1971 European Cup Winners' Cup Final

1971 European Cup Winners' Cup Final
Date 19 May 1971
Venue Karaiskakis Stadium, Piraeus, Greece
Referee Rudolf Scheurer (Switzerland)
Attendance 45,000
Event Replay
Date 21 May 1971
Venue Karaiskakis Stadium, Piraeus, Greece
Referee Rudolf Scheurer (Switzerland)
Attendance 19,917

The 1971 European Cup Winners' Cup Final was a football match contested by Chelsea F.C. of England and Real Madrid of Spain. It was the final match of the 1971 competition and the 11th European Cup Winners' Cup final in all.

Route to the final

England Chelsea Spain Real Madrid
Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg
Greece Aris Thessaloniki 6–2 1–1 (A) 5–1 (H) First round Malta Hibernians 5–0 0–0 (A) 5–0 (H)
Bulgaria CSKA Sofia 2–0 1–0 (A) 1–0 (H) Second round Austria Wacker Innsbruck 2–1 0–1 (H) 2–0 (A)
Belgium Club Brugge 4–2 0–2 (A) 4–0 (a.e.t.) (H) Quarter-finals Wales Cardiff City 2–1 0–1 (A) 2–0 (H)
England Manchester City 2–0 1–0 (H) 1–0 (A) Semi-finals Netherlands PSV Eindhoven 2–1 0–0 (A) 2–1 (H)

Match review

The Spanish club were challenging for their seventh European trophy overall, a record among European clubs at the time, while the West Londoners were seeking their first ever European honour. The final took place on 19 May 1971 and was staged at Karaiskakis Stadium in Piraeus, Greece, which was filled to capacity by traveling fans of both clubs as well as local football aficionados. Chelsea went ahead with a Peter Osgood left-foot volley from inside the area, after a Boyle-Cooke combination, but Real, demonstrating their "exceptional ball skills", pressed back and eventually equalised in the last minute with Ignacio Zoco.[1] There were no further goals scored in extra time, so the final went to a replay game.

The replay was staged at the same venue two days later, on a Friday, with markedly lower attendance. Most of the clubs' fans had left, having booked return tickets on the assumption that, as usual, the final would be decided in one game, although a number of Chelsea's followers stayed on, "sleeping in the rough" around the city.[2] Chelsea scored two goals with Peter Osgood and John Dempsey in the first half. Real's Sebastián Fleitas scored 15 minutes before the end of the game but Chelsea hung on to win 21 and become the third London club to win the trophy.

Match details

Chelsea
Real Madrid C.F.
GK 1 England Peter Bonetti
DF 2 Scotland John Boyle
DF 3 England Ron Harris (c)
MF 4 England John Hollins  91'
DF 5 Republic of Ireland John Dempsey
DF 6 England David Webb
W 7 England Keith Weller
MF 8 England Alan Hudson
ST 9 England Peter Osgood  86'
MF 10Scotland Charlie Cooke
W 11England Peter Houseman
Substitutes:
DF 12Republic of Ireland Paddy Mulligan  91'
ST 13England Tommy Baldwin  86'
Manager:
England Dave Sexton
GK 1 Spain Jose Luis Borja
DF 2 Spain José Luis
DF 3 Spain Gregorio Benito
DF 4 Spain Ignacio Zoco
MF 5 Spain Pirri
DF 6 Spain Fernando Zunzunegui
MF 7 Spain Ramón Grosso
MF 8 Spain Manuel Velázquez
MF 9 Argentina Miguel Pérez  65'
FW 10Spain Amancio Amaro
FW 11Spain Francisco Gento (c)  70'
Substitutes:
MF 12Paraguay Sebastián Fleitas  65'
FW 13Spain José Antonio Grande  70'
Manager:
Spain Miguel Muñoz

Replay

GK 1 England Peter Bonetti
DF 2 Scotland John Boyle
DF 3 England Ron Harris (c)
MF 4 Scotland Charlie Cooke
DF 5 Republic of Ireland John Dempsey
DF 6 England David Webb
MF 7 England Keith Weller
FW 8England Tommy Baldwin
FW 9 England Peter Osgood  73'
MF 10 England Alan Hudson
MF 11England Peter Houseman
Substitutes:
DF 12Republic of Ireland Paddy Mulligan
FW 15South Africa Derek Smethurst  73'
Manager:
England Dave Sexton
GK 1 Spain Jose Luis Borja
DF 2 Spain José Luis
DF 3 Spain Fernando Zunzunegui
MF 4 Spain Pirri (c)
DF 5 Spain Gregorio Benito
DF 6 Spain Ignacio Zoco
FW 7Paraguay Sebastián Fleitas
FW 8Spain Amancio Amaro
MF 9 Spain Ramón Grosso
MF 10 Spain Manuel Velázquez  75'
MF 11 Spain Manuel Bueno  60'
Substitutes:
MF 16Spain Francisco Gento  75'
FW 15Spain José Antonio Grande  60'
Manager:
Spain Miguel Muñoz

See also

References

  1. "Real Shock for Chelsea", Daily Mirror, 20 May 1971
  2. "Ole! Ole! Chelsea!", Daily Mirror, 22 May 1971

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, August 11, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.