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1975–76 UEFA Cup

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1975–76 UEFA Cup
Anfield hosted the first leg of the final.
Tournament details
Dates14 September 1975 – 19 May 1976
Teams64
Final positions
ChampionsEngland Liverpool (2nd title)
Runners-upBelgium Club Brugge
Tournament statistics
Matches played126
Goals scored384 (3.05 per match)
Attendance2,744,090 (21,778 per match)
Top scorer(s)Ruud Geels (Ajax)
11 goals

The 1975–76 UEFA Cup was the fifth season of the UEFA Cup, the third-tier club football competition organised by UEFA. The final was played over two legs at Anfield, Liverpool, England and at the Olympiastadion, Bruges, Belgium. It was won by Liverpool of England, who defeated Club Brugge of Belgium by an aggregate result of 4–3 to claim their second UEFA Cup title.

This was the first of only two times in the history of the UEFA Cup, its unofficial predecessor Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, or its successor UEFA Europa League where both finalists won their national championship in the same season. Until then, this had only happened twice in the European Cup, and it would only happen once in the European Cup Winners Cup.

Club Brugge was the first Belgian team to reach a UEFA Cup final, six years after Anderlecht also reached the final in the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, its predecessor tournament. The final's first leg was the last major final held at Anfield in one of the three premier European club championships, although the stadium would also host two UEFA Super Cup legs in later finals.

Association team allocation

[edit]

A total of 64 teams from 31 UEFA member associations participate in the 1975–76 UEFA Cup. The original allocation scheme was as follows:

  • 3 associations have four teams qualify.
  • 3 associations have three teams qualify.
  • 18 associations have two teams qualify.
  • 7 associations have one team qualify.

The Soviet Union and Sweden were the two associations selected to have an extra third birth for this season, while the Netherlands and Austria went back to two qualified teams.

Associations in the 1975–76 UEFA Cup
Four teams
England England
West Germany West Germany
Italy Italy
Three teams
Soviet Union Soviet Union
Spain Spain
Sweden Sweden
Two teams
Netherlands Netherlands East Germany East Germany Scotland Scotland
Portugal Portugal Belgium Belgium Poland Poland
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia Hungary Hungary Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia
Romania Romania Bulgaria Bulgaria Greece Greece
Turkey Turkey France France Switzerland Switzerland
Austria Austria Denmark Denmark Norway Norway
One team
Northern Ireland Northern Ireland
Republic of Ireland Republic of Ireland
Malta Malta
Finland Finland
Luxembourg Luxembourg
Iceland Iceland
Cyprus Cyprus
Did not compete
Wales Wales[Note WAL]
Albania Albania[Note ALB]
  • ^
    Wales: There was no national league in Wales before 1992 and the only competition organised by the Football Association of Wales was the Welsh Cup so Wales had just a single participant in European competitions, the winner (or best placed Welsh team as several English teams also competed) of the Welsh Cup which competed in the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup.
  • ^
    Albania: Albanian teams were absent from European competition from 1973 to 1978 due to the international isolation of the country during the communist rule of Enver Hoxha.[1] Vllaznia would have qualified for the UEFA Cup by league position.
  • Teams

    [edit]

    The labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for competition:

    • TH: Title holders
    • CW: Cup winners
    • CR: Cup runners-up
    • LC: League Cup winners
    • 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, etc.: League position
    • P-W: End-of-season European competition play-offs winners
    Qualified teams for 1975–76 UEFA Cup
    England Liverpool (2nd) England Ipswich Town (3rd) England Everton (4th)[Note ENG] England Aston Villa (LC)
    West Germany Hertha BSC (2nd) West Germany Hamburg (4th) West Germany Köln (5th) West Germany Duisburg (CR)[Note GER]
    Italy Napoli (2nd) Italy Roma (3rd) Italy Lazio (4th) Italy Milan (5th)
    Soviet Union Spartak Moscow (2nd) Soviet Union Chornomorets Odesa (3rd) Soviet Union Torpedo Moscow (4th) Spain Zaragoza (2nd)
    Spain Barcelona (3rd) Spain Real Sociedad (4th) Sweden AIK (2nd) Sweden Östers (3rd)
    Sweden GAIS (4th) Netherlands Feyenoord (2nd) Netherlands Ajax (3rd) East Germany Carl Zeiss Jena (2nd)
    East Germany Dynamo Dresden (3rd) Scotland Hibernian (2nd) Scotland Dundee United (4th) Portugal Porto (2nd)
    Portugal Sporting CP (3rd) Belgium Antwerp (2nd) Belgium Club Brugge (4th) Poland Stal Mielec (2nd)
    Poland Śląsk Wrocław (3rd) Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Vojvodina (2nd) Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade (3rd) Hungary Budapest Honvéd (2nd)
    Hungary Vasas (LC)[Note HUN] Czechoslovakia Inter Bratislava (2nd) Czechoslovakia Bohemians Prague (3rd) Romania Târgu Mureș (2nd)
    Romania Universitatea Craiova (3rd) Bulgaria Levski Sofia (2nd) Bulgaria Dunav Ruse (4th) Greece AEK Athens (2nd)
    Greece PAOK (3rd) Turkey Galatasaray (2nd) Turkey Eskişehirspor (3rd) France Marseille (2nd)
    France Lyon (3rd) Switzerland Young Boys (2nd) Switzerland Basel (3rd) Austria VÖEST Linz (2nd)
    Austria Rapid Wien (3rd) Denmark B1903 (3rd) Denmark Holbæk (4th) Norway Molde (2nd)
    Norway Vålerenga (3rd) Northern Ireland Glentoran (3rd) Republic of Ireland Athlone Town (2nd) Malta Sliema Wanderers (2nd)
    Finland HJK Helsinki (3rd) Luxembourg Avenir Beggen (2nd) Iceland Keflavík (2nd) Cyprus Enosis Neon Paralimni (2nd)

    Notes

    1. ^
      England: At the end of the 1974–75 Football League season in April, the Football Association still applied the old Inter-Cities Fairs Cup ruling of 'one city, one team' to determine the teams that qualified for the UEFA Cup. As a result, Everton was bypassed for the final English birth, as the city of Liverpool was already represented by second placed Liverpool, and Stoke City was nominated for the spot after finishing fifth. However, UEFA gave a ultimatum to the English Football League in order for teams to qualify without geographical limitations, warning that English teams would not be accepted in European competitions otherwise. On 7 June 1975, the EFL formally confirmed Everton as the recipient of the fourth UEFA Cup spot.[2]
    2. ^
      West Germany: The fourth UEFA Cup spot for West Germany was not awarded to the fourth best team not qualified for the European Cup or the European Cup Winners' Cup, which was Fortuna Dusseldorf, as it was common practice. Instead, this place was awarded to Duisburg, who had been runners-up in the 1974–75 DFB-Pokal.
    3. ^
      Hungary: Vasas, who had finished 6th in the Hungarian league, qualified for the UEFA Cup by winning the Liberation Cup on its 30th anniversary. The tournament had not provided a European spot before, and would not do it ever since.[3]

    Schedule

    [edit]

    The schedule of the competition was as follows. Matches were scheduled for Wednesdays, though some matches took place on Tuesdays. In the first round, three first leg matches were played on a Thursday, and both legs of the match-up between MSV Duisburg and Enosis Neon Paralimni FC were played over three days in West Germany, with the first leg being held on a Sunday.

    Schedule for 1975–76 UEFA Cup
    Round First leg Second leg
    First round 14–24 September 1975 16 September – 1 October 1975
    Second round 21–22 October 1975 4–5 November 1975
    Third round 26 November 1975 10 December 1975
    Quarter-finals 3 March 1976 17 March 1976
    Semi-finals 30–31 March 1976 14 April 1976
    Final 28 April 1976 19 May 1976

    First round

    [edit]
    Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
    MSV Duisburg West Germany 10–3 Cyprus Enosis Neon Paralimni 7–1 3–2
    Glentoran Northern Ireland 1–14 Netherlands Ajax 1–6 0–8
    Grasshoppers Switzerland 4–4 (a) Spain Real Sociedad 3–3 1–1
    PAOK Greece 2–6 Spain Barcelona 1–0 1–6
    AIK Sweden 1–2 Soviet Union Spartak Moscow 1–1 0–1
    Royal Antwerp Belgium 5–1 England Aston Villa 4–1 1–0
    Bohemians Prague Czechoslovakia 2–3 Hungary Budapest Honvéd 1–2 1–1
    Carl Zeiss Jena East Germany 4–0 France Marseille 3–0 1–0
    Universitatea Craiova Romania 2–4 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade 1–3 1–1
    Everton England 0–1 Italy Milan 0–0 0–1
    Feyenoord Netherlands 1–4 England Ipswich Town 1–2 0–2
    GAIS Sweden 4–5 Poland Śląsk Wrocław 2–1 2–4
    Hertha BSC West Germany 6–2 Finland HJK Helsinki 4–1 2–1
    Hibernian Scotland 2–3 England Liverpool 1–0 1–3
    Holbæk B&I Denmark 1–3 Poland Stal Mielec 0–1 1–2
    Köln West Germany 5–2 Denmark B1903 2–0 3–2 (a.e.t.)
    Lyon France 4–6 Belgium Club Brugge 4–3 0–3
    Molde Norway 1–6 Sweden Öster 1–0 0–6
    ASA Târgu Mureș Romania 3–6 East Germany Dynamo Dresden 2–2 1–4
    Chornomorets Odesa Soviet Union 1–3 Italy Lazio 1–0 0–3 (a.e.t.)
    Porto Portugal 10–0 Luxembourg Avenir Beggen 7–0 3–0
    Rapid Wien Austria 2–3 Turkey Galatasaray 1–0 1–3
    Roma Italy 2–1 Bulgaria Dunav Ruse 2–0 0–1
    Torpedo Moscow Soviet Union 5–2 Italy Napoli 4–1 1–1
    VÖEST Linz Austria 2–4 Hungary Vasas 2–0 0–4
    Vojvodina Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1–3 Greece AEK Athens 0–0 1–3
    Young Boys Switzerland 2–4 West Germany Hamburg 0–0 2–4
    Athlone Town Republic of Ireland 4–2 Norway Vålerengen 3–1 1–1
    Inter Bratislava Czechoslovakia 8–2 Spain Zaragoza 5–0 3–2
    Keflavík Iceland 0–6 Scotland Dundee United 0–2 0–4
    Levski-Spartak Sofia Bulgaria 7–1 Turkey Eskişehirspor 3–0 4–1
    Sliema Wanderers Malta 2–5 Portugal Sporting CP 1–2 1–3

    First leg

    [edit]
    MSV Duisburg West Germany7–1Cyprus Enosis Neon Paralimni
    Report Chatzigiannis 11'
    Attendance: 5,000

    Glentoran Northern Ireland1–6Netherlands Ajax
    Jamison 79' Report
    Attendance: 4,000

    Grasshoppers Switzerland3–3Spain Real Sociedad
    Report
    Attendance: 6,600

    PAOK Greece1–0Spain Barcelona
    Koudas 72' Report

    AIK Sweden1–1Soviet Union Spartak Moscow
    Leback 58' (pen.) Report Lovchev 57'

    Royal Antwerp Belgium4–1England Aston Villa
    Report Graydon 77'
    Attendance: 15,817

    Bohemians Prague Czechoslovakia1–2Hungary Budapest Honvéd
    Mastník 86' Report Pintér 85'
    Tóth 89'
    Attendance: 3,395

    Carl Zeiss Jena East Germany3–0France Marseille
    Sengewald 33', 35'
    Kurbjuweit 47'
    Report

    Universitatea Craiova Romania1–3Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade
    Report

    Everton England0–0Italy Milan
    Report
    Attendance: 31,917

    Feyenoord Netherlands1–2England Ipswich Town
    de Jong 68' Report
    Attendance: 32,000

    GAIS Sweden2–1Poland Śląsk Wrocław
    Pålsson 9', 85' (pen.) Report Kwiatkowski 82'
    Attendance: 1,778
    Referee: Gordon Kew (England)

    Hertha BSC West Germany4–1Finland HJK Helsinki
    Report Kangaskorpi 34'
    Attendance: 7,500

    Hibernian Scotland1–0England Liverpool
    Harper 19' Report
    Attendance: 19,219

    Holbæk B&I Denmark0–1Poland Stal Mielec
    Report Sekulski 76'
    Attendance: 5,000

    Köln West Germany2–0Denmark B1903
    Report
    Attendance: 7,000
    Referee: Ian Foote (Scotland)

    Lyon France4–3Belgium Club Brugge
    Report
    Attendance: 19,088

    Molde Norway1–0Sweden Öster
    Westerdahl 70' Report
    Attendance: 3,000

    ASA Târgu Mureș Romania2–2East Germany Dynamo Dresden
    Report

    Chornomorets Odesa Soviet Union1–0Italy Lazio
    Doroshenko 33' Report
    Attendance: 20,235

    Porto Portugal7–0Luxembourg Avenir Beggen
    Report

    Rapid Wien Austria1–0Turkey Galatasaray
    Widmann 77' Report

    Roma Italy2–0Bulgaria Dunav Ruse
    Pellegrini 5'
    Petrini 21'
    Report
    Attendance: 53,581

    Torpedo Moscow Soviet Union4–1Italy Napoli
    Grishin 2', 84'
    Sakharov 30' (pen.)
    Belenkov 90'
    Report Savoldi 35'
    Attendance: 27,000

    VÖEST Linz Austria2–0Hungary Vasas
    Scharmann 34'
    Stering 65'
    Report
    Attendance: 4,317
    Referee: Hilmi Ok (Turkey)

    Vojvodina Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia0–0Greece AEK Athens
    Report

    Young Boys Switzerland0–0West Germany Hamburg
    Report
    Attendance: 17,173

    Athlone Town Republic of Ireland3–1Norway Vålerengen
    Martin 3'
    Davis 66', 85'
    Report Olsen 10'

    Inter Bratislava Czechoslovakia5–0Spain Zaragoza
    Report
    Attendance: 7,870

    Keflavík Iceland0–2Scotland Dundee United
    Report Narey 4', 43'

    Levski-Spartak Sofia Bulgaria3–0Turkey Eskişehirspor
    Report

    Sliema Wanderers Malta1–2Portugal Sporting CP
    Azzopardi 66' Report
    Attendance: 4,500

    Second leg

    [edit]

    Both legs were played in West Germany, MSV Duisburg won 10–3 on aggregate.


    Ajax Netherlands8–0Northern Ireland Glentoran
    Report
    Attendance: 2,900

    Ajax won 14–1 on aggregate.


    Real Sociedad Spain1–1Switzerland Grasshoppers
    Urreisti 37' Report Santrač 79'

    4–4 on aggregate; Real Sociedad won on away goals.


    Barcelona Spain6–1Greece PAOK
    Report Anastasiadis 77'
    Attendance: 32,708
    Referee: Jack Taylor (England)

    Barcelona won 6–2 on aggregate.


    Spartak Moscow Soviet Union1–0Sweden AIK
    Andreyev 76' Report
    Attendance: 6,227
    Referee: Rolf Nyhus (Norway)

    Spartak Moscow won 2–1 on aggregate.


    Aston Villa England0–1Belgium Royal Antwerp
    Report Kodat 18'
    Attendance: 31,513

    Royal Antwerp won 5–1 on aggregate.


    Budapest Honvéd won 3–2 on aggregate.


    Marseille France0–1East Germany Carl Zeiss Jena
    Report Irmscher 45'

    Carl Zeiss Jena won 4–0 on aggregate.


    Red Star Belgrade Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia1–1Romania Universitatea Craiova
    Report
    Attendance: 10,812

    Red Star Belgrade won 4–2 on aggregate.


    Milan Italy1–0England Everton
    Calloni 68' (pen.) Report
    Attendance: 35,825

    Milan won 1–0 on aggregate.


    Ipswich Town England2–0Netherlands Feyenoord
    Report
    Attendance: 30,411

    Ipswich Town won 4–1 on aggregate.


    Śląsk Wrocław Poland4–2Sweden GAIS
    Report Johansson 14', 80'

    Śląsk Wrocław won 5–4 on aggregate.


    HJK Helsinki Finland1–2West Germany Hertha BSC
    Salo 2' Report

    Hertha BSC won 6–2 on aggregate.


    Liverpool England3–1Scotland Hibernian
    Toshack 21', 54', 64' Report Edwards 33'
    Attendance: 29,963

    Liverpool won 3–2 on aggregate.


    Stal Mielec Poland2–1Denmark Holbæk B&I
    Report Hansen 47'
    Attendance: 20,000

    Stal Mielec won 3–1 on aggregate.


    B1903 Denmark2–3 (a.e.t.)West Germany Köln
    Kristiansen 14', 65' Report Brücken 96', 110', 119'

    Köln won 5–2 on aggregate.


    Club Brugge Belgium3–0France Lyon
    Report
    Attendance: 18,000

    Club Brugge won 6–4 on aggregate.


    Öster Sweden6–0Norway Molde
    Report
    Attendance: 2,145

    Öster won 6–1 on aggregate.


    Dynamo Dresden East Germany4–1Romania ASA Târgu Mureș
    Report
    Attendance: 27,000

    Dynamo Dresden won 6–3 on aggregate.


    Lazio Italy3–0 (a.e.t.)Soviet Union Chornomorets Odesa
    Chinaglia 89' (pen.), 102', 120' Report
    Attendance: 46,038

    Lazio won 3–1 on aggregate.


    Avenir Beggen Luxembourg0–3Portugal Porto
    Report

    Porto won 10–0 on aggregate.


    Galatasaray Turkey3–1Austria Rapid Wien
    Report Krankl 60'

    Galatasaray won 3–2 on aggregate.


    Dunav Ruse Bulgaria1–0Italy Roma
    Ivanov 63' Report
    Attendance: 12,369

    Roma won 2–1 on aggregate.


    Napoli Italy1–1Soviet Union Torpedo Moscow
    Braglia 37' Report Filatov 15'

    Torpedo Moscow won 5–2 on aggregate.


    Vasas Hungary4–0Austria VÖEST Linz
    Várady 8', 41'
    Kovács 35'
    Izsó 51'
    Report
    Attendance: 12,000

    Vasas SC won 4–2 on aggregate.


    AEK Athens Greece3–1Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Vojvodina
    Report

    AEK Athens won 3–1 on aggregate.


    Hamburg West Germany4–2Switzerland Young Boys
    Report Siegenthaler 65', 87'
    Attendance: 29,199

    Hamburg won 4–2 on aggregate.


    Vålerengen Norway1–1Republic of Ireland Athlone Town
    Olavson 55' Report Martin 19'
    Attendance: 747
    Referee: Sven Jonsson (Sweden)

    Athlone Town won 4–2 on aggregate.


    Zaragoza Spain2–3Czechoslovakia Inter Bratislava
    Report
    Attendance: 10,141
    Referee: Jan Peeters (Belgium)

    Inter Bratislava won 8–2 on aggregate.


    Dundee United Scotland4–0Iceland Keflavík
    Report
    Attendance: 4,500

    Dundee United won 6–0 on aggregate.


    Levski-Spartak Sofia won 7–1 on aggregate.


    Sporting CP Portugal3–1Malta Sliema Wanderers
    Report Fabri 44'

    Sporting CP won 5–2 on aggregate.

    Second round

    [edit]
    Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
    MSV Duisburg West Germany 4–4 (a) Bulgaria Levski-Spartak Sofia 3–2 1–2
    Athlone Town Republic of Ireland 0–3 Italy Milan 0–0 0–3
    Carl Zeiss Jena East Germany 1–1 (2–3 p) Poland Stal Mielec 1–0 0–1 (a.e.t.)
    Dundee United Scotland 2–3 Portugal Porto 1–2 1–1
    Galatasaray Turkey 2–7 Soviet Union Torpedo Moscow 2–4 0–3
    Hertha BSC West Germany 2–4 Netherlands Ajax 1–0 1–4
    Budapest Honvéd Hungary 2–3 East Germany Dynamo Dresden 2–2 0–1
    Inter Bratislava Czechoslovakia 3–3 (a) Greece AEK Athens 2–0 1–3
    Ipswich Town England 3–4 Belgium Club Brugge 3–0 0–4
    Spartak Moscow Soviet Union 3–0 West Germany Köln 2–0 1–0
    Öster Sweden 1–2 Italy Roma 1–0 0–2
    Real Sociedad Spain 1–9 England Liverpool 1–3 0–6
    Red Star Belgrade Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1–5 West Germany Hamburg 1–1 0–4
    Śląsk Wrocław Poland 3–2 Belgium Royal Antwerp 1–1 2–1
    Vasas Hungary 4–3 Portugal Sporting CP 3–1 1–2
    Lazio Italy 0–7 Spain Barcelona 0–3 0–4

    First leg

    [edit]
    MSV Duisburg West Germany3–2Bulgaria Levski-Spartak Sofia
    Report Panov 11', 31'
    Attendance: 18,000

    Athlone Town Republic of Ireland0–0Italy Milan
    Report


    Dundee United Scotland1–2Portugal Porto
    Rennie 67' Report
    Attendance: 7,500

    Galatasaray Turkey2–4Soviet Union Torpedo Moscow
    Report

    Hertha BSC West Germany1–0Netherlands Ajax
    Kostedde 49' Report
    Attendance: 54,584

    Budapest Honvéd Hungary2–2East Germany Dynamo Dresden
    Weimper 67', 80' Report Heidler 32', 41'
    Attendance: 12,350

    Inter Bratislava Czechoslovakia2–0Greece AEK Athens
    Report
    Attendance: 8,120

    Ipswich Town England3–0Belgium Club Brugge
    Report
    Attendance: 28,617

    Spartak Moscow Soviet Union2–0West Germany Köln
    Lovchev 16', 89' Report
    Attendance: 8,423
    Referee: Ulf Eriksson (Sweden)

    Öster Sweden1–0Italy Roma
    Evesson 27' Report
    Attendance: 10,196

    Real Sociedad Spain1–3England Liverpool
    Amas 87' Report
    Attendance: 16,256

    Red Star Belgrade Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia1–1West Germany Hamburg
    Sušić 23' Report Bjørnmose 24'
    Attendance: 17,137

    Śląsk Wrocław Poland1–1Belgium Royal Antwerp
    Pawłowski 38' Report Houwaart 50'
    Attendance: 12,000
    Referee: Josef Bucek (Austria)

    Vasas SC Hungary3–1Portugal Sporting CP
    Kovács 63', 79'
    Várady 86' (pen.)
    Report Faria 69'
    Attendance: 12,350

    Lazio Italy0–3Spain Barcelona
    Report

    Lazio refused to play for security reasons, claiming it would be impossible to play due to political demonstrations following the execution in Spain of five ETA and FRAP members on 27 September on terrorism charges. UEFA awarded Barcelona a 3–0 victory, ruling those three goals were not applicable for the away goals rule.

    Second leg

    [edit]
    Levski-Spartak Sofia Bulgaria2–1West Germany MSV Duisburg
    Report Worm 59'

    4–4 on aggregate; Levski-Spartak Sofia won on away goals.


    Milan Italy3–0Republic of Ireland Athlone Town
    Vincenzi 63'
    Benetti 70', 77' (pen.)
    Report
    Attendance: 42,804

    Milan won 3–0 on aggregate.


    1–1 on aggregate; Stal Mielec won on penalties.


    Porto Portugal1–1Scotland Dundee United
    Seninho 70' Report Hegarty 65'

    Porto won 3–2 on aggregate.


    Torpedo Moscow Soviet Union3–0Turkey Galatasaray
    Report

    Torpedo Moscow won 7–2 on aggregate.


    Ajax Netherlands4–1West Germany Hertha BSC
    Report Kostedde 41'

    Ajax won 4–2 on aggregate.


    Dynamo Dresden East Germany1–0Hungary Budapest Honvéd
    Dörner 25' (pen.) Report

    Dynamo Dresden won 3–2 on aggregate.


    AEK Athens Greece3–1Czechoslovakia Inter Bratislava
    Report

    3–3 on aggregate; Inter Bratislava won on away goals.


    Club Brugge Belgium4–0England Ipswich Town
    Report
    Attendance: 26,000

    Club Brugge won 4–3 on aggregate.


    Köln West Germany0–1Soviet Union Spartak Moscow
    Report Andreyev 62'

    Spartak Moscow won 3–0 on aggregate.


    Roma Italy2–0Sweden Öster
    Pellegrini 5'
    Boni 49'
    Report
    Attendance: 42,804
    Referee: Paul Bonett (Malta)

    Roma won 2–1 on aggregate.


    Liverpool England6–0Spain Real Sociedad
    Report
    Attendance: 23,796
    Referee: Rolf Nyhus (Norway)

    Liverpool won 9–1 on aggregate.


    Hamburg West Germany4–0Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade
    Report
    Attendance: 61,300

    Hamburg won 5–1 on aggregate.


    Royal Antwerp Belgium1–2Poland Śląsk Wrocław
    De Schrijver 52' Report
    Attendance: 12,246

    Śląsk Wrocław won 3–2 on aggregate.


    Sporting CP Portugal2–1Hungary Vasas
    Fernandes 32', 70' Report Gass 76'

    Vasas SC won 4–3 on aggregate.


    Barcelona Spain4–0Italy Lazio
    Sotil 6'
    Cruyff 43'
    Neeskens 79'
    Fortes 82'
    Report
    Attendance: 29,238

    Before the game, Johan Cruyff was given his Ballon d'Or award for the 1974 season.

    Barcelona won 7–0 on aggregate.

    Third round

    [edit]
    Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
    Ajax Netherlands 3–3 (3–5 p) Bulgaria Levski-Spartak Sofia 2–1 1–2 (a.e.t.)
    Barcelona Spain 4–1 Hungary Vasas 3–1 1–0
    Club Brugge Belgium 2–0 Italy Roma 1–0 1–0
    Dynamo Dresden East Germany 4–3 Soviet Union Torpedo Moscow 3–0 1–3
    Hamburg West Germany 3–2 Portugal Porto 2–0 1–2
    Inter Bratislava Czechoslovakia 1–2 Poland Stal Mielec 1–0 0–2
    Śląsk Wrocław Poland 1–5 England Liverpool 1–2 0–3
    Milan Italy 4–2 Soviet Union Spartak Moscow 4–0 0–2

    First leg

    [edit]

    Barcelona Spain3–1Hungary Vasas
    Migueli 16'
    Rexach 37'
    Neeskens 39'
    Report Müller 26'
    Attendance: 26,317
    Referee: Clive Thomas (Wales)

    Club Brugge Belgium1–0Italy Roma
    Cools 42' Report

    Dynamo Dresden East Germany3–0Soviet Union Torpedo Moscow
    Report
    Attendance: 22,405

    Hamburg West Germany2–0Portugal Porto
    Report
    Attendance: 42,184

    Inter Bratislava Czechoslovakia1–0Poland Stal Mielec
    Šajánek 69' Report

    Śląsk Wrocław Poland1–2England Liverpool
    Pawłowski 79' Report
    Attendance: 43,000
    Referee: Hilmi Ok (Turkey)

    Milan Italy4–0Soviet Union Spartak Moscow
    Calloni 19', 71'
    Bigon 48'
    Maldera 51'
    Report
    Attendance: 16,290

    Second leg

    [edit]

    3–3 on aggregate; Levski-Spartak Sofia won on penalties.


    Vasas Hungary0–1Spain Barcelona
    Report Fortes 15'
    Attendance: 28,280

    Barcelona won 4–1 on aggregate.


    Roma Italy0–1Belgium Club Brugge
    Report Lambert 69'
    Attendance: 36,796

    Club Brugge won 2–0 on aggregate.


    Dynamo Dresden won 4–3 on aggregate.


    Porto Portugal2–1West Germany Hamburg
    Report Reimann 29'
    Attendance: 21,582
    Referee: Robert Wurtz (France)

    Hamburg won 3–2 on aggregate.


    Stal Mielec Poland2–0Czechoslovakia Inter Bratislava
    Report
    Attendance: 25,000

    Stal Mielec won 2–1 on aggregate.


    Liverpool England3–0Poland Śląsk Wrocław
    Case 22', 29', 46' Report
    Attendance: 17,886

    Liverpool won 5–1 on aggregate.


    Spartak Moscow Soviet Union2–0Italy Milan
    Papayev 60'
    Lovchev 84'
    Report
    Attendance: 14,500

    Milan won 4–2 on aggregate.

    Quarter-finals

    [edit]
    Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
    Barcelona Spain 8–5 Bulgaria Levski-Spartak Sofia 4–0 4–5
    Club Brugge Belgium 3–2 Italy Milan 2–0 1–2
    Dynamo Dresden East Germany 1–2 England Liverpool 0–0 1–2
    Hamburg West Germany 2–1 Poland Stal Mielec 1–1 1–0

    First leg

    [edit]
    Barcelona Spain4–0Bulgaria Levski-Spartak Sofia
    Report
    Attendance: 45,000

    Club Brugge Belgium2–0Italy Milan
    Le Fevre 5'
    Krieger 62'
    Report
    Attendance: 28,686

    Dynamo Dresden East Germany0–0England Liverpool
    Report

    Hamburg West Germany1–1Poland Stal Mielec
    Bertl 11' Report Oratowski 46'

    Second leg

    [edit]
    Levski-Spartak Sofia Bulgaria5–4Spain Barcelona
    Report

    Barcelona won 8–5 on aggregate.


    Milan Italy2–1Belgium Club Brugge
    Bigon 31'
    Chiarugi 65'
    Report Sanders 74'
    Attendance: 44,570

    Club Brugge won 3–2 on aggregate.


    Liverpool England2–1East Germany Dynamo Dresden
    Report Heidler 63'
    Attendance: 39,300
    Referee: Robert Wurtz (France)

    Liverpool won 2–1 on aggregate.


    Stal Mielec Poland0–1West Germany Hamburg
    Report Nogly 17'

    Hamburg won 2–1 on aggregate.

    Semi-finals

    [edit]
    Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
    Barcelona Spain 1–2 England Liverpool 0–1 1–1
    Hamburg West Germany 1–2 Belgium Club Brugge 1–1 0–1

    First leg

    [edit]
    Barcelona Spain0–1England Liverpool
    Report Toshack 13'
    Attendance: 49,572

    Hamburg West Germany1–1Belgium Club Brugge
    Reimann 77' Report Lambert 48'
    Attendance: 49,000

    Second leg

    [edit]
    Liverpool England1–1Spain Barcelona
    Thompson 51' Report Rexach 52'
    Attendance: 55,102

    Liverpool won 2–1 on aggregate.


    Club Brugge Belgium1–0West Germany Hamburg
    Kaltz 85' (o.g.) Report
    Attendance: 29,458

    Club Brugge won 2–1 on aggregate.

    Final

    [edit]

    First leg

    [edit]
    Liverpool England3–2Belgium Club Brugge
    Kennedy 60'
    Case 62'
    Keegan 65' (pen.)
    Report Lambert 5'
    Cools 15'
    Attendance: 50,188

    Second leg

    [edit]
    Club Brugge Belgium1–1England Liverpool
    Lambert 11' (pen.) Report Keegan 15'
    Attendance: 29,423

    Liverpool won 4–3 on aggregate.

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ McCracken, Craig (15 October 2015). "Albania's history in European football: beards and bad behaviour in the Balkans". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
    2. ^ "Everton to replace Stoke in UEFA Cup". New Sunday Times. Kuala Lumpur: New Straits Times Press. Reuters. 8 June 1975. p. 15. Archived from the original on 7 March 2017. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
    3. ^ "Sport - Labdarúgás - Felszabadulási Kupa - Vasas-Újpesti Dózsa". Nemzeti Archívum (in Hungarian). Retrieved 23 May 2024.
    [edit]