1993–94 UEFA Champions League

The 1993–94 UEFA Champions League was the 39th season of the UEFA Champions League, UEFA's premier club football tournament, and the second season with the UEFA Champions League logo (it was adopted in the group stage and semi-finals, the rest of the tournament continued to be called "European Champion Clubs' Cup" or "European Cup"). The competition was won by AC Milan, their fifth title, beating Barcelona 4–0 in the final. Marseille were the defending champions, but were not allowed to enter the competition due their involvement in a match-fixing scandal in Division 1 the season prior. This saw them stripped of their league title and demoted to Division 2 at the end of 1993–94. This was the first and only time which the defending champions did not participate in the following season of the competition. Third-placed Monaco took the vacated French berth (second-placed Paris Saint-Germain, who refused the defaulted French title, competed in the Cup Winners' Cup instead as Coupe de France winners).

1993–94 UEFA Champions League
The Olympic Stadium in Athens hosted the final.
Tournament details
DatesQualifying:
18 August – 1 September 1993
Competition proper:
15 September 1993 – 18 May 1994
TeamsCompetition proper: 32
Total: 42
Final positions
ChampionsItaly AC Milan (5th title)
Runners-upSpain Barcelona
Tournament statistics
Matches played75
Goals scored217 (2.89 per match)
Attendance2,082,730 (27,770 per match)
Top scorer(s)Ronald Koeman (Barcelona)
Wynton Rufer (Werder Bremen)
8 goals each

There were changes made to the UEFA Champions League's format from the previous year. After two seasons, with the groups, it introduced one legged semi-finals taking place after the group stage, meaning the two sides qualified from each group as group winners playing the semi-finals at home.

This edition was marked by the absence of Yugoslav participants because Yugoslavia was under UN economic sanctions. Yugoslav participants were frequently present in advanced stages of the competition with Red Star Belgrade having won the European Cup in 1991 and finished second in the group the following season. FK Partizan were to represent Yugoslavia in this edition, but were not allowed to participate. Meanwhile, Croatia, Belarus, Moldova, Georgia and Wales entered their champions for the first time in this edition.

Teams

Location of teams of the 1993–94 UEFA Champions League.
Purple: Eliminated in the preliminary round; Yellow: Eliminated in the first round; Orange: Eliminated in the second round; Red: Qualified for group stage.

42 national champions participated in 1993–94 UEFA Champions League season. 20 lowest-ranked of them by 1993 UEFA club ranking[1] entered in the Preliminary Round, 22 best-ranked champions entered in the First Round.

First round
Milan (1st) Barcelona (1st) Manchester United (1st) Werder Bremen (1st)
Anderlecht (1st) Monaco (3rd)[Note FRA] Porto (1st) Spartak Moscow (1st)
Rangers (1st) Steaua București (1st) Feyenoord (1st) Galatasaray (1st)
Sparta Prague (1st)[Note CZE] Lech Poznań (1st) Austria Wien (1st) Copenhagen (1st)
AEK Athens (1st) AIK (1st) Dynamo Kyiv (1st) Kispest Honvéd (1st)
Dinamo Minsk (1st) Levski Sofia (1st)
Preliminary round
Rosenborg (1st) Aarau (1st) HJK (1st) Linfield (1st)
Croatia Zagreb (1st) ÍA (1st) Partizani (1st) Avenir Beggen (1st)
Omonia (1st) Cwmbrân Town (1st) Floriana (1st) Cork City (1st)
Skonto (1st) B68 Toftir (1st) Beitar Jerusalem (1st) Dinamo Tbilisi (1st)
Ekranas (1st) Norma Tallinn (1st) Olimpija Ljubljana (1st) Zimbru Chișinău (1st)
Notes

Round and draw dates

The schedule of the competition is as follows. All draws were held in Geneva, Switzerland.

PhaseRoundDraw dateFirst legSecond leg
Qualifying round14 July 199318 August 19931 September 1993
First round15 September 199329 September 1993
Second round1 October 199320 October 19933 November 1993
Group stageMatchday 15 November 199324 November 1993
Matchday 28 December 1993
Matchday 32 March 1994
Matchday 416 March 1994
Matchday 530 March 1994
Matchday 613 April 1994
Knockout phaseSemi-finals27 April 1994
Final18 May 1994 at Olympic Stadium, Athens

Preliminary round

The first legs were played on 18 and 22 August, and the second legs on 1 September 1993.

Team 1Agg.Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
HJK 2–1 Norma Tallinn1–11–0
Ekranas 0–2 Floriana0–10–1
B68 Toftir 0–11 Croatia Zagreb0–50–6
Skonto 1–1 (11–10 p) Olimpija Ljubljana0–11–0 (a.e.t.)
Cwmbrân Town 4–4 (a) Cork City3–21–2
Dinamo Tbilisi w/o[note 1] Linfield2–11–1
Avenir Beggen 0–3 Rosenborg0–20–1
Partizani 0–3 ÍA0–00–3
Omonia 2–3 Aarau2–10–2
Zimbru Chișinău 1–3 Beitar Jerusalem1–10–2

First round

The first legs were played on 15 and 16 September, and the second legs on 28 and 29 September 1993.

Team 1Agg.Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Porto 2–0 Floriana2–00–0
ÍA 1–3 Feyenoord1–00–3
Monaco 2–1 AEK Athens1–01–1
Steaua București 4–4 (a) Croatia Zagreb1–23–2
Rangers 4–4 (a) Levski Sofia3–21–2
Werder Bremen 6–3 Dinamo Minsk5–21–1
Linfield 3–4 Copenhagen3–00–4 (a.e.t.)
Aarau 0–1 Milan0–10–0
AIK 1–2 Sparta Prague1–00–2
HJK 0–6 Anderlecht0–30–3
Kispest Honvéd 3–5 Manchester United2–31–2
Galatasaray 3–1 Cork City2–11–0
Lech Poznań 7–2 Beitar Jerusalem3–04–2
Skonto 0–9 Spartak Moscow0–50–4
Dynamo Kyiv 4–5 Barcelona3–11–4
Rosenborg 4–5 Austria Wien3–11–4

Second round

The first legs were played on 20 October, and the second legs on 3 November 1993.

Team 1Agg.Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Porto 1–0 Feyenoord1–00–0
Monaco 4–2 Steaua București4–10–1
Levski Sofia 2–3 Werder Bremen2–20–1
Copenhagen 0–7 Milan0–60–1
Sparta Prague 2–5 Anderlecht0–12–4
Manchester United 3–3 (a) Galatasaray3–30–0
Lech Poznań 2–7 Spartak Moscow1–51–2
Barcelona 5–1 Austria Wien3–02–1

Group stage

Location of teams of the 1993–94 UEFA Champions League.
Brown: Group A; Red: Group B;

The group stage began on 24 November 1993 and ended on 13 April 1994. The eight teams were divided into two groups of four, and the teams in each group played against each other on a home-and-away basis, meaning that each team played a total of six group matches. For each win, teams were awarded two points, with one point awarded for each draw. At the end of the group stage, the two teams in each group with the most points advanced to the semi-finals.

All teams except Milan and Porto made their group stage debuts. Two of these teams (Barcelona and Anderlecht) had previously contested the 1991–92 group stage, the only season of the European Cup to adopt such a format.

Group A

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification BAR MON SPA GAL
1 Barcelona6420133+1010Advance to knockout stage2–05–13–0
2 Monaco631294+570–14–13–0
3 Spartak Moscow6132612−652–20–00–0
4 Galatasaray6024110−920–00–21–2
Source: UEFA

Group B

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification MIL POR BRM AND
1 Milan624062+48Advance to knockout stage3–02–10–0
2 Porto6312106+470–03–22–0
3 Werder Bremen62131115−451–10–55–3
4 Anderlecht612359−440–01–01–2
Source: UEFA

Knockout stage

Bracket

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
27 April 1994 – Milan
 
 
Milan3
 
18 May 1994 – Athens
 
Monaco0
 
Milan4
 
27 April 1994 – Barcelona
 
Barcelona0
 
Barcelona3
 
 
Porto0
 

Semi-finals

The matches were played on 27 April 1994.

Team 1 Score Team 2
Milan 3–0 Monaco
Barcelona 3–0 Porto

Final

The final was played on 18 May 1994 at the Olympic Stadium in Athens.

Milan 4–0 Barcelona
Report
Attendance: 70,000[2]
Referee: Philip Don (England)

Top goalscorers

The top scorers from the 1993–94 UEFA Champions League (excluding preliminary round) are as follows:

RankNameTeamGoals
1 Ronald Koeman Barcelona8
Wynton Rufer Werder Bremen8
3 Luc Nilis Anderlecht7
Hristo Stoichkov Barcelona7
5 Bernd Hobsch Werder Bremen5
Valery Karpin Spartak Moscow5
7 Marco Bode Werder Bremen4
Jürgen Klinsmann Monaco4
Daniele Massaro Milan4
Viktor Onopko Spartak Moscow4
Jean-Pierre Papin Milan4
Nikolai Pisarev Spartak Moscow4
Sergey Rodionov Spartak Moscow4
Kubilay Türkyilmaz Galatasaray4

See also

Notes

References

External links