Liverpool F.C. in Europe

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Liverpool Football Club first participated in European football during 1964, when they competed in the European Cup. Their first match in Europe was against KR Rekjavik of Iceland. They have subequently won this competition five times, the most recent being in 2005. The club has won the UEFA Cup three times, which is the joint-record along with four other clubs. Liverpool have also won the UEFA Super Cup three times, been to the final of the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup and have competed in the Intercontinental Cup. Liverpool are one of only five teams to have the right to wear the UEFA Badge of Honour. Liverpool's last participation in a European final was in 2007, in the UEFA Champions League. They lost the final 2–1 to AC Milan.

Liverpool were suspended from European football in 1985, following the Heysel stadium disaster, in which 39 Juventus fans were killed by a collapsing wall. The ban was supposed to last for ten years, however Liverpool only served seven years of this, the ban also applied to other English teams. Liverpool's first match in Europe after the ban, was in 1992.

Contents

[edit] History

Liverpool first particpated in Europe during the 1964–65 season, when they competed in the European Cup. Liverpool had earned the right to participate in the competition by winning the English First Division, in the 1963–64 season.[citation needed] Their first match in European competition was against KR Rekjavik of Iceland in the preliminary round. They won the two legs 5–0 and 6–1 to progress to the first round. Liverpool faced Anderlecht in the first round, a tie which is notable, as it represents the first time Liverpool wore their all-red strip.[citation needed] They progressed to the quarter-finals by virtue of a 4&nash;0 aggregate victory. They faced 1. FC Köln, and progressed to the semi-finals, by the toss of a coin, as at this time there was no provision for extra-time or penalty shoot-outs.[citation needed] Liverpool faced the reigning champions Inter Milan in the semi-finals, where they lost 4–3 on aggregate. Though the tie did not pass without controversy, as Liverpool accused the referee Jose María Ortiz de Mendebil of favouring Inter Milan throughout the second leg.[citation needed]

Liverpool entered the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup following season as a result of winning the FA Cup. Liverpool beat Juventus FC of Italy, in the first round 2–1 on aggregate. Standard Liege of Belgium were the club's opposition in the second round, defeating the Belgians 5–2 over the two matches. The subsequent quarter-final against Honved of Hungary was not played for three months prior to the second round. However they progressed to the semi-finals, after drawing 0–0 in Hungary, and winning 2–0 at Anfield. Liverpool faced Celtic in the semi-finals in all British tie, with the two ties being played five days apart.[citation needed] Celtic won the first leg 1–0 at Parkhead, however goals from Tommy Smith and Geoff Strong, ensured Liverpool would be going to Hampden Park to play in their first European final.[citation needed] Borussia Dortmund were there opponents in the final and they took an early lead through Sigfried Held, however Roger Hunt equalised for Liverpool, to send the final into extra-time. Dortmund would win the match 2–1 after a 40 yard shot from Reinhard Libuda hit the crossbar, and subsequently hit Ron Yeats, on its way into Liverpool's goal.[citation needed]

The 1966–67 was another unsuccessful for Liverpool in Europe. They participated in the European Cup after winning their national league the previous season. Petrolul Ploiesti faced the club in the first round, and the tie was level after the two legs, resulting in a third tie being played in Brussels, which Liverpool won 2–0. Dutch champions Ajax were the club's opponents in the second round. A 5–1 first leg defeat in Amsterdam was followed up by a 2–2 draw at Anfield, a 7–3 aggregate defeat meant Liverpool were out of European competition for the remainder of the season. Liverpool faced Malmö FF in the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, they won the first leg 2–0 away from home, and won the return leg 2–1. They faced TSV 1860 München in the second round, winning the home leg 8–0, they lost the away leg 2–1 but they went through 10–1 on aggregate. Ferencváros were Liverpool's opponents in the third round, and won both legs 1–0 to progress at Liverpool's expense. The 1968–69 season saw Liverpool competing again in the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, however they exited in the first round, after Athletic Bilbao beat them on the toss of a coin, after both legs finished 2–1.

[edit] Records

[edit] European Cup/UEFA Champions League

Winners: 5
1977
Stadio Olimpico, Rome, 25 May 1977.
Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 3 – 1 Borussia Monchengladbach Flag of West Germany
Liverpool Goals: Terry McDermott Scored after 28 minutes 28', Tommy Smith Scored after 64 minutes 64', Phil Neal Scored after 82 minutes 82' (pen.)
Borussia Monchengladbach Goals: Allan Simonsen Scored after 52 minutes 52'
Team: Ray Clemence, Phil Neal, Joey Jones, Tommy Smith, Ray Kennedy, Emlyn Hughes c, Kevin Keegan, Jimmy Case, Steve Heighway, Ian Callaghan, Terry McDermott
Substitutes: Peter McDonnell, David Fairclough, David Johnson, Alan Waddle, Alec Lindsay
Manager: Bob Paisley
Liverpool FC won their first European Cup by beating Borussia Monchengladbach 3-1. Borussia Monchengladbach were incidentally, the club beaten by Liverpool in their first UEFA Cup final win in 1973. Bob Paisley became the first person to manage a club to victory in the European Cup after winning the UEFA Cup in the preceding year. José Mourinho later did this with FC Porto and Rafael Benitez did it with Valencia CF (UEFA Cup) and Liverpool FC (UEFA Champions League). The 1976-77 season was a good one for Liverpool with a second consecutive League title and victory in the European Cup final. They however missed out on the treble by losing to Manchester United in the FA Cup final the weekend before the European Cup final.
1978
Wembley Stadium, London, 10 May 1978.
Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 1 – 0 Club Brugge K.V. Flag of Belgium
Liverpool Goals: Kenny Dalglish Scored after 65 minutes 65'
Club Brugge K.V. Goals:
Team: Ray Clemence, Phil Neal, Phil Thompson, Alan Hansen, Emlyn Hughes c, Terry McDermott, Kenny Dalglish, Graeme Souness, Ray Kennedy, David Fairclough, Jimmy Case Substituted off after 63 minutes 63'
Substitutes: Steve Ogrizovic, Joey Jones, Colin Irwin, Ian Callaghan, Steve Heighway Substituted on after 63 minutes 63'
Manager: Bob Paisley
Liverpool FC won their second European Cup by beating Club Brugge K.V. 1-0. Club Brugge where incidentally the club beaten by Liverpool in their second UEFA Cup final win in 1976. Bob Paisley became the first and so far only manager to win the UEFA Cup and followed by two consecutive European Cups.
1981
Parc des Princes, Paris, 27 May 1981.
Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 1 – 0 Real Madrid Flag of Spain
Liverpool Goals: Alan Kennedy Scored after 82 minutes 82'
Real Madrid Goals:
Team: Ray Clemence, Phil Neal, Phil Thompson c, Alan Hansen, Alan Kennedy, Sammy Lee, Terry McDermott, Graeme Souness, Ray Kennedy, Kenny Dalglish Substituted off after 87 minutes 87', David Johnson
Substitutes: Steve Ogrizovic, Colin Irwin, Howard Gayle, Richard Money, Jimmy Case Substituted on after 87 minutes 87'
Manager: Bob Paisley
Liverpool FC won their third European Cup by beating Real Madrid 1-0. Bob Paisley became the first and so far only person to manage a club to 3 victories in the European Cup. This was also the 5th consecutive win by an English team, which was the first time a county had achieved this since Spain achieved it in the late 50s when Real Madrid won the first 5 trophies. England would break the record in the following year when Aston Villa won England's 6th consecutive trophy.
1984
Stadio Olimpico, Rome, 30 May 1984.
Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 1 – 1 AS Roma Flag of Italy
Liverpool Goals: Phil Neal Scored after 13 minutes 13'
AS Roma Goals: Roberto Pruzzo Scored after 42 minutes 42'
Penalties:
Liverpool: Steve Nicol Missed, Phil Neal Scored, Graeme Souness Scored, Ian Rush Scored, Alan Kennedy Scored
AS Roma: Agostino Di Bartolomei Scored, Bruno Conti Missed, Ubaldo Righetti Scored, Francesco Graziani Missed
Team: Bruce Grobbelaar, Phil Neal, Mark Lawrenson, Alan Hansen, Alan Kennedy, Craig Johnston Substituted off after 72 minutes 72', Sammy Lee, Graeme Souness c, Ronnie Whelan, Kenny Dalglish Substituted off after 94 minutes 94', Ian Rush
Substitutes: Bob Bolder, David Hodgson, Gary Gillespie, Michael Robinson Substituted on after 94 minutes 94', Steve Nicol Substituted on after 72 minutes 72'
Manager: Joe Fagan
Liverpool FC won their fourth European Cup by beating AS Roma on penalties in the final. Roma where playing in their home stadium only the second time a final has been played in one of the finalists grounds (Inter Milan played in the San Siro in the 1965 final). Phil Neal was the only player to have played in Liverpool's three previous finals. Liverpool FC also won the League and the League Cup for a unique treble. The fourth final win also made Liverpool the second most successful club in the competition at the time with Real Madrid having 6 trophies while Bayern Munich and Ajax both had 3. AC Milan would win their 5th in 1994 to put Liverpool in 3rd postition.
2005
Atatürk Olympic Stadium, Istanbul, Turkey, 25 May 2005.
Liverpool F.C. Flag of England 3 – 3 AC Milan Flag of Italy
Liverpool Goals: Steven Gerrard Scored after 54 minutes 54', Vladimír Šmicer Scored after 56 minutes 56', Xabi Alonso Scored after 60 minutes 60'
AC Milan Goals: Paolo Maldini Scored after 1 minutes 1', Hernán Crespo Scored after 39 minutes 39' Scored after 44 minutes 44'
Penalties:
AC Milan: Serginho Missed, Andrea Pirlo Missed, Jon Dahl Tomasson Scored, Kaká Scored, Andriy Shevchenko Missed (goalkeeper saved)
Liverpool: Dietmar Hamann Scored, Djibril Cissé Scored, John Arne Riise Missed, Vladimír Šmicer Scored
Team: Jerzy Dudek, Steve Finnan Substituted off after 46 minutes 46', Sami Hyypiä, Jamie Carragher, Djimi Traoré, Harry Kewell Substituted off after 23 minutes 23', Xabi Alonso, Steven Gerrard c, John Arne Riise, Luis García, Milan Baroš Substituted off after 85 minutes 85'
Substitutes: Scott Carson, Josemi, Igor Biscan, Antonio Nunez, Dietmar Hamann Substituted on after 46 minutes 46', Vladimír Šmicer Substituted on after 23 minutes 23', Djibril Cissé Substituted on after 85 minutes 85'
Manager: Rafael Benítez
Liverpool FC won their fifth (only the third team to achieve this) by beating AC Milan on penalties after drawing the match 3-3. The final is one of the most notable with Liverpool coming back from 3-0 down at half time to win the trophy. Due to it being the fifth triumph Liverpool became the fifth club to get the UEFA Badge of Honour and got to permanently keep the trophy. The final is said to be one of the best finals ever if not the best[1]. The final is notable not only for the famous comeback but also due Liverpool being huge underdogs after finishing 5th in the League. Paolo Maldini became the oldest and also fastest scorer in the final with his goal in the first minute. Steven Gerrard captained his boyhood team and became the second youngest victorious captain. Rafael Benítez became the third manager to win the trophy the season after winning the UEFA Cup and was the first to do it with 2 different clubs.
Runners-Up: 2
1985
Heysel Stadium, Belgium, 29 May 1985.
Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 0 – 1 Juventus Flag of Italy
Liverpool Goals:
Juventus Goals: Michel Platini Scored after 56 minutes 56' (pen.)
Team: Bruce Grobbelaar, Phil Neal c, Jim Beglin, Mark Lawrenson Substituted off after 4 minutes 4', Alan Hansen, Steve Nicol, Kenny Dalglish, Ronnie Whelan, John Wark; Ian Rush, Paul Walsh Substituted off after 46 minutes 46'
Substitutes: Chris Pile, Gary Gillespie Substituted on after 4 minutes 4', Jan Mølby, Sammy Lee, Craig Johnston Substituted on after 46 minutes 46'
Manager: Joe Fagan
Liverpool lost in the final for the first time to Juventus by 1-0. The final was Liverpool's 5th in 9 seasons. The match was overshadowed by the disaster which took place about an hour before kick off, when Liverpool supporters charged at Juventus supporters, causing a huge crush of people against a stadium wall which subsequently collapsed. 39 people were killed and hundreds injured[2]. It was decided that the match should be played, as it was felt that abandoning it could cause further trouble. The disaster led to Liverpool being banned from European Competitions for 6 years[2].
2007
Olympic Stadium, Greece, 23 May 2007.
Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 1 – 2 AC Milan Flag of Italy
Liverpool Goals: Dirk Kuyt Scored after 89 minutes 89'
AC Milan Goals: Filippo Inzaghi Scored after 45 minutes 45', Scored after 82 minutes 82'
Team: José Manuel Reina, Steve Finnan Substituted off after 88 minutes 88', Jamie Carragher, Daniel Agger, John Arne Riise, Xabi Alonso, Javier Mascherano Substituted off after 78 minutes 78', Jermaine Pennant, Boudewijn Zenden Substituted off after 59 minutes 59' , Steven Gerrard c, Dirk Kuyt
Substitutes: Jerzy Dudek, Álvaro Arbeloa Substituted on after 88 minutes 88', Sami Hyypiä, Harry Kewell Substituted on after 59 minutes 59', Mark González, Peter Crouch Substituted on after 78 minutes 78', Craig Bellamy
Manager: Rafael Benítez
Liverpool lost their second final to AC Milan in a repeat of the 2005 final. They had reached the final by defeating the reigning European Champions FC Barcelona, the Dutch Champions PSV Eindhoven and the English Champions Chelsea FC in the knock-out stages. Unlike the previous encounter in 2005, the first half contained only one goal, scored against the run of play by A.C. Milan's Filippo Inzaghi in the 45th minute after a deflection from an Andrea Pirlo free kick. The deflection resulted in the ball being diverted past Liverpool goalkeeper José Manuel Reina. In the second half Inzaghi put the game away in the 82nd minute with a goal that managed to slid by. But Dirk Kuyt gave some hope at the end with an 89th minute goal[3].

[edit] UEFA Cup

Winners: 3
1973
First Leg
Anfield, Liverpool, 1 May 1973.
Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 3 – 0 Borussia Monchengladbach Flag of West Germany
Liverpool Goals: Kevin Keegan Scored after 21 minutes 21' Scored after 32 minutes 32', Larry Lloyd Scored after 61 minutes 61'
Borussia Monchengladbach Goals:
Team: Ray Clemence, Chris Lawler, Alec Lindsay, Larry Lloyd, Tommy Smith,c Emlyn Hughes, Kevin Keegan, Peter Cormack, Steve Heighway Substituted off after 83 minutes 83', Ian Callaghan, John Toshack
Substitutes: Frank Lane, Brian Hall Substituted on after 83 minutes 83', Trevor Storton, Phil Thompson, Phil Boersma
Second Leg
Bökelbergstadion, Mönchengladbach, 23 May 1973.
Flag of West Germany Borussia Monchengladbach 2 – 0 Liverpool F.C. Flag of England
Liverpool Goals:
Borussia Monchengladbach Goals: Jupp Heynckes Scored after 29 minutes 29' Scored after 40 minutes 40'
Team: Ray Clemence, Chris Lawler, Alec Lindsay, Larry Lloyd, Tommy Smith'c', Emlyn Hughes,Kevin Keegan, Peter Cormack, Steve Heighway Substituted off after 77 minutes 77', Ian Callaghan, John Toshack
Substitutes: Frank Lane, Brian Hall, Trevor Storton, Phil Thompson, Phil Boersma Substituted on after 77 minutes 77'
Aggregate Score: Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 3 – 2 Borussia Monchengladbach Flag of West Germany
Manager: Bill Shankly
Liverpool won their first European title by defeating Borussia Monchengladbach over two legs in the final of the Uefa Cup in 1973. Liverpool would later win their first European Cup in the final against Borussia Monchengladbach. During the 1970s Borussia Monchengladbach were one of the best sides in Europe, with 2 UEFA Cups out of 4 finals and a European Cup final as well in the space of 10 years.
1976
First Leg
Anfield, Liverpool, 28 April 1976.
Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 3 – 2 Club Brugge K.V. Flag of Belgium
Liverpool Goals: Ray Kennedy Scored after 59 minutes 59', Jimmy Case Scored after 61 minutes 61', Kevin Keegan Scored after 65 minutes 65' (pen.)
Club Brugge K.V. Goals: Raoul Lambert Scored after 5 minutes 5', Julien Cools Scored after 15 minutes 15'
Team: Ray Clemence, Tommy Smith, Phil Neal, Phil Thompson, Ray Kennedy, Emlyn Hughes c, Kevin Keegan, David Fairclough, Steve Heighway, Ian Callaghan, John Toshack Substituted off after 46 minutes 46'
Substitutes: Jimmy Case Substituted on after 46 minutes 46'
Second Leg
Olympiastadion, Brugge, 19 May 1976.
Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 1 – 1 Club Brugge K.V. Flag of Belgium
Liverpool Goals: Kevin Keegan Scored after 15 minutes 15'
Club Brugge K.V. Goals: Raoul Lambert Scored after 11 minutes 11' (pen.)
Team: Ray Clemence, Tommy Smith, Phil Neal, Phil Thompson, Ray Kennedy, Emlyn Hughes c, Kevin Keegan, Jimmy Case, Steve Heighway, Ian Callaghan, John Toshack Substituted off after 62 minutes 62'
Substitutes: David Fairclough Substituted on after 62 minutes 62'
Aggregate Score: Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 4 – 3 Club Brugge K.V. Flag of Belgium
Manager: Bob Paisley
Liverpool won their second UEFA Cup by defeating Club Brugge K.V. 4-3 over two legs. This was the first of 4 eventual European trophies won under the management of Bob Paisley.
2001
Westfalenstadion, Dortmund, 16 May 2001.
Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 5 – 4 (a.e.t.) Deportivo Alavés Flag of Spain
Liverpool Goals: Markus Babbel Scored after 3 minutes 3', Steven Gerrard Scored after 15 minutes 15', Gary McAllister Scored after 40 minutes 40' (pen.), Robbie Fowler Scored after 70 minutes 70', Delfi Geli Scored after 115 minutes 115' (o.g.) (GG)
Alavés Goals: Iván Alonso Scored after 26 minutes 26', Javi Moreno Scored after 46 minutes 46' Scored after 50 minutes 50', Jordi Cruyff Scored after 88 minutes 88'
Team: Sander Westerveld, Markus Babbel, Sami Hyypiä c, Stephane Henchoz Substituted off after 55 minutes 55', Jamie Carragher, Gary McAllister, Dietmar Hamann, Steven Gerrard, Danny Murphy, Emile Heskey Substituted off after 64 minutes 64', Michael Owen Substituted off after 78 minutes 78'
Substitutes: Pegguy Arphexad, Gregory Vignal, Stephen Wright, Vladimir Smicer Substituted on after 55 minutes 55', Nick Barmby, Patrick Berger Substituted on after 78 minutes 78', Robbie Fowler Substituted on after 64 minutes 64'
Manager: Gerard Houllier
Liverpool won their third record equalling UEFA Cup by defeating Alavés 5-4 in extra time with a Golden Goal, which was also a Own Goal. The final was dramatic with Alaves coming from behind 3 times to level the match with their 4th goal coming in the 88th minute. Liverpool were the eventual winners when Geli headed a Gary McAllister free kick into his own goal to give Liverpool their first European trophy in 17 years. The final is often said to be amongst the greatest ever[4] and compares well to the 2005 UEFA Champions League Final.

[edit] European Cup Winners' Cup

Runners-Up: 1
1966
Hampden Park, Glasgow, 5 May 1966.
Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 1 – 2 (a.e.t.) Borussia Dortmund Flag of West Germany
Liverpool Goals: Roger Hunt Scored after 68 minutes 68'
Borussia Monchengladbach Goals: Sigfried Held Scored after 62 minutes 62', Reinhard Libuda Scored after 109 minutes 109'
Team: Tommy Lawrence, Chris Lawler, Ron Yeats, Gerry Byrne, Gordon Milne, Willie Stevenson, Ian Callaghan, Ian St John, Tommy Smith, Peter Thompson
Substitutes:
Manager: Bill Shankly
Liverpool lost the 1966 Cup Winners' Cup final to Borussia Dortmund 2-1 after extra time. This was Liverpool's first ever European final in only their second year of European competition (lost to Inter Milan in the European Cup semi-finals the season before). The UEFA Cup Winners' Cup remains the only European trophy Liverpool have never won and is now impossible after it was merged with the UEFA Cup in 1999[5]. Liverpool have however won both the UEFA Champions League and the UEFA Cup since the demise of the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, the only other team to have managed this is FC Porto.

[edit] UEFA Super Cup

The 1981 Super Cup was not held as Liverpool could not find dates to play FC Dinamo Tbilisi on.

Winners: 3
1977
First Leg
Volksparkstadion, Hamburg, 22 November 1977.
Flag of West Germany Hamburger SV 1 – 1 Liverpool F.C. Flag of England
Liverpool Goals: David Fairclough Scored after 65 minutes 65'
Hamburger SV Goals: Ferdinand Keller Scored after 29 minutes 29'
Second Leg
Anfield, Liverpool, 6 December 1977.
Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 6 – 0 Hamburger SV Flag of West Germany
Liverpool Goals: Phil Thompson Scored after 21 minutes 21', Terry McDermott Scored after 40 minutes 40' Scored after 56 minutes 56' Scored after 57 minutes 57', David Fairclough Scored after 84 minutes 84', Kenny Dalglish Scored after 88 minutes 88'
Hamburger SV Goals:
Aggregate Score: Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 7 – 1 Hamburger SV Flag of West Germany
Manager: Bob Paisley
2001
Stade Louis II, Monaco, 2 August 2001.
Flag of Germany Bayern Munich 2 – 3 Liverpool F.C. Flag of England
Liverpool Goals: John Arne Riise Scored after 22 minutes 22', Emile Heskey Scored after 45 minutes 45', Michael Owen Scored after 46 minutes 46'
Bayern Munich Goals: Hasan Salihamidžić Scored after 57 minutes 57', Carsten Jancker Scored after 81 minutes 81'
Team: Sander Westerveld, Markus Babbel, Stéphane Henchoz, Sami Hyypiä, Jamie Carragher, Gary McAllister, Dietmar Hamann, Steven Gerrard Substituted off after 66 minutes 66', John Arne Riise Substituted off after 70 minutes 70', Emile Heskey, Michael Owen Substituted off after 83 minutes 83'
Substitutes: Pegguy Arphexad, Grégory Vignal, Jamie Redknapp, Danny Murphy Substituted on after 70 minutes 70', Igor Bišcan Substituted on after 66 minutes 66', Robbie Fowler Substituted on after 83 minutes 83', Jari Litmanen
Manager: Gerrard Houllier
2005
Stade Louis II, Monaco, 26 August 2005.
Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 3 – 1 (a.e.t.) CSKA Moscow Flag of Russia
Liverpool Goals: Djibril Cissé Scored after 82 minutes 82' Scored after 103 minutes 103', Luis Garcia, Scored after 109 minutes 109'
CSKA Moscow Goals: Daniel Carvalho Scored after 28 minutes 28'
Team: José Manuel Reina, Josemi, Jamie Carragher, Sami Hyypiä, John Arne Riise Substituted off after 79 minutes 79', Dietmar Hamann, Steve Finnan Substituted off after 55 minutes 55', Xabi Alonso Substituted off after 70 minutes 70', Boudewijn Zenden, Luis García, Fernando Morientes
Manager: Rafael Benitez
Runners-Up: 2
1978
First Leg
Parc Astrid, Brussels, 4 December 1978.
Flag of Belgium R.S.C. Anderlecht 3 – 1 Liverpool F.C. Flag of England
Liverpool Goals: Jimmy Case Scored after 27 minutes 27'
Hamburger SV Goals: Franky Vercauteren Scored after 17 minutes 17', François Van Der Elst Scored after 38 minutes 38', Rob Rensenbrink Scored after 87 minutes 87'
Second Leg
Anfield, Liverpool, 19 December 1978.
Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 2 – 1 R.S.C. Anderlecht Flag of Belgium
Liverpool Goals: Emlyn Hughes Scored after 13 minutes 13', David Fairclough Scored after 87 minutes 87'
Hamburger SV Goals: François Van Der Elst Scored after 71 minutes 71'
Aggregate Score: Flag of Belgium R.S.C. Anderlecht 4 – 3 Liverpool F.C. Flag of England
Manager: Bob Paisley
1984
First Leg
Stadio Comunale di Torino, Turin, 16 January 1985.
Flag of Italy Juventus 2 – 0 Liverpool F.C. Flag of England
Liverpool Goals:
Juventus Goals: Zbigniew Boniek Scored after 39 minutes 39' Scored after 79 minutes 79'
Second Leg
Not held due to Liverpool being unable to find a date to play Juventus on.
Manager: Joe Fagan

[edit] Intercontinental Cup

Despite having won the European Cup in 1977 Liverpool declined to play Boca Juniors in the Intercontinental Cup (Borussia Mönchengladbach played Boca instead). In 1978 Liverpool and Boca Juniors did not play due to scheduling conflicts so the cup was not held at all.

Runners-Up: 2
1981
International Stadium Yokohama, Tokyo, 13 December 1981.
Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 0 – 3 Flamengo Flag of Brazil
Liverpool Goals:
Flamengo Goals: Adílio Scored, Nunes Scored Scored
Team: Bruce Grobbelaar, Phil Neal, Phil Thompson, Alan Hansen, Mark Lawrenson, Ray Kennedy, Sammy Lee, Terry McDermott (sub David Johnson), Graeme Souness, Craig Johnson, Kenny Dalglish
Manager: Bob Paisley
1984
International Stadium Yokohama, Tokyo, 9 December 1984.
Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 0 – 1 Independiente Flag of Argentina
Liverpool Goals:
Independiente Goals: José Alberto Percudani Scored after 6 minutes 6'
Team: Bruce Grobbelaar, Phil Neal, Steve Nicol, Ray Kennedy, Alan Hansen, Gary Gillespie, Kenny Dalglish, Jan Molby, Ian Rush, Craig Johnson, John Wark (sub Ronnie Whelan)
Manager: Joe Fagan

[edit] FIFA Club World Cup

Runners-Up: 1
2005[6]
International Stadium Yokohama, Tokyo, 18 December 2005.
Flag of England Liverpool F.C. 0 – 1 São Paulo Flag of Brazil
Liverpool Goals:
Flamengo Goals: Mineiro Scored after 27 minutes 27'
Team: José Manuel Reina, Jamie Carragher, Stephen Warnock Substituted off after 79 minutes 79', Steve Finnan, Sami Hyypiä, Harry Kewell, Steven Gerrard c, Luis García, Xabi Alonso, Fernando Morientes Substituted off after 85 minutes 85', Momo Sissoko Substituted off after 79 minutes 79'
Substitutes: Jerzy Dudek, John Arne Riise Substituted on after 79 minutes 79', Djibril Cissé, Scott Carson, Josemi, Djimi Traoré, Florent Sinama-Pongolle Substituted on after 79 minutes 79', Dietmar Hamann, Peter Crouch Substituted on after 85 minutes 85'
Manager: Rafael Benitez

[edit] Year by Year Performance

Below is a table of the performance of Liverpool FC in European competition (excluding the European Super Cup).

Season Competition Round Knocked Out by Played Won Drew Lost Goals for Goals Against
1964-65 European Cup Semi-Final Flag of Italy Inter Milan 9 5 3 1 10 7
1965-66 Cup Winners' Cup Final Flag of West Germany Borussia Dortmund 9 5 1 3 12 6
1966-67 Cup Winners' Cup Round 2 Flag of the Netherlands Ajax Amsterdam 5 2 1 2 8 10
1967-68 UEFA Cup Round 3 Flag of Hungary Ferencvárosi TC 6 3 0 3 13 5
1968-69 UEFA Cup Round 1 Flag of Spain Athletic Bilbao 2 1 0 1 3 3
1969-70 UEFA Cup Round 2 Flag of Portugal Vitória FC 4 3 0 1 17 3
1970-71 UEFA Cup Semi-Final Flag of England Leeds United 10 5 4 1 13 4
1971-72 Cup Winners' Cup Round 2 Flag of Germany Bayern Munich 4 1 1 2 4 5
1972-73 UEFA Cup Winners Flag of Germany Borussia Mönchengladbach (beat in final) 12 8 2 2 19 6
1973-74 European Cup Round 2 Flag of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade 4 1 1 2 5 5
1974-75 Cup Winners' Cup Round 2 Flag of Hungary Ferencvárosi TC 4 2 2 0 13 1
1975-76 UEFA Cup Winners Flag of Belgium Club Brugge (beat in final) 12 8 3 1 25 9
1976-77 European Cup Winners Flag of Germany Borussia Mönchengladbach (beat in final) 9 7 0 2 22 5
1977-78 European Cup Winners Flag of Belgium Club Brugge (beat in final) 7 5 0 2 17 7
1978-79 European Cup Round 1 Flag of England Nottingham Forest 2 0 1 1 0 2
1979-80 European Cup Round 1 Flag of the Soviet Union FC Dinamo Tbilisi 2 1 0 1 2 4
1980-81 European Cup Winners Flag of Spain Real Madrid (beat in final) 9 6 2 1 24 4
1981-82 European Cup Quarter Final Flag of Bulgaria CSKA Sofia 6 4 1 1 14 6
1982-83 European Cup Quarter Final Flag of Poland Widzew Łódź 6 4 0 2 13 6
1983-84 European Cup Winners Flag of Italy AS Roma (beat in final) 9 7 2 0 16 3
1984-85 European Cup Final Flag of Italy Juventus 9 6 1 2 18 5
1991-92 UEFA Cup Quarter-Final Flag of Italy Genoa C.F.C. 8 4 0 4 16 8
1992-93 Cup Winners' Cup Round 2 Flag of Russia Spartak Moscow 4 2 0 2 10 8
1995-96 UEFA Cup Round 2 Flag of Denmark Brøndby IF 4 1 1 2 2 2
1996-97 Cup Winners' Cup Semi-Final Flag of France Paris Saint-Germain FC 8 6 1 1 18 9
1997-98 UEFA Cup Round 2 Flag of France RC Strasbourg 4 1 2 1 4 5
1998-99 UEFA Cup Round 3 Flag of Spain Celta de Vigo 6 2 2 2 11 6
2000-01 UEFA Cup Winners Flag of Spain Alavés (beat in final) 13 8 3 1 19 9
2001-02 Champions League Quarter Final Flag of Germany Bayer Leverkusen 16 6 7 2 23 12
2002-03 Champions League Group Stage 1 3rd to Flag of Spain Valencia CF and Flag of Switzerland FC Basel 6 2 2 2 12 8
2002-03 UEFA Cup Quarter Final Flag of Scotland Celtic FC 6 4 1 1 6 3
2003-04 UEFA Cup Round 4 Flag of France Marseille 8 4 3 1 14 7
2004-05 Champions League Winners Flag of Italy AC Milan (beat in final) 15 8 4 3 20 10
2005-06 Champions League Last 16 Flag of Portugal S.L. Benfica 14 8 3 3 20 7
2006-07 Champions League Final Flag of Italy AC Milan 15 9 2 4 22 12
2007-08 Champions League Semi Final Flag of England Chelsea FC 14 8 3 3 34 12
Total 297 148 77 72 444 257
  • In 2002-03 after Liverpool went out of the group stage of the Champions League, they entered the UEFA Cup due to achieving 3rd place in group B.

[edit] Teams played

Liverpool have played against clubs from 37 countries (clubs classed by the country they were in when the game was played). Liverpool have played 101 different clubs in Europe with the 100th different club being Toulouse FC of France and the most recent new club being Beşiktaş J.K.. They are due to face Arsenal FC as their 102nd different opposition.

Country Clubs
Flag of Austria Austria FK Austria Wien, Grazer AK, FC Tirol Innsbruck
Flag of Belgium Belgium R.S.C. Anderlecht, Standard Liège, Club Brugge
Flag of Bulgaria Bulgaria CSKA Sofia, Levski Sofia
Flag of Cyprus Cyprus Apollon Limassol
Flag of the Czech Republic Czech Republic FC Slovan Liberec
Flag of Denmark Denmark Brøndby IF, Odense BK
Flag of the German Democratic Republic East Germany Dynamo Berlin, Dynamo Dresden
Flag of England England Arsenal FC, Chelsea FC, Leeds United, Nottingham Forest, Tottenham Hotspur
Flag of Finland Finland FC Haka, HJK Helsinki, FC Lahti, MyPa 47, AC Oulu
Flag of France France AJ Auxerre, FC Bordeaux, Marseille, AS Monaco FC, Paris Saint-Germain FC, AS Saint-Étienne, RC Strasbourg, Toulouse FC
Flag of Germany Germany Bayer Leverkusen, Bayern Munich, Borussia Dortmund
Flag of Greece Greece AEK Athens FC, Olympiacos, Panathinaikos FC
Flag of the Netherlands Holland Ajax, AZ Alkmaar, PSV Eindhoven, Vitesse
Flag of Hungary Hungary Ferencvárosi TC, Honved
Flag of Iceland Iceland KR Reykjavik
Flag of Ireland Ireland Dundalk F.C.
Flag of Israel Israel Maccabi Haifa F.C.
Flag of Italy Italy Genoa CFC, Inter Milan, Juventus, AC Milan, AS Roma
Flag of Lithuania Lithuania FBK Kaunas
Flag of Luxembourg Luxembourg Jeunesse Esch
Flag of Northern Ireland Northern Ireland Crusaders F.C.
Flag of Norway Norway S.K. Brann, Strømsgodset I.F.
Flag of Poland Poland Lech Poznań, Śląsk Wrocław, Widzew Łódź
Flag of Portugal Portugal SL Benfica, Boavista FC, FC Porto, Vitória FC
Flag of Romania Romania FC Dinamo Bucureşti, Rapid Bucuresti, Steaua Bucuresti, Petrolul Ploieşti
Flag of Russia Russia CSKA Moscow, FC Spartak Moscow, FC Alania Vladikavkaz
Flag of Scotland Scotland Aberdeen FC, Celtic FC, Hibernian FC
Flag of Slovakia Slovakia MFK Košice
Flag of Slovenia Slovenia Olimpija Ljubljana
Flag of the Soviet Union Soviet Union FC Dinamo Tbilisi (now Georgia Flag of Georgia (country))
Flag of Spain Spain Alavés, Athletic Bilbao, FC Barcelona, Celta de Vigo, Deportivo de La Coruña, Real Betis, Real Madrid, Real Sociedad, Valencia CF
Flag of Sweden Sweden Malmö FF
Flag of Switzerland Switzerland FC Basel, FC Sion, Servette FC, FC Zürich
Flag of Turkey Turkey Beşiktaş J.K., Galatasaray S.K., Trabzonspor
Flag of Ukraine Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv
Flag of Wales Wales TNS
Flag of West Germany West Germany Bayern Munich, Borussia Dortmund, Borussia Mönchengladbach, Eintracht Frankfurt, Hamburger SV, 1. FC Köln, TSV 1860 München
Flag of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade (now Serbia Flag of Serbia)

[edit] UEFA coefficients

UEFA seed teams for the draws in their competitions. This seeding is done based upon the UEFA coefficients of the team. Liverpool as one of the most successful teams of recent years has a ranking in the top 8 teams in Europe and is set to rise in the ranking due to them getting to at least the semi-finals of the Champions League this season. Liverpool were once ranked the number 1 team in Europe during the 1980s. Below is a graph of Liverpool's rankings in European cometition[7].

[edit] Records

Jamie Carragher holds the record for the most appearances in Europe, making 100 during his career. The most goals scored in European competition by a Liverpool player is 24, which is held by Steven Gerrard.[8] The 8–0 home win against Beşiktaş on November 7, 2007 represents the biggest ever win in the UEFA Champions League. Liverpool's first match in European competition was against KR Rekjavik in the first round of the European Cup on 17 August 1964. Liverpool won the match 5–0. The club's biggest win in Europe was 11–0 which came against Strømsgodset in the first round of the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup on 17 September 1974. This victory also represents Liverpool's record victory. Liverpool's highest European attendance was 55,104, which came against FC Barcelona during the 1975–76 season. Liverpool's match against Dundalk during the 1982–83 season, in which 12,021 spectators attended the match represents Liverpool's lowest European attendance.


[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Media reaction to Liverpool win. Retrieved on 2007-22-02.
  2. ^ a b 1985: Fans die in Heysel rioting. Retrieved on 2007-22-02.
  3. ^ Inzaghi inspires Milan to glory. Retrieved on 2007-23-05.
  4. ^ Hansen: 'Best Game Ever'. Retrieved on 2007-22-02.
  5. ^ Lazio wins last Cup Winner's Cup. Retrieved on 2007-22-02.
  6. ^ Sao Paulo 1-0 Liverpool. Retrieved on 2007-22-02.
  7. ^ UEFA Team Ranking. Retrieved on 2007-24-04.
  8. ^ LFC Records. liverpoolfc.tv. Retrieved on 2008-3-25.

[edit] External links

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