UEFA CUP

UEFA Cup
''2007-08 UEFA Cup''
'Founded'
1971
'Continent'
Europe (UEFA)
'Number of Teams'
'80' (First Round)
8 clubs join after group stage[1]
'157' (Total)
'Current Champions (2006-07)'
Sevilla FC
'2008 final to be held in'
City of Manchester Stadium
Manchester
'Most successful club'
Juventus FC
(3 time champions, 3 times runner-up)
'Website'
UEFA Cup

'The UEFA Cup' (also known as 'European Cup 3', 'CE3' or 'C3') is a football competition for European club teams, organized by the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA). It is the second most important international competition for European football clubs, after the UEFA Champions League. Clubs qualify for the UEFA Cup based on their performance in national leagues and cup competitions.
It began in 1971 and replaced the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup. In 1999 the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup was abolished and merged with the UEFA Cup. While the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup is considered a pre-cursor to the UEFA Cup for records purposes, this does not apply to the Cup Winners' Cup.
Sevilla FC are the current holders of the UEFA Cup having won the competition for the second year in a row with their latest triumph occurring in Hampden Park, Glasgow, Scotland, on 16 May 2007. They beat fellow Spaniards RCD Espanyol on penalties.
The final for the 2007-08 season will be hosted by Manchester.

Contents
History
Qualification
Competition format
Current format
Historical formats
UEFA Cup Finals
Inter-Cities Fairs Cup Finals
Records and statistics
Notes and references
See also
External links

History


The UEFA Cup was first played in 1971 with English team Tottenham Hotspur F.C. being the first winner. The 'one club per city' rule, inherited from the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, was dropped in 1975. English club Everton F.C. had finished fourth in the English league and could thus qualify but were barred from entry because city rivals Liverpool F.C. 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 UEFA's third European competition, the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup. Since then, the winners of domestic cup competitions have also entered the UEFA Cup. Also, clubs eliminated in the third qualifying round of the UEFA Champions League and the third placed teams at the end of the group phase could go on to compete in the UEFA Cup. Also admitted to the competition are three Fair Play representatives, eleven UEFA Intertoto Cup winners, and winners of some selected domestic league cup competitions.
The winners keep the trophy for a year and after handing it back they can keep a replica which is four-fifths the size of the original trophy. The regulations also state that the original trophy is handed to any club that wins the UEFA Cup three times in a row or five times overall though this has yet to occur as of 2007.
Three teams have achieved the great accomplishment of winning their domestic league, domestic cup and the UEFA Cup in the same season, those being Galatasaray in 2000, F.C. Porto in 2003 and PFC CSKA Moscow in 2005.

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 currently grant a UEFA Cup place to their secondary cup winners are England and France.
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) by virtue of their domestic form, 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 for European competition through two different routes. In all cases, if a club is eligible to enter the UEFA Champions League then the Champions League place takes preference and the club does not enter the UEFA Cup. The UEFA Cup place is then granted to another club. If a team qualifies for European competition through both winning a cup and league placing, the "spare" UEFA Cup place will go to either the cup runners-up or the highest placed league team which has not already qualified for European competition, depending on the rules of the national association.
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 second 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 current competition format was first adopted for the 2004-05 season. The major change was the introduction of a group stage and two qualifying rounds instead of one. Additional changes were introduced for 2006-07 season due to the changes in the UEFA Intertoto Cup format.
Current format

The UEFA Cup starts with three knockout qualifying rounds held in July and August. Participants from associations ranked 18 and lower enter the first qualifying round, and participants from associations ranked 9-18 join them in the second qualifying round. In addition, three places in the first qualifying round are reserved for the Fair Play winners, and eleven places in the second qualifying round are reserved for the UEFA Intertoto Cup winners.
Winners of the qualifying rounds join teams from the associations ranked 1-13 in the first round proper. In addition, losers in the third qualifying round of the Champions League also enter this round, and another place is reserved for the title-holders. There are 80 teams total in this round.
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.
After the group stage there is a winter break. From this point, knockout play resumes, with two-legged ties leading to the one-off final, which is held at a neutral ground meeting UEFA's criteria for a .
Seeding is used to protect stronger teams in the qualifying rounds, first round and group stage.
Historical formats

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.

UEFA Cup Finals


Main articles: UEFA Cup finals

The Inter-Cities Fairs Cup and UEFA Cup finals were played over two legs until 1997. The first final was played on 5 March 1958 in London and 1 May 1958 in Barcelona. The first leg between London XI and FC Barcelona was drawn 2-2, but in the return match Barça triumphed 6-0.
The one-match finals in pre-selected venues were introduced in 1998. The venue must meet or exceed UEFA 4-star standards to host UEFA Cup finals. On two occasions the final was played at a finalist's home ground: Feyenoord defeated Borussia Dortmund at De Kuip, Rotterdam in 2002, and Sporting Lisbon lost to CSKA Moscow at their own José Alvalade Stadium, Lisbon in 2005.
The 2007-08 UEFA Cup Final will be played at the City of Manchester Stadium, Manchester, and the 2008-09 UEFA Cup Final will be played at the Şükrü Saracoğlu Stadium, Istanbul.

Inter-Cities Fairs Cup Finals


SeasonHome TeamScoreAway TeamVenue
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)
Szusza Ferenc 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''

Records and statistics


Main articles: UEFA Cup records and statistics

Notes and references


1. The top three teams in each group advance to the round of 32, where they are joined by the eight third-place teams in the Champions League group phase.

See also



UEFA Cup finals

UEFA Cup records and statistics

UEFA Champions League

UEFA Cup Winners' Cup

External links



Official UEFA Cup website

UEFA European Cup Football - independent site with regularly updated statistics including club and country rankings, tournament seedings, and match results.

UEFA Cup final 1966/67

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves