2005 UEFA Cup Final

2005 UEFA Cup Final

Match programme cover
Event 2004–05 UEFA Cup
Date 18 May 2005
Venue Estádio José Alvalade, Lisbon
Man of the Match Daniel Carvalho
(CSKA Moscow)[1][2]
Referee Graham Poll (England)[3]
Attendance 47,085
Weather Sunny
28 °C (82 °F)
56% humidity

The 2005 UEFA Cup Final was the final match of the 2004–05 UEFA Cup, the 34th season of the UEFA Cup, UEFA's second-tier club football tournament. The match was contested by Sporting CP and CSKA Moscow; CSKA won the match 3–1. Sporting CP opened the scoring in the first half from full-back Rogério, before Aleksei Berezutski equalised in the second half. Yuri Zhirkov would give the Russian side the lead nine minutes after CSKA's equalising goal, and the Moscow outfit would close out the scoring fifteen minutes from the end after a quick CSKA counterattack saw Vágner Love fire the ball past Sporting's keeper Ricardo to give the Russian side a first UEFA Cup trophy.[4][5][6][7][8]

The match was played at the Estádio José Alvalade – home ground of finalists Sporting CP – in Lisbon, Portugal, on 18 May 2005.[9] It was the third European football final to be held in Portugal, after the 1967 European Cup Final, which was held in another Lisbon venue, the Estádio Nacional,[10][11] and the 1992 European Cup Winners' Cup Final, which was held at the Estádio da Luz.[12]

Route to the final

Sporting CP Round CSKA Moscow
Champions League
Opponent Result Legs Qualifying phase Opponent Result Legs
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
England Newcastle United 431081+710
France Sochaux 43014409
Portugal Sporting CP 421193+67
Greece Panionios 41036823
Georgia (country) Dinamo Tbilisi 4004213110
Group stage
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
England Chelsea 6411103+713
Portugal Porto 622246−28
Russia CSKA Moscow 62135507
France Paris Saint-Germain 612338−55
UEFA Cup
Opponent Result Legs Final phase Opponent Result Legs
Netherlands Feyenoord 4–2 2–1 home; 2–1 away Round of 32 Portugal Benfica 3–1 2–0 home; 1–1 away
England Middlesbrough 4–2 3–2 away; 1–0 home Round of 16 Serbia and Montenegro Partizan 3–1 1–1 away; 2–0 home
England Newcastle United 4–2 1–0 away; 4–1 home Quarter-finals France Auxerre 4–2 4–0 home; 0–2 away
Netherlands AZ Alkmaar 4–4 (a) 2–1 home; 2–3 away Semi-finals Italy Parma 3–0 0–0 away; 3–0 home

Match

Details

Sporting CP
CSKA Moscow
GK 76Portugal Ricardo
RB 15Portugal Miguel Garcia
CB 14Nigeria Joseph Enakarhire
CB 22Portugal Beto
LB 37Brazil Rogério  80'
RM 8 Portugal Pedro Barbosa (c)  14'
CM 26Brazil Fábio Rochemback
CM 28Portugal João Moutinho  88'
LM 11Chile Rodrigo Tello
CF 31Brazil Liédson
CF 10Portugal Ricardo Sá Pinto  73'
Substitutes:
GK 1 Portugal Nélson
DF 4 Brazil Anderson Polga
DF 27Portugal Custódio
MF 45Portugal Hugo Viana  88'
MF 23Portugal Rui Jorge
FW 9 Romania Marius Niculae  73'
FW 17Cameroon Roudolphe Douala  80'
Manager:
Portugal José Peseiro
GK 35Russia Igor Akinfeev
RB 24Russia Vasili Berezutskiy
CB 4 Russia Sergei Ignashevich (c)
CB 6 Russia Aleksei Berezutskiy
LB 15Nigeria Chidi Odiah
CM 22Russia Evgeni Aldonin  86'
CM 25Bosnia and Herzegovina Elvir Rahimić
RW 7 Brazil Daniel Carvalho  82'
LW 18Russia Yuri Zhirkov
CF 11Brazil Vágner Love
CF 9 Croatia Ivica Olić  67'
Substitutes:
GK 1 Russia Veniamin Mandrykin
MF 2 Lithuania Deividas Šemberas  82'
MF 8 Russia Rolan Gusev  86'
MF 10Argentina Osmar Ferreyra
MF 19Latvia Juris Laizāns
MF 40Russia Aleksandr Salugin
FW 17Serbia and Montenegro Miloš Krasić  67'
Manager:
Russia Valery Gazzaev

Man of the Match:
Brazil Daniel Carvalho (CSKA Moscow)[1][2]

Referee:
England Graham Poll (England)[3]

Assistant referees:
England Michael Tingey (England)[3]
England Glenn Turner (England)[3]
Fourth official:
England Steve Bennett (England)[3]

Match rules
  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra time if necessary.
  • Penalty shootout if scores still level.
  • Seven named substitutes.
  • Maximum of three substitutions.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Sporting frente ao CSKA: Peseiro invent e pagou bem caro" [Sporting against CSKA: Peseiro invented and paid very expensively]. Record. 19 May 2005. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
  2. 1 2 "CSKA frente ao Sporting: "Polka" deu lugar ao samba de Daniel" [CSKA against Sporting: "Polka" gives its seat to the samba of Daniel]. Record. 19 May 2005. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Referee appointed for UEFA Cup final" (PDF). UEFA.com (Union of European Football Associations). 16 May 2005. Retrieved 21 June 2010.
  4. "Resilient CSKA sink Sporting". UEFA. 18 May 2005. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
  5. "2004/05: Carvalho inspires CSKA to 'landmark victory'". UEFA. 18 May 2005. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
  6. "SPORTING-CSKA MOSCOVO, 1-3 (Rogério 28; Aleksei Berezoutski 56, Zhirkov 65, Vágner Love 74)" [SPORTING-CSKA MOSCOW, 1-3 (Rogério 28; Aleksei Berezoutski 56, Zhirkov 65, Vágner Love 74)]. Record. 18 May 2005. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
  7. "Daniel Carvalho: "Estive nos quatro golos"" [Daniel Carvalho: "I was involved in the four goals"]. Record. 19 May 2005. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
  8. "Sporting-CSKA, 1-3: Como a final de sonho se tornou num pesadelo" [Sporting-CSKA, 1-3: Like the dream final turned into a nightmare]. Record. 19 May 2005. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
  9. "Final da Taça UEFA no Alvalade XXI" [Final of UEFA Cup at the Alvalade XXI]. ZeroZero (in Portuguese). 5 February 2004. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
  10. "Celtic 2-1 Internazionale". ZeroZero (in Portuguese). Retrieved 30 November 2013.
  11. "Champions: Capitão do Celtic em 1967 lembra final do Jamor" [Champions: Celtic's captain in 1967 remembers the final in Jamor]. ZeroZero (in Portuguese). 17 September 2013. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
  12. "Werder Bremen 2-0 Monaco". ZeroZero (in Portuguese). Retrieved 30 November 2013.

External links

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