1982 European Cup final explained

1982 European Cup final
Event:1981–82 European Cup
Team1:Aston Villa
Team1score:1
Team2:Bayern Munich
Team2score:0
Date:26 May 1982
Stadium:De Kuip
City:Rotterdam
Man Of The Match1a:Peter Withe (Aston Villa)
Referee:Georges Konrath (France)
Attendance:46,000
Referee2:Linesman (red flag): Joel Quiniou (France)
Referee3:Linesman (yellow flag): Rene Lopez (France)
Previous:1981
Next:1983

The 1982 European Cup final was played on 26 May 1982 at the end of the 1981–82 European Cup season. Football League First Division winners Aston Villa defeated Bundesliga winners Bayern Munich 1–0 at De Kuip in Rotterdam, Netherlands, to win their first (and to date only) European Cup; this continued the streak of English teams winning the competition in six straight seasons.

Route to the final

 Aston VillaRound Bayern Munich
OpponentAgg.1st leg2nd legOpponentAgg.1st leg2nd leg
 Valur7–05–0 (H)2–0 (A)First round Östers IF6–01–0 (A)5–0 (H)
 Dynamo Berlin2–2 (a)2–1 (A)0–1 (H)Second round Benfica4–10–0 (A)4–1 (H)
 Dynamo Kyiv2–00–0 (A)2–0 (H)Quarter-finals Universitatea Craiova3–12–0 (A)1–1 (H)
 Anderlecht1–01–0 (H)0–0 (A)Semi-finals CSKA Sofia7–43–4 (A)4–0 (H)

Match

Summary

After 10 minutes, Aston Villa goalkeeper Jimmy Rimmer suffered a repeat of a recurring shoulder injury. His replacement, Nigel Spink, subsequently made his second first team appearance for the club. His performance in helping prevent Bayern from scoring throughout the match was highly praised, and is seen by many as the making of a player who would be Villa's first choice goalkeeper for the following 10 seasons.[1]

Bayern did find the net with three minutes of play remaining, but the goal was canceled by an offside. Villa also got the ball in the net for a second time a few seconds before the end of the match but this goal was also disallowed.

Brian Moore's commentary of the winning goal is displayed on a giant banner across the North Stand of Villa Park:

As defending European champions, Villa were invited into the European Cup, European Super Cup and the Intercontinental Cup for the following season. Their defence of the European Cup ended in a quarter-final defeat to Juventus. They beat Barcelona 3–1 on aggregate to win the Super Cup, but lost 2–0 to Uruguayan club Peñarol for the Intercontinental Cup in Tokyo, Japan.

Details

width=25!width=25
GK 1
RB 2 Kenny Swain
CB 5 Ken McNaught
CB 4 Allan Evans
LB 3
CM 6 Dennis Mortimer (c)
CM 10 Gordon Cowans
CM 7 Des Bremner
RW 9 Peter Withe
CF 8 Gary Shaw
LW 11 Tony Morley
Substitutes:
GK 16
DF Colin Gibson
MF Andy Blair
MF Pat Heard
FW David Geddis
Manager:
Tony Barton
width=25!width=25
GK 1 Manfred Müller
RB 2 Wolfgang Dremmler
CB 4 Hans Weiner
CB 5 Klaus Augenthaler
LB 3
RM 10
CM 6
CM 8 Paul Breitner (c)
LM 7 Bernd Dürnberger
CF 9 Dieter Hoeneß
CF 11
Substitutes:
MF 16
MF 13
GK Walter Junghans
Manager:
Pál Csernai

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: How Aston Villa won the European Cup (and were then relegated five years later). 26 May 2016. Guardian. 27 May 2016.