List of UEFA Cup Winners' Cup finals

List of UEFA Cup Winners' Cup finals
Founded 1960
Abolished 1999
Region Europe (UEFA)
Number of teams 32 (first round)
2 (finalists)
Last champions Italy Lazio (1st title)
Most successful team(s) Spain Barcelona (4 titles)

The UEFA Cup Winners' Cup was a seasonal association football competition contested between member associations of European football's governing body, the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA). It was open to winners of domestic cup winners, such as the English FA Cup champions. Throughout its 39-year history, the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup was always a knock-out tournament with two-legged home and away ties 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 first competition was won by Fiorentina, from Italy, who defeated Scotland's Rangers 4–1 over two legs to win the 1961 final. The competition was abolished in 1999; Italian team Lazio were the last team to win the competition when they beat Mallorca 2–1.[1]

Barcelona are the most successful club in the competition's history, having won it on four occasions,[1] followed by Anderlecht (Belgium), Milan (Italy), Chelsea (England) and Dynamo Kyiv (USSR / Ukraine) with two victories each. Barcelona, Atlético Madrid, Real Madrid (all from Spain), Anderlecht, Fiorentina (Italy), Rangers (Scotland), Arsenal (England) and Rapid Wien (Austria) hold the record for being runners-up the most times, with each team losing the final twice. Teams from England have won the competition the most, with teams from the country winning the competition eight times.[2]

Winners

Key
dagger Match was won during extra time
* Match was won on a penalty shoot-out
& Match was won after a replay
  • The "Season" column refers to the season the competition was held, and wikilinks to the article about that season.
  • The wikilinks in the "Final score" column point to the article about that season's final game.
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup winners
Season Country Winner[3] Score[3] Runners-up[3] Country Venue[2] Attendance[4]
1960–61  Italy Fiorentina 2–0 Rangers  Scotland Scotland Ibrox Stadium, Glasgow 80,000
 Italy Fiorentina 2–1 Rangers  Scotland Italy Comunale Stadium, Florence 50,000
Fiorentina won 4–1 on aggregate
1961–62  Spain Atlético Madrid 3–0&[A] Fiorentina  Italy West Germany Neckarstadion, Stuttgart 67,186
1962–63  England Tottenham Hotspur 5–1 Atlético Madrid  Spain Netherlands De Kuip, Rotterdam 49,143
1963–64  Portugal Sporting CP 1–0&[B] MTK Hungária  Hungary Belgium Bosuil Stadium, Antwerp 17,132
1964–65  England West Ham United 2–0 1860 Munich  West Germany England Wembley Stadium, London 97,974
1965–66  West Germany Borussia Dortmund 2–1dagger Liverpool  England Scotland Hampden Park, Glasgow 41,657
1966–67  West Germany Bayern Munich 1–0dagger Rangers  Scotland West Germany Städtisches Stadion, Nuremberg 69,480
1967–68  Italy Milan 2–0 Hamburg  West Germany Netherlands De Kuip, Rotterdam 53,276
1968–69  Czechoslovakia Slovan Bratislava 3–2 Barcelona  Spain Switzerland St. Jakob Stadium, Basel 19,478
1969–70  England Manchester City 2–1 Górnik Zabrze  Poland Austria Prater Stadium, Vienna 7,968
1970–71  England Chelsea 2–1&[C] Real Madrid  Spain Greece Karaiskakis Stadium, Piraeus 66,000
1971–72  Scotland Rangers 3–2 Dynamo Moscow  Soviet Union Spain Camp Nou, Barcelona 24,701
1972–73  Italy Milan 1–0 Leeds United  England Greece Kaftanzoglio Stadium, Thessaloniki 40,154
1973–74  East Germany Magdeburg 2–0 Milan  Italy Netherlands De Kuip, Rotterdam 6,461
1974–75  Soviet Union Dynamo Kyiv 3–0 Ferencváros  Hungary Switzerland St. Jakob Stadium, Basel 10,897
1975–76  Belgium Anderlecht 4–2 West Ham United  England Belgium Heysel Stadium, Brussels 58,000
1976–77  West Germany Hamburg 2–0 Anderlecht  Belgium Netherlands Olympisch Stadion, Amsterdam 66,000
1977–78  Belgium Anderlecht 4–0 Austria Wien  Austria France Parc des Princes, Paris 48,769
1978–79  Spain Barcelona 4–3dagger Fortuna Düsseldorf  West Germany Switzerland St. Jakob Stadium, Basel 58,000
1979–80  Spain Valencia 0–0*[D] Arsenal  England Belgium Heysel Stadium, Brussels 40,000
1980–81  Soviet Union Dinamo Tbilisi 2–1 Carl Zeiss Jena  East Germany West Germany Rheinstadion, Düsseldorf 8,000
1981–82  Spain Barcelona 2–1 Standard Liège  Belgium Spain Camp Nou, Barcelona 100,000
1982–83  Scotland Aberdeen 2–1dagger Real Madrid  Spain Sweden Nya Ullevi, Gothenburg 17,804
1983–84  Italy Juventus 2–1 Porto  Portugal Switzerland St. Jakob Stadium, Basel 60,000
1984–85  England Everton 3–1 Rapid Wien  Austria Netherlands De Kuip, Rotterdam 38,500
1985–86  Soviet Union Dynamo Kyiv 3–0 Atlético Madrid  Spain France Stade de Gerland, Lyon 39,300
1986–87  Netherlands Ajax 1–0 Lokomotive Leipzig  East Germany Greece Spiros Louis Stadium, Athens 35,000
1987–88  Belgium Mechelen 1–0 Ajax  Netherlands France Stade de la Meinau, Strasbourg 39,446
1988–89  Spain Barcelona 2–0 Sampdoria  Italy Switzerland Wankdorf Stadium, Bern 45,000
1989–90  Italy Sampdoria 2–0dagger Anderlecht  Belgium Sweden Nya Ullevi, Gothenburg 20,103
1990–91  England Manchester United 2–1 Barcelona  Spain Netherlands De Kuip, Rotterdam 45,000
1991–92  Germany Werder Bremen 2–0 Monaco  France Portugal Estádio da Luz, Lisbon 16,000
1992–93  Italy Parma 3–1 Royal Antwerp  Belgium England Wembley Stadium, London 37,393
1993–94  England Arsenal 1–0 Parma  Italy Denmark Parken Stadium, Copenhagen 33,765
1994–95  Spain Real Zaragoza 2–1dagger Arsenal  England France Parc des Princes, Paris 42,424
1995–96  France Paris Saint-Germain 1–0 Rapid Wien  Austria Belgium King Baudouin Stadium, Brussels 37,500
1996–97  Spain Barcelona 1–0 Paris Saint-Germain  France Netherlands De Kuip, Rotterdam 36,802
1997–98  England Chelsea 1–0 Stuttgart  Germany Sweden Råsunda Stadium, Stockholm 30,216
1998–99  Italy Lazio 2–1 Mallorca  Spain England Villa Park, Birmingham 33,000

Performances

By club

Performance in Finals by club
Club Winners[3] Runners-up[2] Years won[3] Years runner-up[2]
Spain Barcelona 4 2 1979, 1982, 1989, 1997 1969, 1991
Belgium Anderlecht 2 2 1976, 1978 1977, 1990
Italy Milan 2 1 1968, 1973 1974
England Chelsea 2 0 1971, 1998
Soviet Union Dynamo Kyiv [F] 2 0 1975, 1986
Spain Atlético Madrid 12 1962 1963, 1986
Scotland Rangers 1 2 1972 1961, 1967
England Arsenal 1 2 1994 1980, 1995
Italy Fiorentina 1 1 1961 1962
England West Ham United 1 1 1965 1976
Germany Hamburg [E] 1 1 1977 1968
Netherlands Ajax 1 1 1987 1988
Italy Sampdoria 1 1 1990 1989
Italy Parma 1 1 1993 1994
France Paris Saint-Germain 1 1 1996 1997
England Tottenham Hotspur 1 0 1963
Portugal Sporting CP 1 0 1964
Germany Borussia Dortmund [E] 1 0 1966
Germany Bayern Munich [E] 1 0 1967
Czechoslovakia Slovan Bratislava [G] 1 0 1969
England Manchester City 1 0 1970
East Germany Magdeburg [E] 1 0 1974
Spain Valencia 1 0 1980
Soviet Union Dinamo Tbilisi [F] 1 0 1981
Scotland Aberdeen 1 0 1983
Italy Juventus 1 0 1984
England Everton 1 0 1985
Belgium Mechelen 1 0 1988
England Manchester United 1 0 1991
Germany Werder Bremen [E] 1 0 1992
Spain Real Zaragoza 1 0 1995
Italy Lazio 1 0 1999
Spain Real Madrid 0 2 1971, 1983
Austria Rapid Wien 0 2 1985, 1996
Hungary MTK Hungária 0 1 1964
Germany 1860 Munich [E] 0 1 1965
England Liverpool 0 1 1966
Poland Górnik Zabrze 0 1 1970
Soviet Union Dynamo Moscow [F] 0 1 1972
England Leeds United 0 1 1973
Hungary Ferencváros 0 1 1975
Austria Austria Wien 0 1 1978
Germany Fortuna Düsseldorf [E] 0 1 1979
East Germany Carl Zeiss Jena [E] 0 1 1981
Belgium Standard Liège 0 1 1982
Portugal Porto 0 1 1984
East Germany Lokomotive Leipzig [E] 0 1 1987
France Monaco 0 1 1992
Belgium Royal Antwerp 0 1 1993
Germany Stuttgart [E] 0 1 1998
Spain Mallorca 0 1 1999

By nation

Performance in Finals by nation
Nation Winners[2] Runners-up[2] Totals
 England 8 5 13
 Spain 7 7 14
 Italy 7 4 11
 West Germany/Germany [E] 4 4 8
 Belgium 3 4 7
 Soviet Union [F] 3 1 4
 Scotland 2 2 4
 East Germany [E] 1 2 3
 France 1 2 3
 Netherlands 1 1 2
 Portugal 1 1 2
 Czechoslovakia [G] 1 0 1
 Austria 0 3 3
 Hungary 0 2 2
 Poland 0 1 1
TOTALS393978

Notes

A. ^ The first final, played at Hampden Park in Glasgow, finished 1–1.[5]

B. ^ The first final played two days earlier, finished 3–3.[6]

C. ^ The first final played two days earlier, finished 1–1.[7]

D. ^ Score was 0–0 after 90 minutes and extra time. Valencia won the penalty-shootout 5–4.[8]

E. ^ West Germany clubs were 3-3 in 6 appearances, former West Germany clubs earned Germany's additional 1-1 in 2 appearances after reunification in 1990

F. ^ No appearances by clubs from the former Soviet Union after its dissolution in 1991

G. ^ No appearances by clubs from the former Czechoslovakia after its dissolution in 1993

References

General

  • Stokkermans, Karel (26 January 2000). "European Cup Winners' Cup". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation (RSSSF). Retrieved 8 July 2010.
  • "UEFA Cup Winners' Cup". Union of European Football Associations (UEFA). Archived from the original on 1 May 2010. Retrieved 8 July 2010.

Specific

  1. 1 2 "History". Union of European Football Associations (UEFA). Archived from the original on 31 January 2011. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Ross, James M. (31 May 1999). "European Cup Winners' Cup Finals 1961–99". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation (RSSSF). Retrieved 8 July 2010.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Stokkermans, Karel (26 January 2000). "European Cup Winners' Cup". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation (RSSSF). Retrieved 8 July 2010.
  4. "UEFA Cup Winners' Cup: All-time finals". Union of European Football Associations (UEFA). 30 June 2005. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
  5. "1961/62: Atletico break Fiorentina's grip". Union of European Football Associations (UEFA). 1 June 1962. Archived from the original on 4 September 2015. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
  6. "1963/64: Sporting at the second attempt". Union of European Football Associations (UEFA). 1 June 1964. Archived from the original on 29 June 2010. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
  7. "1970/71: Replay joy for Chelsea". Union of European Football Associations (UEFA). 1 June 1971. Archived from the original on 1 May 2010. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
  8. Stokkermans, Karel (9 January 2008). "Cup Winners' Cup 1979–80". Rec. Sport. Soccer Statistics Foundation (RSSSF). Retrieved 28 February 2012.

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