The 1999–2000 UEFA Cup season was the 29th edition of the UEFA Cup competition. The final took place at Parken Stadium in Copenhagen and was won by Galatasaray, who defeated Arsenal in the final. The game was scoreless through the first ninety minutes and stayed that way through thirty minutes of extra time. The match went on to penalty kicks in which Gheorghe Popescu scored the winning goal to win the cup. Galatasaray won the cup without losing a single game. The competition was marred by violence involving Turkish and English hooligans in the semi-finals and the final, in particular the fatal stabbings of Leeds United fans Kevin Speight and Christopher Loftus by Galatasaray fans in Istanbul.[1]
Dates | 10 August 1999 – 17 May 2000 |
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Final positions | |
Champions | Galatasaray (1st title) |
Runners-up | Arsenal |
Tournament statistics | |
Matches played | 205 |
Goals scored | 565 (2.76 per match) |
Top scorer(s) | Darko Kovačević (Juventus) 10 goals |
← 1998–99 2000–01 → |
Parma were the defending champions, but were eliminated by Werder Bremen in the fourth round. They entered in the first round due to elimination in the third qualifying round of the UEFA Champions League.
It was the first season of the new format UEFA Cup; it had absorbed the now defunct Cup Winners' Cup to include domestic cup winners, and now featured an additional knockout round. This was the first year when the UEFA Cup winners qualified for the UEFA Super Cup. This season's champions also qualified for the 2001 FIFA Club World Championship, which was never held. So far, Galatasaray are the only UEFA Cup winners to qualify for a Club World Cup.
Association team allocation
editA total of 142 teams from 49 UEFA associations participated in the 1999–2000 UEFA Cup. Associations are allocated places according to their 1999–2000 UEFA league coefficient.
Below is the qualification scheme for the 1999–00 UEFA Cup:
- Associations 1–6 each enter three teams
- Associations 7–8 each enter four teams
- Associations 9–15 each enter two teams
- Associations 16–21 each enter three teams
- Associations 22–50 each enter two teams, with the exception of Bosnia who didn't have a domestic league winner, as well as Liechtenstein and Andorra who enter with only one team each
- 3 winners of the Intertoto Cup
- 16 teams eliminated from the 1999–2000 UEFA Champions League third qualifying round are transferred to the UEFA Cup
- 8 teams eliminated from the 1999–2000 UEFA Champions League first group stage are transferred to the UEFA Cup
Association ranking
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- Notes
- (UCL): Additional teams transferred from the UEFA Champions League
- (IT): Additional teams from Intertoto Cup
Distribution
editTeams entering in this round | Teams advancing from previous round | Teams transferred from Champions League | |
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Qualifying round (76 teams) |
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First round (96 teams) |
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Second round (48 teams) |
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Third round (32 teams) |
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Fourth round (16 teams) |
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Play-offs (8 teams) |
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Redistribution rules
editA UEFA Cup place is vacated when a team qualify for both the Champions League and the UEFA Cup, or qualify for the UEFA Cup by more than one method. When a place is vacated, it is redistributed within the national association by the following rules:
- When the domestic cup winners (considered as the "highest-placed" qualifier within the national association) also qualify for the Champions League, their UEFA Cup place is vacated, and the remaining UEFA Cup qualifiers are moved up one place, with the final place (with the earliest starting round) taken by the domestic cup runners-up, provided they do not already qualify for the Champions League or the UEFA Cup. Otherwise, UEFA forgot to establish a rule, so each association decided how to assign this place.
- When the domestic cup winners also qualify for the UEFA Cup through league position, their place through the league position is vacated, and the UEFA Cup qualifiers which finish lower in the league are moved up one place, with the final place taken by the highest-placed league finisher which do not qualify for the UEFA Cup yet.
- A place vacated by the League Cup winners is taken by the highest-placed league finisher which do not qualify for the UEFA Cup yet.
- A Fair Play place is taken by the highest-ranked team in the domestic Fair Play table which do not qualify for the Champions League or UEFA Cup yet.
Teams
editThe labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for the place of its starting round:
- TH: Title holders
- CW: Cup winners
- CR: Cup runners-up
- LC: League Cup winners
- Nth: League position
- PO: End-of-season European competition play-off winners
- FP: Fair play
- IT: Intertoto Cup winners
- CL: Relegated from the Champions League
- GS: Third-placed teams from the group stage
- Q3: Losers from the third qualifying round
- Notes
- ^ Poland (POL): Polish champions Wisła Kraków were banned from European competitions by UEFA. As a result, league runners-up Widzew Łódź were promoted to Champions League, while 4th-placed Lech Poznań were awarded UEFA Cup spot.[2]
- ^
- ^ Estonia (EST): 1998 Meistriliiga runners-up Tallinna Sadam merged into Levadia Maardu (who also won the Cup) after the season. Sadam's UEFA Cup spot was given to 3rd-placed Lantana Tallinn.[3]
Qualifying round
editFirst round
editSecond round
editTeam 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
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Aris | 2–4 | Celta Vigo | 2–2 | 0–2 |
Udinese | 2–1 | Legia Warsaw | 1–0 | 1–1 |
Deportivo La Coruña | 5–1 | Montpellier | 3–1 | 2–0 |
Widzew Łódź | 1–3 | Monaco | 1–1 | 0–2 |
MTK Hungária | 2–2 (a) | AEK Athens | 2–1 | 0–1 |
Roda | 0–1 | VfL Wolfsburg | 0–0 | 0–1 |
Anderlecht | 2–4 | Bologna | 2–1 | 0–3 |
PAOK | 3–3 (1–4 p) | Benfica | 1–2 | 2–1 (a.e.t.) |
Inter Bratislava | 0–7 | Nantes | 0–3 | 0–4 |
Atlético Madrid | 5–1 | Amica Wronki | 1–0 | 4–1 |
Parma | 4–1 | Helsingborgs IF | 1–0 | 3–1 |
GAK | 2–2 (a) | Panathinaikos | 2–1 | 0–1 |
Steaua București | 2–0 | West Ham United | 2–0 | 0–0 |
Levski Sofia | 2–4 | Juventus | 1–3 | 1–1 |
Leeds United | 7–1 | Lokomotiv Moscow | 4–1 | 3–0 |
Hapoel Haifa | 1–3 | Ajax | 0–3 | 1–0 |
Slavia Prague | 3–2 | Grasshopper | 3–1 | 0–1 |
Zürich | 2–5 | Newcastle United | 1–2 | 1–3 |
Werder Bremen | 2–2 (a) | Viking | 0–0 | 2–2 |
Teplice | 1–5 | Mallorca | 1–2 | 0–3 |
IFK Göteborg | 0–3 | Roma | 0–2 | 0–1 |
Lyon | 2–0 | Celtic | 1–0 | 1–0 |
Lens | 5–2 | Vitesse | 4–1 | 1–1 |
Tottenham Hotspur | 1–2 | 1. FC Kaiserslautern | 1–0 | 0–2 |
Final phase
editIn the final phase, teams played against each other over two legs on a home-and-away basis, except for the one-match final. The mechanism of the draws for each round was as follows:
- In the draws for the third and fourth rounds, teams were seeded and divided into groups containing an equal number of seeded and unseeded teams. In each group, the seeded teams were drawn against the unseeded teams, with the first team drawn hosting the first leg. Teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other.
- In the draws for the quarter-finals onwards, there were no seedings and teams from the same association could be drawn against each other.
Bracket
editThird round
editTeam 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
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Ajax | 0–3 | Mallorca | 0–1 | 0–2 |
AEK Athens | 2–3 | Monaco | 2–2 | 0–1 |
Rangers | 2–2 (1–3 p) | Borussia Dortmund | 2–0 | 0–2 (a.e.t.) |
Bologna | 2–3 | Galatasaray | 1–1 | 1–2 |
Roma | 1–0 | Newcastle United | 1–0 | 0–0 |
Spartak Moscow | 2–2 (a) | Leeds United | 2–1 | 0–1 |
Slavia Prague | 5–2 | Steaua București | 4–1 | 1–1 |
Udinese | 2–2 (a) | Bayer Leverkusen | 0–1 | 2–1 |
Arsenal | 6–3 | Nantes | 3–0 | 3–3 |
Deportivo La Coruña | 5–3 | Panathinaikos | 4–2 | 1–1 |
Parma | 5–4 | Sturm Graz | 2–1 | 3–3 (a.e.t.) |
Lyon | 3–4 | Werder Bremen | 3–0 | 0–4 |
Olympiacos | 3–4 | Juventus | 1–3 | 2–1 |
Celta Vigo | 8–1 | Benfica | 7–0 | 1–1 |
VfL Wolfsburg | 3–5 | Atlético Madrid | 2–3 | 1–2 |
Lens | 5–3 | 1. FC Kaiserslautern | 1–2 | 4–1 |
Fourth round
editTeam 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
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Mallorca | 4–2 | Monaco | 4–1 | 0–1 |
Borussia Dortmund | 0–2 | Galatasaray | 0–2 | 0–0 |
Roma | 0–1 | Leeds United | 0–0 | 0–1 |
Slavia Prague | 2–2 (a) | Udinese | 1–0 | 1–2 |
Arsenal | 6–3 | Deportivo La Coruña | 5–1 | 1–2 |
Parma | 2–3 | Werder Bremen | 1–0 | 1–3 |
Juventus | 1–4 | Celta Vigo | 1–0 | 0–4 |
Atlético Madrid | 4–6 | Lens | 2–2 | 2–4 |
Quarter-finals
editTeam 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
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Leeds United | 4–2 | Slavia Prague | 3–0 | 1–2 |
Arsenal | 6–2 | Werder Bremen | 2–0 | 4–2 |
Mallorca | 2–6 | Galatasaray | 1–4 | 1–2 |
Celta Vigo | 1–2 | Lens | 0–0 | 1–2 |
Semi-finals
editTeam 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
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Galatasaray | 4–2 | Leeds United | 2–0 | 2–2 |
Arsenal | 3–1 | Lens | 1–0 | 2–1 |
Final
editThe final was played on 17 May 2000 at the Parken Stadium in Copenhagen, Denmark.
Top goalscorers
editRank | Name | Team | Goals | Minutes played |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Darko Kovačević | Juventus | 10 | 720' |
2 | Marco Di Vaio | Parma | 7 | 460' |
Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink | Atlético Madrid | 574' | ||
Thierry Henry | Arsenal | 592' | ||
Pascal Nouma | Lens | 875' | ||
6 | Benni McCarthy | Celta Vigo | 6 | 796' |
Hakan Şükür | Galatasaray | 833' |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Fans killed in Turkey violence". BBC News. 6 April 2000. Retrieved 29 August 2016.
- ^ a b No Champions League spot for Wisla Krakow
- ^ Estonia 1998 (fall season) at RSSSF
- ^ "4. UEFA Cup Finals" (PDF). UEFA Europa League Statistics Handbook 2012/13. Nyon: Union of European Football Associations. 28 May 2013. p. 71. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 June 2013. Retrieved 27 August 2014.
- ^ "UEFA Cup Final officials". Arsenal F.C. official website. 15 May 2000. Archived from the original on 18 September 2000. Retrieved 28 July 2013.
External links
edit- 1999–2000 All matches UEFA Cup – season at UEFA website
- Official Site
- Results at RSSSF.com
- All scorers 1999–2000 UEFA Cup according to (excluding preliminary round) according to protocols UEFA all scorers preliminary round
- 1999/2000 UEFA Cup – results and line-ups (archive)