From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1986 European Cup final
Match programme cover
Event 1985–86 European Cup
After extra time
Steaua București won 2–0 on penalties
Date7 May 1986
Venue Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán, Seville
Referee Michel Vautrot ( France)
Attendance70,000
1985
1987

The 1986 European Cup final was a football match played at the Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán Stadium, Seville, Spain, on 7 May 1986 to determine the champions of that season's European Cup. Steaua București of Romania defeated Barcelona of Spain in a penalty shoot-out after 120 minutes of play could not separate the two sides. Barcelona had all four of their spot-kicks saved by Steaua goalkeeper Helmuth Duckadam, who was later dubbed "the Hero of Seville". [1] It was the first European Cup final to finish goalless and remains Steaua's only European Cup triumph, and the first of only two won by an Eastern European club.

Route to the final

Romania  Steaua București Round Spain  Barcelona
Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg
Denmark  Vejle 5–2 1–1 (A) 4–1 (H) First round Czechoslovakia  Sparta Prague 2–2 ( a) 2–1 (A) 0–1 (H)
Hungary  Budapest Honvéd 4–2 0–1 (A) 4–1 (H) Second round Portugal  Porto 3–3 ( a) 2–0 (H) 1–3 (A)
Finland  Kuusysi 1–0 0–0 (H) 1–0 (A) Quarter-finals Italy  Juventus 2–1 1–0 (H) 1–1 (A)
Belgium  Anderlecht 3–1 0–1 (A) 3–0 (H) Semi-finals Sweden  IFK Göteborg 3–3 (5–4 p) 0–3 (A) 3–0 (H)

Match

Details

Steaua
Barcelona
GK 1 Romania Helmuth Duckadam
RB 2 Romania Ștefan Iovan ( c)
LB 3 Romania Ilie Bărbulescu Yellow card 107'
CB 4 Romania Adrian Bumbescu Yellow card 21'
CM 5 Romania Lucian Bălan downward-facing red arrow 72'
CB 6 Romania Miodrag Belodedici
SS 7 Romania Marius Lăcătuș Yellow card 26'
RM 8 Romania Mihail Majearu
CF 9 Romania Victor Pițurcă downward-facing red arrow 111'
LM 10 Romania Gabi Balint
CM 11 Romania László Bölöni Yellow card 31'
Substitutes:
FW 13 Romania Anghel Iordănescu upward-facing green arrow 72'
FW 16 Romania Marin Radu upward-facing green arrow 111'
Manager:
Romania Emerich Jenei
GK 1 Spain Javier Urruticoechea
RB 2 Spain Gerardo
CB 3 Spain Migueli
LB 4 Spain Julio Alberto Yellow card 23'
CM 5 Spain Víctor Muñoz
CB 6 Spain José Ramón Alexanko ( c)
CF 7 Spain Lobo Carrasco Yellow card 21'
CM 8 West Germany Bernd Schuster downward-facing red arrow 85'
RM 9 Spain Ángel Pedraza
CF 10 Scotland Steve Archibald downward-facing red arrow 100'
LM 11 Spain Marcos Alonso
Substitutes:
MF 14 Spain Josep Moratalla upward-facing green arrow 85'
FW 16 Spain Pichi Alonso upward-facing green arrow 100'
Manager:
England Terry Venables

See also

References

  1. ^ Miller, Stevie (5 August 2009). "Steaua's story". BBC Sport. Retrieved 7 August 2009.

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1986 European Cup final
Match programme cover
Event 1985–86 European Cup
After extra time
Steaua București won 2–0 on penalties
Date7 May 1986
Venue Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán, Seville
Referee Michel Vautrot ( France)
Attendance70,000
1985
1987

The 1986 European Cup final was a football match played at the Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán Stadium, Seville, Spain, on 7 May 1986 to determine the champions of that season's European Cup. Steaua București of Romania defeated Barcelona of Spain in a penalty shoot-out after 120 minutes of play could not separate the two sides. Barcelona had all four of their spot-kicks saved by Steaua goalkeeper Helmuth Duckadam, who was later dubbed "the Hero of Seville". [1] It was the first European Cup final to finish goalless and remains Steaua's only European Cup triumph, and the first of only two won by an Eastern European club.

Route to the final

Romania  Steaua București Round Spain  Barcelona
Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg
Denmark  Vejle 5–2 1–1 (A) 4–1 (H) First round Czechoslovakia  Sparta Prague 2–2 ( a) 2–1 (A) 0–1 (H)
Hungary  Budapest Honvéd 4–2 0–1 (A) 4–1 (H) Second round Portugal  Porto 3–3 ( a) 2–0 (H) 1–3 (A)
Finland  Kuusysi 1–0 0–0 (H) 1–0 (A) Quarter-finals Italy  Juventus 2–1 1–0 (H) 1–1 (A)
Belgium  Anderlecht 3–1 0–1 (A) 3–0 (H) Semi-finals Sweden  IFK Göteborg 3–3 (5–4 p) 0–3 (A) 3–0 (H)

Match

Details

Steaua
Barcelona
GK 1 Romania Helmuth Duckadam
RB 2 Romania Ștefan Iovan ( c)
LB 3 Romania Ilie Bărbulescu Yellow card 107'
CB 4 Romania Adrian Bumbescu Yellow card 21'
CM 5 Romania Lucian Bălan downward-facing red arrow 72'
CB 6 Romania Miodrag Belodedici
SS 7 Romania Marius Lăcătuș Yellow card 26'
RM 8 Romania Mihail Majearu
CF 9 Romania Victor Pițurcă downward-facing red arrow 111'
LM 10 Romania Gabi Balint
CM 11 Romania László Bölöni Yellow card 31'
Substitutes:
FW 13 Romania Anghel Iordănescu upward-facing green arrow 72'
FW 16 Romania Marin Radu upward-facing green arrow 111'
Manager:
Romania Emerich Jenei
GK 1 Spain Javier Urruticoechea
RB 2 Spain Gerardo
CB 3 Spain Migueli
LB 4 Spain Julio Alberto Yellow card 23'
CM 5 Spain Víctor Muñoz
CB 6 Spain José Ramón Alexanko ( c)
CF 7 Spain Lobo Carrasco Yellow card 21'
CM 8 West Germany Bernd Schuster downward-facing red arrow 85'
RM 9 Spain Ángel Pedraza
CF 10 Scotland Steve Archibald downward-facing red arrow 100'
LM 11 Spain Marcos Alonso
Substitutes:
MF 14 Spain Josep Moratalla upward-facing green arrow 85'
FW 16 Spain Pichi Alonso upward-facing green arrow 100'
Manager:
England Terry Venables

See also

References

  1. ^ Miller, Stevie (5 August 2009). "Steaua's story". BBC Sport. Retrieved 7 August 2009.

External links


Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook