1990 UEFA Cup final: Difference between revisions
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| title = 1990 UEFA Cup |
| title = 1990 UEFA Cup final |
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| caption = 1989–90 Juventus team |
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| previous = [[1989 UEFA Cup |
| previous = [[1989 UEFA Cup final|1989]] |
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| next = [[1991 UEFA Cup |
| next = [[1991 UEFA Cup final|1991]] |
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The '''1990 UEFA Cup Final''' was an [[association football]] tie played on 2 May 1990 and 16 May 1990 between [[Juventus F.C.|Juventus]] and [[ACF Fiorentina|Fiorentina]] of Italy. Juventus won 3–1 on aggregate. This was the [[UEFA Cup and Europa League records and statistics#Miscellaneous records|first final between two Italian sides]] in the [[UEFA competition records|UEFA competitions']] history and the third between two clubs of the same country. |
The '''1990 UEFA Cup Final''' was an [[association football]] tie played on 2 May 1990 and 16 May 1990 between [[Juventus F.C.|Juventus]] and [[ACF Fiorentina|Fiorentina]] of Italy. Juventus won 3–1 on aggregate. This was the [[UEFA Cup and Europa League records and statistics#Miscellaneous records|first final between two Italian sides]] in the [[UEFA competition records|UEFA competitions']] history and the third between two clubs of the same country. |
Revision as of 14:10, 12 October 2023
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Event | 1989–90 UEFA Cup | ||||||
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on aggregate | |||||||
First leg | |||||||
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Date | 2 May 1990 | ||||||
Venue | Stadio Comunale Vittorio Pozzo, Turin | ||||||
Referee | Emilio Soriano Aladrén (Spain) | ||||||
Attendance | 45,000 | ||||||
Second leg | |||||||
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Date | 16 May 1990 | ||||||
Venue | Stadio Partenio, Avellino | ||||||
Referee | Aron Schmidhuber (West Germany) | ||||||
Attendance | 32,000 | ||||||
The 1990 UEFA Cup Final was an association football tie played on 2 May 1990 and 16 May 1990 between Juventus and Fiorentina of Italy. Juventus won 3–1 on aggregate. This was the first final between two Italian sides in the UEFA competitions' history and the third between two clubs of the same country.
The first game was the last official football game played at the Stadio Comunale until 2006, when Stadio delle Alpi was closed.
The second game was played in Avellino because Fiorentina's substitute stadium in Perugia was closed after the incidents in the semifinal game against SV Werder Bremen.
With this defeat, Fiorentina became the second club – after Hamburger SV – to have been runner-up in all three major European competitions (European Champion Clubs' Cup/UEFA Champions League, UEFA Cup/UEFA Europa League, and the now-defunct Cup Winners' Cup).[1]
Route to the final
Juventus | Round | Fiorentina | ||||||
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Opponent | Agg. | 1st leg | 2nd leg | Opponent | Agg. | 1st leg | 2nd leg | |
Górnik Zabrze | 5–2 | 1–0 (A) | 4–2 (H) | First round | Atlético Madrid | 1–1 (p) | 0–1 (A) | 1–0 (a.e.t.) (H) |
Paris Saint-Germain | 3–1 | 1–0 (A) | 2–1 (H) | Second round | Sochaux | 1–1 (a) | 0–0 (H) | 1–1 (A) |
Karl-Marx-Stadt[a] | 3–1 | 2–1 (H) | 1–0 (A) | Third round | Dynamo Kyiv | 1–0 | 1–0 (H) | 0–0 (A) |
Hamburger SV | 3–2 | 2–0 (A) | 1–2 (H) | Quarter-finals | Auxerre | 2–0 | 1–0 (H) | 1–0 (A) |
1. FC Köln | 3–2 | 3–2 (H) | 0–0 (A) | Semi-finals | Werder Bremen | 1–1 (a) | 1–1 (A) | 0–0 (H) |
Match details
First leg
Juventus | 3–1 | Fiorentina |
---|---|---|
Galia 3' Casiraghi 59' De Agostini 73' |
Report | Buso 10' |
Juventus
|
Fiorentina
|
|
|
Second leg
Fiorentina | 0–0 | Juventus |
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Report |
Fiorentina
|
Juventus
|
|
|
See also
- 1989–90 UEFA Cup
- ACF Fiorentina in European football
- Juventus F.C. in European football
- Italian football clubs in international competitions
- ACF Fiorentina–Juventus F.C. rivalry
Notes
- ^ renamed to Chemnitzer FC later that year following German reunification.
References
- ^ Roberto Di Maggio (18 February 2021). "International Finalists". Record Sport Soccer Statistics Foundation.