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1999–2000 UEFA Champions League

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
European football tournament
1999–2000 UEFA Champions League
Tournament details
DatesQualifying:
13 July – 25 August 1999
Competition proper:
14 September 1999 – 24 May 2000
TeamsCompetition proper: 32
Total: 71
Final positions
ChampionsSpainReal Madrid (8th title)
Runners-upSpainValencia
Tournament statistics
Matches played157
Goals scored442 (2.82 per match)
Attendance5,495,112 (35,001 per match)
Top scorer(s)Raúl (Real Madrid)
Rivaldo (Barcelona)
Mário Jardel (Porto)
10 goals each
International football competition

The1999–2000 UEFA Champions League was the 45th season of theUEFA Champions League,UEFA's premier European clubfootball tournament, and the eighth season since its rebranding from the "European Champion Clubs' Cup" or "European Cup". The competition was won byReal Madrid, who clinched a historic eighth title win by beating fellowLa Liga sideValencia inthe final held at theStade de France inParis, the city where the original roots of the competition had begun nearly 50 years earlier.

Aftertwo years of allowing runners-up of strongest continental leagues to enter,UEFA went even further and expanded the tournament to up to four strongest teams from Europe's top national leagues. As a result, the tournament was a stark contrast from the1996–97 edition three years earlier where only national champions had participated.

The competition was dominated by Spanish teams, with three of the four semi-finalists coming from that nation: Real Madrid, Valencia andBarcelona. The final between Real Madrid and Valencia marked the first time that both finalists had come from the same country.

Manchester United were thedefending champions, but were eliminated by eventual winners Real Madrid in the quarter-finals.

Changes to the competition format

[edit]

The 1999–2000 edition of the Champions League featured a whole different format to the competition. An additional qualifying round was introduced to generate two group stages, firstly with 32 teams – eight groups of four – who played six matches each to reduce the competition to 16 teams for the second group stage, with the eight third-placed teams moving to the UEFA Cup third round. At the end of the second group stage, eight teams remained to contest the knock-out stage.[1]

Association team allocation

[edit]

A total of 71 teams participated in the 1999–2000 Champions League, from 47 of 51UEFA associations. Liechtenstein (who don't have their own league) as well as Andorra and San Marino did not participate. Additionally, Bosnia and Herzegovina were not admitted due to having no nation-wide champion.

Below is the qualification scheme for the 2000–01 UEFA Champions League:[2]

  • Associations 1–3 each have four teams qualify
  • Associations 4–6 each have three teams qualify
  • Associations 7–15 each have two teams qualify
  • Associations 16–48 each have one team qualify (except Liechtenstein)

Association ranking

[edit]

Countries are allocated places according to their 1998UEFA league coefficient, which takes into account their performance in European competitions from 1993–94 to 1997–98.[3]

RankAssociationCoeff.Teams
1 Italy59.6404
2 Germany49.932
3 Spain48.580
4 France41.4333
5 Netherlands35.916
6 England35.566
7 Portugal31.2662
8 Greece28.750
9 Czech Republic28.166
10 Norway27.449
11 Austria27.250
12 Russia26.866
13 Croatia26.166
14 Turkey25.650
15 Denmark24.200
16 Switzerland22.2501
17 Ukraine22.082
RankAssociationCoeff.Teams
18 Poland22.0001
19 Hungary21.083
20 Belgium21.000
21 Slovakia20.999
22 Romania20.750
23 Sweden20.600
24 Georgia20.333
25 Cyprus20.332
26 Scotland19.500
27 Israel16.749
28 Slovenia15.998
29 Belarus14.833
30 Iceland13.666
31 Finland13.415
32 Latvia11.498
33 Bulgaria10.499
34 Macedonia8.666
RankAssociationCoeff.Teams
35 Lithuania7.3331
36 FR Yugoslavia7.083
37 Moldova6.666
38 Liechtenstein5.0000
39 Estonia4.9991
40 Armenia4.832
41 Northern Ireland4.665
42 Malta4.664
43 Wales3.999
44 Republic of Ireland3.998
45 Faroe Islands2.833
46 Albania2.666
47 Luxembourg2.333
48 Azerbaijan1.833
49 Andorra0.0000
50 Bosnia and Herzegovina0.000
51 San Marino0.000

Distribution

[edit]

The title holders (Manchester United) qualified for the Champions League group stage through their domestic league, thus the group stage spot reserved for the title holders was vacated. Additionally, Bosnia and Herzegovina was not admitted as their play-off for Champions League qualification didn't take place. Due to these factors, the following changes to the default access list are made:

  • The champions of association 10 (Norway) are promoted from the third qualifying round to the group stage.
  • The champions of association 16 (Switzerland) are promoted from the second qualifying round to the third qualifying round.
  • The champions of associations 27, 28 and 29 (Israel, Slovenia and Belarus) are promoted from the first qualifying round to the second qualifying round.
Teams entering this roundTeams advancing from previous round
First qualifying round
(18 teams)
  • 18 champions from associations 30–48 (except Liechtenstein)
Second qualifying round
(28 teams)
  • 13 champions from associations 17–29
  • 6 runners-up from associations 10–15
  • 9 winners from the first qualifying round
Third qualifying round
(32 teams)
  • 6 champions from associations 11–16
  • 3 runners-up from associations 7–9
  • 6 third-place finishers from associations 1–6
  • 3 fourth-place finishers from associations 1–3
  • 14 winners from the second qualifying round
First group stage
(32 teams)
  • 10 champions from associations 1–10 (including title holdersManchester United)
  • 6 runners-up from associations 1–6
  • 16 winners from the third qualifying round
Second group stage
(16 teams)
  • 8 group winners from the first group stage
  • 8 group runners-up from the first group stage
Knockout phase
(8 teams)
  • 4 group winners from the second group stage
  • 4 group runners-up from the second group stage

Teams

[edit]

League positions of the previous season shown in parentheses (TH: Champions League title holders).

Group stage
ItalyMilan(1st)SpainBarcelona(1st)NetherlandsFeyenoord(1st)PortugalPorto(1st)
ItalyLazio(2nd)SpainReal Madrid(2nd)NetherlandsWillem II(2nd)GreeceOlympiacos(1st)
GermanyBayern Munich(1st)FranceBordeaux(1st)EnglandManchester United(1st)THCzech RepublicSparta Prague(1st)
GermanyBayer Leverkusen(2nd)FranceMarseille(2nd)EnglandArsenal(2nd)NorwayRosenborg(1st)
Third qualifying round
ItalyFiorentina(3rd)SpainValencia(4th)GreeceAEK Athens(2nd)CroatiaCroatia Zagreb(1st)
ItalyParma(4th)FranceLyon(3rd)Czech RepublicTeplice(2nd)TurkeyGalatasaray(1st)
GermanyHertha BSC(3rd)NetherlandsPSV Eindhoven(3rd)AustriaSturm Graz(1st)DenmarkAaB(1st)
GermanyBorussia Dortmund(4th)EnglandChelsea(3rd)RussiaSpartak Moscow(1st)SwitzerlandServette(1st)
SpainMallorca(3rd)PortugalBoavista(2nd)
Second qualifying round
NorwayMolde(2nd)DenmarkBrøndby(2nd)SlovakiaSlovan Bratislava(1st)ScotlandRangers(1st)
AustriaRapid Wien(2nd)UkraineDynamo Kyiv(1st)RomaniaRapid București(1st)IsraelHapoel Haifa(1st)
RussiaCSKA Moscow(2nd)PolandWidzew Łódź(2nd)[Note POL]SwedenAIK(1st)SloveniaMaribor(1st)
CroatiaRijeka(2nd)HungaryMTK Hungária(1st)Georgia (country)Dinamo Tbilisi(1st)BelarusDnepr-Transmash Mogilev(1st)
TurkeyBeşiktaş(2nd)BelgiumGenk(1st)CyprusAnorthosis Famagusta(1st)
First qualifying round
IcelandÍBV(1st)LithuaniaŽalgiris(1st)Northern IrelandGlentoran(1st)Faroe IslandsHB(1st)
FinlandHaka(1st)Federal Republic of YugoslaviaPartizan(1st)MaltaValletta(1st)AlbaniaTirana(1st)
LatviaSkonto(1st)MoldovaZimbru Chișinău(1st)WalesBarry Town(1st)LuxembourgJeunesse Esch(1st)
BulgariaLitex Lovech(1st)EstoniaFlora(1st)Republic of IrelandSt Patrick's Athletic(1st)AzerbaijanKapaz(1st)
North MacedoniaSloga Jugomagnat(1st)ArmeniaTsement Ararat(1st)
Notes
  1. ^
    Poland (POL): Polish championsWisła Kraków were banned by UEFA due to fan behaviour in the1998–99 UEFA Cup and replaced by runners-upWidzew Łódź.[4]

Round and draw dates

[edit]

The schedule of the competition is as follows (all draws are held inGeneva,Switzerland, unless stated otherwise).[5]

PhaseRoundDraw dateFirst legSecond leg
QualifyingFirst qualifying round30 June 199913–14 July 199921 July 1999
Second qualifying round28 July 19994 August 1999
Third qualifying round23 July 199910–11 August 199925 August 1999
First group stageMatchday 126 August 1999
(Monaco)
14–15 September 1999
Matchday 221–22 September 1999
Matchday 328–29 September 1999
Matchday 419–20 October 1999
Matchday 526–27 October 1999
Matchday 62–3 November 1999
Second group stageMatchday 15 November 199923–24 November 1999
Matchday 27–8 December 1999
Matchday 329 February – 1 March 2000
Matchday 47–8 March 2000
Matchday 514–15 March 2000
Matchday 621–22 March 2000
Knockout phaseQuarter-finals24 March 20004–5 April 200018–19 April 2000
Semi-finals2–3 May 20009–10 May 2000
Final24 May 2000 atStade de France,Saint-Denis

Qualifying rounds

[edit]
Main article:1999–2000 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds

First qualifying round

[edit]
Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
ÍBV Iceland3–1Albania Tirana1–02–1
Litex Lovech Bulgaria5–0Northern Ireland Glentoran3–02–0
Žalgiris Lithuania5–0Armenia Tsement Ararat2–03–0
HB Faroe Islands1–7Finland Haka1–10–6
Partizan Federal Republic of Yugoslavia10–1Estonia Flora6–04–1
Jeunesse Esch Luxembourg0–10Latvia Skonto0–20–8
Sloga Jugomagnat North Macedonia2–2 (a)Azerbaijan Kapaz1–01–2
Barry Town Wales2–3Malta Valletta0–02–3
St Patrick's Athletic Republic of Ireland0–10Moldova Zimbru Chișinău0–50–5

Second qualifying round

[edit]
Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Rapid Wien Austria5–0Malta Valletta3–02–0
Anorthosis Famagusta Cyprus3–2Slovakia Slovan Bratislava2–11–1
Partizan Federal Republic of Yugoslavia6–1Croatia Rijeka3–13–0
CSKA Moscow Russia2–4Norway Molde2–00–4
Litex Lovech Bulgaria5–5 (2–3p)Poland Widzew Łódź4–11–4 (a.e.t.)
Haka Finland1–7Scotland Rangers1–40–3
Dinamo Tbilisi Georgia (country)2–3Moldova Zimbru Chișinău2–10–2
Dnepr-Transmash Mogilev Belarus0–3Sweden AIK0–10–2
Sloga Jugomagnat North Macedonia0–2Denmark Brøndby0–10–1
Rapid București Romania4–5Latvia Skonto3–31–2
Beşiktaş Turkey1–1 (a)Israel Hapoel Haifa1–10–0
Dynamo Kyiv Ukraine3–0Lithuania Žalgiris2–01–0
ÍBV Iceland1–5Hungary MTK Hungária0–21–3
Maribor Slovenia5–4Belgium Genk5–10–3

Third qualifying round

[edit]

The losing teams advanced to the first round of the1999–2000 UEFA Cup.

Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Zimbru Chișinău Moldova0–2Netherlands PSV Eindhoven0–00–2
Spartak Moscow Russia5–1Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Partizan2–03–1
Chelsea England3–0Latvia Skonto3–00–0
Rapid Wien Austria0–4Turkey Galatasaray0–30–1
Fiorentina Italy5–1Poland Widzew Łódź3–12–0
AaB Denmark3–4Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv1–22–2
Rangers Scotland2–1Italy Parma2–00–1
Brøndby Denmark3–6Portugal Boavista1–22–4 (a.e.t.)
AEK Athens Greece0–1Sweden AIK0–00–1
Hapoel Haifa Israel0–4Spain Valencia0–20–2
Hertha BSC Germany2–0Cyprus Anorthosis Famagusta2–00–0
Sturm Graz Austria4–3Switzerland Servette2–12–2
Molde Norway1–1 (a)Spain Mallorca0–01–1
Lyon France0–3Slovenia Maribor0–10–2
Croatia Zagreb Croatia2–0Hungary MTK Hungária0–02–0
Teplice Czech Republic0–2Germany Borussia Dortmund0–10–1

First group stage

[edit]
Main article:1999–2000 UEFA Champions League first group stage
Location of teams of the1999–2000 UEFA Champions League first group stage.
Brown: Group A; Red: Group B; Orange: Group C; Yellow: Group D;
Green: Group E; Blue: Group F; Purple: Group G; Pink: Group H.

16 winners from the third qualifying round, 10 champions from countriesranked 1–10, and six second-placed teams from countries ranked 1–6 were drawn into eight groups of four teams each. Compared to the two previous seasons, three associations (England, France, The Netherlands) were allowed three teams – the league winner and runner-up from each nation qualified for the first group stage, and the third-placed teams qualified for the third qualifying round – and three associations were allowed four teams (Germany, Italy, Spain) – the league winner and runner-up from each nation qualified for the first group stage, and the third- and fourth-placed teams qualified for the third qualifying round. Nine additional associations were still allowed two teams (Czech Republic, Greece, Norway, Portugal: league winner in group stage; Austria, Croatia, Denmark, Turkey, Russia: league winner in third qualifying round). The top two teams in each group advanced to the Champions League second group stage, while the third-placed teams advanced to round three of theUEFA Cup.

AIK,Boavista,Bordeaux,Chelsea,Fiorentina,Hertha BSC,Lazio,Maribor,Molde,Valencia andWillem II made their debut in the group stage. Maribor was the first Slovenian side to play in group stage. Germany became the first association to have four teams in the Champions League group stage.

Tiebreakers, if necessary, are applied in the following order:

  1. Points earned in head-to-head matches between the tied teams.
  2. Total goals scored in head-to-head matches between the tied teams.
  3. Away goals scored in head-to-head matches between the tied teams.
  4. Cumulative goal difference in all group matches.
  5. Total goals scored in all group matches.
  6. HigherUEFA coefficient going into the competition.

Group A

[edit]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualificationLAZDKVLEVMRB
1ItalyLazio6420133+1014Advance tosecond group stage2–11–14–0
2UkraineDynamo Kyiv621388070–14–20–1
3GermanyBayer Leverkusen61417707Transfer toUEFA Cup1–11–10–0
4SloveniaMaribor6114212−1040–41–20–2
Source:UEFA

Group B

[edit]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualificationBARFIOARSAIK
1SpainBarcelona6420199+1014Advance tosecond group stage4–21–15–0
2ItalyFiorentina623197+293–30–03–0
3EnglandArsenal62229908Transfer toUEFA Cup2–40–13–1
4SwedenAIK6015416−1211–20–02–3
Source:UEFA

Group C

[edit]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualificationROSFEYDORBOA
1NorwayRosenborg6321125+711Advance tosecond group stage2–22–22–0
2NetherlandsFeyenoord615076+181–01–11–1
3GermanyBorussia Dortmund613279−26Transfer toUEFA Cup0–31–13–1
4PortugalBoavista6123410−650–31–11–0
Source:UEFA

Group D

[edit]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualificationMUNMARSTMCZG
1EnglandManchester United641194+513Advance tosecond group stage2–12–10–0
2FranceMarseille6312108+2101–02–02–2
3AustriaSturm Graz6204512−76Transfer toUEFA Cup0–33–21–0
4CroatiaCroatia Zagreb612377051–21–23–0
Source:UEFA

Group E

[edit]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualificationRMAPOROLYMOL
1SpainReal Madrid6411157+813Advance tosecond group stage3–13–04–1
2PortugalPorto640296+3122–12–03–1
3GreeceOlympiacos6213912−37Transfer toUEFA Cup3–31–03–1
4NorwayMolde6105614−830–10–13–2
Source:UEFA

Group F

[edit]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualificationVALBAYRANPSV
1SpainValencia633084+412Advance tosecond group stage1–12–01–0
2GermanyBayern Munich623176+191–11–02–1
3ScotlandRangers62137707Transfer toUEFA Cup1–21–14–1
4NetherlandsPSV Eindhoven6114510−541–12–10–1
Source:UEFA

Group G

[edit]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualificationSPPBORSPMWIL
1Czech RepublicSparta Prague6330146+812Advance tosecond group stage0–05–24–0
2FranceBordeaux633074+3120–02–13–2
3RussiaSpartak Moscow6123912−35Transfer toUEFA Cup1–11–21–1
4NetherlandsWillem II6024715−823–40–01–3
Source:UEFA

Group H

[edit]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualificationCHEHERGALMIL
1EnglandChelsea6321103+711Advance tosecond group stage2–01–00–0
2GermanyHertha BSC6222710−382–11–41–0
3TurkeyGalatasaray62131013−37Transfer toUEFA Cup0–52–23–2
4ItalyMilan613267−161–11–12–1
Source:UEFA

Second group stage

[edit]
Main article:1999–2000 UEFA Champions League second group stage

Eight winners and eight runners-up from the first group stage were drawn into four groups of four teams each, each containing two group winners and two runners-up. Teams from the same country or from the same first-round group could not be drawn together. The top two teams in each group advanced to the quarter-finals.

Group A

[edit]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualificationBARPORSPPHER
1SpainBarcelona6510175+1216Advance toknockout stage4–25–03–1
2PortugalPorto6312880100–22–21–0
3Czech RepublicSparta Prague6123512−751–20–21–0
4GermanyHertha BSC602438−521–10–11–1
Source:UEFA

Group B

[edit]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualificationMUNVALFIOBOR
1EnglandManchester United6411104+613Advance toknockout stage3–03–12–0
2SpainValencia631295+4100–02–03–0
3ItalyFiorentina622278−182–01–03–3
4FranceBordeaux6024514−921–21–40–0
Source:UEFA

Group C

[edit]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualificationBAYRMADKVROS
1GermanyBayern Munich6411138+513Advance toknockout stage4–12–12–1
2SpainReal Madrid63121112−1102–42–23–1
3UkraineDynamo Kyiv6312108+2102–01–22–1
4NorwayRosenborg6015511−611–10–11–2
Source:UEFA

Group D

[edit]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualificationLAZCHEFEYMAR
1ItalyLazio6321104+611Advance toknockout stage0–01–25–1
2EnglandChelsea631285+3101–23–11–0
3NetherlandsFeyenoord622277080–01–33–0
4FranceMarseille6114211−940–21–00–0
Source:UEFA

Knockout stage

[edit]
Main article:1999–2000 UEFA Champions League knockout stage

Bracket

[edit]
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
SpainReal Madrid033
EnglandManchester United022
SpainReal Madrid213
GermanyBayern Munich022
PortugalPorto112
24 May –Saint-Denis
GermanyBayern Munich123
SpainReal Madrid3
SpainValencia0
SpainValencia505
ItalyLazio213
SpainValencia415
SpainBarcelona123
EnglandChelsea314
SpainBarcelona(a.e.t.)156

Quarter-finals

[edit]
Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Real Madrid Spain3–2England Manchester United0–03–2
Porto Portugal2–3Germany Bayern Munich1–11–2
Chelsea England4–6Spain Barcelona3–11–5 (a.e.t.)
Valencia Spain5–3Italy Lazio5–20–1

Semi-finals

[edit]
Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Valencia Spain5–3Spain Barcelona4–11–2
Real Madrid Spain3–2Germany Bayern Munich2–01–2

Final

[edit]
Main article:2000 UEFA Champions League final

The final was played on 24 May 2000 at theStade de France inSaint-Denis, France.

Real MadridSpain3–0SpainValencia
Report
Attendance: 80,000[6]

Top goalscorers

[edit]

The top scorers from the 1999–2000 UEFA Champions League (excluding qualifying rounds) are as follows:

RankNameTeamGoalsMinutes played
1BrazilMário JardelPortugalPorto101150
BrazilRivaldoSpainBarcelona101229
SpainRaúlSpainReal Madrid101350
4ItalySimone InzaghiItalyLazio9700
5UkraineSerhiy RebrovUkraineDynamo Kyiv81061
NorwayTore André FloEnglandChelsea81159
7BrazilPaulo SérgioGermanyBayern Munich71007
NetherlandsPatrick KluivertSpainBarcelona71203
9SpainLuis EnriqueSpainBarcelona6581
ArgentinaGabriel BatistutaItalyFiorentina6875
Republic of IrelandRoy KeaneEnglandManchester United61048
SpainFernando MorientesSpainReal Madrid61129

Source:[7]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Hughes, Rob; Tribune, International Herald (1999-09-17)."Champions League : A Few Delights in Europe's Overloaded Feast of Soccer".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved2024-05-10.
  2. ^"Qualification 2000/2001".kassiesa.net.
  3. ^"UEFA Country Ranking 1998". Retrieved11 October 2019.
  4. ^Kassies, Bert (15 June 1999)."No Champions League spot for Wisla Krakow".Bert Kassies UEFA Statistics. UEFA European Cup Football.
  5. ^"UEFA European Football Calendar 1999/2000". Bert Kassies.
  6. ^"2. Finals"(PDF).UEFA Champions League Statistics Handbook 2016/17. Nyon: Union of European Football Associations. 2017. p. 1. Retrieved22 April 2017.
  7. ^"Statistics – Goals scored".UEFA. Archived fromthe original on 19 June 2000. Retrieved3 October 2014.

External links

[edit]
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