1994 UEFA Champions League Final

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  (Redirected from 1994 European Cup Final)
Jump to: navigation, search
1994 UEFA Champions League Final
1994europeancupfinal.jpg
Event 1993–94 UEFA Champions League
Date 18 May 1994
Venue Olympic Stadium, Athens
Referee Philip Don (England)
Attendance 70,000
1993
1995

The 1994 UEFA Champions League Final was a football match between Italian club Milan and Spanish club Barcelona, played on 18 May 1994 at the Athens Olympic Stadium in Athens, Greece. Milans victory is the largest victory (4-0) ever made in a Champions League Final until date.

Barcelona were favourites to win the their 2nd European title in three years over the 1993 runners up, having just won La Liga. Milan's preparation before the final was in disarray: legendary striker Marco van Basten and £13 million young sensation Gianluigi Lentini (then world's most expensive footballer) were missing through injury, sweeper and legendary captain, Franco Baresi was suspended, as was defender Alessandro Costacurta; while UEFA regulations which ordered that a team could only field a maximum of three non-nationals meant that their coach Fabio Capello was forced to leave out Florin Răducioiu, Jean-Pierre Papin and Brian Laudrup.

Milan played in their all-white away strip, which historically they use in finals of the European Cup and Champions League, while Barcelona played in their red and blue strip. Milan dominated early and were rewarded when Dejan Savićević ran down the right flank and passed to Daniele Massaro who tapped the ball into an empty net. Massaro banged in his second just before half time to make it 2–0 after a solo run by Roberto Donadoni down the left wing.

In the 47th minute Savićević capitalised on a defensive error by Miguel Ángel Nadal to lob goalkeeper Andoni Zubizarreta for the third goal. Eight minutes later, after Savicevic had hit a post and the Barcelona defense had failed to clear, Milan defender Marcel Desailly beat the offside trap to make it 4–0, which ended up being the final score. Pundits described Milan's performance against Barcelona in the final as the greatest ever by a team in European Cup/UEFA Champions League history. Desailly became the first player to win the trophy in consecutive years with different clubs after winning with Olympique Marseille in 1993.

Contents

[edit] Match details

18 May 1994
21:15
Milan Italy 4 – 0 Spain Barcelona Olympic Stadium, Athens
Attendance: 70,000
Referee: Philip Don (England)
Massaro Goal 22'45+2'
Savićević Goal 47'
Desailly Goal 58'
Milan
Barcelona
MILAN:[1]
GK 1 Italy Sebastiano Rossi
RB 2 Italy Mauro Tassotti (c) Booked in the 35th minute 35'
LB 3 Italy Christian Panucci Booked in the 88th minute 88'
CM 4 Italy Demetrio Albertini Booked in the 53rd minute 53'
CB 5 Italy Filippo Galli
CB 6 Italy Paolo Maldini Substituted off in the 84th minute 84'
LM 7 Italy Roberto Donadoni
CM 8 France Marcel Desailly
RM 9 Croatia Zvonimir Boban
CF 10 Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Dejan Savićević
CF 11 Italy Daniele Massaro Booked in the 45th minute 45'
Substitutes:
GK 12 Italy Mario Ielpo
DF 13 Italy Stefano Nava Substituted on in the 84th minute 84'
MF 14 Italy Angelo Carbone
MF 15 Italy Gianluigi Lentini
FW 16 Italy Marco Simone
Manager:
Italy Fabio Capello
BARCELONA:[1]
GK 1 Spain Andoni Zubizarreta
RB 2 Spain Albert Ferrer Booked in the 58th minute 58'
CM 3 Spain Josep Guardiola
CB 4 Netherlands Ronald Koeman
CB 5 Spain Miguel Ángel Nadal Booked in the 54th minute 54'
CM 6 Spain José Mari Bakero (c) Booked in the 48th minute 48'
LB 7 Spain Sergi Booked in the 55th minute 55' Substituted off in the 73rd minute 73'
RW 8 Bulgaria Hristo Stoichkov Booked in the 24th minute 24'
CM 9 Spain Guillermo Amor
CF 10 Brazil Romário
LW 11 Spain Txiki Begiristain Substituted off in the 51st minute 51'
Substitutes:
DF 12 Spain Juan Carlos
GK 13 Spain Carles Busquets
MF 14 Spain Eusebio Sacristán Substituted on in the 51st minute 51'
MF 15 Spain Ion Andoni Goikoetxea
MF 16 Spain Quique Estebaranz Substituted on in the 73rd minute 73'
Manager:
Netherlands Johan Cruyff

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Wilson, Jonathan (2008). Inverting the Pyramid: The History of Football Tactics. Orion. p. 318. ISBN 978-1-4091-0204-5. 

[edit] External links

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Interaction
Toolbox
Print/export
Languages