2004 UEFA Champions League final

The 2004 UEFA Champions League final was an association football match played on 26 May 2004 to decide the winner of the 2003–04 UEFA Champions League. AS Monaco, a Monaco-based club representing the French Football Federation, faced Portuguese side Porto at the Arena AufSchalke in Gelsenkirchen, Germany. Porto won the match 3–0, with Carlos Alberto, Deco and Dmitri Alenichev scoring the goals in a dominant game from Mourinho's Porto. Deco was named Man of the Match.

2004 UEFA Champions League final
Match programme cover
Event2003–04 UEFA Champions League
Date26 May 2004
VenueArena AufSchalke, Gelsenkirchen
Man of the MatchDeco (Porto)[1]
RefereeKim Milton Nielsen (Denmark)
Attendance53,053[1]
2003
2005

Porto's previous triumph in the competition had been in 1987 – although they had won the UEFA Cup in the previous season – while Monaco were playing in their first ever UEFA Champions League final. Both teams started their campaigns in the group stage and defeated former European champions on their way to the final: Porto beat 1968 and 1999 winners Manchester United while Monaco defeated nine-time champions Real Madrid.

Both teams were considered underdogs in the competition before reaching the final stages and were led by young managers. Monaco had hired former France national football team star Didier Deschamps as manager and Porto were led by rising star José Mourinho, who left the club for Chelsea a week after the match.

Monaco became the fourth club representing the French league to reach the final after Reims in 1956 & 1959, Saint-Étienne in 1976, and Olympique de Marseille in 1991 & 1993. This was the fifth final in the history of the European Cup in which neither of the teams came from England, Germany, Italy or Spain, the first since the 1991 final when Red Star Belgrade of Yugoslavia beat Marseille, and as of current, the last time a team not from the four previously mentioned countries won the final.

Background

Monaco

Monaco finished second in the French Ligue 1 the previous season, meaning that they entered the Champions League at the group stage. Monaco were placed in Group C, alongside Deportivo La Coruña, PSV and AEK Athens. After a 2–1 in their first win in the Netherlands and a 4–0 win at the Stade Louis II against AEK Athens, Monaco travelled to Spain, losing 1–0 by Deportivo. The Monegasque adventure really began after the return match against Deportivo, when Monaco won 8–3, which represented the highest number of goals in one match in the history of the new version of the UEFA Champions League; this record lasted until 22 November 2016, when Legia Warsaw lost 8–4 to Borussia Dortmund. Croatian striker Dado Pršo scored four times, while captain Ludovic Giuly (2), Jérôme Rothen, Jaroslav Plašil and Édouard Cissé pulverised the Spanish defensive line. After two more draws against PSV and AEK Athens, Monaco finished at the top of Group C.

The first knockout round saw Monaco winning against Lokomotiv Moscow after a 2–1 defeat in Russia and a win 1–0 at Stade Louis II. In the quarter-finals, Monaco played Real Madrid. After a 4–2 loss in Madrid (where Fernando Morientes scored, and was applauded by his former fans), Monaco created a sensation by defeating the Spanish 3–1 at home. Monaco played against Chelsea in the semi-finals, and despite the exclusion of Akis Zikos, Monaco found enough strength to score twice and win the game 3–1.[2] The last goal was scored by striker Shabani Nonda, who just returned from a seven-month injury. The second leg at Stamford Bridge saw Monaco resisting Chelsea's strikes, for a final score of 2–2 to reach the European Cup final for the first time in their history.[3]

Porto

Porto, winners of the Primeira Liga, Taça de Portugal and UEFA Cup in 2002–03, were the only Portuguese team in the group stage, after the elimination of Benfica in the third qualifying round by Italian side Lazio. Porto was drawn in Group F, along with Real Madrid, Marseille and Partizan. Porto's first match was at Partizan Stadium in Belgrade. Costinha scored the opening goal on 22 minutes, but Andrija Delibašić scored the equaliser on 54 minutes.[4] The next match, the first at the Estádio das Antas, was a 3–1 loss to Real Madrid. Costinha scored the opening goal again, on seven minutes. Iván Helguera equalised on 28 minutes; Santiago Solari on 37 minutes and Zinedine Zidane on 67 scored Real Madrid's winning goals.[5]

Two straight wins against Marseille followed by a win at home against Partizan secured Porto's place in the first knockout round before the last match of the group stage, a draw in Madrid.[6] In the first knockout round, Porto met Manchester United. The Portuguese won 2–1 at home[7] and managed to qualify in the final minutes of the second leg, when Costinha scored an equaliser in injury time in a 1–1 draw at Old Trafford.[8] In the quarter-finals, Porto met a French team for the second time in the tournament: a 2–0 win at home[9] and a 2–2 draw in France eliminated Lyon from the competition.[10] In the semi-finals, Porto played Deportivo La Coruña, eliminating them 1–0 on aggregate.[11]

Route to the final

MonacoRound Porto
OpponentResultGroup stageOpponentResult
PSV Eindhoven2–1 (A)Matchday 1 Partizan1–1 (A)
AEK Athens4–0 (H)Matchday 2 Real Madrid1–3 (H)
Deportivo La Coruña0–1 (A)Matchday 3 Marseille3–2 (A)
Deportivo La Coruña8–3 (H)Matchday 4 Marseille1–0 (H)
PSV Eindhoven1–1 (H)Matchday 5 Partizan2–1 (H)
AEK Athens0–0 (A)Matchday 6 Real Madrid1–1 (A)
Group C winners

PosTeamPldPts
1 Monaco611
2 Deportivo La Coruña610
3 PSV Eindhoven610
4 AEK Athens62
Source: RSSSF
Final standingsGroup F runners-up

PosTeamPldPts
1 Real Madrid614
2 Porto611
3 Marseille64
4 Partizan63
Source: RSSSF
OpponentAgg.1st leg2nd legKnockout stageOpponentAgg.1st leg2nd leg
Lokomotiv Moscow2–2 (a)1–2 (A)1–0 (H)First knockout round Manchester United3–22–1 (H)1–1 (A)
Real Madrid5–5 (a)2–4 (A)3–1 (H)Quarter-finals Lyon4–22–0 (H)2–2 (A)
Chelsea5–33–1 (H)2–2 (A)Semi-finals Deportivo La Coruña1–00–0 (H)1–0 (A)

Match

Summary

Monaco, in their first European final since the 1992 Cup Winners Cup final,[3] were up against Porto, the UEFA Cup winners from the previous season,[3] who were appearing in the European Cup final for a second time, after defeating Bayern Munich in the 1987 European Cup final.[12] Porto were the favourites after eliminating Manchester United and Deportivo La Coruña in the knockout phase, while Monaco had eliminated Real Madrid and Chelsea.[citation needed] Porto won the match 3–0; Carlos Alberto opened the scoring in the first half, while Deco and Dmitri Alenichev extended Porto's lead in the second half.[13]

Details

Monaco 0–3 Porto
Report
Monaco[14]
Porto[14]
GK30 Flavio Roma
RB4 Hugo Ibarra
CB27 Julien Rodriguez
CB32 Gaël Givet  72'
LB3 Patrice Evra
CM14 Édouard Cissé  64'
CM7 Lucas Bernardi
CM15 Akis Zikos
RW8 Ludovic Giuly (c)  23'
LW25 Jérôme Rothen
CF10 Fernando Morientes
Substitutes:
GK29 Tony Sylva
DF19 Sébastien Squillaci  72'
MF6 Jaroslav Plašil
MF35 Hassan El Fakiri
FW9 Dado Pršo  23'
FW18 Shabani Nonda  64'
FW24 Emmanuel Adebayor
Manager:
Didier Deschamps
GK99 Vítor Baía
RB22 Paulo Ferreira
CB2 Jorge Costa (c)  77'
CB4 Ricardo Carvalho
LB8 Nuno Valente  29'
DM6 Costinha
CM23 Pedro Mendes
CM18 Maniche
AM10 Deco  85'
CF19 Carlos Alberto  40'  60'
CF11 Derlei  78'
Substitutes:
GK13 Nuno
DF3 Pedro Emanuel  85'
DF5 Ricardo Costa
DF17 José Bosingwa
MF15 Dmitri Alenichev  60'
FW9 Edgaras Jankauskas
FW77 Benni McCarthy  78'
Manager:
José Mourinho

Man of the Match:
Deco (Porto)[1]

Assistant referees:
Jens Larsen (Denmark)
Jørgen Jepsen (Denmark)
Fourth official:
Knud Erik Fisker (Denmark)

Match rules

Statistics

Second half[15][16]
StatisticMonacoPorto
Goals scored02
Total shots74
Shots on target03
Ball possession56%44%
Corner kicks62
Fouls committed1014
Offsides128
Yellow cards01
Red cards00
Overall
StatisticMonacoPorto
Goals scored03
Total shots86
Shots on target04
Ball possession55%45%
Corner kicks74
Fouls committed1720
Offsides1911
Yellow cards03
Red cards00

See also

References

External links