontinental Cup than their European counterparts.
An especially traumatic event was the 1969 series between Estudiantes and Milan, which resulted in extremely harsh suspensions for many Estudiantes players.
Out of concern for the integrity of players, and also because of the lack of financial incentive, several European champions declined to participate; in all cases, their runners-up took their place. The 1975 and 1978 editions were not played at all.
The very viability of the competition came under fire until Toyota assumed the role of sponsor for the 1980 edition; for the remainder of the competition's history, no club declined playing the Intercontinental Cup, and the competition always took the form of a single match held on neutral ground, in Toyota's home country Japan.
This cup was played for the last time in 2004, being replaced by the FIFA Club World Cup from 2005. However, as of December 2005 there are talks of restoring it soon but this time featuring the winners of the Recopa Sudamericana against the European Supercup champions.

Cup Format


From 1960 to 1979, the World Club Championship was played in two legs. Between 1960 and 1968, the cup was decided on points only, the same format used by CONMEBOL to determine the winner of the Copa Libertadores final through 1987. Because of this format, a third match was needed when both teams were tied on points. From 1969 through 1979, the competition adopted the European standard method of aggregate score, with away goals.
Starting in 1980, the final became a single match. Up until 2000, the matches were held at Tokyo's National Stadium. Finals since 2001 were held at the Yokohama International Stadium, venue of the 2002 FIFA World Cup final.

Intercontinental Cup finals


Single match finals


★ For finals including both Intercontinental Cup and FIFA Club World Cup, see Intercontinental Cup and FIFA Club World Cup statistics.
YearWinnerScoreRunner-upVenue
2004'FC Porto'

(POR)
'0 - 0
aet'
Once Caldas

(COL)
International Stadium,
Yokohama
8-7 in penalty shootout
2003'Boca Juniors'

(ARG)
'1 - 1
aet'
AC Milan

(ITA)
International Stadium,
Yokohama
3-1 in penalty shootout
2002'Real Madrid'

(ESP)
'2 - 0'Olimpia Asunción

(PAR)
International Stadium,
Yokohama
2001'Bayern Munich'

(GER)
'1 - 0'Boca Juniors

(ARG)
International Stadium,
Yokohama
2000'Boca Juniors'

(ARG)
'2 - 1'Real Madrid

(ESP)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
1999'Manchester United'

(ENG)
'1 - 0'Palmeiras

(BRA)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
1998'Real Madrid'

(ESP)
'2 - 1'Vasco da Gama

(BRA)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
1997'Borussia Dortmund'

(GER)
'2 - 0'Cruzeiro

(BRA)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
1996'Juventus F.C.'

(ITA)
'1 - 0'River Plate

(ARG)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
1995'Ajax'

(NED)
'0 - 0
aet'
Grêmio

(BRA)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
4-3 in penalty shootout
1994'Vélez Sarsfield'

(ARG)
'2 - 0'AC Milan

(ITA)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
1993'São Paulo'

(BRA)
'3 - 2'AC Milan

(ITA)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
European champions Marseille (FRA) were suspended
due to a match fixing and bribery scandal
1992'São Paulo'

(BRA)
'2 - 1'Barcelona

(ESP)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
1991'Red Star Belgrade'

(YUG)
'3 - 0'Colo-Colo

(CHI)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
1990'AC Milan'

(ITA)
'3 - 0'Olimpia Asunción

(PAR)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
1989'AC Milan'

(ITA)
'1 - 0
aet'
Atlético Nacional

(COL)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
1988'Nacional'

(URU)
'2 - 2
aet'
PSV Eindhoven

(NED)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
7-6 in penalty shootout
1987'FC Porto'

(POR)
'2 - 1
aet'
Peñarol

(URU)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
1986'River Plate'

(ARG)
'1 - 0'Steaua Bucharest

(ROM)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
1985'Juventus'

(ITA)
'2 - 2
aet'
Argentinos Juniors

(ARG)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
4-2 in penalty shootout
1984'Independiente'

(ARG)
'1 - 0'Liverpool

(ENG)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
1983'Grêmio'

(BRA)
'2 - 1
aet'
Hamburger SV

(FRG)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
1982'Peñarol'

(URU)
'2 - 0'Aston Villa

(ENG)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
1981'Flamengo'

(BRA)
'3 - 0'Liverpool

(ENG)
National Stadium,
Tokyo
1980'Nacional'

(URU)
'1 - 0'Nottingham Forest

(ENG)
National Stadium,
Tokyo

Two-legged finals

YearHome TeamScoreAway TeamVenue
1979Malmö FF

(SWE)
'0 - 1''Olimpia Asunción'

(PAR)
Malmö Stadion,
Malmö
'Olimpia Asunción'

(PAR)
'2 - 1'Malmö FF

(SWE)
Defensores del Chaco,
Asunción
'Olimpia Asunción' won 3-1 on aggregate
Note: European champions Nottingham Forest (ENG) declined to play
1978'NOT HELD'
Liverpool Boca Juniors
vs

(ENG) (ARG)
Both teams declined to play due to scheduling conflicts
1977'Boca Juniors'

(ARG)
'2 - 2'Borussia M'gladbach

(FRG)
La Bombonera,
Buenos Aires
Borussia M'gladbach

(FRG)
'0 - 3''Boca Juniors'

(ARG)
Wildpark,
Karlsruhe
'Boca Juniors' won 5-2 on aggregate
Note: European champions Liverpool (ENG) declined to play
1976'Bayern Munich'

(FRG)
'2 - 0'Cruzeiro

(BRA)
Olympiastadion,
Munich
Cruzeiro

(BRA)
'0 - 0''Bayern Munich'

(FRG)
Mineirão,
Belo Horizonte
'Bayern Munich' won 2-0 on aggregate
1975'NOT HELD'
Bayern Munich Independiente
vs

(FRG) (ARG)
Both teams could not agree on dates to play
1974Independiente

(ARG)
'1 - 0''Atlético Madrid'

(ESP)
Estadio Almirante Cordero,
Avellaneda
'Atlético Madrid'

(ESP)
'2 - 0'Independiente

(ARG)
Vicente Calderón,
Madrid
'Atlético Madrid' won 2-1 on aggregate
Note: European champions Bayern Munich (FRG) declined to play
1973Juventus

(ITA)
'0 - 1''Independiente'

(ARG)
Stadio Olimpico,
Rome
Single match played
Note: European champions Ajax (NED) declined to play
1972Independiente

(ARG)
'1 - 1''Ajax'

(NED)
Estadio Almirante Cordero,
Avellaneda
'Ajax'

(NED)
'3 - 0'Independiente

(ARG)
Olympic Stadium,
Amsterdam
'Ajax' won 4-1 on aggregate
1971Panathinaikos

(GRE)
'1 - 1''Nacional'

(URU)
Karaiskaki,
Athens
'Nacional'

(URU)
'2 - 1'Panathinaikos

(GRE)
Estadio Centenario,
Montevideo
'Nacional' won 3-2 on aggregate
Note: European champions Ajax (NED) declined to play
1970Estudiantes La Plata

(ARG)
'2 - 2''Feyenoord'

(NED)
La Bombonera,
Buenos Aires
'Feyenoord'

(NED)
'1 - 0'Estudiantes La Plata

(ARG)
De Kuip,
Rotterdam
'Feyenoord' won 3-2 on aggregate
1969'AC Milan'

(ITA)
'3 - 0'Estudiantes La Plata

(ARG)
San Siro,
Milan
Estudiantes La Plata

(ARG)
'2 - 1''AC Milan'

(ITA)
La Bombonera,
Buenos Aires
'AC Milan' won 4-2 on aggregate
1968'Estudiantes La Plata'

(ARG)
'1 - 0'Manchester United

(ENG)
La Bombonera,
Buenos Aires
Manchester United

(ENG)
'1 - 1''Estudiantes La Plata'

(ARG)
Old Trafford,
Manchester
'Estudiantes La Plata' won with 3 points
1967Celtic

(SCO)
'1 - 0''Racing Club'

(ARG)
Hampden Park,
Glasgow
'Racing Club'

(ARG)
'2 - 1'Celtic

(SCO)
El Cilindro,
Avellaneda
'Racing Club'

(ARG)
'1 - 0'Celtic

(SCO)
Estadio Centenario,
Montevideo
Both teams tied with 2 points each
'Racing Club' won the decisive playoff match
1966'Peñarol'

(URU)
'2 - 0'Real Madrid

(ESP)
Estadio Centenario,
Montevideo
Real Madrid

(ESP)
'0 - 2''Peñarol'

(URU)
Santiago Bernabéu,
Madrid
'Peñarol' won with 4 points
1965'Inter Milan'

(ITA)
'3 - 0'Independiente

(ARG)
Giuseppe Meazza,
Milan
Independiente

(ARG)
'0 - 0''Inter Milan'

(ITA)
Estadio Almirante Cordero,
Avellaneda
'Inter Milan' won with 3 points
1964Independiente

(ARG)
'1 - 0''Inter Milan'

(ITA)
Estadio Almirante Cordero,
Avellaneda
'Inter Milan'

(ITA)
'2 - 0'Independiente

(ARG)
Giuseppe Meazza,
Milan
'Inter Milan'

(ITA)
'1 - 0
aet'
Independiente

(ARG)
Santiago Bernabéu,
Madrid
Both teams tied with 2 points each
'Inter Milan' won the decisive playoff match
1963AC Milan

(ITA)
'4 - 2''Santos'

(BRA)
San Siro,
Milan
'Santos'

(BRA)
'4 - 2'AC Milan

(ITA)
Maracanã,
Rio de Janeiro
'Santos'

(BRA)
'1 - 0'AC Milan

(ITA)
Maracanã,
Rio de Janeiro
Both teams tied with 2 points each
'Santos' won the decisive playoff match
1962'Santos'

(BRA)
'3 - 2'Benfica

(POR)
Maracanã,
Rio de Janeiro
Benfica

(POR)
'2 - 5''Santos'

(BRA)
Estádio da Luz,
Lisbon
'Santos' won with 4 points
1961Benfica

(POR)
'1 - 0''Peñarol'

(URU)
Estádio da Luz,
Lisbon
'Peñarol'

(URU)
'5 - 0'Benfica

(POR)
Estadio Centenario,
Montevideo
'Peñarol'

(URU)
'2 - 1'Benfica

(POR)
Estadio Centenario,
Montevideo
Both teams tied with 2 points each
'Peñarol' won the decisive playoff match
1960Peñarol

(URU)
'0 - 0''Real Madrid'

(ESP)
Estadio Centenario,
Montevideo
'Real Madrid'

(ESP)
'5 - 1'Peñarol

(URU)
Santiago Bernabéu,
Madrid
'Real Madrid' won with 3 points

''aet - after extra time''

Overall Statistics



★ For statistics including both European/South American Cup and FIFA Club World Cup, see Intercontinental Cup and FIFA Club World Cup statistics.
By Team

TeamCupsYears
Boca Juniors3(1977, 2000, 2003)
AC Milan3(1969, 1989, 1990)
Nacional3(1971, 1980, 1988)
Peñarol3(1961, 1966, 1982)
Real Madrid3(1960, 1998, 2002)
AFC Ajax2(1972, 1995)
Bayern Munich2(1976, 2001)
Independiente2(1973, 1984)
Internazionale2(1964, 1965)
Juventus2(1985, 1996)
FC Porto2(1987, 2004)
Santos FC2(1962, 1963)
São Paulo2(1992, 1993)
Atlético Madrid1(1974)
Borussia Dortmund1(1997)
Estudiantes La Plata1(1968)
Feyenoord1(1970)
Flamengo1(1981)
Grêmio1(1983)
Manchester United1(1999)
Olimpia1(1979)
Racing Club1(1967)
Red Star Belgrade1(1991)
River Plate1(1986)
Vélez Sársfield1(1994)

By countries

CountryTeamsCupsYears
Argentina
69(1967, 1968, 1973, 1977, 1984, 1986, 1994, 2000, 2003)
Italy
37(1964, 1965, 1969, 1985, 1989, 1990, 1996)
Brazil
46(1962, 1963, 1981, 1983, 1992, 1993)
Uruguay
26(1961, 1966, 1971, 1980, 1982, 1988)
Spain
24(1960, 1974, 1998, 2002)
Germany
23(1976, 1997, 2001)
Netherlands
23(1970, 1972, 1995)
Portugal
12(1987, 2004)
Paraguay
11(1979)
England
11(1999)
Yugoslavia
11(1991)

By continent

ContinentTeamsCountriesCups
South America13422
Europe12721

Coaches

Carlos Bianchi won three editions as coach: one with Vélez Sársfield in 1994, and 2 with Boca Juniors in 2000 and 2003.
Luis Cubilla and Juan Mugica, 2 Uruguayans won cups both as a player and coaching:

★ Luis Cubilla (played for Peñarol in 1961 and for Nacional in 1971; then coached Olimpia Asunción in 1979)

★ Juan Mugica (played for Nacional in 1971; and coached it in 1980)
Team - Players


Alessandro Costacurta and Paolo Maldini participated 5 times of the competition, always with Milan (1989, 1990, 1993, 1994, 2003).

★ Estudiantes (1968, 1969 and 1970) and Independiente (1972, 1973 and 1974) participated 3 consecutive years. Of these teams a few players played the three years, including Carlos Salvador Bilardo and Juan Ramón Verón.
Man of the Match

''Since 1980''
YearPlayerClub
2004 Maniche FC Porto
2003 Matías Donnet Boca Juniors
2002 Ronaldo Real Madrid
2001 Samuel Kuffour Bayern Munich
2000 Martín Palermo Boca Juniors
1999 Ryan Giggs Manchester United
1998 Raúl Real Madrid
1997 Andreas Möller Borussia Dortmund
1996 Alessandro Del Piero Juventus
1995 Danny Blind AFC Ajax
1994 Omar Asad Vélez Sársfield
1993 Cerezo São Paulo FC
1992 Raí São Paulo FC
1991 Vladimir Jugović Red Star Belgrade
1990 Frank Rijkaard AC Milan
1989 Alberigo Evani AC Milan
1988 Santiago Ostolaza Nacional
1987 Rabah Madjer FC Porto
1986 Antonio Alzamendi River Plate
1985 Michel Platini Juventus
1984 José Percudani Independiente
1983 Renato Gaúcho Grêmio
1982 Jair Peñarol
1981 Zico Flamengo
1980 Waldemar Victorino Nacional

See also



FIFA Club World Cup

Copa Toyota Libertadores

UEFA Champions League

Intercontinental Cup and FIFA Club World Cup statistics

External links



Official Competition Website

UEFA website

International Clubs Cup - The Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation

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