1979 European Cup Final

1979 European Cup Final
Event 1978–79 European Cup
Date 30 May 1979
Venue Olympiastadion, Munich
Referee Erich Linemayr (Austria)
Attendance 68,000

The 1979 European Cup Final was a football match held at the Olympiastadion, Munich, on 30 May 1979 (the venue was decided in Bern by the UEFA Executive Committee on 27 September 1978).[1] It saw Nottingham Forest of England defeat Malmö FF of Sweden 1–0. The win represented a third successive victory for an English side in the European Cup after Liverpool's victories in 1977 and 1978.

Background

The competition had provided many great stories and had thrown up a final that no-one could have predicted when it had started the previous August. Unfortunately, with two of their best players – midfielder Bo Larsson and defender Roy Andersson – already ruled out with injury and with their captain and key midfielderStaffan Tapper – breaking his toe in training on the eve of the final, Malmö FF resorted to the same defensive tactics that Belgian team Club Bruges had used at Wembley in the final twelve months earlier. With neither of the finalists being one of Europe’s major clubs, Munich’s Olympiastadion was far from full for the Final, and the game itself was something of an anti-climax. There was, however, one memorable story still to be told. Back in February, Brian Clough had elected to spend the money that Forest had made from winning the league title in 1978 on a forward from Birmingham City. Clough made Trevor Francis Britain’s first £1 million footballer when he took him to Nottingham, but UEFA rules stipulated that he could not play European football for another three months.Therefore, the first game that Francis was eligible for was the final itself and, with Martin O'Neill injured and Archie Gemmill not selected by Clough, Francis was picked to play his first ever European club game, albeit out on the right wing.

Route to the final

Nottingham Forest Round Malmö FF
Opponent Result Legs Opponent Result Legs
England Liverpool 2–0 2–0 home; 0–0 away First round France AS Monaco 1–0 0–0 home; 1–0 away
Greece AEK Athens 7–2 5–1 home; 2–1 away Second round Soviet Union Dynamo Kiev 2–0 2–0 home; 0–0 away
Switzerland Grasshopper 5–2 4–1 home; 1–1 away Quarter-finals Poland Wisła Kraków 5–3 4–1 home; 1–2 away
West Germany Köln 4–3 3–3 home; 1–0 away Semi-finals Austria Austria Vienna 1–0 1–0 home; 0–0 away

Match summary

With Malmö FF sitting back in defence, the game was merely about whether Forest could break through. Despite constant pressure, the English side had still failed to score as first half injury time began, but then John Robertson, a man who was now one of the most feared wingers in European football, beat two Swedish defenders on the left hand side before whipping in a cross. Goalkeeper Jan Möller, who had been solid up to this point, did not come out to clear the ball, and at the far post was none other than Trevor Francis to head the ball into the roof of the net.

And that was effectively the end of the match. Both Garry Birtles and Robertson missed good chances in the second half, but it did not matter, as Malmö FF never looked likely to score.

It may have been an unremarkable final, but it was certainly the end to a remarkable story. Under their maverick manager Brian Clough, Nottingham Forest, a relatively small English provincial club, had won European club football’s biggest prize, knocking out two-time defending champions Liverpool along the way. Just two years earlier, Forest had been in English football's second tier. Forest would retain their title the following year.

Match

Details

Nottingham Forest England 1–0 Sweden Malmö FF
Francis  45+1' Report
Attendance: 68,000
Nottingham Forest
Malmö FF
GK1England Peter Shilton
DF2England Viv Anderson
DF3England Frank Clark
MF4Scotland John McGovern (c)
DF5England Larry Lloyd
DF6Scotland Kenny Burns
MF7England Trevor Francis
MF8England Ian Bowyer
FW9England Garry Birtles
FW10England Tony Woodcock
MF11Scotland John Robertson
Substitutes:
GKEngland Chris Woods
DFEngland David Needham
MFNorthern Ireland Martin O'Neill
MFScotland Archie Gemmill
FWScotland John O'Hare
Manager:
England Brian Clough
GK1Sweden Jan Möller
DF2Sweden Roland Andersson
DF3Sweden Ingemar Erlandsson
DF4Sweden Kent Jönsson
DF5Sweden Magnus Andersson
MF6Sweden Staffan Tapper (c) 34'
MF7Sweden Anders Ljungberg
MF8Sweden Robert Prytz
FW9Sweden Tommy Hansson 82'
FW10Sweden Tore Cervin
MF11Sweden Jan-Olov Kinnvall
Substitutes:
DF12Sweden Mats Arvidsson
FW13Sweden Tommy Andersson 82'
MF15Sweden Claes Malmberg 34'
GK16Sweden Arne Åkesson
Manager:
England Bob Houghton

Footnotes

See also

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