UEFA Cup Winners' Cup records and statistics
Below are tables of the clubs that have won the Cup Winners' Cup.
Performances
By club
By nation
Nation | Wins | Runners-up | Winning clubs |
---|---|---|---|
8 | 5 | Chelsea (2), Arsenal (1), Everton (1), Manchester City (1), Manchester United (1), Tottenham Hotspur (1), West Ham United (1) | |
7 | 7 | Barcelona (4), Atlético Madrid (1), Real Zaragoza (1), Valencia (1) | |
7 | 4 | Milan (2), Fiorentina (1), Juventus (1), Lazio (1), Parma (1), Sampdoria (1) | |
5 | 6 | Bayern Munich (1), Borussia Dortmund (1), Hamburg (1), Werder Bremen (1), Magdeburg (1) | |
3 | 4 | Anderlecht (2), KV Mechelen (1) | |
3 | 1 | Dynamo Kyiv (2), Dinamo Tbilisi (1) | |
2 | 2 | Aberdeen (1), Rangers (1) | |
1 | 2 | Paris Saint-Germain (1) | |
1 | 1 | Ajax (1) | |
1 | 1 | Sporting CP (1) | |
1 | 0 | Slovan Bratislava (1) | |
0 | 3 | – | |
0 | 2 | – | |
0 | 1 | – | |
Clubs
By semi-final appearances
= | Finalist team in season |
Trivia and records
- For the 1994–95 season, England had two representatives in the tournament, neither of which was the domestic cup winners. The first was Arsenal, who were the Cup Winners' Cup holders, and the second was Chelsea, who had lost the 1994 FA Cup final to double winners Manchester United. Both teams were eliminated from competition by eventual winners Real Zaragoza of Spain.
- Largest margin of victory in a final: 1962–63, Tottenham Hotspur 5–1 Atlético Madrid
- Most goals in a final: 1978–79, Barcelona 4–3 Fortuna Düsseldorf
- Most goals in a match: 1963–64, Sporting CP 16–1 APOEL (European Cups record)
Consecutive participation
It is uncommon for teams to participate in more than two consecutive Cup Winners' Cups, but these teams have done so.
5
Cardiff City (1967–68 until 1971–72) Lahti (1973–74 until 1977–78)
4
Shamrock Rovers (1966–67 until 1969–70) Anderlecht (1975–76 until 1978–79) Barcelona (1981–82 until 1984–85) Dinamo București (1986–87 until 1989–90) Dinamo Batumi (1995–96 until 1998–99)[lower-alpha 1]
3
Olympiacos (1961–62 until 1963–64)[lower-alpha 2] Dinamo Zagreb (1963–64 until 1965–66) Galatasaray (1965–65 until 1966–67) Floriana (1965–66 until 1967–68) Standard Liège (1965–66 until 1967–68) Rába ETO Győr (1966–67 until 1968–69) Levski-Spartak Sofia (1967–68 until 1969–70) Górnik Zabrze (1968–69 until 1970–71) Steaua București (1969–70 until 1971–72) Sporting CP (1971–72 until 1973–74) PAOK (1972–73 until 1974–75) Fortuna Düsseldorf (1978–79 until 1980–81) Swansea City (1981–82 until 1983–84) Rapid Wien (1984–85 until 1986–87) Glentoran (1985–86 until 1987–88) Barcelona (1988–89 until 1990–91) Valur (1991–92 until 1993–94) Žalgiris (1993–94 until 1995–96) AEK Athens (1995–96 until 1997–98) Lokomotiv Moscow (1996–97 until 1998–99)[lower-alpha 1]
Domestic champions
Five clubs won their domestic leagues and the Cup Winners' Cup in the same season.
Dynamo Kyiv: 1975, 1986 Milan: 1968 Magdeburg: 1974 Juventus: 1984 Everton: 1985
Undefeated champions
Atlético Madrid (1962) Milan (1968 & 1973) Dynamo Kyiv (1975) Juventus (1984) Everton (1985) KV Mechelen (1988) Barcelona (1989 & 1997) Sampdoria (1990) Manchester United (1991) Werder Bremen (1992) Arsenal (1994) Lazio (1999)
Notes
Most goals in a single season
Goals | Player(s) |
---|---|
14 | Lothar Emmerich |
13 | Kiril Milanov |
11 | Mascarenhas |
10 | Roger Claessen |
9 | Mario Kempes, Ian Wright, Roberto Baggio, Petr Samec |
See also
External links
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