1991–92 FC Barcelona season

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FC Barcelona
1991–92 season
PresidentJosep Lluís Núñez
Head CoachJohan Cruyff
StadiumCamp Nou
La Liga1st
Copa del ReyRound of 16
Supercopa de EspañaWinners
European CupWinners
Joan Gamper TrophyWinners
Top goalscorerLeague: Hristo Stoichkov (17)
All: Hristo Stoichkov (22)

The 1991–92 season was the 93rd season for FC Barcelona. The season is best remembered by the title of European Cup first ever for Barcelona, finally clinched in Wembley against italian squad U.C. Sampdoria with a score of 1-0 after extra time with a late goal through free kick of Ronald Koeman.

In La Liga Barcelona had a poor start, losing 3 out of their first 8 games. But the tide began to turn as Barcelona experienced a brilliant run losing only 3 out of their next 30 games. Going into the final match day, Barcelona trailed Real Madrid by a point. Barcelona won their final game but Real Madrid lost to CD Tenerife 2-3 handing the second consecutive title over to Barcelona.


Squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK Spain ESP Carles Busquets
GK Spain ESP Andoni Zubizarreta
GK Spain ESP Jesús Angoy
DF Spain ESP Albert Ferrer
DF Spain ESP José Ramón Alexanko
DF Spain ESP Juan Carlos
DF Netherlands NED Ronald Koeman
DF Spain ESP Ricardo Serna
DF Spain ESP Miguel Ángel Nadal
DF Spain ESP Nando
DF Spain ESP Cristóbal Parralo
DF Spain ESP Lluís Carreras
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Spain ESP Guillermo Amor
MF Spain ESP José Mari Bakero (captain)
MF Spain ESP Eusebio
MF Spain ESP Pep Guardiola
MF Spain ESP Sánchez Jara
MF Spain ESP Urbano
MF Netherlands NED Richard Witschge
FW Spain ESP Txiki Begiristain
FW Spain ESP Ion Andoni Goikoetxea
FW Spain ESP Julio Salinas
FW Denmark DEN Michael Laudrup
FW Spain ESP Antonio Pinilla
FW Bulgaria BUL Hristo Stoichkov

[1]

Competitions

Supercopa

15 October 1991 Atlético Madrid 0-1 Barcelona Madrid
21:00 CET Amor 86' Stadium: Vicente Calderón
Attendance: 15,000
Referee: Merino Gonzalez
29 October 1991 Barcelona 1-1 Atlético Madrid Barcelona
20:45 CET Bakero 69' Alfredo 39' Stadium: Camp Nou
Attendance: 45,000
Referee: José Luis Pajares

La Liga

League table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Barcelona (C) 38 23 9 6 87 37 +50 55 Qualification for the Champions League first round
2 Real Madrid 38 23 8 7 78 32 +46 54 Qualification for the UEFA Cup first round
3 Atlético Madrid 38 24 5 9 67 35 +32 53 Qualification for the Cup Winners' Cup first round[a]
4 Valencia 38 20 7 11 63 42 +21 47 Qualification for the UEFA Cup first round
5 Real Sociedad 38 16 12 10 44 38 +6 44
Source: BDFútbol
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Head-to-head results; 3) Goal difference; 4) Number of goals scored
(C) Champions
Notes:
  1. ^ Atlético Madrid qualified for the European Cup Winners' Cup as champions of the Copa del Rey.


Matches

14 December 1991 14 Real Burgos 2-2 FC Barcelona Burgos
Report

Source:Competitive Matches[2]

Copa del Rey

Eightfinals

22 January 1992 FC Barcelona 4-2
(4-4 agg.)
(4-5 p)
Valencia CF Barcelona
Stadium: Camp Nou

European Cup

First round

18 September 1991 Barcelona Spain 3–0 Germany Hansa Rostock[3] Barcelona
Laudrup 25', 47'
Goikoetxea 77'
Report Stadium: Camp Nou
Attendance: 65,000
Referee: Alphonse Constantin (Belgium)
2 October 1991 Hansa Rostock Germany 1–0 Spain Barcelona Rostock
Spies 66' Report Stadium: Ostseestadion
Attendance: 8,000
Referee: Pierluigi Pairetto (Italy)

Second round

23 October 1991 Barcelona Spain 2–0 Germany Kaiserslautern Barcelona
Begiristain 41', 53' Report Stadium: Camp Nou
Attendance: 65,000
Referee: FranceGérard Biguet
6 November 1991 Kaiserslautern Germany 3–1 Spain Barcelona Kaiserslautern
Hotić 35', 49'
Goldbæk 76'
Report Bakero 90' Stadium: Fritz-Walter-Stadion
Attendance: 30,200
Referee: SwedenErik Fredriksson

Group Stage

Group B

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Spain Barcelona 6 4 1 1 10 4 +6 9
Czechoslovakia Sparta Prague 6 2 2 2 7 7 0 6
Portugal Benfica 6 1 3 2 8 5 +3 5
Commonwealth of Independent States Dynamo Kyiv 6 2 0 4 3 12 −9 4
Source: [citation needed]


27 November 1991 Barcelona Spain 3–2 Czechoslovakia Sparta Prague Camp Nou, Barcelona
20:45 Amor 14'
Laudrup 34'
Bakero 61'
Report Vrabec 19'
Němeček 64'
Attendance: 80,000
Referee: Kim Milton Nielsen (Denmark)
11 December 1991 Benfica Portugal 0–0 Spain Barcelona Estádio da Luz, Lisbon
22:00 Report Attendance: 70,000
Referee: Bruno Galler (Switzerland)
4 March 1992 Dynamo Kyiv Commonwealth of Independent States 0–2 Spain Barcelona Republican Stadium, Kiev
19:00 Report Stoichkov 33'
Salinas 66'
Attendance: 48,500
Referee: Guy Goethals (Belgium)
18 March 1992 Barcelona Spain 3–0 Commonwealth of Independent States Dynamo Kyiv Camp Nou, Barcelona
20:45 Stoichkov 60', 81'
Salinas 88'
Report Attendance: 53,000
Referee: Karl-Josef Assenmacher (Germany)
1 April 1992 Sparta Prague Czechoslovakia 1–0 Spain Barcelona Letná Stadium, Prague
18:00 Siegl 65' Report Attendance: 27,374
Referee: Bo Karlsson (Sweden)
15 April 1992 Barcelona Spain 2–1 Portugal Benfica Camp Nou, Barcelona
20:00 Stoichkov 10'
Bakero 25'
Report Brito 29' Attendance: 100,000
Referee: Hubert Forstinger (Austria)

Final

20 May 1992 Sampdoria Italy 0–1 (a.e.t.) Spain Barcelona Wembley Stadium, London
19:15 BST Report Koeman 112' Attendance: 70,827
Referee: GermanyAron Schmidhuber

External links

References

  1. ^ 9192 FCB squad, worldfootball.net, retrieved 24 September 2019
  2. ^ 9192 FCB season, worldfootball.net, retrieved 24 September 2019
  3. ^ {{Germany (GER): The original slot allocation of the former West/East Germany still applied. 1. FC Kaiserslautern qualified as champions of the 1990–91 Bundesliga, while Hansa Rostock qualified as champions of the 1990–91 NOFV-Oberliga. Due to the reunification of Germany in October 1990, all flags show Germany instead of West/East Germany. However, Hansa Rostock matches and their records were still counted for East Germany, and not for Germany, under UEFA regulations.}}