1988–89 European Cup

1988–89 European Cup
Camp Nou in Barcelona hosted the final.
Tournament details
Dates 6 September 1988 – 24 May 1989
Teams 31
Final positions
Champions Italy Milan (3rd title)
Runners-up Romania Steaua București
Tournament statistics
Matches played 59
Goals scored 170 (2.88 per match)
Top scorer(s) Netherlands Marco van Basten
(10 goals)

The 1988–89 European Cup was the 34th season of the European Cup football club tournament. The competition was won for the first time since 1969, and third time overall, by Milan comfortably in the final against former winners Steaua București.

PSV Eindhoven, the defending champions, were eliminated by Real Madrid in the quarter-finals. English clubs were still banned, following the Heysel Stadium disaster of 1985, so Liverpool were denied a place in the competition.

First round

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
PSV Eindhoven Netherlands Bye
Porto Portugal 3–2 Finland HJK Helsinki 3–0 0–2
Górnik Zabrze Poland 7–1 Luxembourg Jeunesse Esch 3–0 4–1
Real Madrid Spain 4–0 Norway Moss 3–0 1–0
Budapest Honvéd Hungary 1–4 Scotland Celtic 1–0 0–4
Dynamo Berlin East Germany 3–5 West Germany Werder Bremen 3–0 0–5
Vitosha Bulgaria 2–7 Italy Milan 0–2 2–5
Dundalk Republic of Ireland 0–8 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade 0–5 0–3
Ħamrun Spartans Malta 2–3 Albania 17 Nëntori 2–1 0–2
Pezoporikos Larnaca Cyprus 2–7 Sweden IFK Göteborg 1–2 1–5
Sparta Prague Czechoslovakia 3–7 Romania Steaua București 1–5 2–2
Spartak Moscow Soviet Union 3–1 Northern Ireland Glentoran 2–0 1–1
Club Brugge Belgium 2–2 (a) Denmark Brøndby 1–0 1–2
Valur Iceland 1–2 France Monaco 1–0 0–2
Larissa Greece 3–3 (0–3 p) Switzerland Neuchâtel Xamax 2–1 1–2
Rapid Wien Austria 2–3 Turkey Galatasaray 2–1 0–2

First leg

Porto Portugal 3–0 Finland HJK
Gomes  6'
Sousa  22'
Águas  76'
Report
Attendance: 45,000
Referee: Roger Philippi (Luxembourg)

Górnik Zabrze Poland 3–0 Luxembourg Jeunesse Esch
Warzycha  33'
Urban  45', 72'
Report
Attendance: 13,120

Real Madrid Spain 3–0 Norway Moss
Losada  19'
Tendillo  28'
Butragueño  31'
Report
Attendance: 66,250
Referee: Charles Scerri (Malta)

Budapest Honvéd Hungary 1–0 Scotland Celtic
Fodor  8' Report
Attendance: 8,000
Referee: Ignace van Swieten (Netherlands)

Dynamo Berlin East Germany 3–0 West Germany Werder Bremen
Doll  16'
Thom  62'
Pastor  77'
Report

Vitosha Bulgaria 0–2 Italy Milan
Report Virdis  18'
Gullit  75'
Attendance: 30,000
Referee: Gerasimos Germanakos (Greece)

Dundalk Republic of Ireland 0–5 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade
Report Stojković  52', 65' (pen.)
Musemić  60'
Bešić  83'
Gjurovski  85'
Attendance: 3,200

Ħamrun Spartans Malta 2–1 Albania 17 Nëntori
Refalo  46', 90' Report Stoja  5'
Attendance: 5,250
Referee: Dragisa Komadinić (Yugoslavia)

Pezoporikos Larnaca Cyprus 1–2 Sweden IFK Göteborg
Livathinos  21' (pen.) Report Eriksson  18'
A. Ravelli  57'
Attendance: 5,500
Referee: Borislav Alexandrov (Bulgaria)

Sparta Prague Czechoslovakia 1–5 Romania Steaua București
Kukleta  20' Report Lăcătuș  30', 45'
Hagi  78', 88'
Stoica  86'
Attendance: 22,296

Spartak Moscow Soviet Union 2–0 Northern Ireland Glentoran
Ivanov  53'
Shalimov  54'
Report
Attendance: 43,000
Referee: Ihsan Türe (Turkey)

Club Brugge Belgium 1–0 Denmark Brøndby
Bettagno  87' Report
Attendance: 19,667
Referee: Antal Hutak (Hungary)

Valur Iceland 1–0 France Monaco
Eðvaldsson  55' Report
Attendance: 5,000
Referee: Thorbjorn Aas (Norway)

Larissa Greece 2–1 Switzerland Neuchâtel Xamax
Ziogas  6'
Mitsibonas  90'
Report Hermann  56'

Rapid Wien Austria 2–1 Turkey Galatasaray
Kranjčar  32'
Kienast  50'
Report Demiral  80'

Second leg

HJK Helsinki Finland 2–0 Portugal Porto
Valla  53'
Kanerva  84'
Report
Attendance: 6,243

Porto won 3–2 on aggregate.


Jeunesse Esch Luxembourg 1–4 Poland Górnik Zabrze
Theis  32' Report Komornicki  6', 30'
Urban  67'
Zagórski  83'
Attendance: 960
Referee: Eysteinn Guðmundsson (Iceland)

Górnik Zabrze won 7–1 on aggregate.


Moss Norway 0–1 Spain Real Madrid
Report Butragueño  39'
Attendance: 5,415
Referee: Pekka Aho (Finland)

Real Madrid won 4–0 on aggregate.


Celtic Scotland 4–0 Hungary Budapest Honvéd
Stark  17'
Walker  73'
McAvennie  77'
McGhee  88'
Report
Attendance: 42,763

Celtic won 4–1 on aggregate.


Werder Bremen West Germany 5–0 East Germany Dynamo Berlin
Kutzop  23' (pen.)
Hermann  55'
Riedle  62'
Burgsmüller  70'
Schaaf  90'
Report
Attendance: 23,542

Werder Bremen won 5–3 on aggregate.


Milan Italy 5–2 Bulgaria Vitosha
Van Basten  2', 13', 42', 83'
Virdis  62'
Report Nachev  29'
Iliev  73'
Attendance: 53,086
Referee: Joe Worrall (England)

Milan won 7–2 on aggregate.


Red Star Belgrade Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 3–0 Republic of Ireland Dundalk
Šabanadžović  3'
Mrkela  51'
Savićević  67'
Report
Attendance: 28,000
Referee: Sadik Deda (Turkey)

Red Star Belgrade won 8–0 on aggregate.


17 Nëntori Albania 2–0 Malta Ħamrun Spartans
Hodja  66'
Josa  69'
Report
Attendance: 19,250
Referee: Stefan Dan Petrescu (Romania)

17 Nëntori Tirana won 3–2 on aggregate.


IFK Göteborg Sweden 5–1 Cyprus Pezoporikos Larnaca
Nilsson  6'
Zetterlund  8'
Holmgren  27'
Fröberg  44', 54'
Report Livathinos  37'
Attendance: 6,442
Referee: Janusz Eksztajn (Poland)

IFK Göteborg won 7–2 on aggregate.


Steaua București Romania 2–2 Czechoslovakia Sparta Prague
Hagi  29'
Lăcătuș  78'
Report Bílek  12', 88'
Attendance: 20,000

Steaua Bucureşti won 7–3 on aggregate.


Glentoran Northern Ireland 1–1 Soviet Union Spartak Moscow
Moore  5' Report Cherenkov  90'
Attendance: 7,000
Referee: Oli P. Olsen (Iceland)

Spartak Moscow won 3–1 on aggregate.


Brøndby Denmark 2–1 Belgium Club Brugge
Frank  36'
Christensen  68'
Report Brylle  80'

2–2 on aggregate; Club Brugge won on away goals.


Monaco France 2–0 Iceland Valur
Vogel  15'
Weah  37'
Report
Attendance: 6,383
Referee: Jean-Pierre Schon (Luxembourg)

Monaco won 2–1 on aggregate.


Neuchâtel Xamax Switzerland 2–1 (a.e.t.) Greece Larissa
Hermann  62'
Fasel  67'
Report Karapialis  58'
Penalties
Hermann
Lei-Ravello
Decastel
3–0 Mitsibonas
Bannon
Sakis Tsiolis
Attendance: 12,200
Referee: Rosario Lo Bello (Italy)

3–3 on aggregate; Neuchâtel Xamax won on penalties.


Galatasaray Turkey 2–0 Austria Rapid Wien
Çolak  53'
Tanman  67'
Report
Attendance: 37,500

Galatasaray won 3–2 on aggregate.

Second round

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
PSV Eindhoven Netherlands 5–2 Portugal Porto 5–0 0–2
Górnik Zabrze Poland 2–4 Spain Real Madrid 0–1 2–3
Celtic Scotland 0–1 West Germany Werder Bremen 0–1 0–0
Milan Italy 2–2 (4–2 p) Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade 1–1 1–11
17 Nëntori Albania 0–4 Sweden IFK Göteborg 0–3 0–1
Steaua București Romania 5–1 Soviet Union Spartak Moscow 3–0 2–1
Club Brugge Belgium 2–6 France Monaco 1–0 1–6
Neuchâtel Xamax Switzerland 3–5 Turkey Galatasaray 3–0 0–5

1 The second leg in Belgrade was replayed. The original second leg match in Belgrade was stopped by West German referee Dieter Pauly due to thick fog with Red Star leading 1–0. The result was then annulled and a replay took place the very next day. The replay ended in the above 1–1 scoreline.[1]

First leg

PSV Eindhoven Netherlands 5–0 Portugal Porto
Kieft  15'
Ellerman  37'
Koeman  42', 53'
Janssen  51'
Report
Attendance: 25,500

Górnik Zabrze Poland 0–1 Spain Real Madrid
Report Sánchez  66' (pen.)
Attendance: 62,500

Celtic Scotland 0–1 West Germany Werder Bremen
Report Wolter  57'
Attendance: 50,624

Milan Italy 1–1 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade
Virdis  48' Report Stojković  47'
Attendance: 71,316

17 Nëntori Albania 0–3 Sweden IFK Göteborg
Report Forsberg  31'
Ingesson  35'
Nilsson  83'
Attendance: 19,000
Referee: Ivan Grégr (Czechoslovakia)

Steaua București Romania 3–0 Soviet Union Spartak Moscow
Dumitrescu  33'
Hagi  58', 70' (pen.)
Report
Attendance: 30,000
Referee: Rosario Lo Bello (Italy)

Club Brugge Belgium 1–0 France Monaco
Mbuyu  48' Report
Attendance: 21,000
Referee: Helmut Kohl (Austria)

Neuchâtel Xamax Switzerland 3–0 Turkey Galatasaray
Lüthi  52'
Chassot  86'
Decastel  90'
Report

Second leg

Porto Portugal 2–0 Netherlands PSV Eindhoven
Águas  43'
Domingos  82'
Report
Attendance: 19,500

PSV Eindhoven won 5–2 on aggregate.


Real Madrid Spain 3–2 Poland Górnik Zabrze
Sánchez  27', 85'
Butragueño  77'
Report Jegor  41'
Baran  54'
Attendance: 37,500
Referee: Joe Worrall (England)

Real Madrid won 4–2 on aggregate.


Werder Bremen West Germany 0–0 Scotland Celtic
Report
Attendance: 38,980
Referee: Carlo Longhi (Italy)

Werder Bremen won 1–0 on aggregate.


Red Star Belgrade Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1–0 Italy Milan
Savićević  50' Report
Attendance: 97,400

The game was abandoned in the 65th minute because of dense fog and low visibility with the score at 1–0. The game was replayed from the beginning the next day at 3 p.m. with the same starting line-ups, with the exception of Milan players Pietro Paolo Virdis and Carlo Ancelotti; Virdis had been sent off in the abandoned match, while Ancelotti picked up his second yellow card of the competition, meaning that he had to sit out a match.

2–2 on aggregate; Milan won on penalties.


IFK Göteborg Sweden 1–0 Albania 17 Nëntori
Forsberg  30' Report
Attendance: 4,434

IFK Göteborg won 4–0 on aggregate.


Spartak Moscow Soviet Union 1–2 Romania Steaua București
Cherenkov  44' Report Lăcătuș  11'
Balint  90'
Attendance: 23,000
Referee: Werner Föckler (West Germany)

Steaua Bucureşti won 5–1 on aggregate.


Monaco France 6–1 Belgium Club Brugge
Fofana  5', 27', 73'
Sonor  8'
Touré  24', 30'
Report Audoor  82'
Attendance: 12,729

Monaco won 6–2 on aggregate.


Galatasaray Turkey 5–0 Switzerland Neuchâtel Xamax
Tütüneker  19', 77'
Çolak  54', 80', 89'
Report
Attendance: 35,119

Galatasaray won 5–3 on aggregate.

Quarter-finals

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
PSV Eindhoven Netherlands 2–3 Spain Real Madrid 1–1 1–2
Werder Bremen West Germany 0–1 Italy Milan 0–0 0–1
IFK Göteborg Sweden 2–5 Romania Steaua București 1–0 1–5
Monaco France 1–2 Turkey Galatasaray 0–1 1–1

First leg

PSV Eindhoven Netherlands 1–1 Spain Real Madrid
Romário  52' Report Butragueño  45'
Attendance: 25,000
Referee: Luigi Agnolin (Italy)

Werder Bremen West Germany 0–0 Italy Milan
Report
Attendance: 40,000

IFK Göteborg Sweden 1–0 Romania Steaua București
Ingesson  54' Report
Attendance: 16,067

Monaco France 0–1 Turkey Galatasaray
Report Çolak  20'
Attendance: 20,000

Second leg

Real Madrid Spain 2–1 (a.e.t.) Netherlands PSV Eindhoven
Sánchez  78' (pen.)
Martín Vázquez  105'
Report Romário  84'

Real Madrid won 3–2 on aggregate.


Milan Italy 1–0 West Germany Werder Bremen
Van Basten  32' (pen.) Report
Attendance: 71,207

Milan won 1–0 on aggregate.


Steaua București Romania 5–1 Sweden IFK Göteborg
Lăcătuș  7', 16', 65'
Dumitrescu  39'
Balint  89'
Report Zetterlund  54'
Attendance: 30,000

Steaua București won 5–2 on aggregate.


Galatasaray Turkey 1–1 France Monaco
Prekazi  51' Report Weah  65'

Galatasaray won 2–1 on aggregate.

Semi-finals

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Real Madrid Spain 1–6 Italy Milan 1–1 0–5
Steaua București Romania 5–1 Turkey Galatasaray 4–0 1–1

First leg

Real Madrid Spain 1–1 Italy Milan
Sánchez  42' Report Van Basten  77'

Steaua București Romania 4–0 Turkey Galatasaray
Dumitrescu  8'
Hagi  40' (pen.)
Petrescu  68'
Balint  72'
Report
Attendance: 25,000
Referee: Vitor Manuel Fernandes Correia (Portugal)

Second leg

Milan Italy 5–0 Spain Real Madrid
Ancelotti  19'
Rijkaard  25'
Gullit  45'
Van Basten  49'
Donadoni  60'
Report
Attendance: 73,112

Milan won 6–1 on aggregate.


Galatasaray Turkey 1–1 Romania Steaua București
Tanman  36' Report Dumitrescu  39'
Attendance: 45,000

Steaua Bucureşti won 5–1 on aggregate.

Final

Steaua București Romania 0–4 Italy Milan
Report Gullit  18', 39'
Van Basten  27', 47'
Attendance: 97,000

Top goalscorers

The top scorers from the 1988–89 European Cup are as follows:

Rank Name Team Goals
1 Netherlands Marco van Basten Italy Milan 10
2 Romania Marius Lăcătuș Romania Steaua București 7
3 Romania Gheorghe Hagi Romania Steaua București 6
4 Turkey Tanju Çolak Turkey Galatasaray 5
Mexico Hugo Sánchez Spain Real Madrid 5
6 Romania Ilie Dumitrescu Romania Steaua București 4
Spain Emilio Butragueño Spain Real Madrid 4
Netherlands Ruud Gullit Italy Milan 4
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Dragan Stojković Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade 4
10 Romania Gavril Balint Romania Steaua București 3
Ivory Coast Youssouf Falikou Fofana France Monaco 3
Poland Jan Urban Poland Górnik Zabrze 3
Italy Pietro Paolo Virdis Italy Milan 3

See also

References

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