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2007 UEFA Champions League final

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Association football match

Football match
2007 UEFA Champions League final
Match programme cover
Event2006–07 UEFA Champions League
MilanLiverpool
ItalyEngland
21
Date23 May 2007
VenueOlympic Stadium,Athens
Man of the MatchFilippo Inzaghi (Milan)[1]
RefereeHerbert Fandel (Germany)[2]
Attendance63,000[1]
WeatherPartly cloudy
24 °C (75 °F)
46%humidity[3]
2006
2008

The2007 UEFA Champions League final was the final match of the2006–07 season of theUEFA Champions League, Europe's primary clubfootball competition. The showpiece event was contested betweenLiverpool of England andMilan of Italy at theOlympic Stadium inAthens, Greece, on 23 May 2007. Liverpool, who had won the competition five times, were appearing in their seventh final. Milan, who had won the competition six times, were appearing in their eleventh final.

The final was a rematch of the2005 final which Liverpool won 3–2 in a penalty shootout, after recovering from a three-goal deficit at half-time to level the score at 3–3 after full-time and extra time. Both teams had to pass through five rounds before they reached the final.[4] They both entered in the third qualifying round and won their respective groups before they reached the knockout stage, where matches were contested over two legs, with a match at each team's home ground. Milan's victories varied from close affairs to comfortable victories. They defeatedCeltic by a single goal over two legs, while they beatManchester United 5–3 on aggregate in the semi-final. Liverpool's matches were mainly all close affairs; they beat defending championsBarcelona on theaway goals rule in the first knockout round and beatChelsea in a penalty shootout in the semi-finals, although they did record a 4–0 aggregate win overPSV Eindhoven in the quarter-finals.

Before the match there were ticketing problems because many fans gained entry to the stadium without valid tickets. After the match, a UEFA spokesman accused Liverpool of having the worstfans in Europe,[5] a claim later denied by UEFA presidentMichel Platini.[6] Watched by a crowd of 63,000,[1] Milan took the lead whenAndrea Pirlo'sfree-kick deflected offFilippo Inzaghi in the first half. Milan extended their lead in the second half when Inzaghi scored a second goal. Liverpool scored a late goal throughDirk Kuyt, but were unable to equalise before the end of the match. Milan won the match 2–1 to win their seventh Champions League.

Background

[edit]

The match was Milan's eleventh appearance in the final, and the third since 2003. They had won on six occasions (1963,1969,1989,1990,1994,2003), and lost four times (1958,1993,1995,2005).[4] Liverpool were appearing in their seventh final. They had previously won the competition five times (1977,1978,1981,1984,2005), while they lost the1985 final toJuventus.

Venue

[edit]

TheOlympic Stadium inAthens, Greece was selected as the venue for the 2007 UEFA Champions League final at the April 2005 meeting of the UEFA Executive Committee inTallinn,Estonia. The meeting also determined the venues for the2006 final and the2006 and2007UEFA Cup finals.[7] Shortly before the final, the UEFA Champions League trophy was returned to UEFA byLudovic Giuly, representing the 2006 winners,Barcelona. UEFA presidentMichel Platini then presented the trophy to theMayor of Athens,Nikitas Kaklamanis, so that it might be put on display in and around the city.[8] The stadium had hosted the showpiece event before. The most recent was the 1994 final. Coincidentally Milan were the winners, beatingBarcelona 4–0. The other final held at the ground was in1983, whenHamburger SV beat Juventus 1–0. The ground had also played host to theUEFA Cup Winners' Cup final in1987, whenAjax beatLokomotiv Leipzig 1–0.[9]

Route to the final

[edit]
Main article:2006–07 UEFA Champions League
ItalyMilanRoundEnglandLiverpool
OpponentAgg.1st leg2nd legQualifying phaseOpponentAgg.1st leg2nd leg
SerbiaRed Star Belgrade3–11–0 (H)2–1 (A)Third qualifying roundIsraelMaccabi Haifa3–22–1 (H)1–1 (A)
OpponentResultGroup stageOpponentResult
GreeceAEK Athens3–0 (H)Matchday 1NetherlandsPSV Eindhoven0–0 (A)
FranceLille0–0 (A)Matchday 2TurkeyGalatasaray3–2 (H)
BelgiumAnderlecht1–0 (A)Matchday 3FranceBordeaux1–0 (A)
BelgiumAnderlecht4–1 (H)Matchday 4FranceBordeaux3–0 (H)
GreeceAEK Athens0–1 (A)Matchday 5NetherlandsPSV Eindhoven2–0 (H)
FranceLille0–2 (H)Matchday 6TurkeyGalatasaray2–3 (A)
Group H winner

PosTeamPldPts
1ItalyMilan610
2FranceLille69
3GreeceAEK Athens68
4BelgiumAnderlecht64
Source:RSSSF
Final standingsGroup C winner

PosTeamPldPts
1EnglandLiverpool613
2NetherlandsPSV Eindhoven610
3FranceBordeaux67
4TurkeyGalatasaray64
Source:RSSSF
OpponentAgg.1st leg2nd legKnockout stageOpponentAgg.1st leg2nd leg
ScotlandCeltic1–00–0 (A)1–0 (a.e.t.) (H)First knockout roundSpainBarcelona2–2 (a)2–1 (A)0–1 (H)
GermanyBayern Munich4–22–2 (H)2–0 (A)Quarter-finalsNetherlandsPSV Eindhoven4–03–0 (A)1–0 (H)
EnglandManchester United5–32–3 (A)3–0 (H)Semi-finalsEnglandChelsea1–1 (4–1p)0–1 (A)1–0 (H)

Milan

[edit]
The players of Milan and Lille before their group stage match at the San Siro

Milan qualified for the competition by finishing third in the2005–06 Serie A.[10] Milan had originally finished second in Serie A, but were docked 30 points for their part in amatch-fixing scandal.[10][11] The original punishment, reduced on appeal, would have barred them from the Champions League altogether.[11] Their opponents in the third qualifying round were Serbian teamRed Star Belgrade. Two victories, 1–0 at home and 2–1 away, ensured Milan's passage to the group stage of the Champions League. They were drawn in Group H alongsideAEK Athens of Greece,Anderlecht of Belgium and French teamLille. Milan won three matches, drew one and lost two to finish top of the group with 10 points and progress to the knockout stage.[12]

They were drawn against Scottish teamCeltic. The first leg at Celtic's home groundCeltic Park finished 0–0. The return leg at Milan's home ground theSan Siro also finished 0–0 after 90 minutes with Celtic managing to limit the goalscoring opportunities Milan had. However, three minutes intoextra time Milan scored whenKaká curled a shot past Celtic goalkeeperArtur Boruc. Celtic were unable to score the away goal they needed to beat Milan, ensuring the Italians progressed to the quarter finals after a 1–0 aggregate victory.[13]

Milan were drawn against German teamBayern Munich in the quarter-finals. The first leg at the San Siro ended in a 2–2 draw after Bayern had scored an equaliser three minutes into stoppage time.[14] The second leg at Bayern's home ground theAllianz Arena was more comfortable for Milan, as they scored two first half goals to win the match 2–0 and win the tie 4–2 on aggregate. Milan were drawn against English teamManchester United in the semi-finals. The first leg at United's home groundOld Trafford, Kaka scored twice to give Milan a 2–1 lead afterCristiano Ronaldo had scored an early goal. However, two goals fromWayne Rooney in the second half meant United won the first leg 3–2.[15] The second leg at the San Siro saw Milan win 3–0 to progress to the final after a 5–3 aggregate victory.[16]

Liverpool

[edit]

Liverpool gained entry to the competition after finishing third in the2005–06 FA Premier League. As a result of that league position, Liverpool entered the Champions League in the third qualifying round, where their opponents wereMaccabi Haifa of Israel. Liverpool won the first leg 2–1 at their home groundAnfield and a 1–1 draw in the away leg inKyiv[note 1] ensured Liverpool progressed to the group stage of the competition. Liverpool were drawn in Group C alongside French teamBordeaux, Dutch teamPSV Eindhoven andGalatasaray of Turkey. After six games including four wins, one draw and one defeat, Liverpool finished top of the group with 13 points to qualify for the knockout stage.[12]

The Liverpool and Barcelona players entering the pitch before their first leg tie at theCamp Nou

Liverpool were drawn against defending championsBarcelona in the first knockout round. Before the first leg in Barcelona, there had been a training ground fracas betweenCraig Bellamy andJohn Arne Riise.[19] Coincidentally, it was Bellamy and Riise who secured a 2–1 victory for Liverpool, completing a comeback afterDeco had given Barcelona the lead.[20] The second leg at Anfield was won 1–0 by Barcelona, however Liverpool progressed to the quarter-finals on the away goals rule, having scored more goals away from home than their opponents.[21]

Their opponents in the quarter-finals were PSV Eindhoven, who they had played in the group stage. The first leg at PSV's home ground thePhilips Stadion was won 3–0 by Liverpool all but securing their progression to the semi-finals.[22] The second leg at Anfield was not as one-sided, a 1–0 victory for Liverpool ensured they would progress to the semi-finals courtesy of a 4–0 aggregate victory.[23] Their opponents in the semi-finals were fellow English teamChelsea. The first leg at Chelsea's home groundStamford Bridge was a close affair with Chelsea winning 1–0 courtesy of a first halfJoe Cole goal.[24] The second leg at Anfield was similar, however it was Liverpool who won 1–0 courtesy to aDaniel Agger goal. With the teams tied at 1–1 aggregate after 90 minutes and extra time the tie went to apenalty shootout, which Liverpool won 4–1 to progress to the final.[25]

Pre-match

[edit]

Match ball

[edit]

Adidas, the official match ball supplier to all major UEFA, FIFA and IOC tournaments, unveiled the official match ball for the 2007 UEFA Champions League final on 9 March 2007, presenting the Adidas Finale Athens. The design of the Adidas Finale Athens was based on the widely recognisable UEFA Champions League Starball logo and was blue and white, representing the colours of theGreek national flag.[26] The final matched two of the top goal-scorers in the competition that season. Milan'sKaká finished on top of the scoring charts with ten goals, and Liverpool'sPeter Crouch entered the game tied for third with six goals in total.[27]

Kits

[edit]

Despite being drawn as the "home" team for the match, Milan chose to wear their all-white away strip for the final; they consider that strip to be their "lucky kit" (Italian:maglia fortunata), having won the European Cup five times in those colours. However, Milan had also lost two finals wearing all-white, most recently against Liverpool in 2005.[28] This decision by Milan meant that Liverpool played the final in their traditional home kit of red shirts, red shorts and red socks. Each of Liverpool's five European Cup titles were won in their all-red strip, and two of these came when they were playing against Italian teams who played in all-white.[4]

Officials

[edit]

In May 2007,Herbert Fandel, the Germanreferee was chosen to oversee the final. He was joined by compatriots Carsten Kadach and Volker Wezel asassistant referees, andFlorian Meyer asfourth official.[2]

Team selection

[edit]

Milan fielded the oldest starting eleven ever in a Champions League final, with the average age at 31 years, 34 days, whilePaolo Maldini was the oldest outfield player ever to play in the final, in what was his eighth final, at 38 years and 331 days.[29] Milan managerCarlo Ancelotti opted to start strikerFilippo Inzaghi, who had missed the 2005 final ahead ofHernán Crespo. Liverpool managerRafael Benítez opted to field a five-man midfield withJermaine Pennant andBoudewijn Zenden on the wings, while Steven Gerrard was deployed behind lone strikerDirk Kuyt. Liverpool fielded five of the players that started the 2005 final: Xabi Alonso,Jamie Carragher,Steve Finnan, Steven Gerrard and John Arne Riise.[30]

Problems before the match

[edit]

Out of 63,800 tickets, only 9,000 tickets for the final went on general sale; the remainder were shared between the two teams, who got 17,000 each, and theUEFA family and sponsors, who received 20,800 tickets.[31][32] This led to some of the problems before the match.[33] While fans were still queuing to gain entry to the stadium, the Greek police informed them that the stadium was full and denied entry to a number of fans who had genuine tickets.[34] UEFA sources said that as many as 5,000 fans either without tickets or brandishing fakes had entered the 74,000-capacityOlympic Stadium. Simultaneously, thousands of fans with genuine tickets were refused entry as police closed the entrance to the ground amid fears that allowing any more to enter could have led to a disaster.[35] The resulting situation became disorderly, with some Liverpool fans attempting to break through checkpoints, set up by the Greek police. Greekriot police usedtear gas andbatons to disperse the crowd.[34] UEFA spokesmanWilliam Gaillard blamed Liverpool fans for causing the problems, stating, "Milan supporters didn't face the same problems because they didn't behave in the same way".[36]

A UEFA report released soon after the final branded Liverpool supporters "the worst fans in Europe", with Gaillard stating: "What other set of fans steal tickets from their fellow supporters or out of the hands of children?"[37] However, UEFA PresidentMichel Platini later denied that Liverpool fans were the worst behaved in Europe.[38] UEFA was itself criticised for poor ticket-checking procedures and for implementing insufficient measures to deal with the large number of fans.Simon Gass, the British ambassador to Greece, said, "Clearly there was some element of breakdown where those fake tickets appeared to be legitimate – that's something UEFA must look at."[39] Meanwhile, Liverpool co-ownerTom Hicks described UEFA's allocation of 17,000 tickets to each team, knowing that Liverpool would be bringing 40,000 supporters, as "insane" and accused Gaillard of blaming Liverpool fans in order to cover up for his own mistakes.[33] UEFA was further criticised by Milan and Liverpool for their lack of provision for the clubs' disabled fans, providing the clubs with only sixteen disabled tickets each.[40]

Match

[edit]

Summary

[edit]

First half

[edit]

Milan won the toss and Liverpool kicked off.[41] Playing in a 4–2–3–1 formation, Liverpool had the first attack of the match, but Jermaine Pennant could not reach Steven Gerrard's cross-field pass.[29] Milan responded with two low attempts on the Liverpool goal, but Jamie Carragher was able to clear them both. The second clearance led to a corner, from which Milan failed to score.[41] Liverpool had the first chance of the match in the ninth minute. A slip from Milan defenderMarek Jankulovski allowed Pennant to run into space; he passed the ball toDirk Kuyt who passed it back to him. Pennant's subsequent shot was saved by Milan goalkeeperDida.[41] Minutes later Gerrard won a header which found Pennant, however Gerrard was unable to make decent contact with the ball following Pennant's pass.[29] Milan had their first shot of the match a few minutes later. Kaká received the ball outside the area and moved to his right before shooting, however Liverpool goalkeeperPepe Reina saved the shot.[29] Liverpool continued to exert pressure leading Milan defenderMassimo Oddo to mis-read a cross from Pennant, the ball reached Gerrard whose shot went over the goal.[29]

Liverpool had another chance in the 27th minute. Frantic defending from Milan to deny the Liverpool forwards a scoring opportunity, led to the ball being passed toXabi Alonso, whose shot went wide of the Milan goal.[41] A mistake from Jankulovski allowed Gerrard to pass the ball to Kuyt in thepenalty area, however Kuyt's shot was blocked by Milan defenderAlessandro Nesta.[41] Milan midfielderGennaro Gattuso was the first player to receive ayellow card, when he was cautioned in the 40th minute for a foul on Alonso.[42] Minutes later, Alonso fouled Kaká on the edge of the Liverpool penalty area, giving away a free-kick. The subsequent free-kick taken byAndrea Pirlo deflected off the shoulder of Milan strikerFilippo Inzaghi, and into the Liverpool goal. The deflection resulted in the ball being diverted past Liverpoolgoalkeeper Pepe Reina, who had dived the other way in anticipation of the ball's original trajectory.[30] Replays showed that the ball struck Inzaghi's upper arm on its way to the goal, but the referee did not judge this to have been ahandball.[43] Inzaghi later said that while the deflection was intended, he did not intend for the ball to hit his arm.[44] With no further action in the first half, Milan went into half-time leading 1–0.[29]

Second half

[edit]

Milan kicked off the second half. Two minutes into the half, Liverpool had the first attack, but Nesta tackled Gerrard before he could reach Kuyt's pass.[29] Jankulovski received a yellow card in the 54th minute when he brought Pennant down.[41] Immediately afterwards, Milan had an attack. Pirlo received the ball from a header byClarence Seedorf, Pirlo played a high pass to Kaká who was ruled to be offside by the assistant referee, despite being behind the defence when the ball was played.[29] Milan had another attack straight after the offside, but Liverpool defenderDaniel Agger tackled Inzaghi before he could shoot.[29] Liverpool had their first yellow card in the 59th minute whenJavier Mascherano received one for bringing down Pirlo.[41] After the yellow card, Liverpool decided to replaceBoudewijn Zenden withHarry Kewell.[42] Liverpool's best goalscoring chance of the match occurred minutes later. Gerrard capitalised on an error by Gattuso to be one-on-one with Dida, but his shot did not possess enough power to beat the Milan goalkeeper.[41]

Liverpool began to exert more pressure, although all their play was in front of the Milan penalty area, while Milan were unable to keep possession of the ball.[29] In an attempt to bring about an equalising goal, Liverpool managerRafael Benítez substituted Mascherano for strikerPeter Crouch.[30] Milan had an attack minutes later, but Inzaghi was unable to control the ball. Inzaghi made amends minutes later when he scored Milan's second goal. With Mascherano substituted, Kaká had the space to pick out a pass to Inzaghi, who took the ball to the side of the Liverpool goalkeeper Reina and rolled it into the net to make the score 2–0 to Milan.[41] Liverpool managed to pull one goal back in the 88th minute when Kuyt scored with a header after Agger had flicked on Pennant's corner from the left.[29] However, they were unable to find a second goal and the referee blew for full-time with the score 2–1 to Milan.[30]

Details

[edit]
MilanItaly2–1EnglandLiverpool
Report
Attendance: 63,000[1]
Milan[3]
Liverpool[3]
GK1BrazilDida
RB44ItalyMassimo Oddo
CB13ItalyAlessandro Nesta
CB3ItalyPaolo Maldini (c)
LB18Czech RepublicMarek JankulovskiYellow card 54'downward-facing red arrow 80'
RM8ItalyGennaro GattusoYellow card 40'
CM21ItalyAndrea Pirlo
CM23ItalyMassimo Ambrosini
LM10NetherlandsClarence Seedorfdownward-facing red arrow 90+2'
SS22BrazilKaká
CF9ItalyFilippo Inzaghidownward-facing red arrow 88'
Substitutes:
GK16AustraliaZeljko Kalac
DF2BrazilCafu
DF4Georgia (country)Kakha Kaladzeupward-facing green arrow 80'
DF19ItalyGiuseppe Favalliupward-facing green arrow 90+2'
DF27BrazilSerginho
MF32ItalyCristian Brocchi
FW11ItalyAlberto Gilardinoupward-facing green arrow 88'
Manager:
ItalyCarlo Ancelotti
GK25SpainPepe Reina
RB3Republic of IrelandSteve Finnandownward-facing red arrow 88'
CB23EnglandJamie CarragherYellow card 60'
CB5DenmarkDaniel Agger
LB6NorwayJohn Arne Riise
DM14SpainXabi Alonso
DM20ArgentinaJavier MascheranoYellow card 58'downward-facing red arrow 78'
RM16EnglandJermaine Pennant
LM32NetherlandsBoudewijn Zendendownward-facing red arrow 59'
AM8EnglandSteven Gerrard (c)
CF18NetherlandsDirk Kuyt
Substitutes:
GK1PolandJerzy Dudek
DF2SpainÁlvaro Arbeloaupward-facing green arrow 88'
DF4FinlandSami Hyypiä
MF11ChileMark González
FW7AustraliaHarry Kewellupward-facing green arrow 59'
FW15EnglandPeter Crouchupward-facing green arrow 78'
FW17WalesCraig Bellamy
Manager:
SpainRafael Benítez

Man of the Match:
Filippo Inzaghi (Milan)

Assistant referees:
Carsten Kadach (Germany)[2]
Volker Wezel (Germany)[2]
Fourth official:
Florian Meyer (Germany)[2]


Match rules

  • 90 minutes
  • 30 minutes of extra time if necessary
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level
  • Seven named substitutes
  • Maximum of three substitutions

Statistics

[edit]
First half[45]
StatisticMilanLiverpool
Goals scored10
Total shots25
Shots on target21
Saves11
Ball possession58%42%
Corner kicks11
Fouls committed716
Offsides12
Yellow cards10
Red cards00
Second half[45]
StatisticMilanLiverpool
Goals scored11
Total shots37
Shots on target13
Saves20
Ball possession48%52%
Corner kicks35
Fouls committed811
Offsides21
Yellow cards12
Red cards00
Overall[45]
StatisticMilanLiverpool
Goals scored21
Total shots512
Shots on target34
Saves31
Ball possession53%47%
Corner kicks46
Fouls committed1527
Offsides33
Yellow cards22
Red cards00

Post-match

[edit]
Milan players celebrate with the trophy.

TheEuropean Champion Clubs' Cup was presented to Milan captainPaolo Maldini in the Guest of Honour's box, as UEFA PresidentMichel Platini favoured a return to the past tradition of the winning captain receiving the trophy among the fans. It had become customary in recent years to have the presentation on a hastily constructed podium in the centre of the pitch. This was the first time that the trophy was presented to a winning captain by a UEFA president who had actually played against him in the past; during Michel Platini's final seasons withJuventus, the then-teenager Paolo Maldini was making his professional debut with Milan.[4]

Milan managerCarlo Ancelotti was delighted with his team after their success. Ancelotti's job had been under threat after a run of poor results in December, therefore the victory had extra significance for Ancelotti: "When I think back to December, we had to overcome so many hurdles so that makes it a very special victory."[46] Milan midfielderClarence Seedorf, who had his fourth victory in the competition following Milan's triumph was equally proud in the team's achievement: "I am so proud to be part of this team. We worked hard this year, a very difficult year."[47]

A number of Milan players who had played in the 2005 final were delighted with the victory after they lost two years previous.Kaká claimed victory was all the sweeter as a result: "What happened then was strange, just six minutes when we played not so good and we paid for that." Milan midfielderGennaro Gattuso echoed his teammates sentiments: "The defeat two years ago will stay me for a lifetime, but this is a different story. It's our turn to celebrate now." StrikerFilippo Inzaghi, who missed the final in 2005, was delighted to have scored the goals that won the final for Milan: "I've scored quite a few times in Europe, but scoring in the Champions League final is something special." Milan President and ownerSilvio Berlusconi was equally delighted about the success, adding that "the fortune we lacked in Istanbul we had with us tonight."[47]

Liverpool managerRafael Benítez was disappointed that his team were unable to match their exploits of 2005, when they beat Milan in a penalty shootout. Despite this he was still proud of his players efforts: "Thank you to our supporters, my staff and players who worked really hard and deserved a bit more." Benítez was already thinking of making transfers in the aftermath of the match, hinting that his team lacked the same calibre of players that Milan had: "You could see the quality they had, and we need to start thinking how we can improve our team."[46]

Liverpool captainSteven Gerrard was adamant that despite the defeat Liverpool would come back stronger next season: "We've got to pick ourselves up, have a good rest in the summer and then go again next season." Gerrard thought that although Liverpool controlled the first half, they did not control the match as much in the second half as they would have liked. Gerrard echoed his manager's sentiments in regards to new players joining the club: "We need to strengthen and bring some quality into the club. The manager and the people in charge of the club know that and it will be an interesting summer."[48]

Winning the Champions League entitled Milan to compete in the2007 UEFA Super Cup against UEFA Cup winnersSevilla. The match was overshadowed by the death of Sevilla playerAntonio Puerta, which raised the possibility that the Super Cup might not go ahead. It did however, Milan beat Sevilla 3–1 to secure their fifth Super Cup victory.[49] Milan's success also entitled them to compete in the2007 FIFA Club World Cup. They entered the competition in the semi-finals, defeating Japanese teamUrawa Red Diamonds 1–0 to progress to the final where they faced Argentine teamBoca Juniors. Milan won the match 4–2 to secure their first FIFA Club World Cup triumph.[50]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Due to thearmed conflict going on in Israel, UEFA decided that no European matches could be staged in the country until further notice.[17] The match was played atValeriy Lobanovskyi Dynamo Stadium inKyiv, Ukraine, instead of Maccabi Haifa regular home venueKiryat Eliezer Stadium inHaifa.[18]

References

[edit]
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  2. ^abcde"Fandel to keep order in Athens".UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 22 May 2007.Archived from the original on 4 November 2012. Retrieved12 September 2011.
  3. ^abc"Tactical Line-ups – Final – Wednesday 23 May 2007"(PDF).UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 23 May 2007.Archived(PDF) from the original on 5 November 2015. Retrieved12 September 2011.
  4. ^abcd"Athens all set for Europe's finest".UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. Archived fromthe original on 5 January 2013. Retrieved5 July 2011.
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  10. ^ab"Milan to play in Champions League".BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. 2 August 2006.Archived from the original on 24 November 2020. Retrieved16 July 2008.
  11. ^abHughes, Rob (30 July 2006)."Soccer: Europeans are facing tough calls: UEFA must rule on safety of teams and integrity of league".International Herald Tribune.Archived from the original on 8 October 2012. Retrieved12 July 2011.
  12. ^ab"2006/07 UEFA Champions League Matchweek Stats Pack – Matchweek 7"(PDF).UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 15 February 2007. pp. 13–24. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 13 October 2012. Retrieved5 July 2011.
  13. ^Moffat, Colin (7 March 2007)."AC Milan 1–0 Celtic (agg 1–0)".BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation.Archived from the original on 29 July 2017. Retrieved28 June 2011.
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  18. ^"Liverpool to play Haifa in Kyiv".BBC Sport. 14 August 2006.Archived from the original on 26 August 2006. Retrieved8 August 2006.
  19. ^"Benitez accepts players' apology".BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. 21 February 2007.Archived from the original on 7 March 2007. Retrieved28 June 2011.
  20. ^Bevan, Chris (21 February 2007)."Barcelona 1–2 Liverpool".BBC Sport.Archived from the original on 14 April 2009. Retrieved28 June 2011.
  21. ^McCarra, Kevin (7 March 2007)."Benítez master plan too shrewd for Barca".The Guardian. Guardian News and Media.Archived from the original on 2 October 2014. Retrieved24 November 2020.
  22. ^Sanghera, Mandeep (3 April 2007)."PSV Eindhoven 0–3 Liverpool".BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation.Archived from the original on 13 February 2009. Retrieved24 November 2020.
  23. ^Bevan, Chris (11 April 2007)."Liverpool 1–0 PSV (agg 4–0)".BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation.Archived from the original on 14 July 2007. Retrieved24 November 2020.
  24. ^McNulty, Phil (25 April 2007)."Chelsea 1–0 Liverpool".BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation.Archived from the original on 27 December 2008. Retrieved24 November 2020.
  25. ^"Liverpool 1–0 Chelsea (Liverpool 4–1 on penalties)".RTÉ Sport. Raidió Teilifís Éireann. 1 May 2007.Archived from the original on 24 November 2020. Retrieved24 November 2020.
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