Mohammed V Trophy
The trophy given to champions | |
Founded | 1962 |
---|---|
Abolished | 1989 |
Region | Casablanca, Morocco |
Number of teams | 4 (in 1989) |
Most successful club(s) |
Atlético Madrid (3 titles) |
The Mohammed V Trophy (French: Coupe Mohammed V) was an international association football friendly[1] competition held in the city of Casablanca, Morocco. The trophy was named after King Mohammed V, who died one year before the competition was established. In 1986 the competition became known as the "Casablanca Trophy".[2]
Champions
The following is the list of finals played:[3][4]
Finals
Year | Champion | Runner-up | Score |
---|---|---|---|
1962 | Stade de Reims | Inter | 2–1 |
1963 | Partizan | Zaragoza | 2–0 |
1964 | Boca Juniors | Real Madrid | 2–1 |
1965 | Atlético Madrid | Partizan | 5–0 |
1966 | Real Madrid | Boca Juniors | 1–1 |
1967 | CSKA Sofia | FAR Rabat | 1–0 |
1968 | Flamengo | Racing Club | 3–2 |
1969 | Barcelona | Bayern Munich | 2–2 |
1970 | Atlético Madrid | FAR Rabat | 4–1 |
1972 | Bayern Munich | Partizan | 3–2 |
1974 | Peñarol | Ruch Chorzów | 1–0 |
1975 | Dynamo Kyiv | Újpest FC | 3–2 |
1976 | Anderlecht | OGC Nice | 2–1 |
1977 | Romania[lower-alpha 1] | Czechoslovakia[lower-alpha 1] | 3–1 |
1979 | Wydad Casablanca | Canon Yaoundé | 1–1 |
1980 | Atlético Madrid | Inter | 1–1 |
1986 | Standard Liège | Gremio | 2–0 |
1988 | Monaco | Hassania Agadir | 1–0 |
1989 | Sochaux | Olympique | 0–0 |
Notes
References
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