1983–84 UEFA Cup explained

Tourney Name:UEFA Cup
Year:1983–84
Dates:11 September 1983 – 23 May 1984
Num Teams:64
Associations:31
Champion Other: Tottenham Hotspur
Count:2
Second Other: Anderlecht
Matches:126
Goals:371
Top Scorer:Tibor Nyilasi (Austria Wien)
8 goals
Prevseason:1982–83
Nextseason:1984–85

The 1983–84 UEFA Cup was the 13th season of the UEFA Cup, the third-tier club football competition organised by the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA). The final was played over two legs at the Constant Vanden Stock Stadium, Brussels, Belgium, and at White Hart Lane, London, England. Tottenham Hotspur of England defeated title holders Anderlecht of Belgium, on penalties, after the final finished 2–2 on aggregate, to win the competition for the second time.

Association team allocation

A total of 64 teams from 31 UEFA member associations participated in the 1982–83 UEFA Cup, all entering from the first round over six knock-out rounds. The association ranking based on the UEFA country coefficients is used to determine the number of participating teams for each association:

Association ranking

For the 1983–84 UEFA Cup, the associations are allocated places according to their 1982 UEFA country coefficients, which takes into account their performance in European competitions from 1977–78 to 1981–82.

Association ranking for 1983-84 UEFA Cup
RankAssociationCoeff.TeamsNotes
1 West Germany51.9994
2 England37.902
3 Netherlands35.466
4 Spain34.5993
5 Belgium31.066
6 France29.550
7 East Germany29.450
8 Yugoslavia28.800
9 Soviet Union25.9662
10 Czechoslovakia24.0503
11 Switzerland22.1502
12 Italy22.082
13 Portugal21.750
14 Scotland21.750
15 Sweden19.500
16 Romania16.750
17 Bulgaria16.700
RankAssociationCoeff.TeamsNotes
18 Hungary15.5702
19 Denmark15.166
20 Austria13.750
- Wales13.0000
21 Greece12.5002
22 Poland11.8501
23 Republic of Ireland8.999
24 Norway7.583
25 Albania5.5000
26 Northern Ireland4.9991
27 Turkey4.833
28 Cyprus4.332
29 Luxembourg3.666
30 Iceland3.664
31 Malta3.331
32 Finland2.499

Teams

The labels in parentheses show how each team qualified for competition:

Schedule

The schedule of the competition was as follows. Matches were scheduled for Wednesdays, though some matches exceptionally took place on Tuesdays or Sundays.

Schedule for 1983–84 UEFA Cup!Round!First leg!Second leg
First round11–14 September 198327–28 September 1983
Second round19 October 19832 November 1983
Third round23 November 19837 December 1983
Quarter-finals7 March 198421 March 1984
Semi-finals11 April 198425 April 1984
Final9 May 198423 May 1984

First round

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First leg

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Second leg

Inter Bratislava won 16–0 on aggregate.----Radnički Niš won 5–1 on aggregate.----Royal Antwerp won 8–3 on aggregate.----Budapest Honvéd won 3–2 on aggregate.----Lokomotive Leipzig won 7–2 on aggregate.----Sparta Rotterdam won 5–1 on aggregate.----Spartak Moscow won 7–0 on aggregate.----Verona won 4–2 on aggregate.----1–1 on aggregate; Hajduk Split won 3–1 on penalties.----Nottingham Forest won 3–0 on aggregate.----Baník Ostrava won 6–1 on aggregate.----PSV Eindhoven won 6–2 on aggregate.----Austria Memphis won 15–0 on aggregate.----PAOK won 5–2 on aggregate.----Werder Bremen won 3–2 on aggregate.----2–2 on aggregate; Widzew Łódź won on away goals.----Celtic won 5–1 on aggregate.----Sturm Graz won 2–1 on aggregate.----Levski Sofia won 2–1 on aggregate.----Bayern Munich won 11–0 on aggregate.----Groningen won 4–2 on aggregate.----Anderlecht won 4–1 on aggregate.----Laval won 1–0 on aggregate.----Carl Zeiss Jena won 3–0 on aggregate.----Lens won 3–2 on aggregate.----Feyenoord won 3–0 on aggregate.----Watford won 4–3 on aggregate.----Tottenham Hotspur won 14–0 on aggregate.----Internazionale won 2–1 on aggregate.----Aston Villa won 5–1 on aggregate.----Sparta Prague won 4–3 on aggregate.----Sporting CP won 4–3 on aggregate.

Second round

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First leg

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Second leg

Sparta Prague won 3–1 on aggregate.----Hajduk Split won 5–3 on aggregate.----Anderlecht won 4–2 on aggregate.----Radnički Niš won 6–3 on aggregate.----Sparta Rotterdam won 4–3 on aggregate.----Watford won 4–2 on aggregate.----2–2 on aggregate; Sturm Graz won on away goals.----Austria Memphis won 5–3 on aggregate.----Lokomotive Leipzig won 2–1 on aggregate.----0–0 on aggregate; Bayern Munich won 9–8 on penalties.----Lens won 5–4 on aggregate.----Tottenham Hotspur won 6–2 on aggregate.----Internazionale won 5–3 on aggregate.----Spartak Moscow won 4–3 on aggregate.----Nottingham Forest won 3–1 on aggregate.----Celtic won 5–2 on aggregate.

Third round

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First leg

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Second leg

Sturm Graz won 2–1 on aggregate.----Hajduk Split won 4–0 on aggregate.----Sparta Prague won 7–2 on aggregate.----Anderlecht won 2–1 on aggregate.----Austria Memphis won 3–2 on aggregate.----Nottingham Forest won 2–1 on aggregate.----Tottenham Hotspur won 2–1 on aggregate.----Spartak Moscow won 3–1 on aggregate.

Quarter-finals

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First leg

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Second leg

Hajduk Split won 2–1 on aggregate.----Nottingham Forest won 2–1 on aggregate.----Tottenham Hotspur won 4–2 on aggregate.----Anderlecht won 4–3 on aggregate.

Semi-finals

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In 1997, it was revealed that the Anderlecht chairman Constant Vanden Stock had paid a £27,000 bribe to the referee Emilio Guruceta Muro in exchange for help fixing their semi-final second leg match versus Nottingham Forest.[1] During the match, Anderlecht were awarded a dubious penalty, and a last minute Nottingham Forest goal – that would have won them the tie on the away goals rule – was disallowed.[2] In 2016, it emerged that UEFA had known about the bribe since 1993 but had taken no action until the information was made public in 1997,[3] when UEFA suspended Anderlecht from the next European tournament for which they qualified. On qualifying for the 1998–99 UEFA Cup, Anderlecht appealed the suspension in the Court of Arbitration for Sport, which overturned the ban on the grounds that it was made by UEFA's executive committee, which did not have the authority to issue the ban.[4]

First leg

The match featured an infamous incident that saw a Hajduk fan (later identified as Ante Baraba, a resident of Paljuv settlement within the Novigrad village) run onto the pitch before the start of the second half with a live rooster – in reference to Tottenham's club symbol, the cockerel – and, while standing at the centre circle, kill the animal by snapping its neck.[5] [6] The contest took place as scheduled, however, as a result of the incident, Hajduk were fined CHF3,000 and ordered to play their next European tie at least 300 km away from their home stadium. That tie turned out to be their 1984–85 European Cup Winners' Cup first round match against Dynamo Moscow.----

Second leg

Anderlecht won 3–2 on aggregate.----2–2 on aggregate; Tottenham Hotspur won on away goals.

Final

See main article: 1984 UEFA Cup Final.

Second leg

2–2 on aggregate; Tottenham Hotspur won 4–3 on penalties.

Top scorers

NameClubGoalsMinutes
Tibor Nyilasi Austria Memphis9699
Kenneth Brylle Anderlecht6631
Yuri Gavrilov Spartak Moscow6720
Mark Falco Tottenham Hotspur6904
Marián Tomčák Inter Bratislava5197
Karol Brezík Inter Bratislava5295
Hans Richter Lokomotive Leipzig5540
Herbert Prohaska Austria Memphis5720
Steve Archibald Tottenham Hotspur5990
Source:[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Riley. Catherine. Football: After 13 years Anderlecht are punished by Uefa. https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220501/https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-after-13-years-anderlecht-are-punished-by-uefa-1240826.html . 1 May 2022 . subscription . live. The Independent. 26 September 2016.
  2. News: Forest sues Anderlecht over '84 bribery scandal . . 24 December 1997 . 9 February 2009 .
  3. Web site: Uefa had Forest-Anderlecht referee bribe evidence 'for four years'. BBC Sport. 25 September 2016.
  4. Web site: Court overturns UEFA ban on Anderlecht club. Associated Press. 26 September 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160927091111/http://web.hurriyetdailynews.com/court-overturns-uefa-ban-on-anderlecht-club.aspx?pageID=438&n=court-overturns-uefa-ban-on-anderlecht-club-1998-05-21. 27 September 2016. dead.
  5. News: Stipković. Branko. Baraba priznao nakon 28 godina: 'Ja sam bezdušno ubio pivca na Poljudu!'. Sportske novosti. 2 August 2012. 27 January 2021.
  6. News: Wright. Chris. Tottenham's 1984 UEFA Cup 'Chicken-Choker Mystery' Solved: Hajduk Split Fan Confesses To Murder Most Fowl. Who Ate All the Pies?. 7 August 2012. 4 April 2020.
  7. Web site: Statistics - Goals scored . UEFA.com . Union of European Football Associations . 27 January 2021 .