UEFA Cup Winners' Cup

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UEFA Cup Winners'Cup
Image:Cup Winners Cup.png
Founded
1960
Merged with the UEFA Cup.
1999
Continent
Europe (UEFA)
Number of Teams
32 (First Round)
49 (Total)[1]
Most successful club
Flag of Spain FC Barcelona
(4 time champions, 2 times runner-up)
Website
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup

The UEFA Cup Winners' Cup (also known as the European Cup Winners' Cup) was a football club competition contested annually by the most recent winners of all European domestic cup competitions. The cup is one of the many inter-European club competitions that have been organised by UEFA. The first competition was held in the 1960/61 season, and the last in 1998/99. The competition was then abolished to make way for a further expansion to the UEFA Champions League, with domestic cup winners now gaining entry into the UEFA Cup.

Prior to its abolition, the Cup Winners' Cup was regarded as the second most prestigious European club competition out of the three major tournaments, behind the UEFA Champions League/European Cup and ahead of the UEFA Cup, although many commentators felt the Cup Winners' Cup was the easiest of the three competitions to win.

From 1972 onwards, the winner of the tournament would go on to play the winner of the European Cup (later the UEFA Champions League) in the UEFA Super Cup. Since the abolition of the Cup Winners' Cup, the Super Cup place previously reserved for the CWC winner has been taken by the winner of the UEFA Cup.

From its inception until 1994, the competition was known as the 'European Cup Winners' Cup' - from the 1994/95 season onwards, UEFA officially named the tournament the 'UEFA Cup Winners' Cup'. The competition is also sometimes referred to as European Cup 2, EC2 or simply C2, usually in football statistics books and websites, although this shorthand was also used on some match tickets and in programmes. Despite the abolition of the Cup Winners' Cup, the modern UEFA Cup is still referred to in shorthand as EC3, in order to avoid confusion with the CWC.

Contents

[edit] Format

UEFA Cup Winners' Cup trophy
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup trophy

Throughout its 39-year history, the Cup Winners' Cup was always a straight knock-out tournament with two-legged home and away ties up until the single match final staged at a neutral venue, the only exception to this being the two-legged final in the competition's first year. The format was identical to the original European Champions' Cup with 32 teams contesting four knock-out rounds prior to the showpiece final, with the tournament usually running from September to May each year. In later years, a regular August preliminary round was added to reduce the number of entrants to 32 following the influx of new UEFA member nations during the 1990s.

Entry was restricted to one club from each UEFA member association, the only exception being to allow the current Cup Winners' Cup holders to enter alongside their nation's new domestic cup winners in order to allow them a chance to defend their CWC title. However, if this team also qualified for the European Champions' Cup then they would default on their place in the Cup Winners' Cup and no other team would replace them.

On occasions when a club completed a domestic league and cup 'double' that club would enter the European Cup/UEFA Champions League and their place in the Cup Winners' Cup would be taken by the domestic cup runners-up. In 1998/99, the competition's final year, SC Heerenveen of the Netherlands entered the CWC despite only reaching the semi-final of the previous season's Dutch Cup. This was due to both Dutch Cup finalists Ajax and PSV qualifying for the recently expanded Champions League. Heerenveen won a third-place playoff and became the only club to enter the Cup Winners' Cup without having contested their own domestic cup final the previous year.

The winners of the League Cup competitions held in some countries were never allowed to enter the Cup Winners' Cup. Instead the winners of these competitions were sometimes allowed to enter the UEFA Cup.

[edit] History

[edit] Inauguration

Mirroring the circumstances behind the creation of the European Cup five years earlier, the idea for a pan-European cup competition contested by all of Europe's domestic cup winners came from prominent European sports journalists. The European Cup had proven to be a great success and the Fairs Cup had also proven popular - as a result, other ideas for new European football tournaments were being aired. One proposal was for a tournament based upon the format of the Champions' Cup, but with national cup winners rather than champions taking part, which could run alongside that competition.

The inaugural Cup Winners' Cup was held in the 1960/61 season and was basically a semi-official pilot tournament. However the initial reaction to the competition's creation was unenthusiastic on the part of many of Europe's top clubs - many European associations did not have domestic cup competitions at the time and in those countries that did, the cup competition was generally held in low esteem and often not taken seriously by the bigger clubs. It was essentially only in England and Scotland that the domestic cup was considered especially prestigious. Many were sceptical about the viability of a European tournament for cup winners and many of the bigger clubs eligible to contest the first CWC turned down the chance to enter, such as Atlético Madrid of Spain and AS Monaco of France.

Ultimately the inaugural CWC was contested by just 10 clubs (with Fiorentina of Italy winning the two-legged final against the Scottish team Rangers FC) but the games were generally well attended and the response from the public and the media to the new tournament was positive and enthusiastic. For the tournament's second season in 1961/62, UEFA took over the running of all aspects of the competition and this time all the clubs eligible to enter accepted the opportunity. By 1968, all UEFA member nations had set up domestic cup competitions due to the success of the Cup Winners' Cup which by then had firmly established itself as Europe's second most prestigious club competition.

[edit] Prestige

The Cup Winners' Cup was a key component of the European football calendar throughout the 1970s and 1980s. The cup was regarded by UEFA as its second most important club competition, even though the tournament was felt to be weaker than both the European Cup and the UEFA Cup in terms of the overall quality of the teams taking part. The tournament gained a reputation for showcasing attacking, entertaining football and also for the remarkable number of spectacular long range goals in many of the finals.

Notable sides to have won the Cup Winners' Cup and some notable finals include:

  • The Tottenham Hotspur side of Danny Blanchflower which became the first British side to win a European trophy when they won the CWC in 1963, two years after becoming the first side in modern times to complete the English league and cup double. Spurs hammered reigning CWC holders Atlético Madrid in the final 5-1, a scoreline which remains the joint largest margin of victory in a one-match European final.
  • In 1970 Joe Mercer's free flow attacking Manchester City side defeated Gornik Zabrze and in doing so became the first English side to win a European and domestic cup in the same season.
  • West Ham United in 1965, who won the CWC at Wembley Stadium with Bobby Moore captaining a side that also included Geoff Hurst and Martin Peters just one season before all three went on to star in England's World Cup winning side of 1966. They defeated 1860 Munich in the final. As a result of their CWC success, Bobby Moore became the only captain to climb the Wembley steps to be presented with three different trophies in three successive seasons (English FA Cup and European Cup Winners' Cup with West Ham in 1964 and 1965 respectively, then the World Cup with England in 1966).
  • AC Milan in 1968, who went on to follow up this success with victory in the European Champions' Cup the following year, making them only one of two clubs to achieve the feat of winning the Cup Winners' Cup and European Cup in consecutive seasons.
  • Rangers FC in 1972. This victory was significant due to the notably difficult route Rangers had to the final, including victory over the famous Bayern Munich team of Franz Beckenbauer. It was also Rangers' third CWC final after losing in 1961 and 1967, and the victory sparked a pitch invasion by their fans. As a result of this Rangers were presented with the trophy in the dressing-room and were forbidden by UEFA from defending the CWC in the following season.
  • Anderlecht, who won the CWC in 1976, then lost the final the following year before returning in 1978 to claim the trophy for the second time in three years.
  • Dinamo Tbilisi in 1981, who won the CWC with a spectacular side that defeated West Ham United home and away before beating Carl Zeiss Jena in the competitions most poorly attended final (7,000 in Dusseldorf). This win was the high point of that Georgian side and is still the club's greatest achievement.
  • Alex Ferguson's young Aberdeen side unexpectedly defeated Spanish giants Real Madrid in 1983, after a notable victory over Bayern Munich in the quarter-final. Having conquered the domestic game in Scotland, Aberdeen went on to become the only Scottish team to win two European trophies by defeating the European Cup holders Hamburger SV to win the UEFA Super Cup, a record which still stands today.
  • Michel Platini's Juventus won the trophy in 1984 and then become the second team after AC Milan to follow victory in the Cup Winners' Cup with a successful European Cup campaign.
  • The Everton side of 1985 which claimed the Cup Winners' Cup and the English league title in the same season. After an impressive victory over Bayern Munich in the semi-final, Everton beat Rapid Wien in the final before narrowly missing out on a unique treble three days later after losing to Manchester United in the FA Cup final. Despite being widely tipped to win the European Champions' Cup the following season, Everton were barred from entering that tournament following the Heysel stadium disaster and the subsequent five-year ban on all English clubs entering UEFA competitions.
  • In 1988, KV Mechelen of Belgium became one of only a handful of clubs to win a European trophy in their first ever European campaign. Their CWC triumph was the highlight of a brief period in the limelight for the Belgian club, who drifted back into relative obscurity only a few years later.
  • Cruijff's star-studded F.C. Barcelona side which won the CWC in 1989. Cruijff became the first of only two managers to win the CWC with two different clubs, having completed the feat in the space of just three seasons.
  • Manchester United won the competition in 1991, becoming the first English team to win a European trophy since the Heysel disaster had forced English clubs into a five-year ban from European competition. United beat Johan Cruijff's F.C. Barcelona just a year before the Dutch legend would lead the Catalan giants to their first European Champions' Cup and in the process United manager Alex Ferguson became one of only two managers - the other being Cruijff himself - to win the CWC with two different clubs.
  • 1995 saw one of the most memorable CWC finals with Real Zaragoza defeating Arsenal F.C. 2-1 with one of the most extraordinary goals ever seen in a European final, a long-range strike by Nayim from 40 yards in the last minute of extra-time.

No club managed to retain the Cup Winners' Cup (the so-called "CWC jinx"), although FC Barcelona won it on four occasions (1979, 82, 89, 97) and finished runners up twice (1969, 91). Aberdeen won the tournament in 1983, however only managed to reach the semi-final the year after, in 1984. Anderlecht won it twice (1976, 78), and finished runners up twice (1977, 90); in addition, four finals over five years between 1993 and 1997 saw the holder reach the final only to lose (Parma F.C. 1993 and 1994, Arsenal F.C. 1994 and 1995, Paris Saint Germain 1996 - 1997).

[edit] Decline

After the establishment of the UEFA Champions League (formerly called the European Champions' Cup) in the early 1990s, the standing and prestige of the Cup Winners' Cup began to decline. With the expansion of the Champions League in 1997 to allow more than one team from the highest ranked member associations to enter, the CWC began to look noticeably inferior. At the time of the Champions League expansion, UEFA also considered expanding the CWC from 32 teams to 64 by allowing a second team to enter from many countries, although by what qualification criteria the second entrants would be determined were never settled upon - ultimately UEFA did not make any of these changes to the CWC. Many of the bigger teams who would previously have entered the CWC were now gaining entry to the Champions League instead by finishing second in their domestic league - such as CWC holders FC Barcelona in 1997/98 and Bayern Munich and PSV in 1998/99 - and this greatly weakened the CWC.

By the late 1990s, the CWC had come to be seen as a second-rate competition with only one or two big name teams available to enter each year and the interest in the tournament from both major clubs and the public dropped. Finally, with the further expansion of the UEFA Champions League to include as many as three or four teams from the top footballing nations, the decision was taken to abolish the competition after the end of the 1998/99 tournament, which was won by S.S. Lazio. Since then, domestic cup winners who do not otherwise qualify for the Champions League are given a place in the UEFA Cup.

[edit] Cup Winners' Cup finals

Season Winner Score Runner-up Venue
1998/99

Details

Flag of Italy S.S. Lazio 2 - 1 Flag of Spain RCD Mallorca Villa Park,
Birmingham
1997/98

Details

Flag of England Chelsea 1 - 0 Flag of Germany VfB Stuttgart Råsunda Stadium,
Stockholm
1996/97

Details

Flag of Spain Barcelona 1 - 0 Flag of France Paris Saint-Germain De Kuip,
Rotterdam
1995/96

Details

Flag of France Paris Saint-Germain 1 - 0 Flag of Austria Rapid Vienna King Baudouin Stadium,
Brussels
1994/95

Details

Flag of Spain Real Zaragoza 2 - 1
aet
Flag of England Arsenal Parc des Princes,
Paris
1993/94

Details

Flag of England Arsenal 1 - 0 Flag of Italy Parma Parken Stadium,
Copenhagen
1992/93

Details

Flag of Italy Parma 3 - 1 Flag of Belgium Royal Antwerp Wembley Stadium,
London
1991/92

Details

Flag of West Germany Werder Bremen 2 - 0 Flag of France Monaco Estádio da Luz,
Lisbon
1990/91

Details

Flag of England Manchester United 2 - 1 Flag of Spain Barcelona De Kuip,
Rotterdam
1989/90

Details

Flag of Italy Sampdoria 2 - 0
aet
Flag of Belgium Anderlecht Nya Ullevi,
Gothenburg
1988/89

Details

Flag of Spain Barcelona 2 - 0 Flag of Italy Sampdoria Wankdorf Stadium,
Berne
1987/88

Details

Flag of Belgium KV Mechelen 1 - 0 Flag of the Netherlands Ajax Stade de la Meinau,
Strasbourg
1986/87

Details

Flag of the Netherlands Ajax 1 - 0 Flag of the German Democratic Republic Lokomotive Leipzig Spiros Louis Stadium,
Athens
1985/86

Details

Flag of the Soviet Union Dinamo Kiev 3 - 0 Flag of Spain Atlético Madrid Stade de Gerland,
Lyon
1984/85

Details

Flag of England Everton 3 - 1 Flag of Austria Rapid Vienna De Kuip,
Rotterdam
1983/84

Details

Flag of Italy Juventus 2 - 1 Flag of Portugal FC Porto St. Jakob Stadium,
Basel
1982/83

Details

Flag of Scotland Aberdeen 2 - 1
aet
Flag of Spain Real Madrid Nya Ullevi,
Gothenburg
1981/82

Details

Flag of Spain Barcelona 2 - 1 Flag of Belgium Standard de Liège Camp Nou,
Barcelona
1980/81

Details

Flag of the Soviet Union Dinamo Tbilisi 2 - 1 Flag of the German Democratic Republic Carl Zeiss Jena Rheinstadion,
Düsseldorf
1979/80

Details

Flag of Spain Valencia 0 - 0
aet
Flag of England Arsenal Heysel Stadium,
Brussels
5 - 4 on penalty shootout;
1978/79

Details

Flag of Spain Barcelona 4 - 3
aet
Flag of West Germany Fortuna Düsseldorf St. Jakob Stadium,
Basel
1977/78

Details

Flag of Belgium Anderlecht 4 - 0 Flag of Austria Austria Vienna Parc des Princes,
Paris
1976/77

Details

Flag of West Germany Hamburger SV 2 - 0 Flag of Belgium Anderlecht Olympic Stadium,
Amsterdam
1975/76

Details

Flag of Belgium Anderlecht 4 - 2 Flag of England West Ham United Heysel Stadium,
Brussels
1974/75

Details

Flag of the Soviet Union Dinamo Kiev 3 - 0 Flag of Hungary Ferencváros St. Jakob Stadium,
Basel
1973/74

Details

Flag of the German Democratic Republic 1. FC Magdeburg 2 - 0 Flag of Italy A.C. Milan De Kuip,
Rotterdam
1972/73

Details

Flag of Italy A.C. Milan 1 - 0 Flag of England Leeds United Kaftanzoglio Stadium,
Salonika
1971/72

Details
Final Details

Flag of Scotland Rangers 3 - 2 Flag of the Soviet Union Dynamo Moscow Camp Nou,
Barcelona
1970/71

Details

Flag of England Chelsea 1 - 1
aet
Flag of Spain Real Madrid Karaiskakis Stadium,
Piraeus
Chelsea won the final replay, 2 - 1 at Karaiskakis Stadium, Piraeus
1969/70

Details

Flag of England Manchester City 2 - 1 Flag of Poland Gornik Zabrze Prater Stadium,
Vienna
1968/69

Details

Flag of Czechoslovakia Slovan Bratislava 3 - 2 Flag of Spain Barcelona St. Jakob Stadium,
Basel
1967/68

Details

Flag of Italy A.C. Milan 2 - 0 Flag of West Germany Hamburger SV De Kuip,
Rotterdam
1966/67

Details

Flag of West Germany Bayern Munich 1 - 0
aet
Flag of Scotland Rangers Frankenstadion,
Nuremberg
1965/66

Details

Flag of West Germany Borussia Dortmund 2 - 1
aet
Flag of England Liverpool Hampden Park,
Glasgow
1964/65

Details

Flag of England West Ham United 2 - 0 Flag of West Germany 1860 Munich Wembley Stadium,
London
1963/64

Details

Flag of Portugal Sporting Lisbon 3 - 3
aet
Flag of Hungary MTK Budapest Heysel Stadium,
Brussels
Sporting Lisbon won the final replay, 1 - 0 at Bosuil Stadium, Antwerp
1962/63

Details

Flag of England Tottenham Hotspur 5 - 1 Flag of Spain Atlético Madrid De Kuip,
Rotterdam
1961/62

Details

Flag of Spain Atlético Madrid 1 - 1
aet
Flag of Italy Fiorentina Hampden Park,
Glasgow
Atlético Madrid won the final replay, 3 - 0 at Gottlieb-Daimler-Stadion, Stuttgart
1960/61

Details

Flag of Scotland Rangers 0 - 2 Flag of Italy Fiorentina Ibrox Park,
Glasgow
Flag of Italy Fiorentina 2 - 1 Flag of Scotland Rangers Stadio Comunale,
Florence
This was the only final played in two legs, home and away
Fiorentina won 4-1 on aggregate
 

[edit] Records and statistics

[edit] Notes and references

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

  • [1] A table of which teams have won the most European and South American International trophies.
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